Organizations, Professionals Weigh In on Alternative CPA Pathway
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October 28, 2024
The American Institute of CPAs (AICPA) and the National Association of State Boards of Accountancy (NASBA) recently proposed an alternative pathway to the standard 150-hour requirement: the CPA Competency-Based Experience Pathway. Comments on the proposal are due by Dec. 6.
CPA firms, CPA societies, accounting professionals and others are expected to submit comments. Several have already issued statements:
Changes to the UAA
The AICPA and NASBA are also recommending changes to the Uniform Accountancy Act (UAA). The UAA model legislation gives state legislatures and boards of accountancy a national model that can be adopted in full or in part to meet the needs of their own jurisdiction. The changes in the UAA provide for implementing the competency model. They would also make changes to the current substantial equivalency provisions in the UAA, which would be monitored and implemented by NASBA.
NJCPA Position
The NJCPA Board of Trustees supports licensure with an additional year of experience instead of 30 credits but does not support the proposal’s requirement that the first year of experience be done within the competency-based framework outlined in their proposal. We are concerned about the onerous compliance requirements on employers to document specific competencies. We are also concerned about the potential to disproportionately impact small firms.
The Board did not support the draft UAA’s proposal to adopt a modified version of the current substantial equivalency system to provide for interstate mobility. Instead, the Board supports the concept of “automatic mobility,” which provides mobility privileges to any person with a CPA license in any other state, so long as they have passed the CPA exam, received a bachelor’s degree, and have two years of experience.
A member working group was formed by the Board to compose the NJCPA’s response by November, which will be shared with members and interested stakeholders. We’d also like to hear from you at feedback@njcpa.org.
You can learn more about the proposals at our free webinar on Nov. 13 or Nov. 19.