MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER
New York Education Law § 6805(1)(6) provides that “[t]o qualify for a pharmacist’s license, an applicant shall ... be a United States citizen or an alien lawfully admitted for permanent residence in the United States.” The phrase “lawfully admitted for permanent residence” refers to aliens who have obtained their green cards — that is, aliens who have gained “legal permanent resident” (“LPR”) status under federal law. See 8 U.S.C. § 1101(a)(20). The New York statute excludes all other aliens from the pharmacy profession, including those who have received authorization from the federal government to work in the United States temporarily. 1 The question in this case is whether § 6805(1)(6) is unconstitutional because it denies non-LPR aliens equal protection of the laws or because it encroaches upon the exclusive federal power to regulate immigration.
The Supreme Court, relying on both the Equal Protection Clause and the exclusivity of the federal immigration power, has traditionally applied strict scrutiny to strike down state laws that discriminate against aliens.
See Examining Bd. of Engineers, Architects and Surveyors v. Flores de Otero,
BACKGROUND
The facts of these consolidated actions are not disputed. Plaintiffs are twenty-six aliens with temporary authorization from the federal government to work in the United States. Twenty-two of them obtained visas known as H-1B temporary worker visas, which under the Immigration and Nationality Act may be given to aliens who come “temporarily to the United States to perform services ... in a specialty occupation....” 8 U.S.C. § 1101(a)(15)(H)(i)(b); Def. 56.1 ¶4. The other four plaintiffs obtained “TN” tempo
Plaintiffs are known in the parlance of immigration law as “nonimmigrant aliens” because they are authorized to stay in the country for only a finite period. Both H-1B and TN status grant admission to the United States for an initial period of no more than three years. 8 C.F.R. §§ 214.2(h)(9)(iii)(A)(1) (H-1B visa), 214.6(e) (TN status). Both statuses also permit three-year extensions of this initial period, but an alien may not remain in the country on an H-1B visa for more than a total of six years (in other words, an H-1B visa may only be extended once).
Id.
at § 214.2(h)(15)(ii)(B)(1).
2
Despite these provisions, however, all but two of the plaintiffs have been in the United States for more than six years, and six have been here for more than ten years. (Adusumelli Opp. at 7 n. 8; Adusumelli 56.1 ¶ 20, 49-51, 98, 159-60, 201-02; Farrell 56.1 ¶8.) Two patterns of the immigration process for professionals explain this apparent anomaly. First, professional aliens who receive temporary work authorization are often former students who entered the country on student visas, completed their studies at an American university, and then remained to work in the United States as H-1B or TN professionals.
(See, e.g.,
Farrell 56.1 ¶¶ 2-4 (Farrell entered on an F-l student visa in 1999, received a Doctor of Pharmacy from Howard University in 2005, and subsequently received an H-1B visa to work as a pharmacist at Mount Sinai Hospital).) Second, aliens may apply for green cards while working in the country on nonimmigrant status.
3
Because the green card process is slow and often remains unresolved when an H
Defendants are the Commissioner of Education and the Chancellor of the Board of Regents (collectively, “the State”) — the leaders of the two New York agencies responsible for enforcing § 6805(1)(6). 4 They argue that nonimmigrant aliens are transient as a class and that the statute rationally protects the public from the consequences of this transience:
Section 6805(1)(6) [furthers] ... New York’s legitimate interest in protecting the health and safety of its residents by monitoring, regulating and enforcing compliance with professional disciplinary rules and ensuring the availability of malpractice actions against pharmacists where appropriate.... Persons without permanent ties to the United States are less likely to remain in the state, and [ ] are therefore less likely to comply with state disciplinary regulations.... Likewise, ... pharmacists without permanent ties to the United States are more likely to locate their assets outside the state and outside the country, making them less available to satisfy judgments in malpractice actions.
(Def. Mem. at 18-19.)
Plaintiffs argue § 6805(1)(6) violates the Equal Protection Clause; unconstitutionally encroaches upon the federal immigration power; conflicts with federal immigration law; violates substantive due process; and violates the right to interstate travel. They seek a judgment declaring the statute unconstitutional and permanently enjoining the defendants from enforcing it. The parties filed cross motions for summary judgment. Because the Court agrees with plaintiffs’ first two arguments, it does not reach the others.
DISCUSSION
“State classifications based on alienage are subject to ‘strict judicial scrutiny.’ ”
Examining Bd. of Engineers, Architects and Surveyors v. Flores de Otero,
[Classifications based on alienage, like those based on nationality or race, are inherently suspect and subject to close judicial scrutiny. Aliens as a class are a prime example of a ‘discrete and insular’ minority (see United States v. Carotene Products Co.,304 U.S. 144 , 152-153, n. 4,58 S.Ct. 778 ,82 L.Ed. 1234 (1938)) for whom such heightened judicial solicitude is appropriate. Accordingly, it was said in Takahashi that “the power of a state to apply its laws exclusively to its alien inhabitants as a class is confined within narrow limits.”
The underpinnings of the Court’s constitutional decisions defining the circumstances under which state and local governments may favor citizens of this country by denying lawfully admitted aliens equal rights and opportunities have been two. The first, based squarely on the concepts embodied in the Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment and in the Due Process Clause of the Fifth Amendment, recognizes that “(a)liens as a class are a prime example of a ‘discrete and insular’ minority ... for whom ... heightened judicial solicitude is appropriate.” Graham v. Richardson,403 U.S. at 372 ,91 S.Ct. 1848 . The second, grounded in the Supremacy Clause, Const., Art. VI, cl. 2, and in the naturalization power, Art. I, s 8, cl. 4, recognizes the Federal Government’s primary responsibility in the field of immigration and naturalization.
Here, the State does not argue that § 6805(1)(6) falls into either of these established exceptions; instead the State seeks to distinguish the rule that alienage classifications draw strict scrutiny on the ground that the rule should only apply to laws that discriminate against LPRs. Unlike the
Graham
line of cases — most of which concerned laws that distinguished between citizens and non-citizens and all of which concerned statutes that disfavored at least some LPRs — § 6805(1)(6) draws a slightly different line by immigration status, one that treats LPRs and citizens alike and places all other aliens into a disfavored class. Justice Rehnquist raised this distinction in his dissent in
Toll v. Moreno,
The Court will consider the LPR distinction’s relevance to each of Justice Blaekmun’s rationales in turn.
A. Equal Protection and the LPR distinction
The State’s Equal Protection argument turns on differences in the rights and obligations of LPRs, on the one hand, and nonimmigrant aliens, on the other hand. According to the State, LPRs “share essential benefits and burdens of citizenship” — they pay taxes like citizens, they can volunteer for or be conscripted into the military, and they have authorization to live and work in the country indefinitely — while other aliens lawfully within the country do not have as much in common with citizens. (Def. Mem. at 13 (quoting
LeClerc,
LeClerc
and
LULAC
support the State’s argument. In
LeClerc,
a divided Fifth Circuit panel upheld a Louisiana law that barred all aliens except LPRs from taking the state bar exam.
The [Supreme] Court’s treatment of resident aliens [ ] rests upon pragmatic recognition that [permanent] resident aliens are similarly situated to citizens in their economic, social, and civic (as opposed to political) conditions.... Like citizens, [permanent] resident aliens may not be deported, are entitled to reside permanently in the United States, may serve, voluntarily or by conscription, in the military, are entitled to state aid benefits, and pay taxes on the same bases as citizens.
Id.
at 418. The court reasoned that nonLPRs do not bear the same badges of quasi-citizenship and that laws discriminating against non-LPRs as a class are therefore not suspect.
Id.
In
LULAC,
a divided Sixth Circuit panel relied on the reasoning in
LeClerc
to uphold a similar Tennessee law, which rendered non-LPR aliens ineligible to obtain driver’s licenses.
LeClerc
and
LULAC’s
adoption of the LPR distinction has prompted criticism from jurists and commentators. In both circuit cases, dissenting judges argued that alienage is a suspect classification for reasons that apply to LPRs and nonimmigrants alike. “[T]he basis for aliens’ suspect class designation seems to be premised on aliens’ inability to vote, and thus their impotence in the political process, and the long history of invidious discrimi
The disagreement over the LPR distinction encompasses two disputed questions. First, what are the differences between LPRs and nonimmigrant aliens? And second, do those differences properly distinguish the underpinnings of the doctrine that aliens are a suspect class? The first question is factual, but it has generated disagreement nonetheless. Both the LeClerc and LULAC courts relied upon a series of purported differences between LPRs and nonimmigrants. LeClerc summarized those differences as follows:
Nonimmigrant aliens’ status is far more constricted than that of resident aliens. Nonimmigrant aliens are admitted to the United States only for the duration of their status, and on the express condition they have “no intention of abandoning” their countries of origin and do not intend to seek permanent residence in the United States. They are admitted, remain, and must depart at the discretion of the Attorney General. Plaintiffs acknowledge that nonimmigrant aliens may not serve in the U.S. military, are subject to strict employment restrictions, incur differential tax treatment, and may be denied federal welfare benefits.
Like citizens, [LPRs] pay taxes, support the economy, serve in the armed forces, and are entitled to reside permanently in the United States. Temporary resident aliens, on the other hand, are admitted to the United States only for the duration of their authorized status, are not permitted to serve in the U.S. military, are subject to strict employment restrictions, incur differential tax treatment, and may be denied federal welfare benefits.
As the dissenters noted, aspects of these summaries are misleading. First, nonimmigrants like plaintiffs do pay taxes, often on the same terms as citizens and LPRs. Nonimmigrants are considered U.S. residents for tax purposes so long as they are “physically present in the U.S. for at least 31 calendar days during the course of the
The Circuit majorities’ descriptions of nonimmigrants’ transience are also inaccurate.
LeClerc
stated “[n]onimmigrant aliens are admitted to the United States only for the duration of their status, and on the express condition they have ‘no intention of abandoning’ their countries of origin and do not intend to seek permanent residence in the United States.”
As for the other features of nonimmigrant status that the circuit majorities relied upon — ineligibility for military service and certain federal benefits, and limited work permission (in other words, permission to work only in a specified field)'— neither the circuits nor defendants here explain how these federally imposed restrictions relate to state policy or otherwise impact the Equal Protection analysis.
See Takahashi,
The remaining question is whether these differences properly distinguish the constitutional rule that alienage-based classifications are suspect under the Equal Protection Clause. The
Graham
court, by providing only the most limited explanation of why it designated aliens a suspect class, left significant room for disagreement over this issue.
Graham
declared aliens a “discrete and insular minority.” But what does it mean to be a discrete and insular minority? And why do aliens as a class fit that description?
Graham
did not clarify.
See Toll,
Perhaps the best way to read Graham’s use of the hoary phrase, “discrete and insular minority,” is as a signifier that denotes a group of criteria for determining the proper scrutiny level under the Equal Protection Clause, rather- than a single dispositive rationale. Justice Brennan proposed this broader reading in Plyler:
Several formulations might explain our treatment of certain classifications as “suspect.” Some classifications are more likely than others to reflect deep-seated prejudice rather than legislative rationality in pursuit of some legitimate objective. Legislation predicated on such prejudice is easily recognized as incompatible with the constitutional understanding that each person is to be judged individually and is entitled to equal justice under the law. Classifications treated as suspect tend to be irrelevant to any proper legislative goal. Finally, certain groups, indeed largely the same groups, have historically been “relegated to such a position of political powerlessness as to command extraordinary protection from the majoritarian political process.” The experience of our Nation has shown that prejudice may manifest itself in the treatment of some groups. Our response to that experience is reflected in the Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment. Legislation imposing special disabilities upon groups disfavored by virtue of circumstances beyond their control suggests the kind of “class or caste” treatment that the Fourteenth Amendment was designed to abolish.
The first scrutiny criterion is the most prevalent. The Supreme Court draws upon history and context to make a preliminary assessment of the legislature’s likely motives for classifying people by a particular characteristic, and if that preliminary assessment reveals red flags, the Court applies heightened scrutiny. For example, race is seldom relevant to policy, and our history reveals examples of legislative enactments motivated by irrational racial prejudice, so the Court is suspicious of any law that classifies by race.
See, e.g., Cleburne v. Cleburne Living Ctr.,
By labeling aliens a discrete and insular minority, the Court [concluded] ... that for most legislative purposes there simply are no meaningful differences between resident aliens and citizens, so that aliens and citizens are persons similarly circumstanced who must be treated alike. At the same time, both common experience and the unhappy history reflected in our cases demonstrate that aliens often have been the victims of irrational discrimination. In combination, these factors — disparate treatment accorded a class of similarly circumstanced persons who historically have been disabled by the prejudice of the majority — [led] the Court to conclude that alienage classifications in themselves supply a reason to infer antipathy and therefore demand close judicial scrutiny.
Toll,
The State’s argument, as the Court construes it, is that alienage classifications
Somewhat persuasively, this argument seeks to tie the LPR distinction to the criteria for determining scrutiny in a way that the
LeClerc
and
LULAC
opinions do not. But the Court is not convinced that the differences between LPRs and nonimmigrants are substantial enough to remove non-LPR classifications from the ambit of judicial suspicion. First, the Supreme Court has already considered and rejected a state law discriminating against a subclass of aliens characterized by potential transience. In
Nyquist,
the Court struck down a New York law that discriminated against LPRs who had not yet applied for citizenship and who did not intend to apply for citizenship once they qualified to do so.
The Nyquist law and § 6805(1)(6) implicate transience in different ways — the Nyquist law by excluding aliens who refused to declare an irrevocable commitment to the United States, and § 6805(1)(6) by excluding aliens whom the federal government may still force to leave after a finite period. But the point remains: the affected sub-class of aliens in Nyquist was distinctly more likely to leave the United States than the unaffected remainder of the citizen/LPR population, yet the Supreme Court applied strict scrutiny anyway.
Second, the State’s argument addresses only one of the two factors the Supreme Court considers in assessing a law’s likely rationality for choice-of-scrutiny purposes. Even if one accepts the premise that non-immigrants have a higher potential for transience than LPRs and that this fact has policy relevance, no one would argue that nonimmigrant aliens are any less likely to suffer irrational discrimination than their LPR counterparts. Indeed, under the State’s reasoning, the opposite is true: because nonimmigrants generally have enjoyed less time to assimilate, they are logically more likely to suffer xenophobic animosity. In other contexts, where a distinguishing characteristic has policy relevance but has also been an axis of irrational discrimination, the Supreme Court has applied other forms of heightened scrutiny. Gender classifications receive intermediate scrutiny because of this mix of possible policy relevance and bad history:
[Sjkeptical scrutiny of official action denying rights or opportunities based on sex responds to volumes of history [ofdiscrimination].... [But] the heightened review standard our precedent establishes does not make sex a proscribed classification. Supposed “inherent differences” are no longer accepted as a ground for race or national origin classifications. Physical differences between men and women, however, are enduring: “The two sexes are not fungible; a community made up exclusively of one [sex] is different from a community composed of both.” Ballard v. United States, 329 U.S. 187 , 193,67 S.Ct. 261 ,91 L.Ed. 181 (1946).
United States v. Virginia,
Of course, one might believe that § 6805(1)(6), rather than extending this unfortunate history, seeks only to further the legitimate purposes the State ascribes to it here — that is, that the law aims to enhance professional discipline and ensure the availability of malpractice remedies,
The non-LPR distinction is even less relevant to the other criteria for heightened scrutiny — fairness and political powerlessness. The Court’s alienage jurisprudence invokes these criteria in tandem.
See Griffiths,
Based on the foregoing considerations, the Court concludes that § 6805(1)(6), by denying non-LPR aliens the opportunity to obtain a pharmacy license, triggers strict or intermediate scrutiny. The Court need not choose between these levels of heightened scrutiny because § 6805(1)(6) fails them both. Under intermediate scrutiny, the government bears the burden of proving that the classification serves “important governmental objectives and that the discriminatory means employed are substantially related to the achievement of those objectives.”
Nguyen v. Immigration and Naturalization Service,
B. The LPR Distinction and the Federal Immigration Power
“[States] can neither add to nor take from the conditions lawfully imposed by Congress upon admission, naturalization and residence of aliens within the United States or the several states. State laws which impose discriminatory burdens upon the entrance or residence of aliens lawfully within the United States conflict with th[e] constitutionally derived federal power to regulate immigration, and have accordingly been held invalid.”
Toll,
In
DeCanas,
the Court limited the
Takahashi
rule somewhat, but not in any way that affects its implications for § 6805(1)(6).
DeCanas
held that a California law prohibiting employment of illegal aliens was a valid exercise of the state’s police power and did not encroach on the federal immigration power.
Under these principles, Section 6805(1)(6) is even more clearly unconstitutional than under the Equal Protection Clause. Indeed, in light of Toll, the LPR distinction is not a distinction at all.
The State makes two arguments. First, it contends that the following provision of federal immigration law shows that § 6805(l)(6)’s discrimination is congressionally sanctioned: “If an occupation requires a state or local license for an individual to fully perform the duties of the occupation, an alien ... seeking [a temporary visa to work] in that occupation must have that license prior to approval of the petition.” 8 C.F.R. § 214.2(h)(4)(v)(A). The State interprets this licensure requirement to mean that it may deny non-immigrants the opportunity to practice pharmacy or other occupations based on their immigration status, because the provision leaves professional licensing decisions to the states. Under this reading, the federal laws creating H-1B and TN visa status are advisory: they indicate that nonimmigrants should be admitted to the country to practice specialty occupations, but they also allow the states to decide whether nonimmigrants (as a class, not as individuals) should be permitted to practice specialty occupations. And if every state decided, like New York, that nonimmigrants should not enjoy this privilege, then they would write H-1B and TN status out of the United States Code. A far more logical interpretation is that the licensure provision prescribes an old and familiar division of labor: the federal government decides which aliens may enter and with what restrictions, and the states decide which individuals have the professional competence and qualifications to obtain pharmacy and other licenses.
See Watson v. Maryland,
Second, the State relies on a passage of dicta from Toll to distinguish that case’s holding:
[W]hen Congress has done nothing more than permit a class of aliens to enter the country temporarily, the proper application of the principle [that states may not impose ‘additional burdens not contemplated by Congress’] is likely to be a matter of dispute. But the instant case does not present such a situation....
There are two problems with this argument. First, most of the plaintiffs here are in all relevant respects similarly situated to the
Toll
plaintiffs. H-1B aliens, like G-4 aliens, need not demonstrate an intent not to abandon a foreign residence.
See LeClerc,
More to the point, the passage of dicta from
Toll
is quite a small platform for the State’s case. The passage does not actually say that states may impose auxiliary burdens on nonimmigrant aliens as a class. And here, the federal government has in fact done something “more than permit [plaintiffs] to enter the country temporarily” — -it has permitted them to enter the country temporarily for the purpose of practicing specialty occupations like pharmacy. By declaring that plaintiffs may not practice pharmacy, New York law unmistakably imposes “additional burdens not contemplated by Congress” and thus unconstitutionally encroaches upon the federal immigration power.
DeCanas,
A final point. The State argues that the four TN plaintiffs cannot argue preemption because the NAFTA Implementation Act provides that only the United States may bring actions attacking state laws that are inconsistent with NAFTA.
See
19 U.S.C. § 3312(b)(2). The Court finds it unnecessary to resolve this issue for two reasons. First, 6805(1)(6) is unconstitutional as applied to the TN plaintiffs because it violates their Equal Protection rights, so it does not matter whether they may assert a preemption challenge. Second, the argument that § 6805(1)(6) encroaches upon the federal immigration power does not actually depend on a conflict between state and federal law. The doctrine is that “state laws which impose discriminatory burdens upon the entrance or residence of aliens lawfully within the United States conflict with th[e]
constitutionally derived federal power to regulate immigration ..." Toll,
CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, plaintiffs’ motions for summary judgment [37, 41] are granted in substantial part and defendants’ motion [33] is denied in substantial part. The individual defendants are permanently enjoined from applying or enforcing § 6805(1)(6) against plaintiffs. Plaintiffs’ claims against the agencies are dismissed, as are their claims for monetary damages.
SO ORDERED.
Notes
. Similar provisions of the New York Education Law exclude non-LPR aliens from other professions. See N.Y. Educ. Law §§ 6524(6) (physicians), 6554(6) (chiropractors), 6604(6) (dentists), 6609(6) (dental hygienists), 6704(6) (veterinarians), 6711(6) (veterinary technicians), 6955(2)(6) (midwives), 7206(6) (engineers), 7206-a(1)(6) (land surveyors), 7324(1)(6) (landscape architects), 7504(1)(6) (certified shorthand reporters), 7804(5) (massage therapists).
. TN status, which covers four of the twenty-six plaintiffs, does not impose any limit on the alien’s total period of stay. Id. at § 214.6(h)(iii)(iv).
. That H-1B and TN workers can apply for green cards may itself seem anomalous, because these work permissions are meant for aliens who seek to remain in the United States temporarily. 8 U.S.C. § 1101(a)(15)(H)(i)(B) (covering aliens who are "coming
temporarily
to the United States”); 8 C.F.R. § 214.6(a) (covering Canadian and Mexican citizens who seek "temporary entry”). TN applicants must actually "satisfy the inspecting immigration officer that the proposed stay is temporary.”
Id.
at § 214.6(b). By the legal fiction of "dual intent,” however, H-1B and TN professionals may maintain their temporary status while simultaneously manifesting an intent to remain in the country permanently by applying to become LPRs.
See LeClerc,
. Though plaintiffs have also named the agencies themselves as defendants, the State argues that the claims against the agencies — the Department of Education and the Board of Regents — are barred by the Eleventh Amendment. The State is correct,
see United States
v.
City of Yonkers,
.
Plyler
concerned a Texas law that denied free public education to undocumented children. Though the Court found that illegal aliens are not a suspect class, it nonetheless invalidated the law under a heightened form of rational basis review triggered primarily by the innocence of the affected children.
. Justice Rehnquist wrote: “In each case in which the Court has tested state alienage classifications ... the question has been the extent to which the States could permissibly distinguish between citizens and permanent resident aliens____[T]he need for strict scrutiny simply does not apply to state policies that distinguish between permanent resident aliens and nonimmigrants.” Id.
. The first step in any Equal Protection analysis is to determine the applicable level of judicial scrutiny. That determination turns on whether the law creates a suspect classification or burdens a fundamental right:
[U]nless the legislature utilizes a classification that is inherently invidious because it disadvantages a suspect class, or because it infringes upon the exercise of a fundamental right, [courts] exercise only a limited review power over the acts of legislatures. Under this limited review power, we will uphold forms of state action under the Equal Protection Clause so long as the classification at issue bears some rational relationship to a legitimate state interest. On the other hand, where a suspect class or a fundamental right is at issue in the classification, we apply a more searching form of scrutiny. Thus, the threshold question for any analysis under the Equal Protection Clause is whether the highly deferential rational basis review applies, or instead whether the legislation involves a suspect class or a fundamental right resulting in the application of a stricter form of scrutiny.
Hayden
v.
Paterson,
. See Erwin Chemerinsky, Constitutional Law 672 (3d ed. 2006) ("Several criteria are applied in determining the level of scrutiny [under the Equal Protection Clause].... [T]he Court has emphasized that immutable characteristics like race, national origin, gender, and the marital status of one's parents warrant heightened scrutiny. The notion is that it is unfair to penalize a person for characteristics that the person did not choose and that the individual cannot change. The Court also considers the ability of the group to protect itself through the political process.... [Finally,] [t]he history of discrimination against the group is relevant to the Court in determining the relevant level of scrutiny. A related issue is the Court’s judgment concerning the likelihood that the classification reflects prejudice as opposed to a permissible government purpose.”).
. This was Justice Rehnquist's argument also.
Toll,
. The terminology of the Supreme Court’s gender-equal protection and alienage-equal protection doctrines is difficult to reconcile. In the gender context, the Court applies intermediate scrutiny based on the conclusion that gender is sometimes relevant to policy.
Virginia,
The differences between the Court's gender and alienage doctrines are in the end of little practical import, because under both frameworks the Court differentiates between permissible policy initiatives, on the one hand, and laws that strike too close to antipathy and irrational discrimination, on the other hand. But in the alienage context, the Court uses a doctrine of exceptions instead of intermediate scrutiny to accomplish that differentiation. The State seems to argue that the LPR distinction should create a third categorical exception to the alienage-equal protection doctrine, alongside the Foley and Plyler exceptions. But the foundation of the LPR distinction is too shoddy to support a bright categorical distinction. While an undocumented alien’s ipso facto violation of federal law marks a stark distinction from other state residents, a nonimmigrant alien’s potential transience is based on probabilities — many nonimmigrants, like the plaintiffs here who have lived in this country for more than ten years and are in the process of applying for permanent residence, stay in the United States longer than many LPRs. The nonimmigrant’s potential transience does not carry the patent salience of the Plyler and Foley distinctions.
. Before 1982, New York law excluded all aliens from the pharmacy profession, except those aliens who had legally declared an intent to become a citizen. See Act of Apr. 14, 1947, ch. 820, § 6803(1)(h), 1947 N.Y. Laws 2052. The Legislature broadened the exception to encompass all LPRs in response to the Graham line of cases. See Act of Jun. 1, 1982, ch. 133, § 17, 1982 N.Y. Laws 499.
. The State relies heavily on similar language in
Graham,
but there the Court referenced the similarities between legal alienage and citizenship in the course of
applying
strict scrutiny to reject a legislative justification; the Court did not invoke those similarities as a basis for choosing strict scrutiny review.
