The previous suggestions are appropriate when your goal is to claim that the slope is different than 15.0. That claim is represented by the alternative hypothesis. You reject the null hypothesis (slope = 15.0) if the evidence in your sample is strong enough (p-value less than alpha). Hypothesis tests are unidirectional. Failing to reject the null does not provide any evidence in favor of the null.
Your goal, in fact, is to claim that the slope is the same as 15.0, so that is your alternative hypothesis. (The null is that the slope is not 15.0.) You need a test for equivalence, not a test for difference. You need two one-sided t-tests. One test where the alternative is that the slope is greater than a lower bound and another test that the slope is less than an upper bound. The bounds are 15.0 plus or minus the margin in which you consider the slope practically equivalent to 15.0. Both tests must be significant to reject the null and claim equivalence.
JMP is adding equivalence tests. Unfortunately, there is no equivalence test for slope in Bivariate at this time.