Kenya Walzer v. Missouri Board of Nursing

CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 10, 2024
DocketWD87131
StatusPublished

This text of Kenya Walzer v. Missouri Board of Nursing (Kenya Walzer v. Missouri Board of Nursing) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kenya Walzer v. Missouri Board of Nursing, (Mo. Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

IN THE MISSOURI COURT OF APPEALS WESTERN DISTRICT KENYA WALZER, ) ) Appellant, ) ) WD87131 v. ) ) OPINION FILED: ) December 10, 2024 MISSOURI BOARD OF NURSING, ) ) Respondent. )

Appeal from the Circuit Court of Cole County, Missouri The Honorable Jon E. Beetem, Judge

Before Division Three: Mark D. Pfeiffer, Presiding Judge, Lisa White Hardwick and Thomas N. Chapman, Judges

Ms. Kenya Walzer (“Walzer”) appeals from the judgment of the Circuit Court of

Cole County, Missouri (“circuit court”), which affirmed a disciplinary order of the

Missouri Board of Nursing (“the Board”) revoking her nursing license. We affirm

Walzer’s license revocation. Factual and Procedural History1

Walzer has a long history and repeated pattern of nursing license discipline by the

Board, receiving disciplinary probation with specific terms from the Board and then

violating those terms.

Walzer was originally licensed as a licensed practical nurse (“LPN”) by the Board

in 2000 and later licensed as a registered nurse (“RN”) in 2006. In 2012, the

Administrative Hearing Commission (“AHC”) found cause to discipline her license due

to her possession of a controlled substance. For this misconduct, the Board placed her

license on probation for three years. The probation order mandated Walzer submit to

random drug testing: she was ordered to check in with National Toxicology Specialists

(“NTS”) on a daily basis and to provide a urine sample on the days that NTS selected her

for testing.

Five months into this probation period, on August 5, 2013, the Board’s General

Counsel filed a probation violation complaint, which alleged Walzer did not check in

with NTS on fifty-five days and failed to submit a sample as required on five days. After

a hearing, the Board revoked Walzer’s original probation and placed her license on a new

four-year probation term, beginning on September 24, 2013.

1 “In reviewing an agency’s findings of fact, this Court defers to the agency’s credibility determinations and the weight given to conflicting evidence. This Court will defer to an agency’s factual findings so long as there is sufficient competent and substantial evidence in the record to support them and they are not contrary to the overwhelming weight of the evidence.” Ferry v. Bd. of Educ. of Jefferson City Pub. Sch. Dist., 641 S.W.3d 203, 206 (Mo. banc 2022) (internal citations and quotation marks omitted).

2 Two years into this second probation term, on October 16, 2015, the Board’s

General Counsel filed a probation violation complaint, which alleged Walzer did not

check in with NTS on 187 days and failed to submit a sample as required on twenty-one

days. After a hearing, the Board censured her license but placed her back on probation.

On July 12, 2017, the Board’s General Counsel filed another probation violation

complaint. After a hearing, the Board again found numerous probation violations:

twenty-three failures to check in; two failures to submit a sample when required; two

submissions of diluted samples, as determined by suspiciously low creatinine levels; and

one positive test for four different controlled substances (lorazepam, oxycodone,

marijuana, and oxymorphone) that Walzer did not have a valid prescription to use. The

Board revoked Walzer’s license.

On May 14, 2019, Walzer applied for an RN license by examination. The Board

rejected her application, and Walzer appealed to the AHC. There, the Board argued for

the AHC to either uphold the Board’s rejection of Walzer’s application for license by

examination or, alternatively, to grant Walzer’s license application subject to a five-year

probation period with terms including the three relevant to this appeal, which relate to the

consumption of various substances:

Walzer shall contract with the Board’s third-party administrator of drug and alcohol testing and comply with that contract;

Walzer shall not use or consume any drugs not lawfully prescribed;

Walzer shall not use or consume alcohol in any form.

3 Conversely, Walzer requested either that her license application be granted

without any probation terms or that the AHC modify the Board’s requested terms to

accommodate her alleged substance abuse disorder, which Walzer argued was

purportedly required by the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA).

On August 13, 2020, the AHC granted Walzer’s nursing license application but

not in the form requested by Walzer; instead, the AHC’s 2020 ruling was expressly

contingent on Walzer passing the nursing exam and expressly subject to the probation

terms requested by the Board. Further, the AHC declined Walzer’s demand for ADA

accommodations. Walzer did not seek judicial review of the AHC’s ruling despite her

prior objection to the probation terms requested by the Board and the AHC’s refusal to

consider her affirmative request for ADA accommodations.

Following the AHC’s 2020 ruling, the Board issued an order on September 10,

2020, adopting the AHC’s probated licensure to Walzer and clarifying how the probation

terms would be administered.2 The Board’s probation terms relevant to this appeal

2 The probation terms in the Board’s order did not mirror the exact language of the AHC’s ruling but were substantively similar to the relevant terms from the AHC’s ruling:

[Walzers]’s failure to comply with [Walzer]’s contract with the [third party administrator] shall constitute a violation of the terms of discipline. .... During the disciplinary period, [Walzer] shall abstain completely from the use or consumption of alcohol in any form, including over the counter products. The presence of any alcohol whatsoever in any biological sample obtained from [Walzer], regardless of the source, shall constitute a violation of [Walzer’s] discipline. ....

4 outlined the procedure for Walzer’s drug and alcohol testing: clarifying that a urine

specimen with a creatinine level below twenty would be considered a diluted result and a

presumed positive test for prohibited substances, resulting in a violation of probation;

providing guidelines for avoiding a diluted result; mandating that Walzer check in with

NTS between 5:00 a.m. and 4:00 p.m.; and prohibiting the consumption of several other

products, including poppy seeds, non-alcoholic beer, and foreign tea.3

Walzer met with the Board on February 22, 2021, to go over the terms of the

Board’s September 10, 2020 probated license order; she signed the order on the last page

and initialed every paragraph detailing how the probation terms would be administered to

signify her understanding of the procedures surrounding her probation terms and of the

expectations for fulfilling them.

On November 1, 2022, the Board’s General Counsel filed the current probation

violation complaint. The complaint identified three categories of violations: (1) two

failures to timely check in with NTS; (2) four diluted test results; and (3) one positive test

for alcohol.

During the disciplinary period, [Walzer] shall abstain completely from the personal use of possession of any controlled substance or other drug for which a prescription is required, unless use of the drug has been prescribed by a person licensed to prescribe such drug and with whom [Walzer] has a bona-fide relationship as a patient. Such prescribed drug shall only be consumed as directed and only for the condition for which it was prescribed. [Walzer] shall not ingest or consume . . . illicit drugs or street drugs.

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474 S.W.3d 607 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 2015)
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
Kenya Walzer v. Missouri Board of Nursing, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kenya-walzer-v-missouri-board-of-nursing-moctapp-2024.