Category Archives: Uncategorized

ANGRY INTERIOR DECORATORS – 1

PROFESSIONAL INTERIOR DESIGNERS- O

http://idpcinfo.wordpress.com/2010/04/17/patti-morrow-idpc-florida-interior-designer-names-to-be-expunged/

So we have raised the white flag on the semantic issue of ‘Interior Design”

We do not own it, we cannot claim it as our own. Apparently anybody can…even though all legitimate resources lead us to believe that it has a body of knowledge that can only be acquired through education, apprenticeship and testing.

At what point will we realize that this is not an issue of interior decorators vs. interior designers?  But it is a campaign/battle/struggle (insert your own war or sport metaphor here ________) between Certified Interior Designers and those who are merely interior designers?

We could be well on our way to distinguishing ourselves via credentialing and a strong unified public relations campaign. Unfortunately we got lost for the past 37 years trying to figure out who we really are.

AAAAAAAAArrrrrrrrggggggggggggggghhhhhhhhhhhhh!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

QOL vs. HSW

Protecting Health Safety & Welfare (HSW) is the current standard by which all efforts to regulate the profession of Interior Design are based. Period. It is the primary aspect of all of our skills, knowledge and service that we present as our greatest, and legally defensible, contribution to society. Unfortunately protecting not only the health and safety but the welfare of the public is such a broad objective it is virtually impossible to define what that really entails.  Certainly John Q. Public can’t comprehend it and many of our policy makers are in the same HGTV boat.  Nevermind that I know of no designer that would willingly, or knowingly, create an interior space that was anything but safe (meets all codes), healthy (addresses indoor air quality, utilizes daylight, does not exude toxic chemicals, etc.) and improves the welfare of the user (not sure how that is actually measured). Furthermore I keep going back to the old adages- “you cannot legislate stupidity” and conversely “the government cannot make you act professional” but I digress…..

It does not take a rocket scientist to know that designing a space that is unsafe, unhealthy and/or purposely detrimental to the users welfare would be unethical, immoral and just plain bad for business. Lets face it if you created unsafe, unhealthy and physiologically and psychologically debilitating spaces you would not last long. There are lots of safety systems in place to make sure this does not happen already.

I am willing to accept that there are unscrupulous, unqualified and inept designers out there. I also believe that the government has a certain responsibility to protect us from those who intentionally set out to harm us….in other words I do believe that it is Uncle Sam’s job to protect us from us…something the tea partiers and ID’s arch-nemesis the Institute for Justice would disagree with.  But I digress….Yes those of us who are supposedly certified and have proven our competency via practice and examination can (and should) protect the health, safety and welfare of the public/our clients. But so do Architects, Professional Engineers, Licensed Contractors and Fire Marshalls. What impetus do lawmakers have to add another redundant layer of regulation other than to collect administrative fees and perpetuate governmental beaurarcracy? Well it’s a hard sell.

So maybe we should step back and really consider if there might be another model for validating our worth to society. PROFESSIONALINTERIORDESIGNER prefers to think that his work improves quality of life (QOL) much more than it protects HSW. In fact that is why our clients hire me and I would bet that is how we really sell ourselves.

Shouldn’t this be the flame by which we light our professional torch?

IT’S THE LAW….SOMEWHERE…SOMEHOW!

In an effort to make this blog more than a forum for my skewed perspective on the state of the profession of interior design I have created a tab that will call up a list of Interior Design Legislation in the U.S. and eventually globally. No, we are not the only people dealing with this issue.

At this time I am still testing format and assembling information please bear with me.

There are several sites that provide similar information but all of them are either in the pro-regulation or anti-regulation camps. None look at this issue from a neutral perspective. Each side is reluctant to acknowledge victories or defeats that do not serve their effort. Many are not current. It is very difficult to know what is happening in all states simultaneously. Frankly PROFESSIONALINTERIORDESIGNER has found the most accurate and current accounting of the legislation of Interior Design can be found on the Anti-Regulation side. Over the past 3 years they are able to claim numerous victories so they are quick to tout those. I however, will do my best to verify all claims.

PROFESSIONALINTERIORDESIGNER’s version will include a revision date, and info on legislative status when possible.  I will try to update it once a month or whenever critical information becomes available.  I also hope to begin acknowledging Interior Design regulation efforts on a global basis.

THIS SHOULD KEEP ME OUT OF TROUBLE.

We are crawling out of the woodwork….er woodgrain laminate

http://www.dsasociety.com/index.cfm

So here is another site for disgruntled interior decorators claiming status as interior design professionals. 

The longer we sleep at our professional steering wheel the more confusing the map from professional status to government regulation becomes.

The Students Get ‘IT’ Why Can’t We?

IT being the benefit of having a singular entity that represents the profession of interior design.

Our students struggle with the issue of aligning themselves with 2 seemingly similar (they don’t know what they don’t know at this point) professional organizations that both want their membership dues (albeit greatly discounted). As instructors and supposedly knowledgeable advisors it is our job to promote the importance of such membership.

Membership still has its privileges unfortunately Professionalinteriordesigner is not a very good BS’er (hard to believe isn’t it?) so he has difficulty acting as if it is perfectly normal to have two organizations representing one profession. Not to mention we have students that simply cannot afford duplicate membership dues. So we have created our own umbrella student group appropriately called iDesign. We still encourage that students become members in ASID and IIDA or both but if the student is unsure, unwilling or unable to join either they can join iDesign for a nominal fee. Membership in iDesign provides all members with notification of ASID or IIDA student events so they can still participate. But more importantly the iDesign group, which is in fact run by ID students for ID students, creates its own programs and events. Some are ASID and IIDA sponsored events but many are funded solely by iDesign dues and nominal admission fees when appropriate.

As they graduate (when they begin to realize what they don’t know) we find that most students will gravitate toward the one organization that fits their career path…ASID for residential work or IIDA for commercial work. This is good in that it facilitates their efforts to sit for the NCIDQ exam. But it does exacerbate the disparity and continuing schism between those that practice “residential” interior design and those that do not.

Maybe this is the way it should be….not as long as I am alive it won’t!

Is It A New Pair-A-Dime Or…….

Is it just another case of ARCHITECTURAL in-DIGEST-ion?

Architectural Digest is a American monthly magazine. Its principal subject is interior design, not architecture as the name of the magazine might suggest … ( en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Architectural_Digest )

Okay enough wordplay….where am I going with this?  The past couple of weeks have been very enlightening for Professionalinteriordesigner. I have attended several conferences and professional presentations in which the focus was interior design education and the state of the art in workplace design.  I can honestly say that after sitting through at least 15 hours of presentations and discussions specifically pertaining to “Interior Design” I did not see one picture of a “beautiful”, “award winning”, “magazine-worthy”, “sumptuous”, “cozy” or “insert your own mindless adjective here” interior space.

My take on this is that more (and more) of us are now focused on identifying the design problem at hand, analyzing the process by which the design problem was solved and most importantly confirming whether the final design solution contributed to the betterment of our built environment. It’s not how good the space looks…it’s whether the space actually improved the lives and/or livelihoods of the occupants. Aesthetics is no longer the primary defining quality of a successful project.   The pretty picture of some unlivable or unworkable interior tableau is becoming our professional albatross.  Many of our so-called Interior Design trade magazines continue to ahem….dwell on the image and not the substance.  I have experienced many an interior space that photographed well but was unlivable.  Why do we continue to celebrate this?

Oh I know this high faluttin’ type of intellectual validation has been going on for some time now..particularly amongst us academics. But given the inability of our profession to distinguish itself and validate its value to society merely by how good we can make a space look the time is right for a paradigm shift…. the reality is in fact changing. Design educators get-it. Our students get-it. Now if our professional organizations would collectively “get-it” maybe we can achieve the level of respect that we deserve without pissing off our peers or getting bogged down in a seemingly intractable legal battle that serves no real purpose.

MYOPIC VITRIOLE OR VISIONARY EMPOWERMENT

I have been thinking about this issue way more than most sane people……..Unfortunately defining the professional domain of Interior Design is a mind numbingly complex, confusing, and completely debatable issue. I certainly understand why many of my peers avoid it like the plague.

In our case (the United States) we have convinced ourselves that it is the government’s responsibility to tell us who is a qualified interior designer and who is not. We have been trying for 35+ years to obtain Uncle Sam’s oversight to help us weed out the interior designer wannabe’s. That effort has caused an insurmountable backlash that, those of us who care about such things, find deeply troubling. I have spent much of this blog waxing (what the hell does that mean anyway) unpoetic about the problems inherent in pursuing government regulation of professional issues that are clearly the responsibility of the profession to deal with.

In my mind we (the profession) have become blindly devoted to a form of professional legitimization that has actually caused more negative public relations than progress. Despite what you might think of the anti-regulation effort -do not think that it is ineffective or short lived.

If you are unaware that there is a concerted effort to de-professionalize Interior Design you are welcome to inform yourselves here;

http://www.idpcinfo.org/

http://www.ij.org/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=2376&Itemid=249

Now assuming that you look at both sides of this issue objectively I hope that you might possibly reach the same conclusion as Professionalinteriordesigner.  What we have here is an absolute debacle.  As long as we pursue government oversight of our professional domain we can expect a concerted and effective push-back. So much so that we are creating enemies out of allies. Never mind the expense of untold financial and intellectual capital on this effort. This is just stupid.

So I have been looking at how others have pursued professional legitimization of interior design. Yes it is in fact a global issue. This is best defined by this organization;

 http://www.ifiworld.org/

If Professionalinteriordesigner were to suddenly be anointed Supreme Leader of the Interior Design profession I would make IFI the de facto representative organization for the profession and I would instill a global credential system that would provide indisputable and globally defensible professional legitimization. 

Some call me a dreamer.

OMG! I Don’t Know Whether to LOL or

COL (Cry out Loud)….So my mom decorated our house..does that make her an interior designer? Well maybe- but unfortunately I am not an overhyped multi-millionaire pre-post pubescent media mogul….actually I am an overjaded multi-in-debt middle age talentless blog-o-phile.  Now even I am beginning to question my career path.

My mom’s an interior designer so my house is going to be perfect all the time,”

http://www.hollywoodlife.com/2010/04/03/miley-cyrus-moving-out-house/

The Case for Self-Regulation

There are typically two sides to the issue of licensing Interior Designers.  There are those that believe the government should regulate the practice of Interior Design and conversely there are those that believe that Interior Design should not be regulated at all…by anybody.  Well Professional Interior Designer may be the only proponent of a third side to the regulation of Interior Design story- self regulation…he hopes he can convince others that there may in fact be 3 sides to this coin. It goes like this:

In order for a profession to be valid it must have processes in place to: educate its members, provide training and test their comprehension of the profession’s body of knowledge. The professional domain must also have a governing entity to accredit and police the validation process and to instill ethical behaviour amongst its members and continued education at a minimum. In most cases once a member has served their internship and proven competence they receive credentials and are granted membership rights in the professional society (see fig. 1).  This is the idea anyway.PhotobucketUnfortunately for the profession of Interior Design it is my opinion that we have failed at establishing a singular governing body that is recognized as the symbolic home, or headquarters, of the professional domain. Essentially we are unable to regulate our own profession. We are forced to  rely on the government to tell us who is qualified and who is not (see Fig. 2). 

Photobucket

Currently we must split our allegiances between two (and more if you wish) diametrically  opposed (on the same circle but opposing sides) professional organizations. Neither of these organizations have official credentialing rights (even though they may claim to) to the profession at large and both fail to self regulate effectively. Many professional interior designers become members of both IIDA and ASID to promote their professional status. Unfortunately membership in either ASID or IIDA is not widely accepted as the threshold of professional status. Membership in either, or both, organization is not only expensive but they do not offer legitimate professional status other than a meaningless acronym. Got that?

We rely on the government to regulate our profession when we are more qualified and actually ethically and morally obligated to police our own domain. We can do this people. It is not hard and we don’t have to abandon the issue of regulating practice, in fact it will simplify the process. Huh you say? Stick with me.

Given the current model of demanding government regulation without a full understanding of what we are calling ourselves or if we are protecting  our right to practice or the Health, Safety and Welfare of the public, we find that most states will happily take our money to tell us who is qualified and who is not but only 3 to date have gone so far to tell us who can practice and who cannot. In other words we ask for practice regulation and we end up with title regulation. WELL DUH!!!!!!!!.

We need to create an official credentialing and accrediting entity, trademark and copyright the credential and require all those who pass the NCIDQ to enlist in order to receive the credential and official professional status.  Everyone who passes the test and serves an apprenticeship becomes either a “Certified”, “Accredited”, “Registered”or “Professional” Interior Designer- I frankly don’t care what we call ourselves as long as call ourselves something (P.S. the acronym ”C.I.D.” is already spoken for by the Certified Interior Decorators…I am not making this up). An official logo is created and trademarked and only those who meet the requirements of professional status and comply with ethics and continuing education requirements are allowed to use the acronym. Our by-laws and membership qualifications are copyrighted. All posers and pretenders are sued in civil court. Uncle Sam has no say in the matter. We keep all of our dues and fees and we have control over our professional destiny. See Figure #3 if all that is too verbose. Whew!PhotobucketRegulating ourselves has several benefits.

1. It acknowledges that we are not interior designers but “registered” interior designers. We are no longer forcing “interior designers” to be required by law to become “licensed”. “Interior Designers” can stay mere interior designers- no harm no foul. Becoming “registered” is a private civil choice. Nobody is forcing anybody to do it.

2. Maintaining “registered” status across the nation provides a common framework for the profession. No more acquiescing to the oddities of state regulation and titling quirks.

3. “Registered” interior designers will be equally qualified to perform within residential and commercial environments. There will be no distinction between residential interior design and licensed designer able to perform contract/commercial work. As I have said we must not let government regulation create an occupational schism between residential designers and commercial designers. A dilemma I am not sure proponents of “licensing” are aware of.

4. “Registered” Interior Designers will be able to promote their brand as unique, distinct and better suited to perform true “interior design” services.  We will not have to rely on ASID or IIDA to provide public relations services. 

5. Over time we will be able to better position ourselves for pursuing government regulation (should the profession deem it necessary) because we will have already established a nationwide level playing field of “registered” professionals….this will not become the government’s job to manage. We can in fact focus on licensing our unique right and qualification to promote and protect the Health Safety and Welfare as well as improving the lives and livelihoods of the public.

So those are a few positive outcomes of self-regulation. I am more than willing to hear any negatives. Bring ‘em on!

WORLD INTERIORS DAY! YEAH!!

The last weekend in May..this year the 29th and 30th is designated by the IFI as World Interiors Day.

http://www.ifiworld.org/#World_Interiors_Day

Should be interesting to see if the domestic interior design organizations will acknowledge it. Might force them to take off the glasses that correct their nearsightedness.