Untitled Texas Attorney General Opinion ( 2002 )


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  •     OFFICE   OF THE   ATTORNEY   GENERAL   . STATE   0~   TEXAS
    JOHN     CORNYN
    October 22,2002
    Mr. William M. Franz                                              Opinion No. JC-0566
    Executive Director
    State Board for Educator Certification                            Re: Procedure      for certification    of foreign
    100 1 Trinity                                                     educators     by State Board         for Educator
    Austin, Texas 78701-2603                                          Certification   (RQ-0541-JC)
    Dear Mr. Franz:
    You have asked this office whether the State Board for Educator Certification (the “SBEC”)
    may require a “Letter of Good Standing” from foreign educators applying for Texas certification.’
    We conclude that while the requirement of such a letter is within the authority of the SBEC, in
    instances where for good reason it cannot be produced and where insistence upon its production
    would work an undue hardship on an applicant, the SBEC may and should accept alternative forms
    of evidence.
    The SBEC has the authority to “regulate and oversee all aspects of the certification,
    continuing education, and standards of conduct of public school educators.” TEX. EDUC. CODE ANN.
    5 21.03(a) (V emon 1996). “No person may be employed as a teacher unless the person has obtained
    an educator certificate.” Tex. Att’y Gen. Op. No. JC-0241 (2000) at 4 (citations omitted). “With
    respect to educator certificates, the SBEC must establish the training requirements and minimum
    academic requirements for a person who wishes to obtain a certificate.” 
    Id. Educators who
    hold certificates issued by a foreign country, and who have taken either the
    Texas certification examination or examinations as rigorous as that for Texas certification, are
    eligible for teacher certification in Texas pursuant to section 21.052 of the Education Code, which
    reads as follows:
    (a) The board may issue a certificate to an educator who
    (1) holds:
    (A) a degree issued by an institution accredited by a
    regional accrediting agency or group that is recognized by a nationally
    recognized accreditation board; or
    ‘See Letter from William M. Franz, Executive Director, State Board for Educator Certification, to Honorable
    John Cornyn, Texas Attorney General (May 1,2002) (on file with Opinion Committee) [hereinafter Request Letter].
    Mr. William M. Franz - Page 2                    (JC-0566)
    (B) a degree issued by an institution located in a
    foreign country, if the degree is equivalent to a degree described by
    Paragraph (A);
    (2) holds an appropriate certificate or other credential issued
    by another state or country; and
    (3) performs satisfactorily   on
    (A) the examination prescribed under section 2 1.048;
    or
    (B) if the educator holds a certificate or other
    credential issued by another state or country, an examination similar
    to and at least as rigorous as that described by Paragraph (A)
    administered to the educator under the authority of that state.
    (b) For purposes of Subsection (a)(2), a person is considered to hold
    a certificate or other credential if the credential is not valid solely
    because it has expired.
    TEX. EDUC. CODE ANN. 8 21.052 (Vernon Supp. 2002).
    The rules promulgated by the SBEC for issuing a certificate to a foreign-trained     educator who
    applies for one require that the applicant provide, among other things:
    (3) evidence in a form approved by the executive director that the
    educator certificate or credential . . . is currently in good standing and
    has not been revoked, suspended, or sanctioned for misconduct and
    is not pending disciplinary or adverse action;
    19 TEx. ADMIN. CODE 5 245.10(a)(3) (2002). It appears that, in practice, the SBEC requires this
    evidence in the form of a “Letter of Good Standing” issued by the ministry of education or the
    authorized licensing agency in the educator’s home country. The SBEC rule, however, does
    not require such a letter, but rather requires “evidence . . . that the educator certificate or credential
    . . . is currently in good standing and has not been revoked, suspended, or sanctioned for misconduct
    and is not pending disciplinary or adverse action.” 
    Id. As we
    understand the situation which led to your request, a Cuban-certified educator now
    residing in Texas has applied to the SBEC for certification, and the SBEC in March of this
    year sent the applicant a letter requesting that he supply a “Letter of Professional Standing from
    the Ministry of Education” to fulfill the requirements of 19 Texas Administrative Code section
    Mr. William M. Franz - Page 3                         (JC-0566)
    245.10( a)( 3).2 The applicant, in a letter to the SBEC, responded to this request for information that
    he, like other Cuban political exiles, “cannot obtain papers from our country, as it does not have any
    diplomatic relations with USA.“3 In its March 27 reply, the SBEC responded that “[tlhe Letter of
    Professional Standing is required of all out-of-country certified applicants, regardless of the country
    of origin or the conditions of the individual’s immigration to the United States. We are not able to
    waive this item.“4
    A representative of the applicant has argued that no such requirement is to be found in the
    Education Code, and the applicant has argued that, in effect, his status as a Cuban immigrant
    exempts him from this state requirement as a matter of federal law.5 You have accordingly asked
    us whether the SBEC may require a “Letter of Good Standing,” and whether persons granted asylum
    or refugee status are exempt from SBEC’s statutory or regulatory requirements in applying for
    certification. We conclude that the regulation in question, 19 Texas Administrative Code section
    245.10(a)(3), is within the SBEC’s regulatory authority, but that neither it nor the Education Code
    require foreign educators to provide a “Letter of Good Standing.” We also conclude that immigrants
    are not exempted from generally applicable state licensing regulations solely on the basis of that
    status.
    “A state agency created by the legislature has only those powers that are explicitly or
    implicitly delegated to it.” Tex. Att’y Gen. Op. No. JC-0241 (2000) at 3, citing City of Sherman v.
    Pub. Util. Comm it, 
    643 S.W.2d 68
    1,686 (Tex. 1983). In particular, “agencyrule[s] may not impose
    additional burdens, conditions, or restrictions in excess of or inconsistent with . . . relevant statutory
    provisions.” S. WI Bell Tel. Co. v. Pub. Uitl. Comm ?I, 
    888 S.W.2d 921
    , 926 (Tex. App.-Austin
    1994, writ denied). However, section 21.052 of the Education Code provides sufficient authority
    for the requirement contained in 19 Texas Administrative Code section 245.10.
    Given that a condition of section 21.052(a)(2) is that an applicant “hold[] an appropriate
    certificate,” see TEX. EDUC. CODE ANN. 9 2 1.052(a)(2) (V emon Supp. 2002), the SBEC has implicit
    authority to determine that this condition has been met. Furthermore, as you note, section 2 1.052(b)
    provides that, “[flor purposes of Subsection (a)(2), a person is considered to hold a certificate or
    other credential if the credential is not valid solely because it has expired.” 
    Id. 4 21.052(b).
    You
    argue that this provision suggests that there may be other reasons why the SBEC could regard a
    foreign certificate as invalid, and that consequently the SBEC may require an applicant to
    *See Letter from State Board for Educator Certification, to Benito A. Castillo (Mar. 6, 2002) (attached to
    Request Letter).
    3See Letter from Benito A. Castillo, to State Board for Educator Certification (Mar. 11, 2002) (attached to
    Request Letter).
    4See Letter from State Board for Educator Certification, to Benito A. Castillo (Mar. 27, 2002) (attached to
    Request Letter).
    ‘See Letter from Rosa de Armas, to State Board of Educator Certification (Apr. 9,2002) (attached to Request
    Letter); Letter from Benito A. Castillo, supra note 3.
    Mr. William M. Franz - Page 4                   (JC-0566)
    demonstrate that such is not the case. Insofar as 19 Texas Administrative Code section 245.10 is
    intended to aid in making such a determination, it is within the SBEC’s authority. However, as we
    have noted, the regulation does not specify that an applicant must submit a “Letter of Good
    Standing” issued by the ministry of education or the authorized licensing agency in the educator’s
    home country. And we believe such a regulatory requirement would impose burdens and conditions
    in excess of the SBEC’s statutory authority. See S. K Bell Tel. 
    Co., 888 S.W.2d at 926
    . There are
    cases such as the instant one in which the production of a “Letter of Good Standing” is impossible,
    and a refusal by the SBEC to consider any other form of documentation in such instances would
    cause a particular class of applicants such as, e.g., Cuban immigrants, undue hardship. In such
    instances, the Education Code and section 245.1 O(a)(3) of the Administrative Code require the SBEC
    to permit other material evidence that is “in a form approved by the executive director,” see 19 TEX.
    ADMIN. CODE 8 245.10(a)(3) (2002), to make the necessary showing that the “credential . . . is
    currently in good standing and has not been revoked, suspended, or sanctioned for misconduct and
    is not pending disciplinary or other adverse action.” 
    Id. We note
    that the SBEC already requires the applicant to provide an evaluation of his or her
    credits “prepared by a credential evaluation service recognized by the executive director of SBEC.”
    
    Id. 8 245.10(a)(2).
    Further, under section 22.082 of the Education Code, the SBEC is obliged to
    “obtain from any law enforcement or criminal justice agency”-a category that, in our view, would
    include the Immigration and Naturalization Service-“all criminal history record information that
    relates to an applicant for or holder of a certificate issued under Subchapter B, chapter 21.” TEX.
    EDUC. CODE ANN. 0 22.082 (Vernon 1996). What other information the SBEC may deem sufficient
    for the purpose of section 245.1 O(a)(3) is a matter within its discretion, so long as that discretion is
    not exercised arbitrarily and capriciously. See, e.g., Occidental Permian, Ltd. v. R.R. Comm ‘n, 
    47 S.W.3d 801
    , 806 (Tex. App.-Austin 2001, no writ).
    In response to an argument offered by the applicant, you ask whether the immigration status
    of foreign applicants exempts them from generally applicable statutory or regulatory requirements.
    So far as we can determine, it does not.
    Article 1, section 8 of the Constitution of the United States gives the Congress the power
    “[t]o establish a uniform Rule of Naturalization.” U.S. CONST.,art. I, sec. 8, cl. 4. The regulation
    of immigration and naturalization as such is an exclusively federal concern. “‘[O]ver no conceivable
    subject is the legislative power of Congress more complete than it is over’ the admission of aliens.”
    FiaZZo v. Bell, 430 U.S. 787,792 (U.S. 1977). Further, under the Supremacy Clause, the Constitution
    and laws of the United States are “the supreme Law of the Land . . . any Thing in the Constitution
    or Laws of any State to the Contrary notwithstanding.”     U.S. CONST.,art. VI, cl. 2. Accordingly, a
    state could not place burdens or restrictions on immigrants inconsistent with federal law. However,
    no such restrictions are evident in subjecting such persons to a common regulatory or licensing
    scheme.
    Presumably of course the Congress of the United States could, consistent with its plenary
    power over matters concerning imrnigration, exempt foreign nationals from some state regulatory
    scheme. But we are aware of no such exemption. In this regard, the applicant refers in his letter of
    Mr. William M. Franz - Page 5                      (JC-0566)
    March 11,2002, to the Cuban Refugee Adjustment Act. See 8 U.S.C. 5 1255 (2000).6 While the
    Act in question does provide, as the applicant notes, certain relief for Cuban nationals in terms of
    the adjustment of their immigration status, nothing in it exempts such persons from generally
    applicable state laws.
    Your third question is whether SBEC may “ascertain and condition educator certification on
    the citizenship or alien status of an applicant originally certified by a foreign jurisdiction.“7
    Assuming your concern here is whether you must assure yourself that the applicant is in the United
    States legally, you must make such a determination. Federal law provides that illegal aliens are “not
    eligible for any State or local public benefit,” which term includes professional licenses. 8 U.S.C.
    9 1621(a)(3), (c)U)(A) ww.          s ee also Tex. Att’y Gen. Qp. No. JC-0051 (1999). “Qualified
    alien[s]” who may be eligible for public benefits, for purposes of 8 U.S.C. 5 1641 include Cuban or
    Haitian entrants to the United States. See 8 U.S.C. 9 1641(b)(7) (2000). You may and should
    require the applicant to provide documentation from the Immigration and Naturalization Service that
    he or she resides legally in the United States.
    %ee Letter from Benito Castillo, supra note 3.
    ‘See Request Letter, supra note 1, at 1.
    Mr. William M. Franz - Page 6                (JC-0566)
    SUMMARY
    The State Board for Educator Certification may require a
    foreign-certified educator who qualifies for certification pursuant to
    section 21.052(a) of the Education Code to produce a “Letter of Good
    Standing” from the foreign jurisdiction in which the educator is
    certified. However, if for good cause the applicant cannot produce
    such a letter, the board should accept alternative documentation.
    Immigration status does not exempt a foreign national from the
    strictures of a uniform state licensing scheme.
    Very truly yours,
    JOtiN    CORNYN
    Attorney General of Texas
    HOWARD G. BALDWIN, JR.
    First Assistant Attorney General
    NANCY FULLER
    Deputy Attorney General - General Counsel
    SUSAN DENMON GUSKY
    Chair, Opinion Committee
    James E. Tourtelott
    Assistant Attorney General, Opinion Committee
    

Document Info

Docket Number: JC-566

Judges: John Cornyn

Filed Date: 7/2/2002

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 2/18/2017