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A. On or after September 1, 2022, it shall be unlawful for any person to operate a massage business without possessing a valid massage business license for each premises where the massage business operates.
B. Each massage business license shall specify the name under which the licensee is to operate, the address of the principal place of business, the expiration date, the number of the license, and any other information the City Clerk deems necessary.
C. The massage business shall display the license in a conspicuous place readily visible to persons entering the licensed premises. (Ord. 22-30)
A. In addition to the requirements set forth in article 1, part 4 of this chapter, the application for a massage business license shall include:
1. The full name and any other names under which each equity holder of the applicant is or has been known and the residence address, telephone number, and date of birth of each equity holder of the applicant;
2. A description of the specific types of services to be rendered;
3. Documentary evidence that the officers and managers of the applicant are at least a minimum of eighteen (18) years old;
4. Documentary evidence that the applicant has or will have possession of the premises to be licensed during the term of the license by ownership, lease, rental, or other arrangement;
5. A statement identifying the zone district of the premises; and
6. A detailed diagram showing the configuration of the premises to be licensed as follows:
a. The diagram shall be no larger than eight and one-half inches by eleven inches (8½" x 11");
b. The diagram shall include the dimensions and total square footage of the premises to be licensed but does not need to be drawn to scale;
c. The diagram shall designate the use of each room or other definitive area of the premises to be licensed;
d. The diagram shall show the type of control of the exterior areas of the premises to be licensed, including, without limitation, fences, walls, and entry/exit points;
e. If the premises to be licensed consists of multiple levels, a separate diagram shall be filed for each floor; and
f. The premises to be licensed shall be outlined in bold.
The Licensing Officer may waive the site diagram for renewal applications if the applicant adopts a diagram that was previously submitted, certifies that the configuration of the premises has not been altered since it was prepared and that the use of any area or room in the premises has not changed.
B. Each principal, managing agent, and equity holder shall meet the general standards and qualifications for an applicant as set forth in section 2.1.401.
C. Each applicant's, principal's, managing agent's, and equity holder's criminal history, any conviction or guilty plea to a charge based upon acts of dishonesty, fraud, deceit, violence, weapons, substance abuse or narcotics, sexual misconduct or prostitution related misconduct of any kind, regardless of the jurisdiction in which the act was committed, may be considered in a decision to grant, renew, revoke, or suspend the license.
D. In the event the Licensing Officer takes into consideration information concerning the applicant's, principal's, managing agent's, and equity holder's criminal history record, the Licensing Officer shall also consider any information provided by the applicant or licensee regarding the criminal history record, including, but not limited to, evidence of mitigating factors, rehabilitation, character references, and educational achievements, especially those items pertaining to the period of time between the applicant's last criminal conviction and the consideration of the application for a license or renewal. (Ord. 22-30)
The licensing requirements of this article do not apply to:
A. Public and private schools accredited by the state board of education or approved by the state division of private occupational schools;
B. Facilities providing massage services by employees of any governmental entity;
C. Training rooms of a recognized professional or amateur sports organization, dance troupe, bona fide athletic club, or other such athletic organization. For purposes of this subsection, a bona fide athletic club is an athletic club that receives ten percent (10%) or less of its gross income from providing massages to its members or the public;
D. Offices, clinics, and other facilities primarily used by state-licensed health care professionals, other than massage therapists, in the ordinary course of their health care profession. For purposes of this subsection, a licensed massage therapist may provide massage services in a facility that primarily is used for state-licensed health care services other than massage without obtaining a massage business license;
E. Barber shops, beauty salons, and other facilities at which barbers and cosmetologists licensed by the state provide massage services to the public in the ordinary course of their professions;
F. A place of business where a person offers to perform or performs massage for not more than seventy two (72) hours in any six-month period and the massage is part of a public or charity event;
G. A self-employed massage therapist operating out of the massage therapist's home or the client's home;
H. A spa or resort operated on the premises of a hotel with at least one hundred (100) rooms for overnight guests; or
I. A place of business which employs individuals who do not claim expressly or implicitly to be massage therapists and provides:
1. Practices using reflexology, auricular therapy, and meridian therapies that affect the reflexes of the body;
2. Practices using touch, words, and directed movements to deepen a person's awareness of movement patterns in his or her body, such as the Feldenkrais method, the Trager approach, and body-mind centering;
3. Practices using touch or healing touch to affect the human energy systems, such as reiki, shiatsu, and meridians;
4. Structural integration practices such as Rolfing and Hellerwork; and
5. The process of muscle activation techniques.
J. The Clerk shall promulgate rules and regulations for the exemption of premises used by self-employed massage therapists whose businesses satisfy exemption criteria set forth in the rules and regulations. Every exemption shall be issued in writing. In addition to such other requirements as the Clerk may establish, the exemption criteria shall require the massage therapist to provide:
1. A copy of the massage therapist's valid state massage therapist's license;
2. A copy of the massage therapist's valid government-issued photographic identity card;
3. A statement that the massage therapist is self-employed; and
4. Such other information as the Clerk requests. (Ord. 22-30)
A. In addition to the grounds set forth in article 1 of this chapter, a massage business license may be denied, suspended, or revoked if the applicant, or a managing agent, principal, or equity holder of the applicant:
1. Has made a willful misrepresentation in applying for and obtaining a license;
2. Has been previously denied a license under this part or has had a license issued under this part suspended or revoked;
3. Has had a massage business license/permit revoked or suspended in another jurisdiction;
4. Applicant's operation of a massage business would be a threat to the public health or safety;
5. Has violated any provision of this part or any other applicable law;
6. Has failed within the required timeframe to remit payment to the City for any fees incurred pursuant to this Code;
7. Has been convicted of operating without a license under this part or performing any act for which a license is required under this part; or
8. Has violated any of the provisions of this General Licensing Code.
B. The suspension or revocation of a massage business license shall be subject to the provisions of section 2.1.801, et seq., of this Chapter. (Ord. 22-30)
A. It shall be unlawful for any person to:
1. Directly or indirectly, personally or through an agent or employee, conduct any massage business, or to use in connection with the massage business any premises, in whole or in part, without possessing a valid massage business license for each premises where the massage business operates.
2. Make a willful misrepresentation in applying for or obtaining a massage business license.
3. Flee, attempt to flee, or elude inspection pursuant to this part.
B. It shall be unlawful for any principal or managing agent of a massage business to:
1. Employ any person as a massage therapist or to allow any person to work as a massage therapist in a massage business who does not possess both a valid government-issued, photographic identity card and a massage therapist license.
2. Encourage, permit, or tolerate any employee or client of the massage business to engage in specified sexual activities or to expose the employee's specified anatomical areas within the premises.
3. Fail to keep records as required by this part or fail to permit inspection of records as required by this part.
4. Fail to immediately report to law enforcement any specified sexual activities occurring in a massage business between an employee of the massage business and a client.
5. Permit the massage business premises to be used for living or sleeping quarters for any person when not otherwise permitted by this Code.
C. It shall be unlawful for any massage business to advertise specified sexual activities, prostitution, escort services, or other sexual services or to employ language in the text of any advertising or any images that would reasonably suggest to a prospective client that any specified sexual activities are available through the massage business or at the licensed premises.
D. It shall be unlawful for any massage business to operate between the hours of eleven o'clock (11:00) P.M. and five o'clock (5:00) A.M., inclusive.
E. Each principal, managing agent, and equity holder shall not violate, or permit to be violated, any local, State, or Federal law based on acts of dishonesty, fraud, deceit, violence, weapons, substance abuse or narcotics, sexual misconduct, or prostitution related misconduct of any kind, whether or not the acts were committed in the State of Colorado. (Ord. 22-30)
A. The managing agent and principals shall keep and maintain records for all employees and independent contractors of the massage business during the term of the person's employment and for at least three (3) years thereafter. These records shall, at a minimum, contain the following: name, age, current address and telephone numbers, description of the duties and responsibilities of the person, a copy of the valid government-issued photographic identity card of the person, and any other information reasonably required by the City Clerk's Office. The records shall also include a copy of the massage therapist license held by any massage therapist working on the premises.
B. The Police Department and the City Clerk's Office may inspect each licensed massage business to determine compliance with the provisions of this part. The Police Department or City Clerk's Office shall inspect the premises and records at any reasonable time during the hours of operation or apparent activity. The licensed premises, including any places of storage, shall be open and made immediately available for inspection. Where any part of the licensed premises consists of a locked area, the area shall be unlocked and made available for inspection without delay upon request of the Police Department or City Clerk's Office.
C. A self-employed massage therapist who obtains a premises exemption pursuant to subsection 2.3.105.J shall maintain a copy of the exemption. Upon request of the Police Department or the Clerk's Office, a massage therapist who is occupying a premises where massage is offered shall produce the exemption, the massage therapist's state-issued license and a valid government-issued photographic identity card for inspection. (Ord. 22-30)
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