I. INTRODUCTION
Appellant Patrick Church was denied a 1993 Permanent Fund Dividend (PFD) because he-was absent from the state for 274 days in 1992 while caring for his dying mother. At the time of his absence, caring for a terminally-ill relative was not an excusable absence for PFD purposes. 1 Church challenges the denial of his PFD, arguing that the Department of Revenue did not have authority to adopt certain PFD regulations, that the regulations and statutes defining a resident for PFD purposes were unreasonable and arbitrary, and that the Department of Revenue violated his procedural and substantive due process rights, his equal protection rights, his right to travel, and his rights to privacy and family relationships. We conclude that Church’s rights were not violated and that the denial was appropriate.
II. FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS
Patrick J. Church, an Alaska resident since 1975, was absent from Alaska from December 19, 1991, to September 30, 1992, while caring for his dying mother. The Alaska Department of Revenue (DOR), Permanent Fund Dividend Division (the Division), denied his application for a 1993 PFD because he was absent from the state for more than 180 days during 1992, and his absence did not fit into one of the allowable absences enumerated in AS 43.23.095(8)(A)-(G) or 15 Alaska Administrative Code (AAC) 23.163(c) (1997).
The Division denied Church’s appeal for a PFD in an informal conference decision on February 28, 1994, and Church moved for a formal hearing. Revenue Hearing Officer Diane Colvin denied Church’s motion for a formal hearing because there were no genuine issues of material fact in dispute and granted the State’s motion for summary adjudication because Church did not “meet the requirements established by law for PFD eligibility during the 1993 eligibility year.” This denial was upheld by Superior Court Judge Charles K. Cranston. Church appeals.
III.DISCUSSION
A. Standard of Review
We review administrative determinations independently.
See Handley v. State, Dep’t of Revenue,
B. The Regulations under Which Church Was Denied a 1993 PFD Were Reasonable and Not beyond the Authority of the Commissioner to Adopt.
Church was denied a 1993 PFD because he was absent from Alaska for more than 180 days during 1992 — the qualifying year for the 1993 PFD — and his absence was not “specifically allowed under AS 43.23.095(8)(A)-(G) or 15 AAC 23.163(c).” Alaska Statute 43.23.095(8) defines “state resident” for PFD purposes, and at the time of this action listed seven excusable absences for residents who were not in the state but intended to return.
2
Subsection (F) of AS
(16) any other reason or reasons consistent with the individual’s intent to remain a resident provided the absence or cumulative absences do not exceed
(A) 180 days if the individual is not claiming any of the absences listed in (1) through (15) of this subsection....
15 AAC 23.163(c)(16) (emphasis added).
Since neither the statute nor the regulation specifically listed the reason for Church’s absence, and he was gone longer than 180 days, the Division was required to deny him a PFD. The regulation is clear and Church does not allege that the Division misinterpreted it; instead, he asserts that the regulation itself is invalid because it circumvents the legislative intent of AS 43.23.
We have held that AS 43.23.015(a), the statute concerning proof of eligibility for PFDs, authorizes “and require[s] the Commissioner of the Department of Revenue to promulgate regulations defining substantive eligibility requirements for PFDs.”
State, Dep’t of Revenue v. Bradley,
Church argues that 15 AAC 23.163(c)(16) creates a bright line 180-day cut-off for discretionary review of absences that are not listed in the statute or regulation and is thus unreasonable and beyond the authority of the commissioner to promulgate.
3
This argument is similar to the challenge in
Brodigan
and the same reasoning serves to answer it. The Brodigans claimed that they should have been eligible for PFDs, even though the time they spent in the state
Church argues, generally, that any temporal restriction on PFD eligibility is unreasonable; he argues that consideration of residency for PFD purposes should be the same as consideration of state residency under AS 01.10.055, which focuses on one’s subjective intent to remain. However, this court has recognized that “the residency requirement for PFD eligibility may differ from other residency requirements.”
Brodigan,
Since the purpose of AS 43.23.095(8) is to ensure that PFDs are only given to permanent residents and a legitimate function of corresponding regulations is to ease the administrative burdens of determining eligibility,
see id.
at 732, 15 AAC 23.163(c)(16) is consistent with its statutory purpose. • Additionally, since this court has ruled that limiting discretionary review of absences not for purposes listed in the statutes or regulations to absences shorter than half a year is not an abuse of discretion,
see id.
at 733;
Gazaway,
C. Church Was Not Denied Procedural Due Process When His Dividend Appeal Was Decided in a Summary Adjudication.
Church argues that his procedural due process rights were violated when the Division denied his appeal in a summary adjudication. “There is no right to an evi-dentiary hearing in the absence of a factual dispute.”
Human Resources Co. v. Alaska Comm’n on Post-Secondary Educ.,
Church admits that he was absent from Alaska for 274 days during 1992 and that he was absent to care for his terminally-ill mother, which was not an excusable absence under AS 43.23.095(8) or 15 AAC 23.63(c) at that time. According to the statu
D. The Statutory and Regulatory Scheme Denying Church a PFD Did Not Violate Substantive Due Process.
Church argues that the list of excusable absences in AS 43.23.095(8) and 15 AAC 23.163(c) is unreasonable and arbitrary and should focus on subjective intent to return, instead of listing some excusable absences. He also contends that he has a property interest in the PFD and perhaps a liberty interest.
The standard for establishing a substantive due process violation is rigorous. A due process claim will only stand if the state’s actions “are so irrational or arbitrary, or so lacking in fairness, as to shock the universal sense of justice.”
Application of Obermeyer,
E. Church’s Equal Protection Rights Were Not Violated.
Church argues that he was not provided the same benefits as the members of groups who were absent for one of the listed excusable absences, and as such his equal protection rights were violated. He further argues that minimum scrutiny is not the appropriate standard of review for PFD matters because the right to travel is implicated.
PFDs represent an economic interest. Equal protection claims concerning their denial are reviewed under minimum scrutiny.
See State v. Anthony,
Despite Church’s argument to the contrary, his equal protection claim should only receive minimum scrutiny. In
Brodigan
we held that even though an equal protection claim to a PFD involved the right to travel, it did not necessarily trigger heightened scrutiny.
The objective of the challenged statutes and regulations is to ensure that only permanent residents receive dividends.
See Brodigan,
Further, allowing only enumerated excusable absences unless a person has been in the state more than half a year bears a fair and substantial relationship to ensuring
F. Church’s Rights to Travel and to Family Relationships Were Not Infringed.
Church argues that his right to travel was infringed because receipt of a PFD was conditioned on his being in the state more than 185 days out of the year. Further, he argues that his familial relations rights were violated because he could not leave the state for more than 180 days to be with his dying mother without losing his dividend.
Both this court and the United States Supreme Court have recognized that not all durational residency requirements necessarily trigger heightened scrutiny. In
Alaska Pacific Assurance Co. v. Brown,
There is no violation of Church’s right to travel when the
Brown
balancing test is applied to the present case. The infringement on Church’s right to travel is relatively small and would not be likely to deter a person from traveling.
See Brown,
In
Attorney General of New York v. Soto-Lopez,
Church also argues that because he could not receive a PFD if he stayed with his mother out of the state for more than 180 days, his right to receive a PFD was conditioned on his not spending time with his mother. This argument is essentially a corollary of the right to travel argument. The only reason Church’s familial rights were infringed is because he had to travel out of
IV. CONCLUSION
The regulations denying Church a PFD were valid, none of his rights were violated, and the denial of his PFD was appropriate. The judgment of the superior court is AFFIRMED.
Notes
. Effective January 1, 1997, the statute defining "state resident” for PFD purposes was amended to allow for absences to care for an “individual's terminally ill parent, spouse, sibling, child or stepchild,” AS 43.23.095(8)(H).
. At the time of this action, AS 43.23.095(8) provided in relevant part:
(8) "state resident” means an individual who is physically present in the state with the intent to remain permanently in the state under the requirements of AS 01.10.055 or, if the individual is not physically present in the state,intends to return to the state and remain permanently in the state under the requirements of AS 01.10.055, and is absent only for any of the following reasons:
(A) vocational, professional, or other specific education for which a comparable program was not reasonably available in the state;
(B) secondary or postsecondary education;
(C) military service;
. (D) medical treatment;
(E) service in Congress;
(F) other reasons which the commissioner may establish by regulation; or
(G) service in the Peace Corps).]
Effective January 1, 1997, this section was amended to add the following excusable absences:
(H) to care for the individual’s tenninally ill parent, spouse, sibling, child, or stepchild;
(I) for up to 220 days to settle the estate of the individual’s deceased parent, spouse, sibling, child, or stepchild; or
(J) to care for a parent, spouse, sibling, child or stepchild with a critical life-threatening illness whose treatment plan, as recommended by the attending physician, requires travel outside the state for treatment at a medical specialty complex.
AS 43.23.095(8) (emphasis added).
. In deciding the validity of a regulation, this court considers “whether the regulation is consistent with the statutory purpose and is reasonable and not arbitrary.”
Brodigan,
. Church argues that recently enacted subsections of AS 43.23.095(8), which allow for absences to care for ailing relatives, see AS 43.23.095(8)(H)(I) and (J), show that the Alaska legislature now favors such absences as a matter of policy. Church recognizes that these provisions do not apply to him because they did not become effective until January 1, 1997; however, he asserts that they show the state’s policy concerning this issue. Since the new provisions did not apply to Church's case and the DOR did not abuse its discretion in adopting the regulations used to deny Church’s dividend, it makes no difference that the law has now changed.
