New
Mexico Register / Volume XXXVI, Issue 19 / October 7, 2025
This is an amendment to 16.63.13 NMAC,
Sections 2, 3, 8, and 9, effective 10/07/2025
16.63.13.2 SCOPE: All baccalaureate social workers, master social
workers, clinical social workers and independent social workers.
[16.63.13.2 NMAC -
Rp, 16.63.13.2 NMAC, 3/13/2022; A, 10/07/2025]
16.63.13.3 STATUTORY
AUTHORITY: These parts are
promulgated pursuant to the Social Work Practice Act, Subsection A of [Section
61-31- 8A, 14-2-1, 61-31-19] Section 61-31-1 to 25, NMSA 1978.
[16.63.13.3 NMAC - Rp, 16.63.13.3 NMAC, 3/13/2022;
A, 10/07/2025]
16.63.13.8 PROCEDURES: Upon receipt of a complaint against any
person licensed under the Social Work Practice Act, Sections 61-31-1 to
61-31-24 NMSA 1978 the board may refer the complaint to the complaint
committee.
A. The
complaint committee shall review and investigate or cause to be investigated
all complaints received by the board. [Complaints
shall remain confidential while investigations are pending and shall not be a
matter of public record until the board takes disciplinary action pursuant to
N.M. State. Ann. Section 61-31-17 NMSA 1978, as amended, and this part].
B. Upon
completion of the investigation initiated pursuant to this part, the complaint
committee or the board shall [submit] recommend to the board
those matters [it feels] that may justify further disciplinary
action.
C. The
board may offer the licensee an informal type of discipline such as a letter of
reprimand in lieu of initiating formal proceedings. The board shall notify the licensee:
(1) that
a letter of reprimand has been officially proposed;
(2) that
the respondent must accept or reject the offer in writing;
(3) that
if accepted, a copy of the reprimand will remain in the private files of the board;
and
(4) that
if rejected, formal disciplinary action pursuant to the Uniform Licensing Act
Sections 61-1-1 to 61-1-31 NMSA 1978 will be initiated.
D. If
accepted, the letter of reprimand shall be personally issued to the licensee by
the chairperson of the board at the next scheduled board meeting and served on
the licensee by certified mail. Copies
of the reprimand will be furnished to members of the board and to the board's
attorney.
E. If
a licensed social worker voluntarily surrenders their license or allows their
license to expire in anticipation of, or during the course of
an investigation, the complaint committee will complete its investigation and
report the findings to the national database.
Any publication or notification of action taken by the board of social work
examiners will include the fact that the licensee voluntarily surrendered or
allowed their license to expire during the investigation.
F. Failure of a licensee to furnish the
board within 10 business days of request, its investigators or representatives
with information requested by the board:
(1) failure to appear before the board
when requested by the board in any disciplinary processing;
(2) Failure to be in
compliance with the Parental Responsibility Act Sections 40-5A-1-13 NMSA
1978;
(3) Fraudulent record keeping;
(4) failure to comply with Continuing
Education Audit. If all continuing education requirements are not met by the
expiration date of the license or granted extension date, the license shall be
subject to disciplinary action.
[16.63.13.8 NMAC -
Rp, 16.63.13.8 NMAC, 3/13/2022; A, 10/07/2025]
16.63.13.9 POTENTIAL
DISQUALIFYING CRIMINAL CONVICTIONS:
A. Felony
convictions for any of the following offenses, or their equivalents in any
other jurisdiction, are disqualifying criminal convictions that may disqualify
an applicant from receiving or retaining a license issued by the board:
(1) homicide, manslaughter, great bodily
harm, wounding, or maiming;
(2) trafficking, trafficking in, unlawful
distribution of, or possession of controlled substances;
(3) human trafficking, stalking,
kidnapping, false imprisonment, assault, aggravated assault, battery, or
aggravated battery;
(4) rape, criminal sexual penetration,
criminal sexual contact, incest, indecent exposure, sexual exploitation, or
other related felony sexual offenses;
(5) crimes involving adult abuse, neglect
or financial exploitation;
(6) crimes involving child abuse, neglect,
abandonment or solicitation;
(7) crimes involving robbery, larceny,
theft, extortion, burglary, bribery, fraud, forgery, embezzlement, breaking and
entering, damage to property, identity theft, arson, perjury, false pretenses,
credit card fraud, or receiving stolen property;
(8) practicing medicine without a license;
(9) failure to comply with a proclamation
of the governor;
(10) crimes involving the unlawful
possession, use, discharge, or sale of a firearm, weapon, or explosives;
(11) furnishing or bringing contraband or
drugs into a prion, jail, or juvenile detention facility;
(12) driving under the influence of
intoxicating liquor, substances or drugs;
(13) an attempt, solicitation, or conspiracy
involving any of the felonies in this subsection.
B. The
board shall not consider the fact of a criminal conviction as part of an
application for licensure unless the conviction in question is one of the
disqualifying criminal convictions listed in Subsection A of this rule.
C. The
board shall not deny, suspend or revoke a license on the sole basis of a
criminal conviction unless the conviction in question is one of the
disqualifying criminal convictions listed in Subsection A of this rule.
D. Nothing
in this rule prevents the board from denying an application or disciplining a
licensee on the basis of an individual’s conduct to the extent that such
conduct violated the Social Work Practice Act, regardless of whether the
individual was convicted of a crime for such conduct or whether the crime for
which the individual was convicted is listed as one of the disqualifying
criminal convictions listed in Subsection A of this rule.
E. In
connection with an application for licensure, the board shall not use,
distribute, disseminate, or admit into evidence at an adjudicatory proceeding
criminal records of any of the following:
(1) an arrest not followed by a valid
conviction;
(2) a conviction that has been sealed,
dismissed, expunged or pardoned;
(3) a juvenile adjudication; or
(4) a conviction for any crime other than
the disqualifying criminal convictions listed in Subsection A of this rule.
[16.63.13.9 NMAC – Rp, 16.63.13.9 NMAC, 3/13/2022; A, 10/07/2025]