88-000847RX
Florida Education Association United vs.
Department Of Education
Status: Closed
DOAH Final Order on Wednesday, December 14, 1988.
DOAH Final Order on Wednesday, December 14, 1988.
1STATE OF FLORIDA
4DIVISION OF ADMINISTRATIVE HEARINGS
8FLORIDA EDUCATION ASSOCIATION/UNITED, )
12)
13Petitioner, )
15and )
17)
18FLORIDA TEACHING PROFESSION/NATIONAL )
22EDUCATION ASSOCIATION, )
25) CASE NO. 88-0847RX
29Intervenor, )
31)
32vs. )
34)
35DEPARTMENT OF EDUCATION, )
39)
40Respondent. )
42________________________________________)
43FINAL ORDER
45Pursuant to notice, a formal hearing was held in this case on October 10
59and 11, 1988, in Tallahassee, Florida, before the Division of Administrative
70Hearings, by its designated Hearing Officer, Diane K. Kiesling.
79APPEARANCES
80For Petitioner: Lorene C. Powell
85Assistant General Counsel
88FEA/United
89208 West Pensacola Street
93Tallahassee, Florida 32301
96For Respondent: Carl J. Zahner
101Carolyn S. Holifield
104Assistant General Counsels
107Department of Education
110Knott Building
112Tallahassee, Florida 32399
115For Intervenor: Vernon T. Grizzard
120Attorney at Law
123116 South Monroe Street
127Tallahassee, Florida 32301
130ISSUE
131The ultimate issue is whether Rule 6A-3.0141(1)(a) Florida Administrative
140Code, is an invalid exercise of delegated legislative authority.
149BACKGROUND AND PROCEDURAL MATTERS
153The Petitioner, Florida Education Association/United (FEA/United), filed a
161Petition seeking a declaration that Rule 6A-3.0141, where a maximum age for
173employment of school bus drivers is established, is an invalid exercise of
185delegated legislative authority in that it constitutes age discrimination in
195violation of the Florida Human Rights Act, Section 760.10, Florida Statutes, and
207Section 112.044, Florida Statutes, and the Age Discrimination in Employment Act
218of 1967, 29 U.S.C. Section 621, et seq., as well as the Fourteenth Amendment of
233the United States Constitution and Article I Section 2 of the Florida
245Constitution. Intervenor, Florida Teaching Profession/National Education
251Association (FTP-NEA), joined in the Petition.
257FEA/United presented the testimony of Sue H. Schler, M.D., Harvey L.
268Sterns, Ph.D., and Marc G. Gertz, Ph.D. Petitioner's Exhibits 1, 2, 3A, 3B, 4-
2828, and 10 (a late filed exhibit) are admitted in evidence.
293FTP-NEA presented the testimony of Mark Ross Trammell and had FTP Exhibit 1
306admitted in evidence.
309Respondent, Department of Education (the Department) presented the
317testimony of Larry McEntire, Patricia F. Waller, Ph.D., and Julian A. Waller,
329M.D. Respondent's Exhibits A-D, G, H, IA, IB, and J are admitted in evidence.
343Post hearing, FTP-NEA filed a Request for Official Recognition which was
354opposed by the Department. The Request for Official Recognition was denied by
366Order dated November 22 1988.
371The transcript of the proceedings was filed on October 26, 1988. The
383parties timely filed their proposed findings of fact and conclusions of law on
396November 16 and 17, 1988. All proposed findings of fact and conclusions of law
410have been considered. Specific ruling on each proposed finding of fact is made
423in the Appendix attached hereto and made a part of this Final Order.
436FINDINGS OF FACT
439A. History of Rule 6A-0141
4441. Prior to the promulgation of Rule 6A-3.0141, effective August 1, 1986,
456the Department did not have an established mandatory retirement age for public
468school bus drivers. It is not known how many drivers remained employed after
481reaching age 70.
4842. The mandatory retirement age of 70 originated from the concern
495expressed by transportation personnel in several local school districts about
505the great variance in the quality of physical examinations given to screen
517drivers for safety. The old rule allowed school districts to designate any
529licensed physician to administer the physical, and, in many cases, drivers were
541going to family physicians who were hesitant to fail them. The mandatory
553retirement age of 70 was adopted to address this concern, however, the old rule
567provision allowing local school districts to designate any licensed physician to
578conduct physical exams went unchanged.
5833. Larry McEntire, Administrator of the Department's School Transportation
592Management Section, worked to formulate the new rule with the five or six
605members of the standing rules committee of the Florida Association for Pupil
617Transportation (FAPT), which is comprised of personnel from the local school
628districts. The rule change instituted comprehensive classroom and on-the-road
637driver training requirements. The anew age restriction was not controversial;
647in fact the official published justification for the rule mentioned only the new
660training requirements, not the new mandatory retirement age.
6684. The particular age of 70 was arrived at through information provided by
681other states, ten of which had a mandatory retirement age of 70, consistent with
695the age-70 limitation on coverage under the federal ADEA at the time. No
708Florida school bus accident data, which was then viewed as unreliable, was used
721in choosing 70 as the age for mandatory retirement. No Florida statute
733suggested that age in general, or age 70 in particular, be used as a criterion
748in establishing qualifications for Florida school bus drivers.
7565. With regard to training and increased frequency of physical
766examinations at age 65 and over, the rule is patterned after the safety
779standards of the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA).
788However, the mandatory retirement age of 70 is in direct conflict with the NHTSA
802standards in effect then and now, which recommend no mandatory retirement age.
8146. The Department received a survey of state directors of pupil
825transportation on September 3, 1985, which was issued August 29, 1985, by the
838National School Transportation Association, indicating that at least 30 states
848had no age limit at that time for employment as a school bus driver.
8627. Although Mr. McEntire had previously seen the 1969 study by Promisel in
875his master's program in transportation and safety at Florida State University,
886neither that study nor any other study or data analysis was presented to or
900considered by the FAPT rules committee or others in the Department. Mr.
912McEntire is not aware of any study, data, or analysis considered during
924rulemaking which contained a recommendation that age 70 be adopted as a
936mandatory retirement age for school bus drivers.
9438. Mr. McEntire is unaware of whether the School Health Advisory Committee
955of the Florida Medical Association (FMA), which has a longstanding relationship
966with the Department, has ever recommended adoption of a mandatory retirement age
978of 70 as a means of ensuring that school bus drivers have the necessary
992qualifications to drive safely.
9969. Mr. McEntire and the FAPT rules committee did see a two-page document
1009from Iowa entitled "In re Sievert Van Dyke" which reported, among other things,
1022that "school bus drivers under 30 years and over 65 have a disproportionately
1035large number of accidents," that "30, 40, 50 percent of the variability can be
1049predicted on the basis of age," and that "sudden incapacity due to medical
1062defects becomes significantly more frequent in any group reaching age 60."
107310. In Rule 6A-3.0141 several statutes are cited as specific authority for
1085the rule and certain other statutes are cited as the specific laws implemented.
1098None of the provisions of law mentioned in the rule requires a mandatory 70 year
1113retirement age for public school bus drivers.
112011. The Student Transportation Coordinator for the Florida Highway Patrol,
1130which has regulatory jurisdiction over approximately 4,000 private school bus
1141drivers in Florida, was aware when the Department of Education instituted a
1153mandatory retirement age of 70. The jurisdiction and mission of the Florida
1165Highway Patrol in this regard directly parallels the mission of the Department
1177of Education concerning public school bus drivers.
118412. While the Florida Highway Patrol requires drivers age 65 and over to
1197have a physical examination semiannually rather than annually, as does the
1208Department of Education, there is no age limitation for driver certification,
1219there has never been one, and no change is planned in this policy.
1232B. Age and Accident Risk
123713. Patricia J. Waller, Ph.D., is the Associate Director for Driver
1248Studies at the University of North Carolina, Highway Safety Research Center,
1259Director of the University of North Carolina Injury Prevention Research Center,
1270and research professor at the University of North Carolina Center for Policy and
1283Health. She is an expert in the area of driver licensing and crash safety.
129714. Dr. Patricia Waller has studied the relationship between age and
1308accident rate. The results of Dr. Waller's research as it relates to age and
1322crash risk are that when number of miles driven is considered, there is an
1336increase in crash risk.
134015. Dr. Patricia Waller was commissioned by the National Academy of
1351Sciences to write a paper, "Renewal Licensure of the Elderly Driver," to be
1364included in a comprehensive study that was done on transportation in an aging
1377society. The publication in which Dr. Waller's paper appears officially came
1388out in October 11, 1988.
139316. Dr. Patricia Waller's paper, "Renewal Licensure of the Elderly
1403Driver", was done after a review of all the literature that was available on the
1418topic of licensure and re-licensure of older drivers. The literature available
1429included studies related to age and accident rate.
143717. Studies have shown that drivers over 65 years of age as a group behave
1452very responsibly in driving situations. Older drivers tend to restrict their
1463own driving to the best time and locations. For example, because of marked
1476vision changes that occur with increasing age, older drivers reduce their
1487nighttime driving; also, older drivers also tend to reduce their driving in
1499cases of inclement weather or during heavy traffic times.
150818. Despite the fact that older drivers restrict their own driving so that
1521it is less demanding, there is still an increase in crash risk with increasing
1535age.
153619. The crash rate increases for people in their middle to late fifties,
1549particularly when the number of miles driven in considered. However, the crash
1561risk increases even more for individuals in their early to late sixties. With
1574respect to drivers in their sixties and seventies, age is associated with an
1587increasingly accelerated risk of crash. There is also an increase in crash risk
1600per mile with increasing age.
160520. It is Dr. P. Waller's opinion that the Department should set a
1618mandatory retirement age for school bus drivers because the crash data on
1630licensed drivers indicates increasing involvement after age 65.
163821. It is also Dr. P. Waller's opinion that it is in everybody's best
1652interest that older people as a group be allowed to meet personal transportation
1665needs by retaining their driver's license for as long as possible. She feels
1678there are tradeoffs that allow us to say we are willing to accept the highway
1693safety risk in order to enable this person to continue to function
1705independently.
170622. Dr. P. Waller does not believe that the state of the art permits
1720adequate testing to determine the ability to safely drive; however, she is not a
1734medical doctor fully versed in medical testing.
174123. For her proposition that older school bus drivers should have the same
1754crash risk as older drivers generally, Dr. P. Waller relied on the Promisel
1767data. The Promisel data, set forth in a 1969 report from Dunlap and Associates
1781on school bus safety and operator age in relation to school bus accidents, shows
1795that the number of crashes increases very dramatically with age, particularly
1806when the number of miles driven is considered.
181424. The Promisel study found no correlation between age and accident
1825severity, recommended against the establishment of school bus driver age limits,
1836specifically disclaimed any causal relationship between age and accidents, and
1846made no analysis of accident risk associated with age 65 or over.
185825. The skewed age population in the Promisel study and the "generational
1870cohort effect" (simply stated, the older a study of drivers, the less validity
1883it may have for current drivers) render any accident risk projections from that
1896study to today's 70-and-over Florida school bus drivers unreliable.
190526. Finally, it is Dr. P. Waller's opinion that age 70 is an arbitrary
1919number and that any set age is arbitrary, however, she is aware of no alterative
1934to using age as the cutoff standard in order to maximize safety.
194627. Dr. Julian Waller is a medical doctor and also has a Master of Public
1961Health Degree in Epidemiology. For the past 20 years, he has been employed at
1975the University of Vermont College of Medicine. Since 1978, Dr. J. Waller has
1988been a professor of medicine in the geriatric unit. Dr. J. Waller is an expert
2003in the areas of human physiology as it relates to driving and medical impairment
2017to driving; also, Dr. J. Waller is an expert in the area of statistics. Dr. J.
2033Waller has not examined a patient since 1961. He is not certified in the sub-
2048specialty of geriatric medicine and he is not familiar with the term
2060heteroschistosity. He has not personally studied bus drivers.
206828. According to Dr. J. Waller, there are four basic driving tasks, all of
2082which involve some type of commercial driving, that put excessive stress on
2094drivers. The specific categories are: driving a bus, driving a large truck,
2106driving an ambulance, and driving a police or fire vehicle.
211629. In order to drive a vehicle of any type, four types of capabilities
2130are needed: (1) the person must be alert; (2) the person must be able to
2145identify things in the environment that potentially represent a threat; (3) the
2157person must be able to make timely and appropriate decisions; and (4) the person
2171must be capable of carrying out the decision in a timely and appropriate manner.
218530. Normal changes occur as an individual ages that may affect his ability
2198to perform the tasks required in a driving situation.
220731. Vision normally deteriorates with increasing age. There may be a
2218narrowing of visual fields, a decrease in ability to adapt to dark situations,
2231and problems associated with glare.
223632. An area of concern that may affect older individuals is contrast
2248sensitivity. An individual with problems in this area may have absolutely
2259normal static visual acuity. That is, he can read a typical Snellan chart very
2273easily, but cannot read signs or other things in the environmental which are not
2287perfect contrast of black and white. A person affected by contrast sensitivity
2299may not be aware of many things in their environment, such as traffic signs and
2314street signs unless they are black and white.
232233. Complex reaction time is an important factor to consider for a person
2335in a driving situation who is required to make decisions. Older people often do
2349not do well in complex situations where reaction time is critical.
236034. A problem among older individuals is the beginning of alteration of
2372consciousness for very brief periods of which they are not totally aware.
238435. A physical examination or a mental examination evaluates the
2394performance of the individual at that particular time only. An individual's
2405performance may vary from day to day or moment to moment.
241636. During the early stages, Alzheimer's disease may be difficult to
2427identify. However, it is during this time that individuals are most likely to
2440be driving. The symptoms which the disease manifests, though not apparent
2451during a physical examination, may affect an individual's driving.
246037. Everyone has a variability in their performance. However, because an
2471older person's spare capacity has been eroded, they have less spare capacity to
2484respond to the demands of driving situations. As a result, what may be even a
2499relatively normal variation may put the older person below the minimum that is
2512required to deal with increased demand required to meet emergencies and more
2524demanding driving situations.
252738. Further, according to Dr. J. Waller, the physiological changes that
2538affect a person's vision, stamina, and ability to deal with time-bound decision
2550making and response time so as to effect crash rate begins at about age 55. By
2566age 65, the increased crash risk of all drivers is significant enough to cause
2580concern about people this age performing a special driving task such as driving
2593a school bus.
259639. Dr. J. Waller believes that health-related criteria used in a physical
2608examination lack the precise, predictable cutoff points to distinguish between
2618those older drivers who should be permitted to drive and those who should not be
2633permitted to drive.
263640. In areas where special licensing procedures are used to license older
2648drivers, there is still the same increased crash risk for older drivers.
266041. It is Dr. J. Waller's opinion that as people grow older they have more
2675crashes per unit of miles driven and turn out to be responsible for those
2689crashes more frequently.
269242. It is Dr. J. Waller's opinion that it is reasonable for the Department
2706to set an age limit for school bus drivers and that such an age should not be
2723much past the age of about 65. He bases this opinion on his experience in
2738working with departments of motor vehicles through the years.
274743. It is also Dr. J. Waller's opinion that the problem of physical
2760impairment and driving and crash risk is too inexact to permit appropriate
2772identifying criteria for those drivers who should not be permitted to drive.
2784Dr. J. Waller served on a committee of the American Medical Association that
2797attempted to put together an appropriate set of identifying criteria and the
2809doctors were unable to agree. According to Dr. Waller, this lack of agreement
2822reflects basically a lack of progress in the predictive capabilities of physical
2834examination that has existed since 1927.
284044. Dr. J. Waller feels that the Folstein mini-mental examination cannot
2851identify early Alzheimer's disease. It is Dr. J. Waller's further opinion that
2863physical examinations do not reveal subtle degradation and reduced capacity in
2874individuals.
287545. Dr. J. Waller believes that subtle degradation changes cannot be
2886measured, but have individual components which may be testable under certain
2897circumstances. However, the way they all relate to each other has never been
2910tested. It is his opinion that the way we know that they exist, since they
2925cannot be tested, is because we see what is the end result.
293746. Dr. J. Waller presented a bar graph, marked as Respondent's Exhibit K,
2950which he relied on for his opinion that the relationship between age and
2963accident risk is approaching an exponential relationship. That graph and the
2974opinion based on it are unreliable. The graph is not statistically accurate, is
2987visually deceptive as drawn, and is an unsubstantiated data analysis.
299747. Marc G. Gertz, Ph.D., is a professor at Florida State University and
3010president of Research Network, an independent data analysis, survey, research
3020methodology and political polling firm. As part of his duties at F.S.U., Dr.
3033Gertz teaches many of the graduate courses in research methodology and
3044statistics as well as having been chairman of and serving on the Ph.D. Methods
3058Comprehensive Examination Committee for the previous eleven years.
306648. Dr. Gertz was employed by FEA/United to conduct an analysis of school
3079bus drivers and accident rates in the State of Florida. In collecting data for
3093this project, Dr. Gertz was not able to find any previous study ever done in
3108Florida on school bus drivers and accident rates.
311649. This project entailed the collection of three sets of data. One set
3129of data was obtained from the Department of Highway Safety and Motor Vehicles
3142(DMV). The second set of data was obtained from the Department of Education
3155(DOE) and the third set of data was a complete enumeration (as opposed to a
3170random sample) obtained from individual counties, specifically Dade, Pinellas,
3179Okaloosa and Hendry.
318250. Dr. Gertz performed a number of statistical analyses on the data
3194collected and compiled it into a report. Dr. Gertz pointed out that this is an
3209original collection of data as opposed to a summary of data from the agencies in
3224question that have control of the data. This data is known as primary data
3238which is data you collect yourself as opposed to secondary data, which is
3251someone else's data used to do your analysis. The problem with secondary data,
3264according to Dr. Gertz, is you don't know what went into their choice of
3278variables, their choice of case, how they operationalized, how they defined the
3290terms or how they manipulated the data.
329751. An example of one piece of primary or "raw" data that was collected by
3312Dr. Gertz for this study is the individual accident reports on file with the
3326DMV.
332752. The DMV data was compared for years 1984 and 1985 for each of the
3342different variables, for example, the number of injuries or the number of
3354fatalities was compared with age to obtain both simple correlations and age as a
3368curvilinear function.
337053. Based on his research, Dr. Gertz found from the DMV data that age had
3385no statistically significant correlation with accidents of school bus drivers in
3396Florida. Dr. Gertz explained the negative numbers of page 1 of his report as
3410negative correlations which indicate that younger drivers are more likely to
3421have accidents, although he was not comfortable saying that the correlation was
3433statistically significant.
343554. Dr. Gertz pointed out that in his examination of the DMV data, what is
3450called an accident may not be what all of us would call an accident. For
3465example, if you knock over a tree limb or if the bus mirror is damaged, this
3481could result in an accident report being filed with the DMV. In the bottom half
3496of page 1 of his report, age was squared to give more weight to the younger and
3513older people to see if age was a curvilinear function of these variables, but
3527this analysis did not change the statistical results.
353555. Dr. Gertz performed more sophisticated analyses on the data sets he
3547collected such as regression analysis and discrimination function analysis, but
3557could still not explain the variation in accidents with any of the variables
3570tested to correlate age with any of those variables.
357956. The second set of data was obtained from the DOE for the years 1986
3594and 1987. The results of Dr. Gertz's analyses are found on page 2 of his
3609report. This data revealed three significant relationships, although in Dr.
3619Gertz's opinion the significance was at a very, very low level. The statistical
3632significance found by Dr. Gertz is .05 which means that 95 times out of 100
3647times it would not be happening at random. These three significant relationship
3659are (a) in 1986 younger drivers were more likely to have had prior accidents;
3673(b) in 1987 the younger drivers were most statistically likely to have been
3686charged in the accident; and (c) in 1986 bus drivers who did have in-service
3700training were less likely to have had accidents. For (c) the statistical
3712significance is .01.
371557. On page 3 of his report, age was cited as a percentage for the years
37311984-1987 using both the DMV data and the DOE data. Dr. Gertz explained this
3745data in terms of the "n" sizes. The "n" size means the sample size. The rule
3761of thumb, according to Dr. Gertz, is that you don't analyze columns that have
3775less than 25 cases in the sample. In the data provided, however, some sample
3789sizes were smaller than 25 which skews the percentage. The closest comparison
3801in this data is in the 1984 Department of Motor Vehicle Data in which a sample
3817size of 18-24 year olds contained 24 cases. The analysis revealed that for all
3831accidents, the percentage where the driver was not charged is 72 percent for 18-
384524 year olds and 87 percent in the 65 and older group.
385758. Petitioner's Exhibit 1, pages 4 and 5 (Gertz's report) contains the
3869data from the third data set. This data was collected directly from the
3882counties and contains a complete enumeration and includes all school bus
3893drivers, those who did not have accidents as well as those who did have
3907accidents.
390859. Based on all the data and his analyses, it was Dr. Gertz's opinion
3922that age did not explain why accidents occurred among school bus drivers in the
3936State of Florida. There is no statistically significant correlation between
3946increased age of public school bus drivers and increased accident risk. In
3958fact, the only slight correlation is between younger drivers and increased
3969accident risk. His conclusion is that, based on the current Florida data, age
3982is no factor in accident risk for public school bus drivers. His opinions are
3996accepted as most creditable because they are based on current Florida data
4008regarding school bus drivers.
4012C. Individual Medical Testing
401660. Dr. Sue H. Schler is a medical doctor and holds a Master's degree in
4031public health and biostatistics and epidemiology.
403761. Dr. Schler is an expert in the field of geriatric medicine.
404962. Dr. Schler passed the first subspeciality certification examination in
4059geriatric medicine ever offered, making geriatric medicine officially a
4068subspeciality of internal medicine as of 1988. Dr. Schler teaches medical
4079students at the University of South Florida College of Medicine.
408963. Dr. Schler believes that the average physician in Florida could easily
4101be trained to conduct a physical examination (including a neurological exam) on
4113a school bus driver that would take about half an hour to perform which would
4128screen out the safe from the unsafe driver of any age.
413964. Dr. Schler explained the principle of heteroschistosity. The
4148principle of heteroschistosity means that there is an increasing variability
4158between individuals of increasing age as for as their physical health and their
4171functional capacity. In light of this principle, medical examinations are
4181increasingly likely to detect medical impairments of both a pathological and a
4193normative nature as individuals increase in age.
420065. In Dr. Schler's opinion, functional assessment is the most appropriate
4211method of testing individuals to determine physical and mental capabilities.
4221Functional assessment is one of the big trends in geriatric medicine and in the
4235past few years has been proven to have predictive value for morbidity and
4248mortality.
424966. Dr. Schler examined ESE Form No. 479, which is the application for a
4263license to drive a school bus, and found it to be grossly inadequate to safely
4278screen a driver of any age.
428467. Florida's physical examination for school bus drivers could be
4294substantially improved by assuring the quality and competence of the physician
4305and his familiarity with the particular procedures used, and by adding more
"4317hands-on" procedures. The current examination form requires only that "vital
4327signs" be taken and a basic "20/20" vision test be performed, and then asks the
4342physician to answer 12 questions "yes" or "no" with a "brief explanation" for
4355any "no" answer. The physician's certification was recently amended to include
4366the limiting language "on that date" regarding the school bus driver's
4377condition.
437868. Dr. Schler believes Florida's screening procedure could be made
4388adequate for school bus drivers if certain additional tests and procedures were
4400added to the current form. Dr. Schler specifically mentioned a better medical
4412history, a better physical examination, including a complete neurological exam,
4422and a mental status examination such as the Folstein Mini Mental Status Test,
4435and additional testing of vision and hearing, including measuring static and
4446dynamic visual acuity, night vision, response to glare, color vision, visual
4457fields and depth perception. She also believes that a more extensive history of
4470the use of medications and alcohol should be included.
447969. According to Dr. Schler, the more comprehensive testing would not be
4491difficult and would not require expensive equipment. The additional equipment
4501required for more precise vision testing could be found at most optometrist's
4513offices in addition to the equipment normally found in a doctor's office.
4525Further, these tests can be effectively and inexpensively accomplished through
4535cooperative arrangements with established vision-related companies like Pearle
4543Vision Center.
454570. Dr. Schler makes the clear distinction between the abilities of a
4557healthy individual as opposed to a sick person of any age. An example she gave
4572is that cardiac sudden death is estimated to occur in thirty percent of all
4586people who have heart disease. Forty-year old men or women who have heart
4599attacks have a thirty percent rate of sudden death, the same as with an eighty
4614year old man or woman. Chronic heart disease can be easily diagnosed with a
4628physical examination, according to Dr. Schler.
463471. Dr. Schler believes that vascular disease could be screened to
4645eliminate the risk of strokes. Dr. Schler also states that a lot of vascular
4659disease is asymptomatic for the first twenty to thirty years but can be
4672identified with testing.
467572. In Dr. Schler's opinion the standard confidence rate, with which you
4687predict accuracy in the kinds of physical examinations which she described, is
4699approximately ninety-five percent, i.e., a person's capabilities can be
4708predicted with ninety-five percent accuracy from the examinations given by Dr.
4719Schler and her colleagues.
472373. In Dr. Schler's practice she finds that she screens out a person as
4737unsafe to drive prior to the DMV doing so through their driver license retesting
4751program.
475274. Dr. Schler stated that the application for a license to drive a school
4766bus, although she feels it is inadequate to test school bus drivers, is still
4780much more comprehensive than the driver licensing and retesting given for a
4792regular drivers license.
479575. In Dr. Schler's opinion, the written statements by Dr. Julian Waller,
4807M.D., stating that physical changes take place in people that are unmeasurable
4819was the state of medicine ten or twenty years ago. Currently, in Dr. Schler's
4833opinion, medical doctors are very good at screening out even subtle changes of
4846illness and aging especially as related to driving ability.
485576. Dr. Schler clearly believes that in healthy older drivers, who have
4867the benefit of experience in driving a school bus, experience has been proven to
4881be a major benefit in terms of safety.
488977. According to Dr. Schler, age should only be used as an added safety
4903factor if there were no other way of safely and effectively testing school bus
4917drivers. In her opinion, however, the State of Florida can today efficiently,
4929cheaply and accurately test these drivers annually to determine which drivers
4940are safe and which drivers are not.
494778. Dr. Schler's testimony and opinions are taken as creditable and are
4959accepted instead of the opinions of Dr. J. Waller. Dr. J. Waller's opinions and
4973information are out of date and out of step with the current state of the art in
4990geriatrics.
4991D. Individual Performance Testing, Training and
4997Evaluation
499879. Harvey Leonard Sterns, Ph.D., currently holds three titles: 1)
5008research professor of psychology at the University of Akron, Ohio, 2) Director,
5020Institute for Life-Span Development and the Gerontology Fellow at the University
5031of Akron, and 3) research professor of gerontology at Northeastern Ohio
5042University College of Medicine. Dr. Sterns is an expert in the field of
5055industrial gerontology.
505780. Dr. Sterns has conducted research on driving as it relates to aging.
5070The research conducted was keyed to the development of a diagnostic battery of
5083tests to determine areas in which older drivers may have difficulty and to
5096assist them with the training program so that they may perform at higher levels.
5110This research also included an individual training approach which was modified
5121in subsequent years in an attempt to attain maximum efficiency.
513181. As a foundation for his research, Dr. Sterns identified three issues
5143of observable approaches to the driving analysis which are called intrinsic
5154predictors. These are 1) perceptual style, i.e., how people extract relevant
5165and irrelevant information from the visual array; 2) selective attention, i.e.,
5176a measure of central processing ability that is highly predictive of incident
5188involvement; and 3) perceptual motor reaction, i.e., dealing with simple and
5199complex choices in complex reactions.
520482. Dr. Sterns also researched the actual driving of a school bus in
5217Alabama. In this research he examined the job of school bus driver from a task
5232analysis perspective and observed first hand what was actually involved in
5243driving the school bus.
524783. Based on this experience Dr. Sterns believes that driving a school bus
5260on a specified route is different than normal everyday driving because, for
5272example, the school bus driver is clearly aware of problem situations coming up
5285such as demanding intersections or curves or other areas of potential danger.
529784. Dr. Sterns points out that school bus accidents are reported any time
5310anything happens to the bus, including a bus getting stuck in the mud,
5323scratched, or backed into a pole or into another bus. This is described in the
5338literature as an "accident or a crash." The majority of accidents that we know
5352about are property damage as opposed to accidents involving injury or
5363fatalities.
536485. Dr. Sterns stated that Dr. Julian Waller in his book Injury Events
5377states that school bus safety is not a major safety problem because out of
5391approximately twenty million children who are transported by school busy every
5402year there are twenty fatalities.
540786. School bus transportation may well be the safest form of
5418transportation there is.
542187. Dr. Sterns cites numerous authorities and studies done both in the
5433United States and Europe which support his opinion that experience is a critical
5446factor in the ability to safely drive a school bus.
545688. Competency and skills involved in driving a school bus could be
5468greatly enhanced by additional supervised on-the-road training experience
5476together with training evaluations as opposed to using the age as criterion.
548889. The job of driving a school bus involves much more than just driving.
5502Dr. Sterns cites the Iowa 1986 data which contained eighteen fatalities and of
5515those, three fatalities were actually on the bus. Therefore he believes that a
5528check ride with passengers actually on the bus is an important part of the
5542observation of the performance level of the school bus driver.
555290. According to Dr. Sterns, the addition of the intrinsic performance
5563evaluators which have relative predictive validity, such as selective attention,
5573perceptual style and motor reaction time, together with enhanced training and on
5585board evaluation of school bus drivers, is far superior to determining who a
5598good employee performer might be as opposed to the use of any arbitrary
5611chronological age.
561391. It is Dr. Sterns' opinion that if it were necessary to be very
5627conservative in the setting of standards for school bus drivers, one commonly
5639used technique in industrial psychology is that of using the median of the young
5653group. That is, taking the younger group of employees and determining their
5665median standard of performance and using that median as the cut off score for
5679any older person with the result that any older person performing below that
5692median cutoff score would not be allowed to drive a school bus.
570492. In metro transit authorities (public transportation), a method used to
5715judge performance is to have a "checker" ride the bus as a passenger or follow
5730in a car to see whether or not the bus driver is performing appropriately. This
5745method would be of practical use in training school bus drivers as well.
575893. Past driving record is predictive of future accident risk.
576894. In a study of commercial drivers, performance training was
5778demonstrated, with statistical significance, to reduce accident risk by
5787approximately 16 percent.
579095. Performance evaluation can appropriately exclude young drivers who
5799have functional problems related to drug or alcohol use or neurological
5810deficits.
581196. Performance training has been developed and demonstrated to be
5821effective at improving the performance level of both older and younger adult
5833drivers.
583497. Performance evaluation through "on board" check rides, a "follow car"
5845procedure, or closely "monitoring" drivers can reduce accident risk, especially
5855when such evaluation is based upon an accurate task analysis.
586598. The 1969 Promisel Study as discussed by Dr. Sterns also relates the
5878benefit of experience even for drivers who began to drive a school bus in their
5893sixties, because even these drivers show an improvement in their driving ability
5905with training and experience. The study also states on page 90 that there is no
5920evidence to show that the severity of an accident is related to driver age and
5935further that more than half or 50-60 percent of the difference that occurs in
5949accident rate can be predicted only by factors other than age.
596099. Performance evaluation over a period of several days, as occurs in
5972Florida's public school bus driver licensing process, is more reliable in
5983determining driver capability than the single-incidence licensing which is
5992typical of the private, noncommercial licensing process.
5999CONCLUSIONS OF LAW
6002100. The Division of Administrative Hearings has jurisdiction of the
6012parties to and the subject matter of this proceeding. Section 120.56(1),
6023Florida Statutes.
6025101. At issue is the validity of Rule 6A-3.0141(1)(a) and (5)(a), Florida
6037Administrative Code, which states in pertinent part:
6044(1) At the time of initial employment the
6052school board shall assure that the driver of a
6061school bus meets the following requirements:
6067(a) Is under seventy (70) years of
6074age . . . .
6079* * *
6082(5) At the time of reemployment or
6089reappointment, the school district shall
6094assure that the driver of a school bus meets
6103the following requirements:
6106(a) All the requirements of Rule 6A-
61133.0141(1) and (3)(a), FAC.
6117102. The rule cites Sections 112.044(3), 120.55(1)(a), 234.02, 234.091,
6126and 234.101, Florida Statutes, as the laws implemented by it. These sections
6138state in relevant part:
6142112.044(3): PROHIBITED ACTIVITIES;
6145EXCEPTIONS.-
6146(a) Except as provided in paragraph (f)
6153it is unlawful for an employer to:
61601. Fail or refuse to hire, discharge or
6168mandatorily retire, or otherwise discriminate
6173against any individual . . . because of age.
6182* * *
6185(f) It is not unlawful for an
6192employer . . . to:
61971. Take any action otherwise prohibited
6203under paragraphs (a), (b), (c), or (e), based
6211on a bona fide occupational qualification
6217reasonably necessary to the normal operation
6223of the particular business.
6227234.02: Maximum regard for safety and
6233adequate protection of health shall be
6239primary requirements which shall be observed
6245by school boards in routing buses, appointing
6252drivers, and providing and operating
6257equipment, in accordance with all
6262requirements of law and regulations of the
6269state board.
6271* * *
6274234.091: Each school bus driver shall be
6281of good moral character, of good vision and
6289hearing, able-bodied, free from communicable
6294diseases, mentally alert, and sufficiently
6299strong physically to handle the bus with ease
6307and to make emergency repairs, and he shall
6315possess such other qualifications as are
6321prescribed by the state board, and he shall
6329hold a valid chauffeur's license issued by
6336the Department of Highway Safety and Motor
6343Vehicles.
6344234.101: (1) The State Board of
6350Education shall adopt requirements which
6355school bus drivers must meet prior to
6362employment by district school boards.
6367* * *
6370103. This action is brought pursuant to Section 120.56(1):
6379(1) Any person substantially affected by
6385a rule may seek an administrative
6391determination of the invalidity of the rule
6398on the ground that the rule is an invalid
6407exercise of delegated legislative authority.
6412104. The standard to be applied is found in Section 120.52(8):
6423(8) "Invalid exercise of delegated
6428legislative authority" means action which
6433goes beyond the powers, functions, and
6439duties delegated by the legislature. A
6445proposed or existing rule is an invalid
6452exercise of delegated legislative authority
6457if anyone or more of the following apply:
6465* * *
6468(c) The rule enlarges, modifies, or
6474contravenes the specific provisions of law
6480implemented, citation to which is required by
6487s. 120.54(7);
6489(d) The rule is vague, fails to establish
6497adequate standards for agency decisions, or
6503vests unbridled discretion in the agency; or
6510(e) The rule is arbitrary or capricious.
6517Of further note in relation to the issues here are two statutes which codify the
6532state's position on age discrimination. Section 112.044(1) states the
6541legislative purpose behind Section 112.044(3), one of the sections implemented
6551by the challenged rule.
6555Section 112.044(1) LEGISLATIVE INTENT;
6559PURPOSE.--The Legislature finds and
6563declares that in the face of rising
6570productivity and affluence, older workers
6575find themselves disadvantaged, both in
6580their efforts to retain employment and in
6587their efforts to regain employment when
6593displaced from jobs. The setting of
6599arbitrary age limits, irrespective of
6604capability for job performance, has become
6610a common practice, and certain otherwise
6616desirable practices may work to the
6622disadvantage of older persons.
6626In comparison to the incidence of
6632unemployment among younger workers, the
6637incidence of unemployment, especially long-
6642term unemployment with resultant
6646deterioration of skill, morale, and employer
6652acceptability, is high among older workers,
6658whose numbers are great and growing and whose
6666employment problems are grave. In industries
6672affecting commerce, the existence of
6677arbitrary discrimination in employment
6681because of age burdens commerce and the free
6689flow of goods. It is the purpose of this act
6699to promote employment of older persons based
6706on ability rather than age and to prohibit
6714arbitrary age discrimination in employment.
6719[Emphasis Supplied]
6721Finally, Section 760.10(1)(a) and (8)(a) of the Human Rights Act of 1977 outlaws
6734age discrimination with one pertinent exception:
6740(1) It is an unlawful employment practice
6747for an employer:
6750(a) To discharge or to fail or refuse to
6759hire any individual . . . because of such
6768individual's . . . age . .
6775* * *
6778(8) Notwithstanding any other provision
6783of this section, it is not an unlawful
6791employment practice under ss. 760.01-760.10
6796for an employer . . . to:
6803(a) Take or fail to take any action on
6812the basis of . . . age . . . in those
6824certain circumstances in which . . .
6831age . . . is a bona fide occupational
6840qualification reasonably necessary for the
6845performance of the particular employment to
6851which such action or inaction is related.
6858105. The Florida Supreme Court in Morrow v. Duval County School Board,
6870514 So.2d 1086 (Fla. 1987), invalidated the mandatory retirement of a teacher at
6883age 70. In doing so, the Court found that Section 231.031 (the statute which
6897contained the age 70 limitation) "should be read in pari materia with section
6910760.10 and section 112.044, in a manner that gives effect to the purposes of all
6925three statutory provisions." Morrow at 1088. Further, the Court noted the
6936similarity between Section 112.044, Section 760.10, and the federal Age
6946Discrimination in Employment Act (ADEA), 29 U.S.C. Section 621 et seq., and
6958stated:
6959The policy behind Florida's statute is
6965similar to the policy behind the federal
6972legislation, "to promote employment of
6977older persons based on their ability rather
6984than age" and to "prohibit arbitrary age
6991discrimination in employment." [Citations
6995omitted] As remedial legislation, Florida's
7000act should be liberally construed to promote
7007its intended purpose.
7010106. The question here is whether the six words in the rule (a) enlarge,
7024modify, or contravene the laws implemented; or (b) are arbitrary or capricious.
7036107. Clearly none of the statutes implemented mandate or even mention a
7048mandatory retirement age for school bus drivers. In fact, Section 112.044(3)
7059specifically outlaws such a mandatory retirement age unless it is shown that age
7072is a bona fide occupational qualification (BFOQ). If Sections 112.044, 760.10,
7083and the other statutes implemented are read in pari materia, the inescapable
7095conclusion is that the rule enlarges and contravenes the laws implemented unless
7107the BFOQ exception applies.
7111108. The leading case outlining the test for establishing a BFOQ is
7123Western Air Lines Inc. v. Criswell, 472 U.S. 400, 105 S.Ct. 2743, 86 L.Ed.2d
7137321 (1985). Criswell utilized and crystallized the standard set forth in Usery
7149v. Tamiami Trail Tours Inc., 531 F.2d 224 (5th Cir. 1976). Summarized, the two
7163pronged test requires
71661. The job qualification must be reasonably
7173necessary to the essence of the business.
7180The greater the safety factor, the more
7187stringent may be the job qualifications
7193designed to ensure safe driving.
71982. The age qualification must be something
7205more than convenient or reasonable; it
7211must be reasonably necessary to the
7217particular business. The employer must
7222be compelled to rely on age as a proxy
7231for the safety-related job qualifications
7236validated in the first inquiry.
7241Id. at 105 S.Ct. 2751. The second prong of the test may be satisfied in two
7257ways.
7258a. The employer can establish a factual
7265basis for believing that all or
7271substantially all persons over the age
7277qualification would be unable to perform
7283safely and efficiently the duties of the
7290job involved; or
7293b. The employer can establish that age is a
7302legitimate proxy for the safety-related
7307job qualifications by proving that it is
7314impossible or highly impractical to deal
7320with older employees on an individualized
7326basis.
7327Id. at 105 S.Ct. 2751-52. Finally, the Court in Criswell specified that one way
7341the employer can meet its burden under the second prong of the test is "to
7356establish that some members of the discriminated-against class possess a trait
7367precluding safe and efficient job performance that cannot be ascertained by
7378means other than knowledge of the applicant's membership in the class." Id. at
7391105 S.Ct. 2752. The Court also recognized that the BFOQ exception "was in fact
7405meant to be an extremely narrow exception to the n i a g a " n o i t i b i h o r p l a r e n e g s t
7440age discrimination.
7442109. It is concluded from the evidence that an essential job qualification
7454which is reasonably necessary is the physical and mental ability to safely drive
7467a school bus. However, the Department did not carry its burden under the second
7481prong of the test. The Department essentially proved only that data exists
7493which shows a higher accident rate among all drivers over age 65.
7505110. In E.E.O.C. v. State of Mississippi, 837 F.2d 1398 (5th Cir. 1988),
7518and in E.E.O.C. v. Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, 829 F.2d 392 (3rd Cir. 1987),
7531it is made clear that before an employer can prove that all or substantially all
7546persons over the age qualification would be unable to meet the standards of safe
7560performance, the employer must develop, implement and enforce minimum standards
7570of health and fitness that would justify the BFOQ. This threshold limits an
7583employer's discretion in establishing a BFOQ defense. "Not only would a finding
7595of minimum standards limit an employer's discretion, but also it. . . would
7608ensure both that a good faith decision on required qualifications was made by a
7622competent authority and that the use of age as a proxy was proper." Id. at P.
76381401. In the Mississippi case, as here, the Court found that such minimum
7651standards were not developed and therefore "there is no essential job
7662qualification in this case that age can stand as a proxy for." Id. at 1402.
7677Under such circumstances, the "BFOQ 'escape clause'" is not available. Id. at
76891402.
7690111. Further, in the Pennsylvania case, the Court held that "before a
7702characteristic can be a reasonably necessary BFOQ, it must be a trait that the
7716employer at least attempts to require of employees of all ages." Here, the
7729Department has not attempted to require of all school bus drivers that they
7742belong to a class with a low accident rate. It is particularly noted that young
7757drivers have similar accident rates to old drivers, yet a licensed driver could
7770conceivably become a school bus driver in Florida at age 19, after five years of
7785licensed driving including the learner's license issuable at age 14. Yet, the
7797data analysis is clear that such young drivers have similar accident rates as
7810drivers over age 65.
7814112. The only justification given by the Department for its use of age as
7828job qualifications was in the form of statistical proof. In rejecting
"7839statistical evidence indicating that there is a correlation between age and
7850accident frequency," the Court in Maki v. Commissioner of Education, 568 F.
7862Supp. 252 (N.D.N.Y. 1983), summarily affirmed, 742 F.2d 1437 (2d Cir. 1984),
7874noted:
7875Regardless of the efficacy of these
7881statistics, these reports, in and of
7887themselves, are an insufficient showing
"7892because an examination may reveal whether
7898a job applicant possesses any of the
7905passenger-endangering physical liabilities
7908that many older people have. In other
7915words, the correlation [between age and
7921accident frequency] is to physical
7926deficiencies, not to age per se." Usery v.
7934Tamiami Trail Tours, Inc., supra, 531 F.
79412d at 237.
7944Similarly, here the Department has failed to carry its burden of establishing
7956that age per se may be used as a proxy based only on statistical evidence of age
7973and accident rate. This is particularly so where the testimony of all the
7986Department's witnesses specified a rise in age/accident rate at age 65, not 70.
7999Hence no age was shown to be an appropriate proxy for the job qualification.
8013113. The Department also produced testimony by Dr. Julian Waller to
8024support its position that it is impossible or highly impractical to deal with
8037older employees on an individualized basis because there are not adequate
8048physical and mental examinations which could effectively screen for traits that
8059would preclude safe and efficient job performance. However, Dr. Waller's
8069testimony was found to be less credible than the testimony of Dr. Schler wherein
8083Dr. Schler identified the type and scope of examinations which could be
8095practically, easily, and efficiently done to achieve the end of safe job
8107performance by older school bus drivers.
8113114. Taken in its best light, the evidence adduced by the Department
8125failed to meet the BFOQ standards and the BFOQ defense is rejected. The
8138mandatory retirement age of 70 directly contravenes the law implemented, Section
8149112.044, and is an invalid exercise of delegated legislative authority pursuant
8160to section 120.52(8)(c).
8163115. It is also concluded that the mandatory retirement age in the rule is
8177arbitrary and is therefore an invalid exercise of delegated legislative
8187authority under Section 120.52(8)(e). The rule is not reasonably related to the
8199purpose of the enabling legislation and it is not appropriate to the ends
8212specified in the legislative act. Agrico Chemical Co. v. Department of
8223Environmental Regulation, 365 So.2d 759 (Fla. 1st DCA 1979). The clearly
8234expressed legislative purpose of Section 112.044 is to prohibit arbitrary age
8245discrimination and the use of arbitrary age limits. "An arbitrary decision is
8257one not supported by facts or logic, or despotic." Id. at 763. The facts set
8272forth in the competent substantial evidence in this case is that the age limit
8286in the rule is arbitrary. In fact, the Department's own witness testified that
8299the use of age 70 was arbitrary because the use of age 65 is better supported by
8316the statistical accident rate data. There is simply no factual evidence to show
8329that age 70, as opposed to 65 or 68 or 71 or 75 is appropriate and is reasonably
8347related to the legislative purpose.
8352ORDER
8353Based upon the foregoing Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Thaw, it is
8366ORDERED that Rule 6A-3.0141(1)(a) , Florida Administrative Code, which
8374states "Is under seventy (70) years of age," constitutes an invalid exercise of
8387delegated legislative authority.
8390DONE and ORDERED this 14th day of December, 1988, in Tallahassee, Florida.
8402_________________________________
8403DIANE K. KIELSLING
8406Hearing Officer
8408Division of Administrative Hearings
8412The Oakland Building
84152009 Apalachee Parkway
8418Tallahassee, Florida 32399-1550
8421(904) 488-9675
8423Filed with the Clerk of the
8429Division of Administrative Hearings
8433this 14th day of December, 1988.
8439APPENDIX TO FINAL ORDER, CASE NO. 88-0847RX
8446The following constitutes my specific rulings pursuant to Section
8455120.59(2), Florida Statutes, on the proposed findings of fact submitted by the
8467parties in this case.
8471Specific Rulings on Proposed Findings of Fact Submitted by Petitioner, Florida
8482Education Association/United
84841. Each of the following proposed findings of fact are adopted
8495in substance as modified in the Final Order. The number in
8506parentheses is the Finding of Fact which so adopts the
8516proposed finding of fact: 1-7(60-66); 8-17(68-77); 18(68);
852319-26(79-86); 27-31(88-92); 38(98); 41-52(47-58); 54(59);
852875(10); 83(13); 88(20); 89(21); 91(22); 95(23); 96-98(27-
853529); 102-106(41-45); and 110 & 111(27)
85412. Proposed findings of fact 32 and 33 are irrelevant.
85513. Proposed findings of fact 34-37, 39, 40, 53, 55, 56, 90,
8563112, and 113 are unnecessary.
85684. Proposed findings of fact 57-74, 76-82, 84-87, 92-94, 99-
8578101, and 107-109 are subordinate to the facts actually found
8588in this Final Order.
85925. Proposed findings of fact 114-116 are rejected as being
8602unsupported by the competent, substantial evidence.
8608Specifically, the exhibits cited were not admitted in
8616evidence.
8617Specific Rulings on Proposed Findings of Fact Submitted by Intervenor, Florida
8628Teaching Profession/National Education Association
86321. Each of the following proposed findings of fact are adopted
8643in substance as modified in the Final Order. The number in
8654parentheses is the Finding of Fact which so adopts the
8664proposed finding of fact: 1-9(1-9); 10(11); 11(12); 13(64);
867214(72); 15(67); 16 & 17(68); 18(70); 19-23(93-97); 26(99);
868027(86); and 36 & 37(46)
86852. Proposed findings of fact 12, 24, 25, 28-33, and 35 are
8697subordinate to the facts actually found in this Final Order. 3. Proposed
8709finding of fact 34 is unnecessary.
87154. Proposed finding of fact 38 is unsupported by the competent,
8726substantial evidence. Specifically it makes reference to an
8734exhibit not admitted in evidence.
8739Specific Rulings on Proposed Findings of Fact Submitted by Respondent,
8749Department of Education
87521. Each of the following proposed findings of fact are adopted
8763in substance as modified in the Final Order. The number in
8774parentheses is the Finding of Fact which so adopts the
8784proposed finding of fact: 8(3); 11-16(13-18); 18-20(19);
879121(23); 25-32(27-34); 34-39(35-40); 51(60); 53(79); and
879754(47).
87982. Proposed findings of fact 1, 3-7, 10, 22, 23, 33, 43-43 and
881148 are subordinate to the facts actually found in this Final
8822Order.
88233. Proposed findings of fact 2 and 9 are unnecessary.
88334. Proposed findings of fact 17, 44-46, and 56 are irrelevant.
88445. Proposed findings of fact 40, 47, 49, 50, 52, 55, and 57-60
8857are unsupported by the competent, substantial evidence.
8864COPIES FURNISHED:
8866Lorene C. Powell
8869Assistant General Counsel
8872FEA/United
8873208 West Pensacola Street
8877Tallahassee, Florida 32301
8880Carl J. Zahner
8883Carolyn S. Holifield
8886Assistant General Counsels
8889Department of Education
8892Knott Building
8894Tallahassee, Florida 32399
8897Vernon T. Grizzard
8900Attorney at Law
8903116 South Monroe Street
8907Tallahassee, Florida 32301
8910Liz Cloud, Chief
8913Bureau of Administrative Code
89171802 The Capitol
8920Tallahassee, Florida 32301
8923Carroll Webb, Executive Director
8927Administrative Procedure Committee
8930120 Holland Building
8933Tallahassee, Florida 32301
8936Honorable Betty Castor
8939Commissioner of Education
8942The Capitol
8944Tallahassee, Florida 32399-0400
8947NOTICE OF RIGHT TO JUDICIAL REVIEW
8953A PARTY WHO IS ADVERSELY AFFECTED BY THIS FINAL ORDER 15 ENTITLED, TO JUDICIAL
8967REVIEW PURSUANT TO SECTION 120.68, FLORIDA STATUTES. REVIEW PROCEEDINGS ARE
8977GOVERNED BY THE FLORIDA RULES OF APPELLATE PROCEDURE. SUCH PROCEEDINGS ARE
8988COMMENCED BY FINDING ONE COPY OF A NOTICE OF APPEAL WITH THE AGENCY CLERK OF THE
9004DIVISION OF ADMINISTRATIVE HEARINGS AND A SECOND COPY, ACCOMPANIED BY FILING
9015FEES PRESCRIBED BY LAW, WITH THE DISTRICT COURT OF APPEAL, FIRST DISTRICT, OR
9028WITH THE DISTRICT COURT OF APPEAL IN THE APPELLATE DISTRICT WHERE THE PARTY
9041RESIDES. THE NOTICE OF APPEAL MUST BE FILED WITHIN 30 DAYS OF RENDITION OF THE
9056ORDER TO BE REVIEWED.
Case Information
- Judge:
- DIANE K. KIESLING
- Date Filed:
- 02/25/1988
- Date Assignment:
- 02/26/1988
- Last Docket Entry:
- 12/14/1988
- Location:
- Tallahassee, Florida
- District:
- Northern
- Agency:
- Department of Education
- Suffix:
- RX