Virginia Regulatory Town Hall
Agency
Department of Professional and Occupational Regulation
 
Board
Board for Professional and Occupational Regulation
 
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9/1/20  1:40 pm
Commenter: PATRICIA B NASH, Intec Group, Inc.

SUPPORT Continued Regulation of Interior Design in Virginia
 
My name is Patricia Nash and I live and work in VIRGINIA. I write this comment in STRONG support of the continued regulation of the interior design profession in Virginia.
 
I have been a Certified Interior Designer  for 20 plus years.  I am currently a Director of Interior Design for and Architectural/Interiors firm in Fairfax, Virginia.  We design interiors for the work place, retail and religious organizations.  My certification provides proof to my clients that I hold my work and my firms work to a higher standard in which we consider life safety and code compliance along with aesthetics.  
 
Eliminating the Interior Design statute would also harm the Commonwealth. Being a Certified Interior Designer in the Commonwealth provides the public with knowledge that a minimum set of requirements, including education, experience, and testing, has been met. Certified Interior Designers do complex design drafting work in large public and code-regulated spaces like hotels, hospitals, corporate offices, and multifamily housing where public life-safety is implicated. CIDs have a knowledge of building codes, standards, and other laws and regulations that are essential to the safe construction of public and other code-regulated buildings.
 
Washington D.C., Maryland, Georgia, Tennessee, and Kentucky, all have statutes in place for the regulation of the title and/or practice of Interior Design. In total, 27 states and two federal jurisdictions regulate interior design. No jurisdiction has ever deregulated the practice of interior design.
 
The interior design statute is not restrictive or protectionist. The title protection law—enacted during the 1990 Session of the General Assembly—does not restrict the scope of practice and serves as the framework for the voluntary certification program. While only certified interior designers may use the title “Certified,” any individual may contract with a client to render services as an interior designer, interior decorator, or similar practitioner if the client so chooses.
 
Eliminating the voluntary regulation of interior design in Virginia is bad public policy. Continued regulation is vital to the practice, profession, industry, consumers, and the public’s health, safety, and welfare. I ask you to not eliminate the regulation of this profession.
 
Sincerely,
Patricia Nash
CommentID: 84270