Tuesday, February 21, 2012
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State Regulation of Yoga Teacher Training: Facts, Opinions and Firsthand Experience

Yoga Alliance is putting together a comprehensive report on state regulation of Yoga teacher training. Our initial research shows that over 40 states have regulation that could be applied to Yoga schools. To gain a better understanding of these laws and how they are being applied in each state, we are reviewing materials from states and having conversations with RYSs in each state to share their firsthand experiences with our community.

Yoga Alliance’s Position on State Regulation

We believe that Yoga teacher training must be held to the highest practicable standards. These standards are best developed and implemented by those with a comprehensive knowledge of the ancient practice and historical traditions of Yoga. It is our belief that government regulatory attempts are financially motivated and state regulators are ill-informed about the nature of Yoga and the practice of teaching Yoga to others. Regulation unfairly burdens smaller Yoga schools resulting in a decrease in the availability and quality of instruction.

That said, we recognize that there are different perspectives on this issue.

Varying Opinions

Through our research, we’ve heard stories ranging from daunting accounts of financial burden and arbitrary regulatory efforts to reports from schools that banded together to achieve exemptions. We also heard from schools who strongly believe that regulation enhanced their business reputation and the overall credibility of Yoga teacher trainings. We sincerely hope that our community can work together, practicing the yamas and niyamas, in our pursuit of what we collectively feel is best to preserve the ancient teachings of Yoga in the US.

Different Tactics, Same Result

In May 2011, the Texas Yoga Association garnered the support of thousands of yogis across the Longhorn state to celebrate victory of an amended Texas statute. The amendment redefined “career school” to specifically exempt Yoga teacher training programs from regulation by the Texas Workforce Commission. Jennifer Buergemeister of the Texas Yoga Association explained, “This was a huge victory for the Yoga community in Texas. Regulating Yoga as a career school detracted from its rightful place as a spiritual and philosophical tradition. It is rare that the little guys can win, but when you are truly passionate about what you believe in, you can achieve the change that you dream of.

At the same time Texas yogis were celebrating their victory with attention from the local media, large rallies and concerts on their state Capitol steps, another victory was being much more quietly celebrated in Louisiana. Through strategic contact with the Louisiana state legislature, a law which amended Louisiana’s proprietary school law to exempt Yoga programs was signed by the Louisiana Governor in June 2011. The full legislative effort was resolved in less than three months, without a single article in the media. The champion of Louisiana’s efforts, Michael Morton, explained, “Throughout the legislative process, we ensured that no press was involved and actually avoided many contacts by the press. It was important to stay under the radar and not ruffle any feathers of our state legislature.”

Yoga Alliance congratulates the hard work of both Texas and Louisiana in successfully achieving exemptions in 2011. The fact that their playbooks for victory were so different offers an inspiring lesson for Yoga teacher trainings in other states looking to replicate their successes. If there is one piece of advice Michael Morton wants to share with Yoga teacher trainings facing state regulation, it is simply, “Finding a legislative solution doesn’t have to be costly and it doesn’t have to be a battle.” The legislative success falls on the heels of successful efforts in Virginia and New York who also won exemptions in 2010.

What We Can Do

We thank all of you who have extended your time already to share your thoughts with us. If you have experience with regulation in your state and would be open to speaking with us, please contact our community development team.

Along with our research, Yoga Alliance has recently launched YA+ , the professional society for Yoga teachers, schools and studios. YA+ will be able to serve the Yoga community in ways that go beyond the scope of YA, which include the potential for organizing grassroots and legislative lobbying, and creating voluntary certification programs.

The YA+ Community is an exclusive online space to connect with other Yoga teachers about issues we are facing. The online community now has state groups that will allow you to network with your peers and share information specific to your state.

Stay tuned for the full research report soon!

Sincerely,
Yoga Alliance

TYA's Efforts in the Texas Legislature

Final Legislative Report

As we hope you have heard by now, the efforts of the Texas Yoga Association to move the Texas Legislature to exempt the training of yoga teachers from undue regulation as a 'career school' were successful! We're happy to present this final report of our legislative efforts! Namaste!

A Note From TYA

After a press release and email inquiry sent to many top yoga teachers around the United States from a very large yoga program in Austin stating that we see yoga as a hobby, there may be confusion about the important details with the TYA’s mission and our stand for yoga in Texas. This seems to be getting messy. I think we need our supporters help to clean it up. Most of you have been there with us from the beginning and know the heart and souls behind this cause. Now some pro-regulation entities have begun to challenge our position unfairly to oppose us by using glamour words and promises to steer those who will listen in through the back door to visit the idea of regulation. We see a very slippery slope on the horizon.

TYA considers yoga a way of life, and a lifelong practice. The practice is handed down teacher to student. It is the guided exploration of the breath and body. The guide, the instructor, is mindful and careful during the session so as to promote body awareness and wellness. Yoga addresses wellness from every aspect including diet, hygiene, sleeping, speaking, movement, stillness, and meditation.

The request for exemption in the bills does not mean that the TYA disagrees with professional standards. Such standards can be explored, defined, and maintained from within the yoga community itself. The TWC, as we have heard in the case of Genevieve Yellin, is NOT interested in the training curriculum or the module's standards, what's being taught or how. It is interested in the revenue! Why else would TWC REQUIRE audits of training centers and levy fees for being in business?

A new path needs to emerge. It needs to be the combination of TYA and the Professionals. If the PYTA is interested in becoming yoga facilitators within the medical community, then that association should develop its own criteria and standards in conjunction with the AMA, NOT with every single yoga outfit. Not all yoga is medically driven. We understand that by its very nature, yoga promotes individual wellness and prevents serious disease and ailment. However, that does not mean that it is essentially or primarily for the western medical community. Yoga is for EVERYBODY.

Yoga should have a more prominent role in the patient's healing process as it should in the preventative stages. Yoga asana, meditation, pranayama, and yogic diet would do well for the healing patient, yet it is only ONE aspect of several curative methods.

The problem with the regulation of ALL yoga studios is that neighborhood studio owners will be burdoned by the bureaucratic rigmarole and heavy taxation. Those studios, who operate on enough profit to stay open and for the owner to live modestly, will CLOSE DOWN due to the unnecessary weight of bureaucracy and government interference. That studio is somebody's sanctuary, somebody's home, somebody's only place to go for healing. TWC and any movement toward regulation with some ideal notion that it will help yoga teachers and the health care system by being seen as a “professional” in the medical community is not only far stretched and without trend, it is a menacing threat to that sacred space we call an intimate yoga studio...

Blessings!

Please "like" this if you agree by going to our Facebook page or group.

Cathal Keane & Jenny Buergermeister

Petition For Yoga

The Texas Workforce Commission (TWC) has sent letters to numerous yoga studios and individuals that offer yoga teacher training requiring that they either (a)become state-licensed career schools regulated by the TWC at great cost and administrative effort, (b) show how they are specifically exempted or (c) shut down immediately. The TWC is operating on the mistaken premise and interpretation that offering a teacher training program for yoga teachers classifies a yoga studio as a "post-secondary career school or college." Why? Because requiring yoga studios to become licensed by the State of Texas generates revenues for the state.

Texas yoga students are adequately protected under the existing Texas state laws. The Texas Workforce Commission has not received a single complaint from a yoga student who enrolled in one of these programs.TWC admits that it has no knowledge of proper yoga instruction nor has it established experts to oversee the imposition of regulations on yoga curriculum. The proposed licensure does not benefit yoga students. This is purely a revenue generating operation. The Texas Workforce Commission is not equipped to oversee advanced yoga training programs. In fact, Yoga studios are not career schools and cannot be treated as such. Licensure offends the tradition of passing yoga down from teacher and student. In addition, Yoga is an expression of physical movement, meditation and spiritual practice more than a vocation. This should classify Yoga as an art form, so should have the same alignment as Martial Arts or Dance.

This licensure also creates undue financial and administrative hardship on yoga studios. The impact of these regulations means increased costs for students, discontinuance of advanced programs, and negative effects on our yoga teachers. This is unacceptable; the government has no business regulating yoga teacher training.

The bottom line is that regulation by the Texas Workforce Commission is not appropriate for yoga studios and does not benefit yoga students. In order to stop this, the law needs to be changed so that yoga is specifically exempted from the statute the Texas Workforce Commission. TWC currently seeks to erroneously enforce against yoga teacher training programs. Regardless of what stance is taken on this important issue, of whether or not there should be some standards regarding what a yoga teacher training program consists of, the State of Texas/ TWC is not the proper entity to make that determination.

Please help us to raise awareness of the importance of keeping yoga free of regulation. You can take action by attending our next legislative session with our state representatives to effect a change in the law.

Please sign our petition for yoga in Texas by visiting our petition site.

Yoga for Texas Petition

Latest News

TYA Update - Meeting with the TWC

On Friday, January 29, 2010, the Houston and Dallas charters of the Texas Yoga Association and legal advisers met with the Texas Workforce Commission in Austin. The purpose of this meeting was to help the Texas Workforce Commission understand how yoga studios operate and the distinction of training programs held at studios from programs offered by vocational schools. Meetings lasted two hours and ended with the Texas Workforce Commission agreeing to give the Texas Yoga Association more time to assimilate before the Texas Workforce Commission takes any additional action against the yoga studios and teachers who have filed responses through the Texas Yoga Association.

Two things were clear by the end of these discussions:

  1. The united response by yoga studios and teachers coordinated through the Texas Yoga Association has positively engaged the standing of yoga with state regulators. The continued growth and organization of the Texas Yoga Association is vital for advocating for the integrity of yoga. This was a great first step in educating our government about yoga but it is only the beginning; and

  2. Many yoga studios and teachers who have received correspondence from the Texas Workforce Commission have failed to respond. It is critical that these recipients file a response. If you have received a letter from the Texas Workforce Commission and have not sent in a response, and even if your fifteen day time frame to respond has expired, we urge you to immediately respond to the state. The state will enforce these inquiries with increasing force until you respond. The Texas Yoga Association resources are available if you would like to unite with our efforts.

You have an opportunity to hear directly from the Texas Yoga Association and the Texas Workforce Commission at the Texas Yoga Conference later this month. Please join us on Friday, February 19, 2010 at 7 p.m. to become familiar with the Texas Yoga Association. This is another opportunity for our community to come together, learn more about how the scrutiny of the state may affect you and contribute your voice in evaluating the possible challenges and solutions for the Texas yoga community. On Saturday, February 20, 2010 at 8 a.m., the Texas Yoga Association will host a talk given by the Texas Workforce Commission. The Texas Workforce Commission will discuss the regulatory scope of the state education code and the possible exemptions available to qualifying programs.

The Texas Yoga Association needs your help. We have set up local charters Dallas, Fort Worth, Houston and Austin, and we need to continue reaching out to establish charters in other regions. We need representation from the entire state in order to speak on behalf of the Texas yoga community as one. Fundraising and membership have begun to generate donations for our political action fund. Our legal advisers have already spent 60+ hours and our lobbyists have spent 40+ hours of time pro bono supporting us. We are blessed by the generosity of these resources but we must start generating funds to sustain ourselves. Please consider donating or becoming a member today. For a limited time, charter memberships to the Texas Yoga Association are available for $75.00! Charter members receive full member benefits, including access to special features on the website and periodic newsletters. Most importantly, you will be showing your support for the efforts of the Texas Yoga Association to advocate for Texas Yoga.

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Upcoming Events

Journey Into the Heart with Krishna Das
January 18, 2012
Unity Church
2929 Unity Drive, Houston


Texas Yoga Conference
February 17 - 19, 2012
University of Houston Houston, TX


40-hour Advanced Asana/Sequencing Training with Les Leventhal
February 20 - 24, 2012
Houston, TX


Embodying the Flow: A Prana Flow Teacher Training Module
April 27-29, 2012
CuraYoga Heights
Houston, TX


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