Veterinarians commit years of their life to education and training so they can protect the animals they love. Licensing issues can threaten to destroy the plans or practices of competent animal medical specialists. Sometimes, the resolution happens easily, but other events require the individual to receive professional legal advice.
Denial for Criminal Record
Anyone can make mistakes. A criminal conviction in the past will not immediately make someone ineligible to hold a professional license. California laws allow several exceptions for veterinarians with prior convictions. Fight the decision if a licensing board refuses an application despite meeting the guidelines.
The time of a conviction matters. California allows people to practice their profession if the conviction happened at least seven years prior to applying for a license. The time is from when the conviction took place and not from when charges occurred, or when the defendant paid a fine or completed other punishment.
A dismissal of the crime, clemency, or proof of meeting court-ordered rehabilitation can also allow people to receive a license despite a prior conviction. Juvenile offenses, minor traffic crimes with fines below $500, or an arrest without a conviction should not affect licensure. If a license refusal still occurs, a lawyer can help with an appeal.
Explanations for Conviction Irrelevance
Not every conviction will cause a denial. The California licensing board may still approve a license application, even if the applicant has a recent conviction. The relevance to the work the applicant performs and what the conviction was for factors into the decision. A lawyer can help to defend an applicant when the board unfairly claims relevance.
A veterinarian charged with drug offenses or with felony animal abuse is less likely to regain their license or receive their initial license than someone with a felony traffic violation. A lawyer can help people convicted of relevant crimes to find alternatives like counseling or rehabilitation programs that may convince the board to reconsider the decision.
Defense Against Unfair Complaints
Losing a license because of unfair claims or outright lies can cost veterinarians their livelihood. Complaints from clients about malpractice, outright abuse, and other issues with veterinary care continue to rise. The increase may have little to do with the behavior of the vet. Licensing boards may not hear all the facts and unfairly punish the veterinarian.
The reasons for unfair complaints are many. An inability to pay a veterinary bill or the natural death of a pet can cause people to react in anger. Some complaints may come from habitual complainers known to file frivolous lawsuits. A fired employee may file a complaint as revenge. A lawyer will research to protect the reputation and license of the veterinarian.
Fighting Against Unfair Restrictions
Veterinarians want to do everything possible for their patients. COVID-19 made it unsafe for people and their pets to receive in-person healthcare. California restrictions against the use of telemedicine for new veterinary patients caused a lot of concern for many in the animal health field. Veterinarians that failed to follow the restrictions learned their licenses were at risk.
A lawyer can help veterinarians that received punishment after treating new patients virtually. Not everyone could prepare in advance for a pet illness, and no one could have predicted the lockdown and the length of the time services would become unavailable. Veterinarians that did what they thought was the most responsible for their staff, clients, and themselves should appeal any license lost for this reason.
At
Spiga & Associates, we want to help compassionate and capable veterinarians to keep their practices open and save lives. Do not accept an unfair licensing board decision. Any veterinarian with a licensing issue should contact us to discuss the case.