¶ 1 This appeal is from the superior court’s ruling affirming the Arizona Department of Health Services’s (“DHS”) order revoking Jimmy Parsons’s caregiver registration card under the Arizona Medical Marijuana Act, A.R.S. §§ 36-2801 through -2810 (“AMMA”), because Parsons had committed an “excluded felony offense” in 2006, making him ineligible to be a designated caregiver. Parsons argued that because his conviction had been set aside pursuant to AR.S. § 13-907, DHS and the superior court erred by using it as a ground for revocation. Specifically, he argued that ineligibility for a caregiver registration card is a “penalty or disability” released upon the setting aside of the conviction.
¶ 2 Whether a set-aside conviction may be considered by DHS as a ground for revoking a license pursuant to the AMMA is an issue of first impression. We hold that ineligibility for a caregiver registration card under the AMMA is not a penalty or disability under AR.S. § 13-907 and that DHS may therefore consider the felony in determining whether to grant, deny, or revoke a caregiver registration card.
FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
¶3 In May 2006, Parsons pled guilty to one count of possession of narcotic drugs (cocaine) for sale, a class 2 felony. The superior court suspended the imposition of a sentence, placed Parsons on five years’ probation, and required him to pay a fine. Parsons successfully completed the terms of his probation and paid the imposed fine. Accordingly, the court discharged him from probation in 2008.
¶ 4 After Parsons was discharged, he twice moved to have his 2005 conviction set aside under A.R.S. § 13-907, but the superior court denied the motions. Parsons tried again in February 2012. Two months later, the superior court issued an order granting Parsons’s application. The order formally set aside the judgment of guilt, “dismissing the accusations or information and releasing [Parsons] from all applicable penalties and disabilities resulting from the conviction” pursuant to A.R.S. § 13-907. The court also ordered that Parsons’s civil rights be restored, except his right to possess or carry a firearm.
¶ 6 Two years later, Parsons applied to DHS for a designated caregiver registration card under the AMMA. As part of his application, DHS required Parsons to attest that he had not been convicted of an excluded felony as defined in A.R.S. § 36-2801(7)—
¶6 Upon receiving Parsons’s application, DHS sent Parsons’s fingerprints to the Arizona Department of Public Safety to obtain his criminal history report. Generally, when DHS receives a criminal history report, it reviews the report for excluded felonies that would make a person ineligible for a caregiver card. This process can take up to several months. However, because the AMMA requires that DHS issue or deny caregiver applications within 15 days, see A.R.S. § 36-2804.03(A), DHS approved Parsons’s application and issued him a caregiver registration card before completing the background check.
¶7 When DHS ultimately received Parsons’s criminal history report, it learned of his 2005 conviction for possession of narcotic drugs for sale and the superior court's subsequent order setting the conviction aside. Upon consulting with its counsel, DHS concluded that Parsons’s conviction was an excluded felony offense under the AMMA, disqualifying him from being a caregiver. Specifically, DHS concluded that setting aside a conviction does not eliminate the conviction and restores only civil rights irrelevant to the issuance of a caregiver identification card under the AMMA. Accordingly, DHS issued a notice of intent to revoke Parsons’s caregiver card in September 2014. DHS alleged that Parsons had been convicted of an excluded felony offense and that Parsons knowingly violated the AMMA by falsely attesting that he had not been convicted of one.
¶ 8 Parsons requested an administrative hearing to challenge DHS’s notice. At the hearing, Parsons argued that the setting aside of his conviction released him from all penalties and disabilities, including ineligibility under the AMMA. He therefore argued that he did not have an excluded felony offense and did not knowingly falsify any information in his application. After taking the matter under advisement, the administrative law judge (“ALJ”) issued a decision recommending that DHS revoke Parsons’s registration card. The ALJ concluded that the AMMA does not permit granting a caregiver registration card to a person who has been convicted of a controlled substance felony. The ALJ also concluded that setting aside a conviction did not change the fact that Parsons was convicted of the felony. DHS’s director subsequently adopted the ALJ’s recommended decision.
¶ 9 Parsons moved for a rehearing. The director denied the motion and Parsons appealed to the superior court. After oral argument, the superior court affirmed the DHS director’s final order, adopting DHS’s arguments and finding that sufficient evidence supported it. Parsons timely appealed.
DISCUSSION
¶ 10 Parsons argues that the superior court erred by affirming the DHS director’s final order upholding the revocation of Parsons’s caregiver card.
¶ 11 Parsons argues that DHS and the superior court erred by concluding that A.R.S. § 13-907 does not remove his ineligibility for caregiver registration pursuant to the AMMA. Our primary goal in interpreting a statute is to give effect to legislative intent. JHass Grp.,
¶ 12 In Arizona, a person convicted of a criminal offense may apply to have the judgment of guilt set aside upon completion of the sentence and discharge. A.R.S. § 13-907(A). This is a “special benefit conferred by statute” and subject to legislative control and limitations. State v. Hall,
¶ 13 For example, setting aside a judgment under A.R.S. § 13-907 does not erase or remove the fact of a conviction in Arizona. Russell v. Royal Maccabees Life Ins. Co.,
¶ 14 Parsons nevertheless argues that a requirement to disclose the conviction does not mean that DHS can use its existence as a reason to revoke his caregiver registration card. But DHS indeed can. The AMMA was enacted in 2010 as a voter initiative measure. State v. Gear,
¶ 16 Particularly when considering the voters’ intent in enacting the AMMA, “our task is to apply the law they have written.” Reed-Kaliher v. Hoggatt,
¶ 16 Although A.R.S. § 13-907(C)’s plain language could support Parsons’s argument that ineligibility for receiving a caregiver registration card under the AMMA is a “disability,” see State v. Zaputil,
¶ 17 Parsons counters that this interpretation would render the enumerated exceptions to A.R.S. § 13-907(C) superfluous because no determinations of eligibility for licensing would ever be affected by A.R.S. § 13-907. However, all of the enumerated exceptions are direct punishments, not collateral consequences,
CONCLUSION
¶ 18 For the foregoing reasons, we affirm.
Notes
. Parsons also argues that insufficient evidence supports the conclusion that he knowingly violated the AMMA by attesting that he had not been convicted of an excluded felony because he believed that setting it aside meant that the conviction no longer existed. However, neither the ALJ, the Department director, nor the superior court made findings or conclusions on this issue. Therefore, we do not address this argument.
