California Board of Accountancy

California Board of Accountancy

Sign outside the Sacramento offices of the California Board of Accountancy
Board overview
Formed1901 (1901)
JurisdictionCalifornia
HeadquartersSacramento, California
Annual budget$11,054,291 (2011/12)[1]
Board executives
  • Joseph Rosenbaum, CPA, President
  • Dominic Franzella, Executive Officer
Parent boardCalifornia Department of Consumer Affairs
Websitewww.dca.ca.gov/cba/

The California Board of Accountancy (CBA), created by statute in 1901, is a semi-autonomous State of California agency under the California Department of Consumer Affairs whose purpose is to protect consumers by ensuring only qualified licensees practice public accountancy in accordance with established professional standards in California.

The CBA currently regulates over 5,000 firms and nearly 81,000 Certified Public Accountant (CPA) licensees, the largest group of licensed accounting professionals in the nation. The agency is unique in California in its authority to license and discipline not only individuals but also firms including partnerships and corporations.[2] Its mandate is to regulate the accounting profession for the protection of the public by establishing and maintaining standards of qualification and conduct within the profession. It fulfills this mandate primarily through its authority to license.

  1. ^ "Where the Money Goes" (PDF). Update. California Board of Accountancy: 7. Spring 2012. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2012-07-16. Retrieved 2012-06-07.
  2. ^ Mission, Vision and Authority Archived 2010-10-06 at the Wayback Machine, California Board of Accountancy, accessed June 29, 2010