Florida new-hire forms
Florida Vet New-Hire Compliance Forms
Florida rules that affect staff acknowledgments and training records.
Verified · 2026-07-06Safety-plan acknowledgments
Florida does not operate an OSHA-approved State Plan. Federal OSHA applies directly to private-sector veterinary employers in Florida, so the federal baseline in this plan is the operative standard — there is no Florida OSHA overlay that adds requirements for private employers. (State and local government workers are not covered by federal OSHA in Florida.) 1
Controlled-substance access and records
No separate state controlled-substance registration. No Florida statute in Chapter 893 creates one for veterinarians; the operative credentials are the Florida veterinary license and federal DEA registration — Chapter 893's "practitioner" definition covers a licensed veterinarian "provided such practitioner holds a valid federal controlled substance registry number". A veterinarian may prescribe, administer, dispense, mix, or prepare controlled substances for use on animals only. The $100 dispensing-practitioner registration reaches only dispensing "for human consumption". 2 3 4
Theft/loss add-on (beyond DEA Form 106): report theft or significant loss of controlled substances to the county sheriff within 24 hours of discovery. 5
Florida veterinary medical records: at least 3 years. Florida requires an individual medical record on every patient examined or treated, kept not less than three years after date of last entry. Longer than the federal two-year CS minimum, this covers the full chart (history, exam findings, diagnoses, and drugs prescribed, administered, or dispensed with route, strength, and dosage). 6
X-ray and sharps handling
Florida registers x-ray machines through the Department of Health, Bureau of Radiation Control. Each machine must be registered on DH Form 1107 within 30 days after acquisition and before use, and you must designate an individual responsible for radiation protection. Registration/inspection fees renew annually on or before October 28; the veterinary schedule is $50 for the first tube/unit and $34 for each additional tube/unit. Two change-reporting rules apply: (1) report in writing within 30 days any change to the Certificate of Registration information — the report covers "name, address of installation change, receipt, sale, transfer, or disposal of any radiation machine or major component"; (2) any registrant or person who sells, leases, transfers, relocates, lends or disposes of a radiation machine or major component must notify the Department within 15 days after the action, on DH Form 1107. A sale, transfer, relocation, or disposal triggers both rules — meet the earlier 15-day deadline. 7 8
Florida also sets veterinary-specific operating rules: dead-man exposure switch and beam-limiting/timer devices; the operator stands at least 6 feet from the animal and tube head and outside the useful beam, or behind a barrier, or wears a protective apron and monitoring device; animals should be immobilized by restraints where practicable, and any person who must hold an animal wears protective apron and gloves, stays out of the useful beam, and is dose-monitored. In addition, the Board's premises minimum standards make personnel radiation monitoring a flat requirement for in-house radiology — "Monitoring of exposure of personnel to radiation required" — so keep dosimetry in place for all x-ray personnel rather than relying on any exposure-threshold trigger. 9 10
Florida regulates sharps as biomedical waste, and veterinary clinics are expressly named as biomedical waste generators under the Department of Health rules. "Biomedical waste" is defined by statute to include discarded disposable sharps and veterinary waste that contains human-disease-causing agents; the rule definition lists "discarded sharps" with no contamination qualifier (unlike absorbents and devices, covered only when blood-saturated or visibly contaminated) — treat every discarded sharp as biomedical waste. 11 12
Sources
Verified against primary sources on 2026-07-06. Each entry shows its own check date.
- U.S. Department of Labor / OSHA — OSHA State Plans — Florida — State Plans — Florida under federal OSHA jurisdiction. www.osha.gov/stateplans checked 2026-07-06
- Florida Legislature / Fla. Stat. — Fla. Stat. 893.02(23) (2025) — Definitions — controlled-substance 'practitioner' (veterinarian; DEA-registry predicate). www.leg.state.fl.us/statutes/index.cfm?App_mode=Display_Statute&URL=0800-0899/0893/... checked 2026-07-06
- Florida Legislature / Fla. Stat. — Fla. Stat. 893.05(1)(c) (2025) — Practitioners administering controlled substances — veterinarian authority. www.leg.state.fl.us/statutes/index.cfm?App_mode=Display_Statute&URL=0800-0899/0893/... checked 2026-07-06
- Florida Legislature / Fla. Stat. — Fla. Stat. 465.0276(2) (2025) — Dispensing practitioner — human-consumption scope of registration. www.leg.state.fl.us/statutes/index.cfm?App_mode=Display_Statute&URL=0400-0499/0465/... checked 2026-07-06
- Florida Legislature / Fla. Stat. — Fla. Stat. 893.07(5)(b) (2025) — Controlled substances — 24-hour theft/significant-loss report to county sheriff. www.leg.state.fl.us/statutes/index.cfm?App_mode=Display_Statute&URL=0800-0899/0893/... checked 2026-07-06
- Florida Board of Veterinary Medicine / Fla. Admin. Code — Fla. Admin. Code r. 61G18-18.002(1),(3),(4) (eff. 2-13-2025) — Maintenance of Medical Records — 3-year retention. www.flrules.org/gateway/ruleno.asp?id=61G18-18.002 checked 2026-07-06
- Florida Dept. of Health / Fla. Admin. Code — Fla. Admin. Code r. 64E-5.511 (eff. 3-21-2016) — Registration of Radiation Machines (DH Form 1107; annual Oct 28 renewal; veterinary fees). www.flrules.org/gateway/ruleno.asp?id=64E-5.511 checked 2026-07-06
- Florida Dept. of Health / Fla. Admin. Code — Fla. Admin. Code r. 64E-5.511(5)(a)1. (eff. 3-21-2016) — Radiation machines — 15-day notification for sale/lease/transfer/relocation/lending/disposal. www.flrules.org/gateway/ruleno.asp?id=64E-5.511 checked 2026-07-06
- Florida Dept. of Health / Fla. Admin. Code — Fla. Admin. Code r. 64E-5.509 (eff. 4-4-1989) — Veterinary Medicine X-Ray Operations — equipment and operating requirements. www.flrules.org/gateway/ruleno.asp?id=64E-5.509 checked 2026-07-06
- Florida Board of Veterinary Medicine / Fla. Admin. Code — Fla. Admin. Code r. 61G18-15.002(2)(a)5.,(2)(b)1.c (eff. 4-5-2018) — Minimum Standards for Premises — pharmacy: CS log, locking cabinet, DEA certificate, expired drugs, dispensing containers/labels; radiology personnel monitoring. www.flrules.org/gateway/ruleno.asp?id=61G18-15.002 checked 2026-07-06
- Florida Dept. of Health / Fla. Admin. Code — Fla. Admin. Code r. 64E-16.002(2),(3),(23) (eff. 6-3-1997) — Biomedical waste definitions — veterinary clinics as generators; sharps in scope. www.flrules.org/gateway/ruleno.asp?id=64E-16.002 checked 2026-07-06
- Florida Legislature / Fla. Stat. — Fla. Stat. 381.0098(2)(a) (2025) — Biomedical waste — statutory definition (includes veterinary waste and discarded sharps). www.leg.state.fl.us/statutes/index.cfm?App_mode=Display_Statute&URL=0300-0399/0381/... checked 2026-07-06