J. Haentges, D.D.S. v. State Board of Dentistry
Date Filed2023-12-21
Docket348 C.D. 2022
JudgeWallace, J. ~ Dissenting Opinion by: Fizzano Cannon, J.
Cited0 times
StatusPublished
Full Opinion (html_with_citations)
IN THE COMMONWEALTH COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA
Joshua Haentges, D.D.S., :
Petitioner :
:
v. : No. 348 C.D. 2022
: Argued: September 13, 2023
State Board of Dentistry, :
Respondent :
BEFORE: HONORABLE RENĂE COHN JUBELIRER, President Judge
HONORABLE PATRICIA A. McCULLOUGH, Judge
HONORABLE MICHAEL H. WOJCIK, Judge
HONORABLE CHRISTINE FIZZANO CANNON, Judge
HONORABLE ELLEN CEISLER, Judge
HONORABLE LORI A. DUMAS, Judge
HONORABLE STACY WALLACE, Judge
OPINION
BY JUDGE WALLACE FILED: December 21, 2023
Joshua Haentges, D.D.S. (Dr. Haentges) petitions for review of the March 16,
2022 order of the State Board of Dentistry (Board), denying his application for dental
licensure by endorsement under 63 Pa.C.S. § 3111(a). Dr. Haentges challenges the
Boardâs determination that the licensing requirements of New York State, where he
obtained a license and currently practices dentistry, were not substantially equivalent
to the licensing requirements of Pennsylvania. After careful review, we reverse and
remand.
I. Background
Dr. Haentges attended the University at Buffalo School of Dental Medicine,
graduating in 2016. Reproduced Record (R.R.) at 114a, 232a. He obtained his New
York dental license in 2017 and has been licensed continuously since that time. Id.
at 71a, 105a. According to Dr. Haentges, he began practicing general dentistry in
Addison, New York in 2017. Id. at 147a, 248a. He practiced in Addison until a
brief period of unemployment in 2020 and now operates his own practice in Watkins
Glen, New York. Id. at 147a-48a, 248a. Dr. Haentges explains he purchased his
practice from a retiring dentist. Id. at 149a. The retiring dentist owned two offices,
one in Watkins Glen and another in Elkland, Pennsylvania, and agreed to sell on the
condition that Dr. Haentges purchase both of them. Id. at 149a-150a. Dr. Haentges
now operates his dental practice in Watkins Glen but also owns the second Elkland
office where he is unable to practice because he lacks a Pennsylvania dental license.
Id. at 151a. He filed an application for licensure by endorsement in Pennsylvania
on May 4, 2021. Id. at 227a-29a.
By way of background, Section 3111(a) provides for licensure of certain out-
of-state professionals. It provides that a licensing board âshall issueâ a license if,
among other things, the applicant â[h]olds a current license . . . from another state,
territory or country and the licensing board or licensing commission determines that
stateâs, territoryâs or countryâs requirements are substantially equivalent to or exceed
the requirements established in this Commonwealth.â 63 Pa.C.S. § 3111(a)(1). By
letter dated July 27, 2021, the Board denied Dr. Haentgesâ application for licensure.
The Board found New Yorkâs dental licensing requirements were not substantially
equivalent to Pennsylvaniaâs requirements because New York did not require dental
2
applicants to pass a clinical examination. R.R. at 394a-95a. It described a clinical
examination as âintegralâ to the licensure process in Pennsylvania. Id. at 394a.
Dr. Haentges filed a written request appealing the Boardâs determination. He
contended that, although New York did not require its applicants to pass a dental
clinical examination, it did require the successful completion of âa clinically-based
postdoctoral general practice or specialty dental residency program, of at least one
yearâs durationâ as well as a âformal outcome assessment evaluation of the residentâs
competence to practice dentistry.â R.R. at 391a (quoting N.Y. Educ. Law § 6604(3) (McKinney 2007)).1 He maintained New Yorkâs residency requirement was âat least âsubstantially equivalentââ to a clinical examination.Id.
The Board delegated the matter to a hearing examiner, who held a hearing on
October 4, 2021. Dr. Haentges participated in the hearing with counsel and was the
sole witness to testify.2 Primarily, Dr. Haentges testified regarding the value of New
Yorkâs residency requirement based on his experiences and regarding the difficulty
he would face if he attempted to complete a dental clinical examination.
Dr. Haentges testified he completed a dental residency at the Stratton Veterans
Affairs Medical Center in Albany, New York. R.R. at 120a. He testified New York
law requires residents to perform a specific list of procedures, including âtwo full
crowns; two endodontically treated teeth; four restorations, meaning two anterior,
two posterior; and one periodontal case.â Id. at 117a. Dr. Haentges contrasted these
minimum requirements with the procedures he actually performed during residency,
1
New Yorkâs legislature amended Section 6604(3), effective November 21, 2022. The current
version eliminates the words âclinically-basedâ but is otherwise the same.
2
Counsel for the Commonwealth also participated in the hearing but did not take a position and
expressed his intent to defer to the hearing examiner and the Board. R.R. at 103a.
3
which included 21 crown preparations, 14 endodontic procedures, 197 restorations,
and 18 periodontal cases. Id. at 135a-42a, 382a.
Further, Dr. Haentges contrasted his experiences as a dental resident with the
American Board of Dental Examiners (ADEX) examination, a clinical examination
accepted in Pennsylvania. R.R. at 123a-31a, 382a. Dr. Haentges testified the ADEX
examination involves only three crown preparations, two restorations, one complete
root canal, and one partial root canal. Id.In addition, he emphasized his residency was one year long, while the ADEX examination is only two to three days long.Id.
at 115a, 145a. Dr. Haentges insisted that attempting to take the ADEX examination now would be an arduous process, which might require him to locate live patients and transport them to the examination site.3Id.
at 109a-11a. Moreover, he testified many ADEX examinations are open to dental students but not current dentists.4Id.
at 112a. Dr. Haentges testified he searched for open ADEX examinations the night before the hearing and found that only 11 of the 60 or 65 available examinations were allowing individuals other than dental students to participate.Id.
at 168a-69a. He added: âfor the rest of this year there is only maybe one or two that are open â not open, but have a wait list and are open to outside candidates.âId.
at 169a-70a.
Despite Dr. Haentgesâ concern that it would be difficult to find and transport
live patients, he acknowledged the ADEX examination does not always require
performing procedures on live patients. R.R. at 145a-46a. Dr. Haentges explained
3
Dr. Haentges explained performing the ADEX examination on a live patient required the patient
to have a âperfectâ dental lesion and a certain health history. R.R. at 109a. He testified: âIt has to
be this type of lesion, this far in. . . . They have to have a certain blood pressure. They have to . . .
have a certain medical history behind them. Itâs very, very stringent as far as getting patients.â Id.
4
He blamed the COVID-19 pandemic for this situation, explaining: âthey used to offer multiple
exams throughout the year, and I believe that the pandemic has changed that. Thereâs not as many
patients coming into the dental schools for treatment.â R.R. at 112a.
4
applicants perform the crown preparation and root canal portions of the ADEX
examination âon manikins,â which means â[t]hereâs no cheek. Thereâs no patient
moving around. Thereâs no coughing or tongue. . . . Which is a big deal in dentistry.
. . . thereâs no patient that needs to be numb.â Id.at 145a. He explained many ADEX examinations did not require live patients at all but were instead performed entirely using âplastic teeth . . . on a manikin.â5, 6Id.
at 170a.
On December 20, 2021, the astute hearing examiner, Michael T. Foerster,
Esquire, issued a thorough and carefully crafted proposed adjudication and order
granting licensure to Dr. Haentges under Section 3111(a). The hearing examiner
concluded New Yorkâs dental licensing requirements equaled or exceeded those in
Pennsylvania. R.R. at 73a. Specifically, the hearing examiner noted the âextensiveâ
requirements of a New York dental residency and found persuasive Dr. Haentgesâ
testimony that a residency is superior to a clinical examination because it focuses on
treating live patients. Id.at 80a-81a. The hearing examiner also noted the procedures Dr. Haentges performed during his residency, which exceeded both the requirements of New York law and the procedures performed during the ADEX examination.Id.
at 84a. The hearing examiner found these procedures showed the 5 The ADEX examination includes a diagnostic computer simulation in which applicants review âsome radiographs or maybe a couple pictures . . . and maybe what the patient is saying on the screenâ to discern âthe proper route of treatment planning.â R.R. at 142a. Dr. Haentges questioned the merits of the simulation as well, explaining âyou canât ask questions. . . . and you canât feel motion through a computer screen. So . . . itâs one of those things where [with] live patients itâs just totally different.âId.
at 143a.
6
Based on the Department of Stateâs website, it would appear the Board began accepting entirely
manikin-based examinations during the COVID-19 pandemic. See Pa. Depât of State, Waived and
Suspended Licensing Regulations, https://www.dos.pa.gov/Pages/COVID-19-Waivers.aspx (last
visited Dec. 12, 2023). When the Court first heard this case as a three-judge panel on December
12, 2022, counsel for the Board explained manikin-based examinations were approved going
forward at the Boardâs September 2022 meeting.
5
value of New Yorkâs residency requirement because they âare done over a period of
time with a resulting professional maturity that would come with such an endeavor.â
Id.at 85a (footnote omitted). The hearing examiner discussed the legislative intent behind Section 3111(a), which, he asserted, was to âopen[ ]up licensureâ and remedy the difficult and time-consuming licensure procedures that may discourage out-of- state professionals from coming to Pennsylvania.Id.
at 85a-86a.
The Board issued a notice of intent to review on December 27, 2021, followed
by a final adjudication and order on March 16, 2022. The Board listed several New
York licensing requirements it found were substantially equivalent to Pennsylvania
licensing requirements. R.R. at 27a-28a. The Board observed, however, that New
York requires a written examination and residency, while Pennsylvania requires a
written examination and dental clinical examination. Id.at 28a. It concluded New Yorkâs written examination and residency were not substantially equivalent to, and did not exceed, Pennsylvaniaâs written and dental clinical examinations.Id.
at 28a-
29a.
Regarding New Yorkâs residency requirement, the Board reasoned that â[t]he
clinical experience of every resident is different, and competency is measured by the
subjective opinion of the program director or attending dentist.â R.R. at 32a. The
Board contrasted this with the purported objectivity of a dental clinical examination,
observing the ADEX examination requires all applicants to âperform at a minimum
levelâ and has quantifiable grading standards. Id.It characterized Pennsylvaniaâs clinical examination as âan additional measurement of competency in the practice of dentistry that is absent in New York.âId.
at 29a.
The Board rejected the idea that it should consider Dr. Haentgesâ âindividual
experiences,â such as the number of procedures he performed during his residency,
6
to determine substantial equivalency. R.R. at 30a. From the Boardâs perspective,
Section 3111(a)(1) permitted it to compare the text of New Yorkâs licensing statute
and regulations against the text of Pennsylvaniaâs licensing statute and regulations.
Id.at 30a-32a. Considering anything but the âplain letter of the licensing lawsâ would be improper, burdensome, and perhaps even âviolative of . . . constitutional protections.âId.
at 30a-31a. The Board rejected the hearing examinerâs reliance on public policy considerations as well, asserting there was no reason to believe Section 3111(a)âs purpose was to lower the âquality standard for professionalsâ licensed in Pennsylvania.7Id.
at 33a.
Dr. Haentges filed a petition for review in this Court. He raises interrelated
challenges to the Boardâs determination that New Yorkâs licensing requirements are
not âsubstantially equivalentâ to Pennsylvaniaâs licensing requirements.8
II. Discussion
This Court reviews the Boardâs order for violations of constitutional rights,
violations of agency practice and procedure, and other legal errors. 2 Pa.C.S. § 704.
In addition, we review whether substantial evidence supports the Boardâs necessary
factual findings. Id. We may disturb the Boardâs order if it committed an abuse of
its discretion, exceeded its authority, or misapplied the law. Hammad v. Bureau of
Pro. & Occupational Affs., State Bd. of Veterinary Med., 124 A.3d 374, 380 n.7 (Pa. Cmwlth. 2015) (citing Nelson v. State Bd. of Veterinary Med.,863 A.2d 129
, 132
n.4 (Pa. Cmwlth. 2004)).
7
Because the Board found no substantial equivalency, it declined to address the other factors at
Section 3111(a)(2)-(5), giving the evidence in support of them âno weight.â R.R at 33a.
8
Although it is absent from the certified record, the reproduced record contains an application for
reconsideration Dr. Haentges filed on March 30, 2022. Dr. Haentges and the Board state in their
respective briefs that the Board did not rule on the application. Dr. Haentgesâ Br. at 7; Boardâs
Br. at 23.
7
Our research has uncovered no previous decisions applying Section 3111(a)
or Pennsylvaniaâs predecessor licensure by endorsement statute, which contained
the same language.9 Section 3111 provides as follows:
(a) General rule.--Notwithstanding any existing provisions related to
licensure by endorsement or licensure by reciprocity in an applicable
licensing statute, a licensing board or licensing commission shall issue
a license, certificate, registration or permit to an applicant to allow
practice in this Commonwealth if, upon application to the licensing
board or licensing commission, the applicant satisfies all of the
following conditions:
(1) Holds a current license, certificate, registration or
permit from another state, territory or country and the
licensing board or licensing commission determines that
stateâs, territoryâs or countryâs requirements are
substantially equivalent to or exceed the requirements
established in this Commonwealth.
(2) Demonstrates competency in the profession or
occupation through methods determined by the licensing
board or licensing commission, including having
completed continuing education or having experience in
the profession or occupation for at least two of the five
years preceding the date of the application under this
section.
(3) Has not committed any act that constitutes grounds for
refusal, suspension or revocation of a license, certificate,
registration or permit to practice that profession or
occupation in this Commonwealth unless the licensing
board or licensing commission determines, in its
discretion, that the act should not be an impediment to the
granting of a license, certificate, registration or permit to
practice in this Commonwealth.
9
The language now found at 63 Pa.C.S. § 3111 originally appeared in the Act of July 2, 1993, P.L.
345, as amended, added by Section 1 of the Act of July 1, 2019, P.L. 292, formerly 63 P.S. §
2206.1. The General Assembly repealed and replaced the Act of July 2, 1993, P.L. 345, by the
Act of July 1, 2020, P.L. 575, resulting in the current codification at 63 Pa.C.S. § 3111.
8
(4) Is in good standing and has not been disciplined by the
jurisdiction that issued the license, certificate, registration
or permit unless the licensing board or licensing
commission determines, in its discretion, that the
discipline should not be an impediment to the granting of
a license, certificate, registration or permit to practice in
this Commonwealth.
(5) Pays any fees established by the licensing board or
licensing commission by regulation.
(b) Provisional endorsement license.--A licensing board or licensing
commission may issue a provisional license, certificate, registration or
permit to an applicant for licensure by endorsement while the applicant
is satisfying remaining requirements for the licensure by endorsement
as determined by the licensing board or licensing commission. The
holder of a provisional endorsement license issued under this
subsection may practice until any of the following occurs:
(1) A license, certificate, registration or permit is denied
by the licensing board or licensing commission under this
section.
(2) The expiration of the provisional endorsement license
as established by the licensing board or licensing
commission by regulation.
(3) The holder of the provisional endorsement license fails
to comply with the terms of the provisional license.
(c) Construction.--Nothing in this section is intended to supersede or
replace existing statutory provisions relating to licensure by
endorsement or licensure by reciprocity applicable to licensing boards
and licensing commissions through their respective enabling statutes.
63 Pa.C.S. § 3111.
As we have summarized, New York law at the time of the proceedings below
required that applicants âpass a written examinationâ and successfully complete âa
clinically-based postdoctoral general practice or specialty dental residency program,
of at least one yearâs duration, in a hospital or dental facility accredited for teaching
9
purposes by a national accrediting body approved by the department.â N.Y. Educ.
Law § 6604(3) (McKinney 2007). Additionally, it required that residencies âinclude a formal outcome assessment evaluation of the residentâs competence to practice dentistry acceptable to the department.âId.
For applicants completing a âgeneral practiceâ residency,10 this evaluation required a ânotarized written statement by the residency program director attesting that the applicantâ successfully completed the residency âand is in the directorâs judgment competent to practice dentistry.âN.Y. Comp. Codes R. & Regs. tit. 8, § 61.18
(b)(3)(i)(a) (2020). The evaluation further required a notarized statement or statements âby the residency program director who supervised the dental procedures performed by the applicant, and/or the attending dentist(s) who supervised the dental procedures,â attesting the applicant performed âindependently, and to generally accepted professional standards for dentistry, two full crowns, two endodontically treated teeth, four restorations (two anterior, two posterior) and one periodontal case during the accredited residency program.â11, 12N.Y. Comp. Codes R. & Regs. tit. 8, § 61.18
(b)(3)(i)(b) (2020).
In Pennsylvania, Section 3(c) of The Dental Law13 provides the Board with
the power to license applicants âafter examination.â 63 P.S. § 122(c). The Board
may âprescribe the subjects, character, manner, time and place of examinations,â
10
Dr. Haentges testified he completed a general practice residency. R.R. at 177a.
11
For specialty residencies, an attestation regarding the procedures an applicant performed was
not necessary. N.Y. Comp. Codes R. & Regs. tit. 8, § 61.18(b)(3)(ii) (2020). Despite this, New York law defined a specialty residency as one where âat least 50 percent of the accredited residency program consists of clinical training.âN.Y. Comp. Codes R. & Regs. tit. 8, § 61.18
(b)(2) (2020).
12
As of 2023, New Yorkâs licensing regulations no longer require a residency to include a specific
number of completed procedures.
13
Act of May 1, 1933, P.L. 216, as amended, 63 P.S. § 122(c).
10
among other things, and âissue licenses and certificates to such applicants as
successfully pass such examination.â 63 P.S. § 122(e). The Pennsylvania Code
provides that applicants âshall pass the National Board Dental Examination (written
examination) and the dental clinical examination administered byâ one of five
testing agencies.14 49 Pa. Code § 33.103(a). Neither the Dental Law nor the
Pennsylvania Code specify the requirements of any dental clinical examination.
Dr. Haentges argues the Board erred by requiring New Yorkâs dental licensing
requirements to be exactly equivalent rather than âsubstantially equivalentâ to the
licensing requirements in Pennsylvania. Dr. Haentgesâ Br. at 14-18. Moreover, he
contends the Board did not consider evidence that New Yorkâs requirements exceed
Pennsylvaniaâs requirements. Id. at 19-20. Dr. Haentges maintains that both New York and Pennsylvania seek to ensure the clinical competency of applicants, but that New York relies on a year-long residency with âlive patients in real life scenariosâ while Pennsylvania relies on âa two-day clinical examination in a controlled and sterile environment.âId. at 16-19
(footnote omitted). He describes the numerous procedures he completed during his residency and dental practice as âevidence of the validity of New Yorkâs approach to clinical competencyâ and asserts the Boardâs reasoning that a residency is more subjective than a dental clinical examination lacks evidentiary support.Id. at 17-19, 22-23, 26-27
. Dr. Haentges discusses legislative history underlying Section 3111(a), including statements by members of the General 14 Agencies listed include the âNorth East Regional Board of Dental Examiners, Inc. (NERB).â49 Pa. Code § 33.103
(a)(1). At the hearing, Dr. Haentges agreed the NERB changed its name to
the Commission on Dental Competency Assessments in 2015, and it is the agency that administers
the ADEX examination. R.R. at 124a.
11
Assembly regarding the statuteâs goal of helping qualified professionals from other
states obtain licensure in Pennsylvania.15 Id. at 11-13.
An applicant is entitled to licensure under Section 3111(a)(1) if âthe licensing
board . . . determinesâ that licensing requirements of an applicantâs state, territory,
or country are âsubstantially equivalent to or exceed the requirements established in
this Commonwealth.â16 63 Pa.C.S. § 3111(a)(1). It is therefore within the Boardâs
discretion to determine substantial equivalency. Nonetheless, we agree with Dr.
Haentges that the Board exercised its discretion in this matter based on an erroneous
15
Dr. Haentges relies in part on a report of the American Dental Association, among other entities,
entitled âReport of the Task Force on Assessment of Readiness for Practice.â Dr. Haentgesâ Br.
at 19-26. Dr. Haentges did not present this report during the hearing but apparently included it for
the first time as an attachment to his application for reconsideration. R.R. at 6a. The parties agree,
as noted, that the Board did not rule on Dr. Haentgesâ application. Dr. Haentgesâ Br. at 7; Boardâs
Br. at 23. Accordingly, the report was never admitted into the record, and we do not consider it in
this appeal.
16
The Dissent focuses on language in Section 3111(c), explaining the licensure by endorsement
provisions in Section 3111(a) do not âreplace or supersedeâ any previously existing licensure by
endorsement or reciprocity provisions. 63 Pa.C.S. § 3111(c). The problem with this reasoning is
that Section 3111(a) applies â[n]otwithstanding any existing provisions related to licensure by
endorsement or licensure by reciprocity in an applicable licensing statute.â 63 Pa.C.S. § 3111(a)
(emphasis added). Section 3111(c) simply means that the General Assembly did not intend Section
3111(a) to prevent applicants from obtaining licensure under any previous statutory provisions. In
other words, if an applicant was eligible for reciprocity under a previous provision, he or she would
remain eligible for reciprocity and would not need to pursue licensure under Section 3111(a). We
note our interpretation is consistent with guidance on the Department of Stateâs website, describing
licensure under Section 3111 as âyet another option for the boards to consider applicants licensed
in other jurisdictions,â which applies â[i]f a boardâs existing endorsement/reciprocity options do
not provide a means of licensure.â Pa. Depât of State, Applying for a professional license from
outside Pennsylvania, https://www.dos.pa.gov/ProfessionalLicensing/Pages/Act-41-2019.aspx
(last visited Dec. 12, 2023). The Dissentâs view, that Section 3111(a) applies â[n]otwithstanding
any existing provisionsââexcept when those provisions are differentârenders the language
meaningless. See 63 Pa.C.S. § 3111(a). The only relevance the previous licensure by endorsement
provision at Section 3(f) of The Dental Law, 63 P.S. § 122(f), has to our analysis today is to
illustrate the type of unduly burdensome licensing requirements our General Assembly moved
away from by enacting Section 3111(a) into law.
12
interpretation of Section 3111(a)(1)âs statutory language. âSubstantially equivalentâ
simply means the licensing requirements of an applicantâs state, territory, or country,
when viewed as a whole, must be equal in their essential respects, or largely equal,
to Pennsylvaniaâs licensing requirements.17 For example, Section 2 of the CPA
Law18 expressly defines âsubstantial equivalency.â Substantial equivalency includes
the fact that âthe education, examination and experience requirements contained in
the statutes and regulations of another jurisdiction are comparable to or exceed the
education, examination and experience requirements contained in this act.â 63 P.S.
§ 9.2.
This plain language reading of Section 3111(a)(1) supports the conclusion that
New Yorkâs licensing requirements were substantially equivalent to Pennsylvaniaâs
licensing requirements. Both New York and Pennsylvania required applicants to
complete a written examination and a clinical componentâa residency in New York
and a clinical examination in Pennsylvania. These clinical components sought to
ensure that only applicants with established clinical skills received licensure. They
served the same purposes and were functionally interchangeable. This is particularly
clear because New York previously required a clinical examination. A review of
New York law reveals the state eliminated its clinical examination and replaced it
17
An âequivalentâ is something âequal in force, amount, or value.â Merriam-Websterâs Collegiate
Dictionary 392-93 (10th ed. 1997). Other relevant definitions include: âcorresponding or virtually
identical esp[ecially] in effect or functionâ and âequal in might or authority.â Id. at 393. Relevant
definitions of âsubstantialâ include âimportant, essential,â and âbeing largely but not wholly that
which is specified.â Id. at 1174.
18
Act of May 26, 1947, P.L. 318, as amended, 63 P.S. § 9.2. A âCPAâ is a certified public
accountant.
13
with a residency, effective December 31, 2006.19 See N.Y. Comp. Codes R. & Regs.
tit. 8, § 61.2(a)(1)(ii), (9) (2006) (requiring individuals who satisfy certain criteria
âon or before December 31, 2006,â to complete an âexamination in clinical
dentistry,â but permitting them to âsubstitute successful completion of a residency
programâ). The New York legislature made this change via a series of bills
beginning in 2002.20 See 2002 N.Y. Sess. Laws Ch. 143 (McKinney).
The Board failed to engage in a plain language reading of Section 3111(a)(1)âs
substantial equivalency requirement when reaching a decision in this case. Instead
19
Counsel for the Board noted at oral argument that approximately seven states accept either a
clinical examination or a residency, which further signals the requirements are interchangeable.
20
A legislative memorandum in support of the change provides the following justification:
This bill would mandate the completion of an accredited clinically-based
postdoctoral general practice or specialty dental residency programs in order to
obtain a dental license. The bill recognizes that the extensive and intensive
supervised practical skills training, as well as the additional academic instructions
of a postdoctoral dental residency program, establishes competency for purposes of
licensure. The bill acknowledges the value of the additional clinical training for
applicants for dental licensure.
This bill is consistent with the State Education Departmentâs reliance upon
approved residency in medicine and podiatry to provide necessary training and
experience for licensure. There is no rationale for creating a different standard for
the acceptability of a dental residentâs training as compared to medicine and
podiatry. Moreover, this bill provides the experience requirement - independent of
the examination requirement - that had previously been missing for dental
licensure.
The bill acknowledges the benefits of measuring dental competency over a period
of time as opposed to the current one-day clinical examination. Moreover, by
requiring a residency program for licensure, the public will be better protected and
the dental profession improved by measuring dental competency over a longer
period of time and requiring additional experience and training, as is required in the
medical field. Residents will also benefit from the opportunity to treat patients in
a setting other than a dental school.
New York State Assembly Memorandum in Support of Legislation, N.Y. Bill Jacket, 2004 A.B.
6065.
14
of considering whether New Yorkâs dental licensing requirements were essentially
equal, largely equal, or in excess of Pennsylvaniaâs requirements, the Board denied
licensure to Dr. Haentges because a residency and a clinical examination were not
exactly the same. The Board suggests in its brief that no residency, no matter how
stringent, could substitute for a clinical examination. See Boardâs Br. at 14 (âA state
whose licensing requirements do not include a clinical dental examination is not
substantially equivalent to Pennsylvania.â).
The Board also discussed why it believed a residency could not be as effective
as a clinical examination for ensuring the âcompetencyâ of applicants. Determining
whether licensing requirements are substantially equivalent will necessarily require
the Board to consider whether a dentist licensed in another jurisdiction can provide
dental care safely and competently to Pennsylvaniaâs standards. Still, it is significant
that the statute requires review of an applicantâs competency in Section 3111(a)(2),
separate from Section 3111(a)(1)âs substantial equivalency determination. See 63
Pa.C.S. § 3111(a)(2). To the extent the Board believed a one-year residency was
less capable of establishing competency than an examination lasting as little as two
days, our legislature ensured that only applicants who demonstrate competency can
obtain licensure by endorsement. Section 3111(a) provides other safeguards as well,
including requirements that an applicant cannot have committed any act that would
be grounds for the loss of a license in Pennsylvania, and that an applicant must be in
good standing and not subject to discipline in his or her own jurisdiction. 63 Pa.C.S.
§ 3111(a)(3), (4).
We agree with the Board that Section 3111(a)(1) requires consideration of the
licensing ârequirementsâ of an applicantâs state, territory, or country, rather than an
applicantâs individual experiences. It is important to add, however, that the Board
15
violated its own rule and looked beyond Pennsylvania law to justify a decision that
New Yorkâs licensing requirements were not substantially equivalent. The critical
qualities of a dental clinical examination on which the Board relied, grading criteria
and objectivity, do not appear in Pennsylvaniaâs licensing statute and regulations.21
Section 3(c) of The Dental Law provides for licensure âafter examination.â22 63 P.S.
§ 122(c). The Pennsylvania Code provides applicants must pass âthe dental clinical
examination administered byâ one of five enumerated testing agencies. 49 Pa. Code
§ 33.103(a). Pennsylvania law does not state what its clinical examinationâs grading
criteria must be, nor does it include controls to ensure objectivity. Just as New York
delegates competency assessments to residency programs, Pennsylvania delegates
those assessments to testing agencies.23 If the Board had truly limited its analysis to
the âplain letter of the licensing laws,â R.R. at 31a, it would have compared what
New Yorkâs licensing statute and regulations requiredâa one-year residency, during
which the applicant performs certain procedures with supervision from experienced
dentists, who then determine if he or she is competentâversus what Pennsylvaniaâs
21
At oral argument before this panel, counsel for the Board explained the ADEX examination
eliminates âoutlierâ scores by using three graders to evaluate each applicantâs performance. We
note the fact that it is possible for an âoutlierâ score to exist demonstrates the ADEX examination
is not wholly objective.
22
The Dissentâs discussion of the âexaminationâ requirement in Section 3(c) and (e) of The Dental
Law is misguided. Section 3(c) does not require a âclinical examination,â and both Pennsylvania
and New York require written examinations. More importantly, the same General Assembly that
long ago expressed its preference for an examination in The Dental Law more recently enacted
Section 3111(a)(1), providing for licensure based on âsubstantially equivalent,â rather than equal
requirements. 63 Pa.C.S. § 3111(a)(1).
23
Dr. Haentges makes a similar point in his brief and reply brief. See Dr. Haentgesâ Br. at 17 n.5;
Dr. Haentgesâ Reply Br. at 2 n.2.
16
licensing statute and regulations requiredâa clinical examination, with no apparent
minimum standards.
Ultimately, even if the Board did not commit an error of law in interpreting
Section 3111(a)(1)âs statutory language, its decision was an abuse of discretion. We
have emphasized the value of deference to boards and commissions because of their
membersâ expertise. See Troiani Grp. v. City of Pittsburgh Bd. of Appeals, 273 A.3d
43, 55-57 (Pa. Cmwlth. 2022) (collecting cases). The fact that this Court may have a different opinion is insufficient to interfere with an agencyâs actions, and we may not substitute judicial discretion for administrative discretion. Gwynedd Dev. Grp., Inc. v. Depât of Lab. & Indus., Bureau of Lab. Standards,666 A.2d 365, 370
(Pa. Cmwlth. 1995) (citing Lynch v. Urb. Redevelopment Auth. of Pittsburgh,496 A.2d 1331
(Pa. Cmwlth. 1985)). That said, for the reasons discussed above, New Yorkâs
licensing requirements were substantially equivalent to, or exceeded, Pennsylvaniaâs
licensing requirements by any reasonable measure. Indeed, if given the choice, it is
doubtful anyone would prefer to undergo a dental procedure performed by a newly
licensed dentist who completed a two-day exam on a manikin over a newly licensed
dentist who completed a year-long residency training and performing procedures on
live patients. Although the Board attempts to justify its decision by implying that
Dr. Haentges and other similarly situated dentists would lower the âquality standard
for professionalsâ licensed in Pennsylvania, R.R. at 33a, we can find no support for
the Boardâs concerns under the applicable law and the circumstances of this case.24
24
Our decision applies only to New Yorkâs residency requirement as it existed when Dr. Haentges
obtained his dental license and applied for licensure by endorsement in Pennsylvania. We express
no opinion on the substantial equivalence of New Yorkâs current residency requirement.
17
III. Conclusion
Accordingly, we must reverse the Boardâs March 16, 2022 order, denying Dr.
Haentges licensure by endorsement under Section 3111(a)(1). Because the Board
considered only Section 3111(a)(1) when reaching its decision, we remand for the
Board to consider the remaining factors at 63 Pa.C.S. § 3111(a)(2)-(5). The Board
shall issue a new order from which appeal may be taken within 45 days of the date
of this decision.
______________________________
STACY WALLACE, Judge
18
IN THE COMMONWEALTH COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA
Joshua Haentges, D.D.S., :
Petitioner :
:
v. : No. 348 C.D. 2022
:
State Board of Dentistry, :
Respondent :
ORDER
AND NOW, this 21st day of December 2023, the State Board of Dentistryâs
(Board) March 16, 2022 order is REVERSED with respect to 63 Pa.C.S. §
3111(a)(1). The case is REMANDED for the Board to consider the factors at 63
Pa.C.S. § 3111(a)(2)-(5). The Board shall issue a new order from which an appeal
may be taken within 45 days of the date of this decision.
Jurisdiction relinquished.
______________________________
STACY WALLACE, Judge
IN THE COMMONWEALTH COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA
Joshua Haentges, D.D.S., :
Petitioner :
:
v. :
:
State Board of Dentistry, : No. 348 C.D. 2022
Respondent : Argued: September 13, 2023
BEFORE: HONORABLE RENĂE COHN JUBELIRER, President Judge
HONORABLE PATRICIA A. McCULLOUGH, Judge
HONORABLE MICHAEL H. WOJCIK, Judge
HONORABLE CHRISTINE FIZZANO CANNON, Judge
HONORABLE ELLEN CEISLER, Judge
HONORABLE LORI A. DUMAS, Judge
HONORABLE STACY WALLACE, Judge
DISSENTING OPINION
BY JUDGE FIZZANO CANNON FILED: December 21, 2023
I respectfully dissent. I do not believe the Board committed any error
of law or abused its discretion in denying the license application of Joshua Haentges,
D.D.S. (Dr. Haentges).
As the majority observes, Section 3(c) and (e) of The Dental Law1
empowers the State Board of Dentistry (Board) to issue licenses to applicants âafter
examinationâ2 â specifically, âto such applicants as successfully pass such
examination.â 63 P.S. § 122(c) & (e). Section 3(f) of The Dental Law allows the
1
Act of May 1, 1933, P.L. 216, as amended, 63 P.S. §§ 120-130l.
2
Pursuant to the examination requirement of this enabling statute, the Boardâs
implementing regulation requires that â[c]andidates for licensure shall pass the National Board
Dental Examination (written examination) and the dental clinical examination administered by one
of the [designated examining agencies].â 49 Pa. Code § 33.103(a).
Board to accept and endorse as valid a license issued in another state, where that
stateâs standards âare, in the opinion of the [B]oard, equal to the standards of this
Commonwealth . . . .â 63 P.S. § 122(f) (emphasis added).
Section 3111(a)(1) of Title 63 of the Pennsylvania Consolidated
Statutes provides generally for reciprocal professional licensure where âthe licensing
board or licensing commission determines that stateâs . . . requirements are
substantially equivalent to or exceed the requirements established in this
Commonwealth.â 63 Pa.C.S. § 3111(a)(1). However, Section 3111(c) provides
guidance on the proper construction of Section 3111 by stating that â[n]othing in this
section is intended to supersede or replace existing statutory provisions relating to
licensure by endorsement or licensure by reciprocity applicable to licensing boards
and licensing commissions through their respective enabling statutes.â 63 Pa.C.S. §
3111(c).3
Here, the legislatureâs specific requirement of an examination in The
Dental Law defines the parameters of the Boardâs discretion in determining whether
another stateâs standards are equal to those of Pennsylvania. The Board did not
commit an error of law by determining that a residency and an examination are not
equal within the meaning of Section 3(f).4
3
Although, as the majority observes, Section 3111(a) applies notwithstanding other
statutory provisions, Section 3111(c) is specifically titled âConstruction.â Thus, in guiding the
construction of Section 3111, Section 3111(c) effectively limits the effect of Section 3111(a)
where, as here, an enabling statute imposes an express requirement that differs from the substantial
equivalency provision of Section 3111(a). See 63 Pa.C.S. 3111(c). In any event, Section 3111(a)
does not eliminate the Boardâs discretion to determine substantial equivalency, which is discussed
below.
4
Regarding the majorityâs suggestion that The Dental Lawâs examination requirement
lacks grading criteria and objectivity requirements, I note that Dr. Haentges has not raised that
issue.
CFC - 2
The Board likewise did not abuse its discretion in determining that New
Yorkâs residency requirement is not substantially equivalent to Pennsylvaniaâs
clinical examination requirement. The majority cites the definition of âsubstantial
equivalencyâ in Section 2 of the CPA Law,5 63 P.S. § 9.2, as illustrating that
licensing requirements in different jurisdictions need not be identical to be
substantially equivalent. I do not disagree with that general premise. Nonetheless,
the Board has broad discretion in considering whether another jurisdictionâs
licensing requirements are substantially equivalent to those in Pennsylvania.
Specifically, the Board had discretion here to determine whether a residency is
substantially equivalent to Pennsylvaniaâs clinical examination.
The majority correctly recognizes the high level of deference courts
owe to the Board because of its expertise in applying its enabling statute. However,
the majorityâs opinion then weighs the relative desirability of a residency versus a
clinical examination in evaluating an applicantâs qualifications for licensure and
concludes that the Boardâs (and, by implication, the legislatureâs) preference for an
examination is not reasonable. Respectfully, I believe that in doing so, the majorityâs
analysis has impermissibly substituted this Courtâs judgment for that of the Board.
In short, I do not believe the Board committed legal error or abused its
broad discretion in determining that fulfilling New Yorkâs residency requirement
did not entitle Dr. Haentges to forgo Pennsylvaniaâs clinical examination in seeking
a license to practice dentistry in Pennsylvania. For that reason, I dissent.
___________________________________
CHRISTINE FIZZANO CANNON, Judge
5
Act of May 26, 1947, P.L. 318, as amended, 63 P.S. §§ 9.1-9.16b.
CFC - 3