Quote Originally Posted by Nosmo33
By the time a patients paper work is returned requesting a new application form be submitted, the Phys. Cert will have expired. This is positively byzantine and is not acceptable. Patients, care givers, 'center" owners seem to be held to one legal standard, while the CDPHE is held to another (not complying w/ time frames mandated by Amendment 20) Just my opinion.
I agree.

Here is the response I got to the last email...
You have to have the new form notarized.

The date that you sign the form must be the same as the date the notary signs the form.

The state offers no credits.

>>> My email 7/14/2010 4:40 PM >>>
So I will still have to pay to have it re notarized? Or do I just fill out the
new form and send it with the old one? If I have to get it re notarized is the
conflict in dates going to be an issue? Will you be applying credits to
reinstatement fees for the extra costs people are going to be acquiring? Alot of
us are on a tight budget.
I think he misunderstood my question about the dates...

[Edit] You will need a new registry form and it will need to be notarized. I'm waiting to hear back about the conflicting dates between the doctors form and the new registry form. [/Edit]