                                 CODE OF VIRGINIA

FINDINGS AND DECLARATION OF PURPOSE (§ 54.1-3040.1)

A. The party states find that:

   1. The health and safety of the public are affected by the degree of
   compliance with and the effectiveness of enforcement activities related to
   state nurse licensure laws;

   2. Violations of nurse licensure and other laws regulating the practice of
   nursing may result in injury or harm to the public;

   3. The expanded mobility of nurses and the use of advanced communication
   technologies as part of our nation&#8217;s health care delivery system require
   greater coordination and cooperation among states in the areas of nurse
   licensure and regulation;

   4. New practice modalities and technology make compliance with individual
   state nurse licensure laws difficult and complex;

   5. The current system of duplicative licensure for nurses practicing in
   multiple states is cumbersome and redundant for both nurses and states; and

   6. Uniformity of nurse licensure requirements throughout the states promotes
   public safety and public health benefits.

B. The general purposes of this Compact are to:

   1. Facilitate the states&#8217; responsibility to protect the public&#8217;s
   health and safety;

   2. Ensure and encourage the cooperation of party states in the areas of nurse
   licensure and regulation;

   3. Facilitate the exchange of information between party states in the areas of
   nurse regulation, investigation, and adverse actions;

   4. Promote compliance with the laws governing the practice of nursing in each
   jurisdiction;

   5. Invest all party states with the authority to hold a nurse accountable for
   meeting all state practice laws in the state in which the patient is located
   at the time care is rendered through the mutual recognition of party state
   licenses;

   6. Decrease redundancies in the consideration and issuance of nurse licenses;
   and

   7. Provide opportunities for interstate practice by nurses who meet uniform
   licensure requirements.

HISTORY: 2016, c. 108.