Question Submitted by: Lyle Kelsey, Executive Director, Oklahoma Board of Medical Licensure and Supervision

2017 OK AG 11
CourtOklahoma Attorney General Reports
DecidedSeptember 6, 2017
StatusUnpublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 2017 OK AG 11 (Question Submitted by: Lyle Kelsey, Executive Director, Oklahoma Board of Medical Licensure and Supervision) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oklahoma Attorney General Reports primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Question Submitted by: Lyle Kelsey, Executive Director, Oklahoma Board of Medical Licensure and Supervision, 2017 OK AG 11 (Okla. Super. Ct. 2017).

Opinion

Question Submitted by: Lyle Kelsey, Executive Director, Oklahoma Board of Medical Licensure and Supervision
2017 OK AG 11
Decided: 09/06/2017
Oklahoma Attorney General Opinions


Cite as: 2017 OK AG 11, __ __

¶0 The Oklahoma Office of the Attorney General has received your request for an official Attorney General Opinion in which you have asked in effect the following questions:
1. May the Director of a physician assistant training program, sitting as a member of the Physician Assistant Advisory Committee, evaluate the application of a former student of that Director's program and make a recommendation as to whether the former student should be licensed?
2. May the State Board of Medical Licensure and Supervision, for the purpose of license renewal, require a licensed physician assistant to pay a fee to a private professional association to log and report the licensee's continuing medical education hours?

I.

Background

¶1 The licensure of physician assistants is governed by the Physician Assistant Act, 59 O.S.2011 & Supp.2016, §§ 519.1-524 ("the Act"). The Act grants the State Board of Medical Licensure and Supervision ("the Board") the power and authority to promulgate rules governing the licensure, standards of training, and standards of practice of physician assistants. 59 O.S.Supp.2016, § 519.3(D). Additionally, the Board is authorized to "approve institutions for training" physician assistants. Id. The Board has further authority to investigate complaints, hold hearings, and revoke licenses. Id. § 519.3(E).

¶2 While the Board has the sole authority to issue and revoke licenses, license applications are first reviewed by the Physician Assistant Advisory Committee (the "Committee"), which then makes a recommendation to the Board. Id. § 519.3(F)(2). Composed of three physician assistants, two allopathic medicine physicians, and two osteopathic physicians,1 the Committee also advises the Board more broadly "on all matters pertaining to the practice of physician assistants." Id. § 519.3(F)(1). When advising the Board on applications for licensure, establishing standards of training, or approving institutions for training, the Committee is enlarged to include "the Director, or designee, of all the Physician Assistant educational programs conducted by institutions of higher education in the state[.]" Id.2

II.

Discussion

A. The director of a physician assistant training program may participate as a member of the Physician Assistant Advisory
Committee to evaluate the application of a former student of that director's program.

¶3 In your first question, you ask whether a director of a physician assistant training program, when sitting as a member of the Committee to evaluate candidates for licensure pursuant to Title 59, Section 519.3(F)(2), may evaluate the application of a former student of that director's program and make a recommendation as to whether the former student should be licensed. Your question appears to be premised on conflict-of-interest and partiality concerns. However, we find such concerns unfounded for the following reasons.

¶4 First, there is no facial impropriety in a director participating in the evaluation of a former student because the Board's enabling act expressly requires it. For the purpose of "considering applicants for licensure"-many of whom are likely graduates of the State's physician assistant programs-the Committee is expressly expanded to include the directors of those programs, and the statute makes no exception for directors evaluating their programs' former students.

59 O.S.Supp.2016, § 519.3(F)(2). In fact, the directors are a likely source of pertinent information regarding the only subjective criterion for licensure: the applicant's moral character. See 59 O.S.2011, § 519.4(1). If the Legislature had intended to restrict the directors' role to evaluating those candidates who are not their former students, the Legislature could have done so. "[L]egislative silence, when it has authority to speak, may be considered as giving rise to an implication of legislative intent." City of Duncan v. Bingham, 1964 OK 165, ¶12, 394 P.2d 456, 460; see also Cox v. State ex rel. Okla. Dept. of Human Services, 2004 OK 17, ¶ 26, 87 P.3d 607, 617 ("This Court does not read exceptions into a statute nor may we impose requirements not mandated by the Legislature."). Because the Legislature did not exclude directors from evaluating their former students, we can only infer that it intended the directors to evaluate the credentials and make a recommendation to the Board as to the licensure of all applicants.

¶5 Second, while State officers and employees must avoid conflicts of interest as proscribed by rules promulgated by the Ethics Commission, see 74 O.S.Supp.2016, Ch. 62, App. I, R. 4.4,

3 the scenario described does not appear to implicate any of the prohibitions of those rules. And even if it did, the interpretation and application of Ethics Commission rules falls within the purview of the Ethics Commission, not this office. A.G. Opin. 2013-1, at 13 n.2; see also Okla. Const. art 29, § 5.

¶6 Finally, in considering the Committee's inclusion of program directors when evaluating and recommending candidates for licensure, it is important to keep in mind that the Committee has no independent decision-making authority. Rather, it is charged solely with "review[ing] and mak[ing] recommendations to the Board on all applications for licensure as a physician assistant."

59 O.S.Supp.2016, § 519.3(F)(2).4 The ultimate decision to grant or deny a license application lies exclusively with the Board. See id. §§ 519.2(5), 519.6(A). In theory, were the Board to abdicate its own decision-making responsibilities and essentially allow the Committee to "make decisions beyond [its] authority," partiality concerns may arise. See Johnson v. Bd. of Governors of Registered Dentists, 1996 OK 41, ¶¶ 34, 36, 913 P.2d 1339, 1348 (finding that the Oklahoma Dental Board abdicated its statutory decision-making authority by allowing an individual board member who was an economic competitor of the Respondent to issue the Formal Complaint and set the hearing date). However, we have no reason to believe that is the case here.

¶7 Accordingly, directors of the State's physician assistant training programs, who are acting in their statutory role as Committee members, may participate in reviewing the applications of students from the programs they oversee and make recommendations to the Board regarding the applicants' licensure.

B. Under the Act, the State Board of Medical Licensure and Supervision may not require a licensee to pay a fee to a private professional association for logging and reporting the licensee's continuing medical education hours.

¶8 In addition to the provisions described above, the Act further authorizes the Board to promulgate rules establishing fees for initial licensure of physician assistants, license renewal, late license renewal, application to practice, and disciplinary hearings.

59 O.S.2011, § 519.8(B). The Board has promulgated such fees in its fee schedule. OAC 435:1-1-7.

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Related

Anderson v. Grand River Dam Authority
1968 OK 143 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1968)
Johnson v. Board of Governors of Registered Dentists
913 P.2d 1339 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1996)
Adams v. Professional Practices Commission
1974 OK 88 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1974)
Van Horn Oil Co. v. Oklahoma Corp. Commission
1988 OK 42 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1988)
Marley v. Cannon
1980 OK 147 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1980)
Boydston v. State
1954 OK 327 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1954)
Sullins v. American Medical Response of Oklahoma, Inc.
2001 OK 20 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 2001)
City of Duncan v. Bingham
1964 OK 165 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1964)
Truman v. Walton
53 N.E. 57 (Ohio Supreme Court, 1899)
French v. Herndon Drilling Company of Tulsa
1954 OK 334 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1954)
Cox v. State ex rel. Oklahoma Department of Human Services
2004 OK 17 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 2004)

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