House Licensing and Occupations Committee advances caterer-license changes, three professional compacts and emergency shelter rule changes

House Licensing and Occupations Committee · February 26, 2026

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Summary

The committee approved an amended Senate bill clarifying caterer licenses (including pushing a tobacco-license date to July 1, 2026), three interstate licensure compacts for respiratory care, dietitians and athletic trainers, a bill easing temporary-structure rules for emergency sheltering, and a change to let previously barred physicians seek reinstatement of state licensure; all measures were passed and advanced to the House floor.

The House Licensing and Occupations Committee on [date] approved a package of bills that the panel’s chair said will clarify regulatory obligations for businesses and ease licensure portability for health professionals.

Senator Julie Rocky Adams, who presented Senate Bill 145, told the committee the measure updates how the Department of Alcoholic Beverage Control regulates licensed caterers and “clarifies where and how licensed caterers may sell and serve alcoholic beverages.” She said the committee substitute also moves a tobacco-license effective date to July 1, 2026, to avoid disenfranchising some license holders.

Representative William Lawrence described House Bill 254 as a practical fix for emergency sheltering. Lawrence cited a Western Kentucky response in which out-of-state trailers required plumbing inspections before occupancy and said, “These trailers cost around $250,000 to be brought in,” arguing the substitute ensures temporary units can be used to house people after disasters.

The committee approved three interstate licensure compacts to provide portability for health professionals. Representative Steve Bratcher outlined the respiratory-care compact, saying it is intended to help military families and allow states to share disciplinary information. Representative Vanessa Grosssell introduced the dietitians compact and said the measure includes a newly added background-check requirement; she said 15 states are currently participating, and Kentucky would become the 16th if it joins. Representative Kevin Jackson and representatives of the Kentucky Athletic Trainer Society introduced the athletic-trainer compact; committee members were told seven states are needed to establish the compact’s commission and the measure has been listed as a DOD priority.

Representative Tom Smith explained House Bill 584, which removes a statutory word barring lifetime reinstatement for physicians who lost a license following investigation or criminal charges. “All this does is take the word ‘permanent’ out and gives them ‘may,’” Smith said, adding that federal authorities retain discretion over prescribing privileges.

Committee members asked about administrative and budget implications in a few instances. Representative Ault asked whether the ABC’s staffing needs to implement SB 145 had been addressed; Senator Adams said staffing impacts were not discussed. Representatives asked whether medical and professional associations had taken positions on the licensure-restoration change; Smith said he had met with associations that declined to take a position.

Each item was approved by committee following committee-substitute adoption and roll-call votes, and chairman Cook announced they would be reported to the full House for consideration. The committee adjourned after recording final procedural items.

What’s next: All measures will be scheduled for the House floor for further consideration; committee records show the bills were advanced by committee votes that the clerk recorded.