California BORN Prevails In Excelsior College Lawsuit

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Looks like the California BRN is holding firm on their decision with Excelsior College. The courts ruled in favor of the board with EC's lawsuit.

http://www.rn.ca.gov/new/pdf/excelsiornewsrelease.pdf

http://www.rn.ca.gov/new/pdf/excelsiorcourtdecision.pdf

SACRAMENTO (February 23, 2006) – The California Board of Registered Nursing prevailed today in a state Court of Appeal decision upholding the BRN’s position that Excelsior College graduates, like other out-of-state school graduates, must fulfill all California licensing requirements, including supervised clinical practice, in order to qualify for licensure as a registered nurse in California.

Ruth Ann Terry, BRN Executive Officer, stated, “This decision is of critical importance to the quality and safety of RN practice in California. It affirms the Board’s position that there is nothing more basic to safe nursing practice than ensuring that students learn hands-on skills through sufficient hours of supervised clinical practice in patient settings.”

Documents filed with the court by Excelsior College describe the college as a distance learning program based in New York. The California Court of Appeal decision states, “As opposed to California’s 810 hours of supervised clinical practice in a variety of settings with various patients, Excelsior’s students simply take the weekend CPNE.”

The court explains the CPNE (Clinical Performance Nursing Examination) is “a weekend course, administered over two and one-half days, with a limited number of patients involving only two areas of nursing.”

The litigation background is as follows. Excelsior College sued the BRN in December 2003 after the BRN ruled that, in order to be eligible for examination and licensure in California, Excelsior College graduates enrolled on or after December 6, 2003, like all other out-of-state school graduates must meet the legal requirements for licensure in California, including the requirement of supervised clinical practice concurrent with theory.

Excelsior’s lawsuit consisted of a petition for writ of mandate and a complaint for declaratory and injunctive relief. The BRN filed a demurrer, and after briefing and oral argument, the trial court ruled in the BRN’s favor and sustained the demurrer. Excelsior filed an appeal in September 2004. Following briefing and oral argument, the Court of Appeal issued its decision in the matter on February 23, 2006.

The Court of Appeal acknowledges “… the numerous attempts by the Board to assist Excelsior with developing strategies for coming into compliance with California’s requirements. Excelsior chose not to do so.” It further states, “As a practical matter, graduates from out-of-state programs can be … assured of licensure in California as long as their schools meet the minimum California requirements.”

Ruth Ann Terry welcomed the court’s recognition that “The primary purpose of the Board is to protect the public,” and that “In clinical practice, students learn the vital hands-on skills that are at the heart of nursing practice.”

Executive Officer Terry elaborated, “Distance education plays a key role in the education of today’s nurse. The Board is fully supportive of innovative learning methods and stands ready to work with all programs to expand the capacity of nursing education to help alleviate the nursing shortage. That said, we will not compromise standards for the care of California patients. We believe that quality education and expansion of education capacity are fully compatible.”

On a related note, in August 2005 the National Council of State Boards of Nursing adopted a position paper that recommends “nursing education programs shall include clinical experiences with actual patients” and “should be supervised by qualified faculty.” The NCSBN stated, “Because the mission of the boards of nursing is to protect the public, the boards asked for guidance with evaluating prelicensure programs that do not provide experiences with actual patients.” NCSBN is the organization of all of the state boards of nursing.

:typing

Specializes in Peds stepdown ICU.
Well, I have it on an email.

Oh, and by the way, there is no shame in being an LPN student. I worked very hard to become an LPN and that is something no one will ever take away from me.

I second that one! I was an LPN for a long time...it was my LPN training that helped me get where I am today. If you spoke to and have information from one of the board members then there could be a way to still become licensed in California. Does anyone else have any other info?

Oh, and by the way, there is no shame in being an LPN student.

When did I say there was any shame in being an LPN student? I didn't. I merely corrected the assumption that I was one ...

If there is some other option to be licensed, why doesn't Excelsior announce it? Instead, they go on and on about how unreasonable the board is in denying licensure to EC students. If there was some realistic way for EC students to get licensed, you'd think they'd be screaming it from the mountain tops ... but they're not ... because it just isn't happening.

So ... which community colleges or hospitals are supposedly sponsoring these clinicals? Got any names? I bet if you called my community college, they wouldn't know anything about it. I'm sure they would tell you to go take all the necessary pre-reqs, and then stand in line behind all the people who have been waiting two years to get into the program.

Whatever ... if people want to ignore all of the official documentation and court rulings ... and foolishly think they can get licensed in Cali ... hey, I guess they can find out when it's too late and they've wasted a ton of money.

Psychological definition of denial: A refusal to accept external reality because it's too threatening.

:typing

Specializes in Peds stepdown ICU.

I am still wondering the roots of your strong opinions regarding Excelsior. I think your inquest into the matter borders on obsessive--you can be found posting on several of the Excelsior threads. Hows this definition Obsessive:an unhealthy and compulsive preoccupation with something or someone Please enlighten us so we may have a better understanding--quite possibly we may understand.

Perhaps Lizz, like some of us, doesn't like seeing people being given misleading information. Some people started with EC not realizing that they would not be able to get liscenced in California (unless they registered before the cutoff date), so they spend a lot of money for courses that won't get them what they want. Then tons of people post rumours about these special secret ways to get around it that the board of nursing doesn't confirm anywhere on their pages and even EC doesn't claim which just further confuses the issue. It isn't obsessive to point that out.

Specializes in Peds stepdown ICU.
Perhaps Lizz, like some of us, doesn't like seeing people being given misleading information. Some people started with EC not realizing that they would not be able to get liscenced in California (unless they registered before the cutoff date), so they spend a lot of money for courses that won't get them what they want. Then tons of people post rumours about these special secret ways to get around it that the board of nursing doesn't confirm anywhere on their pages and even EC doesn't claim which just further confuses the issue. It isn't obsessive to point that out.

While it may not be obsessive to point that out, it is to engage in some sort of comment for the past 3 years related to Excelsior. It was before this decision that she began posting about Excelsior and her distaste. It proves strange to constantly seek out something that you dislike. She is not a distance learning student but spends more time on here than some of the distance learning students. That to me is obsessive....I just would be interested in knowing the roots of the opinions she brings to the board...it honestly may enlighten me on a new perspective.

As I have expressed before, I totally agree that one should be well aware of what we are getting into prior to committing to something like this. I fully agree Excelsior lacks in some areas BUT all schools do for that matter. No one wants to see someone waste their money on a dream...that is why it is always best to get it in writing--I concur with Lizz and Suzanne on this...that was not my issue--my issue is why seek out something you don't like when you aren't even enrolled in it? Usually opinions this strong come from being jaded in some way, shape, or form.

pedinurse: this thread isn't about me. why don't you follow the moderator's advice ..

please stick to the topic of the original thread.

for a second time:

please pay nice and stick to the original topic. this is not the place to pick on others.

Specializes in Med-Surg/Telemetry.

I don't understand why Excelsior wouldn't just comply with California Board of Nursing's standards by including a hybrid portion to the program, adding a hands on teaching clinical to every theory portion. It makes no sense not to. Even if they just did it in the state of California. Then they could expand their school, increase their student body, have more affiliate hospitals, especially if they upgraded it also to a BSN program, eliminating the associate degree option. Fusing the ASN and BSN together into an online - hybrid BSN program that has teaching clinical rotations for every theory level could possibly meet California board of nursing standards. Excelsior's structure may have to conform to future trends as the associate degree is slowly being phased out of nursing all across the boards anyway. This proposed type of hybrid will probably become the standard nursing trend for all RN programs in the future. Eventually there will be no more associate degree nursing programs. But back to Excelsior College, if their goal is really to help students succeed, then why not just comply to the different board of nursing's guidelines and eliminate the college not being accepted in some states. It would benefit their institution as well as the individual students it graduates. When Excelsior's RN program began in the early 1970s as Regents College, I'm sure nursing was not nearly as complex as it is now. Doesn't Excelsior mean ever upward. Excelsior is a wonderful school with a lot of potential for future growth. Its time to move on up. Its time for a change.

Specializes in OB-Gyn/Primary Care/Ambulatory Leadership.

This is a NINE YEAR OLD THREAD.

Specializes in hospice.

That poster is on some kind of Excelsior vendetta. They're all over the board with this.

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