STEADMAN, Associate Judge:
Petitioners here are four resident alien attorneys, primarily educated in foreign law schools, who have been admitted to the bar of an American state within the past five years
and now seek admission without examination to the bar of the District of Columbia. All four petitioners passed the bar examination of the other jurisdiction with a Multistate Bar Examination (“MBE”) score of at least 133. Thus, they have met one of the requirements of our Rule 46(c)(3)(h) providing for admission without examination of recent admittees to the bars of other American jurisdictions.
However, each petitioner is faced with the obstacle presented by the additional requirement of the rule that the applicant have “been awarded Juris Doctor degree or its equivalent by a law school which, at the time of awarding the degree, was approved by the American Bar Association.”
Although not all of the petitioners are identically situated, they present various constitutional grounds that they assert compel their admission.
Alternatively, they ask this court to consider the facts of their individual cases and waive the requirement of graduation from an ABA approved school. Two of the petitioners, Al-Athari and Coiquaud-Guerra, claim that in any event they meet that requirement as set forth in the provisions of the Rule.
I.
Petitioners Al-Athari and Coiquaud-Gu-erra contend that they have satisfied the requirements of Rule 46(c)(3)(ii) and that the Committee on Admissions of the District of Columbia Bar (the “Committee”)
interpreted the rule erroneously in denying their applications for admission. The argument turns in part on the rules governing the conditions under which applicants are eligible to sit for the D.C. bar examination and seek admission in that manner. Under our Rule 46(b), petitioners note, candidates are eligible to take the D.C. bar examination
either
if they earn a J.D. from an ABA approved law school
or
if they complete twenty-four semester hours at an ABA approved law school (after earning a law degree at a school which is not ABA approved).
In petitioners’ view, this demonstrates that the Rules themselves recognize the equivalence.of these two different educational approaches. As such, they argue that completion of twenty-four semester hours at an ABA approved law school, combined with graduation from a law school not approved by the ABA, is the “equivalent” of a Juris Doctor degree for purposes of admission without examination under Rule 46(c)(3)(ii). Since both Al-Athari and Coiquaud-Guerra have completed at least twenty-four credit hours at ABA approved schools,
they claim to have satisfied the
requirement of Rule 46(c)(3)(ii)(A) that they have “been awarded a Juris Doctor degree or its equivalent by a law school which, at the time of awarding the degree, was approved by the American Bar Association.” Additionally, petitioner Al-Athari argues that since he relied on this reasonable interpretation in opting to take the Pennsylvania, and not the District of Columbia, bar examination, the claimed ambiguity in the term “equivalent” in Rule 46(c) should be resolved in his favor.
We find these arguments unpersuasive. The fact that petitioners Al-Athari and Coiquaud-Guerra
may possess the educational training required of graduates of non-ABA approved law schools
to be permitted to take
the D.C. bar examination under Rule 46(b)(4) does not mean they have a degree which is equivalent to a J.D. from an ABA approved law school for purposes of admission without examination under Rule 46(c).
Although the two different educational paths governed by Rule 46(b) both satisfy D.C. bar
examination
eligibility requirements, this does not mean that the two are equal ways to gain the educational qualifications required for admission without examination to the D.C. Bar. The fact that candidates who have not graduated from ABA approved law schools must be subjected to the rigors of the District of Columbia bar examination, graded according to our standards, provides an added safeguard that they are so qualified.
That is why a legal education which is equivalent for purposes of admission by examination is not equivalent for purposes of admission without examination.
We also reject petitioner Al-Athari’s claim that he relied on a reasonable interpretation of the rules when, thinking he could waive into the D.C. Bar, he decided to take the Pennsylvania bar examination. We do not view Rule 46(c)(3)(ii)(A) as ambiguous in this regard. Moreover, Al-Athari made no inquiries to the Committee about the interpretation of Rule 46(c) before choosing to take the Pennsylvania exam.
Petitioner Coiquaud-Guerra also argues that her acceptance into Southern
Methodist University’s LL.M. program demonstrates that she already has at least the equivalent of a J.D. degree. She attaches to her petition an extract from the Southern Methodist University catalogue, which states that as a prerequisite to admission to its International and Comparative Law LL.M. program, an applicant must “be a graduate of a foreign law school of standing comparable to those approved by the Section of Legal Education of the American Bar Association.” She thus claims she possesses an ABA approved law degree equivalent to, if not more advanced than, a J.D.
This argument is also unpersuasive. The fact that a foreign law school is of comparable standing to an ABA approved school does not establish that it meets the educational requirements imposed by the ABA for accreditation, or that its students receive training in areas they must master to practice law competently in this jurisdiction. Acceptance into and completion of an LL.M. program alone cannot establish that a candidate has been awarded by an ABA approved law school a degree which is the equivalent of a J.D. awarded by an ABA approved school.
II.
We are also presented with several constitutional arguments, all of which we reject.
1.
Full Faith and Credit.
Petitioners first note that the highest courts of the jurisdictions which admitted them have effectively determined that their education is equivalent or substantially equivalent to that provided by an ABA approved law school for the purpose of admission to the bar.
Those determinations, they contend, must be followed in this jurisdiction under the full faith and credit clause of article IV of the U.S. Constitution. Petitioners misread the effect of that clause.
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STEADMAN, Associate Judge:
Petitioners here are four resident alien attorneys, primarily educated in foreign law schools, who have been admitted to the bar of an American state within the past five years
and now seek admission without examination to the bar of the District of Columbia. All four petitioners passed the bar examination of the other jurisdiction with a Multistate Bar Examination (“MBE”) score of at least 133. Thus, they have met one of the requirements of our Rule 46(c)(3)(h) providing for admission without examination of recent admittees to the bars of other American jurisdictions.
However, each petitioner is faced with the obstacle presented by the additional requirement of the rule that the applicant have “been awarded Juris Doctor degree or its equivalent by a law school which, at the time of awarding the degree, was approved by the American Bar Association.”
Although not all of the petitioners are identically situated, they present various constitutional grounds that they assert compel their admission.
Alternatively, they ask this court to consider the facts of their individual cases and waive the requirement of graduation from an ABA approved school. Two of the petitioners, Al-Athari and Coiquaud-Guerra, claim that in any event they meet that requirement as set forth in the provisions of the Rule.
I.
Petitioners Al-Athari and Coiquaud-Gu-erra contend that they have satisfied the requirements of Rule 46(c)(3)(ii) and that the Committee on Admissions of the District of Columbia Bar (the “Committee”)
interpreted the rule erroneously in denying their applications for admission. The argument turns in part on the rules governing the conditions under which applicants are eligible to sit for the D.C. bar examination and seek admission in that manner. Under our Rule 46(b), petitioners note, candidates are eligible to take the D.C. bar examination
either
if they earn a J.D. from an ABA approved law school
or
if they complete twenty-four semester hours at an ABA approved law school (after earning a law degree at a school which is not ABA approved).
In petitioners’ view, this demonstrates that the Rules themselves recognize the equivalence.of these two different educational approaches. As such, they argue that completion of twenty-four semester hours at an ABA approved law school, combined with graduation from a law school not approved by the ABA, is the “equivalent” of a Juris Doctor degree for purposes of admission without examination under Rule 46(c)(3)(ii). Since both Al-Athari and Coiquaud-Guerra have completed at least twenty-four credit hours at ABA approved schools,
they claim to have satisfied the
requirement of Rule 46(c)(3)(ii)(A) that they have “been awarded a Juris Doctor degree or its equivalent by a law school which, at the time of awarding the degree, was approved by the American Bar Association.” Additionally, petitioner Al-Athari argues that since he relied on this reasonable interpretation in opting to take the Pennsylvania, and not the District of Columbia, bar examination, the claimed ambiguity in the term “equivalent” in Rule 46(c) should be resolved in his favor.
We find these arguments unpersuasive. The fact that petitioners Al-Athari and Coiquaud-Guerra
may possess the educational training required of graduates of non-ABA approved law schools
to be permitted to take
the D.C. bar examination under Rule 46(b)(4) does not mean they have a degree which is equivalent to a J.D. from an ABA approved law school for purposes of admission without examination under Rule 46(c).
Although the two different educational paths governed by Rule 46(b) both satisfy D.C. bar
examination
eligibility requirements, this does not mean that the two are equal ways to gain the educational qualifications required for admission without examination to the D.C. Bar. The fact that candidates who have not graduated from ABA approved law schools must be subjected to the rigors of the District of Columbia bar examination, graded according to our standards, provides an added safeguard that they are so qualified.
That is why a legal education which is equivalent for purposes of admission by examination is not equivalent for purposes of admission without examination.
We also reject petitioner Al-Athari’s claim that he relied on a reasonable interpretation of the rules when, thinking he could waive into the D.C. Bar, he decided to take the Pennsylvania bar examination. We do not view Rule 46(c)(3)(ii)(A) as ambiguous in this regard. Moreover, Al-Athari made no inquiries to the Committee about the interpretation of Rule 46(c) before choosing to take the Pennsylvania exam.
Petitioner Coiquaud-Guerra also argues that her acceptance into Southern
Methodist University’s LL.M. program demonstrates that she already has at least the equivalent of a J.D. degree. She attaches to her petition an extract from the Southern Methodist University catalogue, which states that as a prerequisite to admission to its International and Comparative Law LL.M. program, an applicant must “be a graduate of a foreign law school of standing comparable to those approved by the Section of Legal Education of the American Bar Association.” She thus claims she possesses an ABA approved law degree equivalent to, if not more advanced than, a J.D.
This argument is also unpersuasive. The fact that a foreign law school is of comparable standing to an ABA approved school does not establish that it meets the educational requirements imposed by the ABA for accreditation, or that its students receive training in areas they must master to practice law competently in this jurisdiction. Acceptance into and completion of an LL.M. program alone cannot establish that a candidate has been awarded by an ABA approved law school a degree which is the equivalent of a J.D. awarded by an ABA approved school.
II.
We are also presented with several constitutional arguments, all of which we reject.
1.
Full Faith and Credit.
Petitioners first note that the highest courts of the jurisdictions which admitted them have effectively determined that their education is equivalent or substantially equivalent to that provided by an ABA approved law school for the purpose of admission to the bar.
Those determinations, they contend, must be followed in this jurisdiction under the full faith and credit clause of article IV of the U.S. Constitution. Petitioners misread the effect of that clause.
First, the “substantial equivalence” of petitioners’ education is not a relevant question in interpreting our Rule 46(c), which focuses on the equivalence of degrees, not of legal educations. Even if this
court were bound by the determination of the courts of Colorado, New York, and Pennsylvania that petitioners’ legal education was substantially equivalent to that offered at an ABA approved law school, our rules do not permit admission to the bar on the basis of an education “substantially equivalent” to that received at an ABA approved law school. In other words, the petitioners have brought us answers by courts of other jurisdictions to a question which the rules governing admission to practice of law in the District of Columbia do not ask.
Second, we are not bound by determinations of courts of other jurisdictions in this instance. The full faith and credit clause does not apply where, as here, there is no risk of conflict with or insult to another state. In
Magnolia Petroleum Co. v. Hunt,
320 U.S. 430, 64 S.Ct. 208, 88 L.Ed. 149 (1943), the Court explained that although the Constitution requires state courts to give full faith and credit to the judgments of other courts, this is not true for matters of local and statutory law.
In the case of local law, since each of the states of the Union has constitutional authority to make its own law with respect to persons and events within its borders, the full faith and credit clause does not ordinarily require it to substitute for its own law the conflicting law of another state, even though that law is of controlling force in the courts of that state with respect to the same persons and events.
Id.
at 436-37, 64 S.Ct. at 212 (citations omitted). More recently, the Court reiterated that the “Pull Faith and Credit Clause does not compel ‘a state to substitute the statutes of other states for its own statutes dealing with a subject matter concerning which it is competent to legislate.’ ”
Sun Oil Co. v. Wortman,
486 U.S. 717, 108 S.Ct. 2117, 2122, 100 L.Ed.2d 743 (1988) (citation omitted). Since the system of rules a state court adopts to govern admission to the bar is matter of local policy, and not a judgment on the merits in a case or controversy, the District of Columbia need not extend full faith and credit to assessments made by the courts of other states of petitioners’ legal training.
See In re Application of Hansen,
275 N.W.2d 790, 798 (Minn.1978),
appeal dismissed,
441 U.S. 938, 99 S.Ct. 2154, 60 L.Ed.2d 1040 (1979) (refusing to defer to other state’s assessment of a bar applicant’s educational qualifications);
Application of Schatz,
80 Wash.2d 604, 611, 497 P.2d 153, 157 (1972) (en banc) (noting that regulation of qualifications for admission to the bar is “peculiarly a domestic affair” not subject to full faith and credit).
2.
Equal Protection.
It is asserted that our rule creates a classification which discriminates against foreign-trained law students. This is characterized as discrimination based “indirectly” on the basis of national origin. Because this is a suspect classification, it is argued, the regulation is subject to strict scrutiny, and no compelling state interest has been demonstrated as required by a strict scrutiny test.
See In re Griffiths,
413 U.S. 717, 721-22 & n. 9, 93 S.Ct. 2851, 2854-55, & n. 9, 37 L.Ed.2d 910 (1973).
The fallacy of petitioners’ assertion is in its premise. Rule 46(c)(3)(ii)(A), of course, is facially neutral and applies with equal force to all individuals regardless of origin. Although it is claimed that the distinction has a discriminatory
impact
on foreign-educated students, no evidence is provided in support of this assertion. Indeed, what evidence there is suggests the opposite; that is, that graduates of non-ABA approved American law schools are the group more greatly affected.
Under a conventional rational basis analysis,
see New Orleans v. Dukes,
427 U.S. 297, 303, 96 S.Ct. 2513, 2516, 49 L.Ed.2d 511 (1976) (per curiam), the requirement that applicants who seek admission without examination graduate with a J.D. from an ABA approved law school has a rational connection with a legitimate state purpose. Such a requirement bears a rational connection to the applicant’s fitness to practice law which comports with the District’s substantial interest in establishing standards for licensing of attorneys who will practice in the jurisdiction.
Goldfarb v. Virginia State Bar,
421 U.S. 773, 792, 95 S.Ct. 2004, 2016, 44 L.Ed.2d 572 (1975).
Because the D.C. bar examination, graded according to our standards, provides an added assurance of competency, it is also rational to permit applicants who meet the requirements of Rule 46(b)(4) to seek admission by taking that examination, while at the same time not allowing such applicants to gain admission without examination.
3.
Privileges and Immunities.
It is also asserted that the practice of law is a “privilege” protected by the privileges and immunities clause of article IV, section 2 of the Constitution.
Petitioners contend that Rule 46(c)(3) places an “unreasonable burden” on non-U.S. trained lawyers, and thus violates the privileges and immunities clause. We reject this challenge also.
The privileges and immunities clause of article IV, section 2, serves to establish “a norm of comity ... that is to prevail among the States with respect to their treatment of each other’s residents.”
Hicklin v. Orbeck,
437 U.S. 518, 523-24, 98 S.Ct. 2482, 2486, 57 L.Ed.2d 397 (1978) (citation omitted). This provision prohibits a state “ ‘from discriminating against citizens of other states in favor of its own.’ ”
Galahad v. Weinshienk,
555 F.Supp. 1201, 1206 (D.Colo.1983) (quoting
Hague v. C.I.O.,
307 U.S. 496, 511, 59 S.Ct. 954, 962, 83 L.Ed. 1423 (1939)).
The District of Columbia bar admission rules do not offend any norm of comity. Provided that resident and non-resident applicants are required to meet the same educational, professional, and personal qualifications, the privileges and immunities clause does not enjoin a state from prescribing the qualifications that applicants must possess for admission to legal practice.
Supreme Court of New Hampshire v. Piper,
470 U.S. 274, 283 n. 16, 105 S.Ct. 1272, 1278 n. 16, 84 L.Ed.2d 205 (1985). Since the Rule 46(c) requirement of ABA accreditation applies whether or not applicants are citizens of the District, the requirement is in no sense a residency requirement. The requirement of Rule 46(c) that an applicant who seeks admission to the D.C. Bar without examination must have a J.D. or its equivalent from an ABA approved law school does not discriminate against citizens of other states or favor D.C. residents. It applies equally to D.C. resident and non-D.C. resident alike. Rule
46 thus does not run afoul of the article IY privileges and immunities clause.
4.
Right to Travel.
Finally, it is asserted that Rule 46(c) imposes an unconstitutional inhibition on interstate migration for a class of lawyers whose education and training has resulted in their admission to the bar of a sister state.
It is true that a rule which unduly restricts the fundamental right of interstate travel may violate the equal protection clause of the fourteenth amendment.
Shapiro v. Thompson,
394 U.S. 618, 89 S.Ct. 1322, 22 L.Ed.2d 600 (1969). However, the Supreme Court has found violations of the right to travel only in cases where a state law, usually through a durational residency requirement, denies benefits to nonresidents which it extends to residents.
See, e.g., Memorial Hospital v. Maricopa County,
415 U.S. 250, 94 S.Ct. 1076, 39 L.Ed.2d 306 (1974) (overturning durational residency requirement for free non-emergency medical care);
Dunn v. Blumstein,
405 U.S. 330, 92 S.Ct. 995, 31 L.Ed.2d 274 (1972) (overturning durational residency requirements for voting). Such laws create impermissible distinctions between long-term residents of and recent arrivals to a state.
Here, however, we have no such rule. The ABA approved law school requirement of Rule 46(c)(3) creates no distinction between residents and non-residents and imposes no District of Columbia residency requirement. Accordingly, the requirement that an applicant to the D.C. Bar for admission without examination earn his or her law degree at an ABA approved school does not violate the fundamental right to travel.
III.
Finally, petitioners seek a waiver of the requirements of Rule 46(c). Citing
Kennedy v. Educational Testing Service, Inc.,
393 A.2d 523, 525 (D.C.1978) and
Feldman v. Gardner,
213 U.S.App.D.C. 119, 123, 661 F.2d 1295, 1299 (1981),
vacated,
460 U.S. 462, 103 S.Ct. 1303, 75 L.Ed.2d 206 (1983), they contend that this court has the legal authority to grant waivers of the regulations governing bar membership. Petitioners base their requests for waivers on the ground that their formal legal training and subsequent experience make them at least as qualified to join the D.C.Bar as graduates of ABA approved law schools.
The decision whether to consider waivers presents a classic rules versus standards debate — whether the certainty and even-handedness of a clear, bright-line rule justifies the possibility that the rule may work imperfectly in some cases. Without engaging in an investigation of the legal education received by the petitioners in these cases, we decline to depart from our longstanding policy, first announced in November 1977,
not to consider waivers to the ABA approved law school graduation requirement on a case by case basis or otherwise. As some other courts have noted,
the task of making separate subjective evaluations of each applicant’s training and education could be time consuming, financially burdensome, and could impose a serious administrative burden on both this court and the Committee. Such a determination would be even more difficult to make when confronted, as in these appeals, with law schools in foreign countries whose legal systems may be very different from our own.
See Adams, supra
note 19, 102
N.M. at 732, 700 P.2d at 195. Furthermore, any case by case consideration of waivers invites the risk of disparate treatment of similar cases, and thus carries its own potential for unfairness.
See Louis v. Supreme Court of Nevada,
490 F.Supp. 1174, 1183 (D.Nev.1980) (inconsistent granting of waivers of a requirement that bar candidates graduate from an ABA approved law school may violate equal protection guarantees).
Finally, we point out that by no means are our doors closed to petitioners. We deal here solely with our rule relating to admission to our bar without examination of attorneys newly admitted in other jurisdictions, which we permit under more liberal rules than all but one or two jurisdictions.
Each petitioner here will be able to waive in without examination within the next several years.
See supra
note 2. They need not even wait that long if willing to meet the relatively modest educational requirement of our Rule 46(b)(4) (if they have not already done so) and to take our own D.C. bar examination.
Accordingly, we deny the petitions to waive the requirement of Rule 46(c)(3)(ii).
So ordered.