Fayetteville Conversion Therapy Ordinance - Where to Report

Civil Rights and Equity North Carolina 3 Minutes Read · published February 10, 2026 Flag of North Carolina

In Fayetteville, North Carolina, people seeking to report conversion therapy should use city, state and professional-licensing complaint channels depending on who provided the practice and the age of the person affected. This guide explains the official reporting options, likely enforcers, and practical steps to file complaints so survivors, families, and witnesses know where to go and what to expect.

Penalties & Enforcement

Fayetteville does not have a known municipal ordinance specifically banning conversion therapy listed in the city code; where penalties and enforcement apply they are generally carried out by state licensing boards, child-protection agencies, or law enforcement depending on the facts. Specific fines, civil penalties or criminal sanctions for conversion therapy are not specified on the cited pages for the City of Fayetteville code; enforcement therefore depends on the controlling state or licensing instrument cited below.[1]

If a provider is licensed, file a complaint with the applicable state licensing board as the primary enforcement route.
  • Enforcer(s): state licensing boards (medical, psychology, counseling), Cumberland County or Fayetteville child-protection/DSS, and local police for criminal conduct.
  • Fines and penalties: amounts are not specified in a single Fayetteville ordinance; monetary penalties depend on the licensing board or statute handling the complaint and are not specified on the cited state or board complaint pages.[2]
  • Escalation: boards may issue warnings, fines, suspensions, license revocation, or refer matters for prosecution; specific escalation steps and timeframes are set by each board and not consolidated in a Fayetteville municipal text.
  • Inspection and complaint pathways: complaints are submitted to licensing boards or to child-protection hotlines; in urgent cases call local police.

Applications & Forms

There is no Fayetteville-specific complaint form for conversion therapy published in the municipal code. To complain about a licensed provider, use the North Carolina Medical Board complaint form or the board form for the provider’s licensing board; for child-protection concerns use the state reporting portal or county DSS. See the official links below for each submission page and instructions.[2]

How to report conversion therapy in Fayetteville

  • For licensed medical doctors or nurse practitioners: file a complaint with the North Carolina Medical Board via its complaint page, include dates, provider name, and any records you have.Medical board complaint[2]
  • For possible child abuse or neglect: report to the North Carolina Department of Health and Human Services child-abuse reporting page which explains county-level referral and hotlines.Report child abuse[1]
  • For criminal or immediate safety concerns: contact Fayetteville Police Department or call 911; non-emergencies can be reported through the department contact page.Fayetteville Police[3]
Document dates, witnesses, written communications and any clinical records before filing to strengthen the complaint.

Common violations and typical outcomes

  • Providing conversion therapy to minors where state child-protection review is triggered — outcome: DSS investigation; penalties not specified on the cited DSS/state pages.
  • Licensed providers offering harmful or fraudulent therapies — outcome: licensing investigation, possible discipline, suspension or revocation by the specific board.
  • False or fraudulent claims about cure rates or guarantees — outcome: consumer protection or board action where authorized.

FAQ

Who enforces rules about conversion therapy in Fayetteville?
Enforcement is typically by state professional licensing boards, Cumberland County/Fayetteville child-protection services for minors, or local law enforcement for criminal matters.
Can I report a provider who is not licensed?
Yes. Non-licensed providers can be reported to local police for unlawful conduct and to city or county consumer-protection or human services offices; licensing boards cannot discipline unlicensed people but other civil or criminal remedies may apply.
How long does a complaint take to resolve?
Timeframes vary by agency; specific appeal periods and review timelines are set by each board or agency and are not consolidated in a single Fayetteville ordinance.

How-To

  1. Collect evidence: dates, messages, receipts, witness names, and clinical records if available.
  2. Identify the responsible authority: licensing board for licensed clinicians, NCDHHS/DSS for child-protection, or police for threats or violence.
  3. File the complaint using the official online form or hotline listed by the agency; keep copies of submissions and confirmation numbers.
  4. Follow up: note any case numbers, ask about estimated timelines, and check board or agency portals for updates.
  5. If you disagree with a decision, use the agency’s appeal process or consult an attorney for civil options; appeal deadlines depend on the agency and are specified in their notices.

Key Takeaways

  • There is no single Fayetteville ordinance expressly regulating conversion therapy; enforcement relies on state boards, DSS, or police.
  • Report licensed providers to the appropriate state licensing board and possible child-protection concerns to NCDHHS/DSS.

Help and Support / Resources


  1. [1] North Carolina Department of Health and Human Services - Report Child Abuse or Neglect
  2. [2] North Carolina Medical Board - File a Complaint
  3. [3] City of Fayetteville - Police Department