Garcia v New York City Dept. of Health & Mental Hygiene (
| Garcia v New York City Dept. of Health & Mental Hygiene |
| June 28, 2018 |
| Stein, J. |
| Court of Appeals |
| Published by New York State Law Reporting Bureau pursuant to Judiciary Law § 431. |
| As corrected through Wednesday, September 16, 2018 |
[*1]
| Magdalena Garcia, Individually and on Behalf of Her Minor Child, P.S., et al., Respondents, v New York City Department of Health and Mental Hygiene et al., Appellants. |
Argued June 6, 2018; decided June 28, 2018
Garcia v New York City Dept. of Health & Mental Hygiene,
On this appeal, respondents the New York City Department of Health and Mental Hygiene (the Department), the New York City Board of Health (the Board), and Dr. Mary Travis Bassett, as Commissioner of the Department, argue that Supreme Court and the Appellate Division erred by enjoining enforcement of the Board's amendments to the New York City Health Code mandating that children between the ages of 6 months and 59{**
New York City and New York State share regulatory authority over child care facilities and programs located in the city. Through the New York City Health Code, the Department and Board[FN1] regulate health and safety [*2]standards for school-based programs for children ages three through five years, as well as public and private group day care services for children under the age of six (see NY City Health Code [24 RCNY] arts 43, 47), while the State maintains oversight of smaller family and group family day care programs, as well as school-age child care (see Social Services Law § 390 [1] [c]-[f]; [13]).
As a matter of state law, Public Health Law § 2164 requires every child between the age of two months and 18 years to receive vaccines against certain enumerated diseases—namely, "poliomyelitis, mumps, measles, diphtheria, rubella, varicella, Haemophilus influenzae type b (Hib), pertussis, tetanus, pneumococcal disease, and hepatitis B" (Public Health Law § 2164 [2] [a]). Absent proof of these immunizations, the Public Health Law prohibits officials in charge of "any public, private or parochial child caring center, day nursery, day care agency, nursery school, kindergarten, elementary, intermediate or secondary school" within the state from allowing any unvaccinated child to attend for more than 14 days (id. § 2164 [1] [a]; [7] [a]). However, a statutory exception permits admission of an unvaccinated child if a physician certifies that "immunization may {**
Prior to the amendments at issue here, New York City Health Code §§ 43.17 and 47.25 required that children attending child care programs under the Department's jurisdiction "be immunized . . . in accordance with . . . Public Health Law § 2164, or successor law, and . . . have such additional immunizations as the Department may require" (former NY City Health Code [24 RCNY] §§ 43.17 [a] [2]; 47.25 [a] [2]). In December 2013, following a public hearing and comment period, the Board amended Health Code §§ 43.17 and 47.25, as relevant here, to provide that all children between the ages of 6 months and 59 months who attend child care or school-based programs under the Department's jurisdiction must also receive annual influenza vaccinations (see NY City Health Code [24 RCNY] §§ 43.17 [a] [2] [B] [i]; 47.25 [a] [2] [B] [i]). As with the other required vaccinations, a child may be exempt from the flu vaccine requirement upon a physician's certification or on the basis of "genuine and sincere religious beliefs" held by the child's parent or guardian (NY City Health Code [24 RCNY] §§ 43.17 [a] [2] [B] [i]; 47.25 [a] [2] [B] [i]). The Board's amendments authorized officials in charge of child care and school programs to deny admission to any child who fails to provide proof of influenza vaccination and established an appeals process for those denied admission on that ground (see id. §§ 43.17 [a] [2] [B] [ii]; 47.25 [a] [2] [B] [ii]). Under the new flu vaccine rules, a child care provider or school "that fails to maintain documentation showing that each child in attendance has either received each vaccination required by this subdivision or is exempt from such a requirement . . . will be subject to fines" for each unvaccinated child permitted entry (id. § 43.17 [a] [2] [C]; see id. § 47.25 [a] [2] [C]).
Petitioners—parents of children enrolled in child care programs subject to the flu vaccine rules who object to their children receiving the vaccination—commenced this hybrid CPLR article 78 proceeding and declaratory judgment action to enjoin respondents from enforcing the flu vaccine rules or, alternatively, to have the court declare such rules invalid. Petitioners maintained that the Board's adoption of those rules{**
Supreme Court granted petitioners' motion, denied respondents' cross motion, and permanently enjoined respondents from enforcing the flu vaccine rules (
On respondents' appeal, the Appellate Division affirmed, but employed different reasoning, concluding that "[t]he motion court improperly found that the Board of Health's adoption of the challenged [flu vaccine rules] was preempted by state law" (
Nevertheless, the Appellate Division held that the flu vaccine rules were invalid as enacted, under the analysis set forth in Boreali v Axelrod (
{**
Respondents argue that the Appellate Division erred in concluding that the Board violated the separation of powers doctrine by adopting the flu vaccine rules. More specifically, respondents contend that the legislature has delegated to the Board, through Administrative Code § 17-109, the necessary authority to promulgate rules relating to vaccinations, including those challenged here. Respondents further assert that the Appellate Division inappropriately applied the Boreali factors (
" 'The concept of the separation of powers is the bedrock of the system of government adopted by this State in establishing three coordinate and coequal branches of government, each charged with performing particular functions' " (Matter of NYC C.L.A.S.H., Inc. v New York State Off. of Parks, Recreation & Historic Preserv.,
Separation of powers challenges often involve the question of whether a regulatory body has exceeded the scope of its delegated powers and encroached upon the legislative domain of policymaking (see Greater N.Y. Taxi Assn. v New York City Taxi & Limousine Commn.,
In Boreali and subsequent cases, we have clarified the "difficult-to-define line between administrative rule-making and legislative policy-making" by articulating four "coalescing circumstances" relevant to rendering such a determination (
We have emphasized that these circumstances or factors are not "discrete, necessary conditions that define improper policymaking by an agency" or "criteria that should be rigidly applied in every case in which an agency is accused of crossing the line into legislative territory" (Matter of New York Statewide Coalition,
Turning to the case before us, the New York City Charter empowers the Department with "jurisdiction to regulate all matters affecting health in the city of New York and to perform all those functions and operations performed by the city that relate to the health of the people of the city" (NY City Charter § 556), as well as to "supervise the reporting and control of communicable and chronic diseases and conditions hazardous to life and health" (id. § 556 [c] [2]). In addition, the City Charter authorizes the Board to "add to and alter, amend or repeal any part of the health code, . . . [to] publish additional provisions for security of life and health in the city and [to] confer additional powers on the [D]epartment not inconsistent with the constitution, laws of this state or this charter" (id. § 558 [b]). The Board "may embrace in the health code all matters and subjects to which the power and authority of the [D]epartment extends" (id. § 558 [c]), and may enforce the Health Code through, among other things, "fines, penalties, [and] forfeitures" (id. § 558 [b]). Although these are broad delegations of power, we have held that they nevertheless "reflect[ ] only a regulatory mandate, not legislative authority" (Matter of New York Statewide Coalition,
In that regard, as particularly relevant here, Administrative Code § 17-109 delegates to the Department—and, by extension, the Board (see NY City Charter § 558 [c])—the power "to collect and preserve pure vaccine lymph or virus, produce diphtheria antitoxin and other vaccines and antitoxins, and add necessary additional provisions to the health code in order{**
Analyzing the first Boreali factor, we must consider whether the flu vaccine rules are the result of the Board making difficult and complex value judgments, choosing between competing policy goals. Petitioners assert that the Board's improper policymaking is evidenced by the so-called "exceptions" inherent in its chosen scheme insofar as [*5]the flu vaccine rules apply only to those child care providers regulated by the City and providers are permitted to admit unvaccinated children, albeit subject to significant financial penalties. In that regard, petitioners liken the flu vaccine rules to the rules at issue in Matter of New York Statewide Coalition (
In Matter of New York Statewide Coalition, the Board weighed the public health goal sought to be achieved by its regulation limiting the size of sugary drinks sold by certain food service establishments against various special interests, including "the economic consequences associated with restricting profits by beverage companies and vendors, tax implications for small business owners, and personal autonomy with respect to the choices of New York City residents concerning what they consume" (id. at 698). While we held that the agency's weighing of these economic considerations supported the view that it had transgressed into policymaking, we clarified that, generally, "the promulgation of regulations necessarily involves an analysis of societal costs and benefits," and that "Boreali should not be interpreted to prohibit an agency from attempting to balance costs and benefits" (Matter of New York Statewide Coalition,
Here, by comparison, the Board did not choose between the competing public policies of advancing public health and avoiding economic disruption of specific industries (compare id. at 698-699). Rather, the legislature chose the "end" of public health and the "means" to promote that end by empowering the Board to "add necessary additional provisions to the health code in order to most effectively prevent the spread of communicable diseases," as well as to "take measures, and supply agents and offer inducements and facilities for general and gratuitous vaccination" (Administrative Code § 17-109 [a], [b]). In adopting the flu vaccine rules, the Board determined, in accordance with the legislature's mandates, which vaccines should be required for children attending certain day care programs, as a matter of public health.
Undisputedly, there is a very direct connection between the flu vaccine rules and the preservation of health and safety (compare Matter of New York Statewide Coalition,
That the Board determined the exact means of achieving and advancing the larger end chosen by the legislature—by imposing fines to ensure that the cost of admitting unvaccinated, nonexempt children to day care programs is too significant for a provider to risk noncompliance—is a necessary part of the Board's exercise of its regulatory authority; it does not give rise to a violation of the separation of powers doctrine. Nor does application of the flu vaccine rules to only those day care programs primarily regulated by the City—not those primarily subject to state oversight—warrant a contrary conclusion. There is no indication that the Board limited the scope of the{**
With regard to the second Boreali factor, as noted above, the legislature has delegated significant power to the Board to promulgate regulations in the field of public health. Indeed, as already observed, the Board has jurisdiction to regulate "all matters affecting health in the city of New York" (NY City Charter § 556), including matters relating to "communicable and chronic diseases and conditions hazardous to life and health" (id. § 556 [c] [2]). Further, Administrative Code § 17-109 specifically delegates to the Board the power to regulate vaccinations and adopt vaccination measures to reduce the spread of infectious disease. This provision traces back to an 1866 act of the state legislature creating a predecessor to the existing Department and Board, which empowered that predecessor agency to "take measures and supply agents, and afford inducements and facilities for general and gratuitous vaccination and [*6]disinfection . . . as in its opinion the protection of the public health may require" (L 1866, ch 74, §§ 16, 20). Over the course of many decades, the State has repeatedly reaffirmed the authority of the Department (in its various forms) to regulate vaccinations (see L 1874, ch 635, § 1; L 1897, ch 378, § 1225 [established New York City Charter and Board of Health, and bestowed upon Board the power to "take measures, and supply agents and offer inducements and facilities for general and gratuitous vaccination"]; L 1901, ch 466, § 1225; L 1937, ch 929, § 556-6.0 [enacted the New York City Administrative Code with vaccination provision]).
In accordance with these statutory delegations, the Board has mandated smallpox vaccinations of minors since 1866 (see former Metropolitan Bd of Health Code of Health Ordinances{**
In light of the state legislature's aforementioned delegations to the Board of the power to regulate vaccines, together with the Board's long history of mandating immunizations for children attending city-regulated child care programs beyond those required by the legislature, there can be no serious claim that, in enacting the flu vaccine rules, the Board " 'wrote on a clean slate, creating its own comprehensive set of rules without benefit of legislative guidance' " (Matter of NYC C.L.A.S.H.,
Nor can it be said that there was a complete absence of any "legislative articulation of health policy goals" (Matter of New York Statewide Coalition,
As for the third Boreali factor, the question of legislative inaction, the parties do not identify any attempt by the New York City Council to legislate whether the influenza vaccine should be mandatory for children attending child care programs regulated by the Department. It is true that the state legislature has generally adopted an incremental approach to imposing vaccination requirements for children and has enacted legislation that encourages, but does not require, that children receive the influenza vaccination (see L 2010, ch 36, § 1; Public Health Law § 613 [1]). However, this is hardly the equivalent of "repeated failures by the [l]egislature to [reach] an agreement" on the subject matter "in the face of substantial public debate and vigorous lobbying by a variety of interested factions" (Boreali,
Likewise, the fourth Boreali factor, which looks to "whether the agency used special expertise or competence in the field to develop the challenged regulations" (Greater N.Y. Taxi Assn.,
The legislature's specific delegation to the Board of authority over vaccinations and our analysis of the Boreali factors—two of which weigh heavily in the agency's favor and two of which do not weigh against it—compel the conclusion that the Board's adoption of the flu vaccine rules fits squarely within its regulatory authority and does not constitute impermissible policymaking. Accordingly, we reject petitioners' separation of powers challenge. In so holding, we emphasize that the Boreali analysis is not aimed at determining whether a regulatory agency adopted the most desirable method or type of regulation. Stated otherwise, the factors enumerated in Boreali are not designed to second-guess agency regulations that properly fall within the agency's purview. Rather, the Boreali analysis is intended only to aid courts in determining whether an agency has usurped the legislature's power by regulating in an area in which it has not been delegated rule-making authority. To be sure, this may entail some consideration of the manner in which the agency has chosen to regulate. However, if the{**
Alternatively, petitioners argue that the flu vaccine rules are invalid because they conflict with the Public Health Law. Petitioners also claim that—despite its delegation of authority to the Board to regulate vaccinations—the state legislature has preempted the narrower field of mandatory school vaccinations by enacting a comprehensive statutory scheme. Respondents contend, in opposition, that their power to adopt vaccination requirements is both consistent with, and derived from, state law and, therefore, the flu vaccine rules are not preempted.
"The preemption doctrine represents a fundamental limitation on home rule powers" and "embodies 'the untrammeled primacy of the [l]egislature to act . . . with respect to matters of State concern' " (Albany Area Bldrs. Assn. v Town of Guilderland,
"We have held that a local law is inconsistent [with state law] 'where local laws prohibit what would be permissible under [s]tate law, or impose prerequisite additional restrictions on rights under [s]tate law, so as to inhibit the operation of the State's general laws' " (Eric M. Berman, P.C.,
As for field preemption, "[t]he [s]tate [l]egislature may expressly articulate its intent to occupy a field, but it need not. It may also do so by implication" (DJL Rest. Corp.,
In support of their preemption claim, petitioners rely on Public Health Law §§ 206, 613, 2164, and 2165. Section 206 sets forth the general powers and duties of the Commissioner of the New York State Department of Health (NYSDOH), including the power to "establish and operate such adult and child immunization programs as are necessary to prevent or minimize the spread of disease and to protect the public health" (Public Health Law § 206 [1] [l]). That section further authorizes NYSDOH to "promulgate such regulations as are necessary for the implementation" of this mandate; however, the statute provides, in the same paragraph, that "[n]othing in this paragraph shall authorize mandatory immunization of adults or children, except as provided in sections [2164] and [2165]" (id. [emphasis added]).
Likewise, Public Health Law § 613 (1) (a) requires NYSDOH to "develop and supervise the execution of a program of immunization, surveillance and testing, to raise to the highest reasonable level the immunity of the children of the state against communicable diseases including . . . influenza" and several other enumerated diseases. Concerning influenza, in particular, Public Health Law § 613 (1) (b) mandates that the NYSDOH Commissioner "administer a program of influenza education to the families of children ages six months to eighteen years of age who attend licensed and registered day care programs" and schools within the state. According to the statute, NYSDOH should encourage and assist municipalities to "maintain local programs of immunization to raise the immunity of the children and adults of each municipality to the{**
Addressing conflict preemption first, nothing in Public Health Law § 2164 suggests that the list of vaccinations set forth therein is an exclusive one that may not be expanded by local municipalities to which the authority to regulate vaccinations has been delegated. Indeed, as noted above, the state legislature has long recognized the Board as a pioneer of mandatory immunizations of children and, to some degree, it modeled Public Health Law § 2164 on the New York City Health Code (see Assembly Mem in Support, Bill Jacket, L 1966, ch 994 at 8; see also Sponsor's Mem, Bill Jacket, L 1989, ch 538 at 8). In fact, NYSDOH expressed its recognition of the Board's independent authority as recently as 2015 (see Notice of Proposed Rule Making, NY Reg, Mar. 18, 2015 at 18 [observing that proposed amendments to state regulations concerning school immunization requirements "do not address additional immunizations that may be required for school admission by the New York City Health Code"]). Thus, the flu vaccine rules do not conflict with either section 2164 or section 2165.
Contrary to petitioners' assertions, the flu vaccine rules also do not conflict with Public Health Law §§ 206 and 613. Those provisions are directed to the powers and duties of the Commissioner{**
Turning to the question of field preemption, although the State has enacted a relatively comprehensive statutory scheme for school vaccinations, the relevant statutes reflect the state legislature's recognition that municipalities play a significant role in vaccination programs. It is not unusual for the State to set the floor for public health regulations while permitting localities to adopt stricter measures (see e.g. Public Health Law § 228 [3]).
"[T]he mere fact that the Legislature has enacted specific legislation in a particular field does not necessarily lead to the conclusion that broader agency regulation of the same field is foreclosed. The key question in all cases is what did the Legislature intend?" (Matter of Consolidated Edison Co. of N.Y. v Department of Envtl. Conservation,
For all of these reasons, we hold that the Board permissibly adopted the flu vaccine rules pursuant to its legislatively-delegated and long-exercised authority to regulate vaccinations. We also hold that neither field, nor conflict, preemption abrogates the rules. Therefore, the order of the Appellate Division should be reversed, with costs, the petition insofar as it sought to enjoin enforcement of the amendments to the New York City Health Code denied, and judgment granted declaring in respondents' favor in accordance with this opinion.[FN4]
Chief Judge DiFiore and Judges Rivera, Fahey, Garcia, Wilson and Feinman concur.
Order reversed, with costs, petition insofar as it sought to enjoin enforcement of the amendments to the New York City Health Code denied, and judgment granted declaring in respondents' favor in accordance with the opinion herein.
Footnote 1:The Board of Health—which is within the Department of Health and Mental Hygiene—is chaired by the Commissioner of the Department and is comprised of 10 other members appointed by the mayor, five of whom must be medical doctors, and the remaining five of whom must have at least a master's degree in a science-related field, in addition to 10 years of relevant experience (see NY City Charter § 553 [a]). Significantly, the New York City Charter authorizes the Board to "add to and alter, amend or repeal any part of the health code" concerning "all matters and subjects to which" the Department's authority extends and to "publish additional provisions for security of life and health in the city" (id. § 558 [b], [c]).
Footnote 2:Public Health Law § 2165 sets forth similar immunization requirements, and statutory exceptions, for college students.
Footnote 3:Vaccinations for pertussis and tetanus were not mandated by state law until 2004 (see L 2004, ch 207).
Footnote 4:Because petitioners sought a declaration of the parties' rights, a declaration in respondents' favor rather than a dismissal of the petition is appropriate (see 200 Genesee St. Corp. v City of Utica,
