IN THE COMMONWEALTH COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA
Maimouna Thiam t/d/b/a :
Rama Hair Braiding Salon, :
Petitioner :
:
v. : No. 301 C.D. 2022
: Argued: April 3, 2023
Bureau of Professional and :
Occupational Affairs, State :
Board of Cosmetology, :
Respondent :
BEFORE: HONORABLE RENÉE COHN JUBELIRER, President Judge
HONORABLE CHRISTINE FIZZANO CANNON, Judge
HONORABLE STACY WALLACE, Judge
OPINION NOT REPORTED
MEMORANDUM OPINION BY
PRESIDENT JUDGE COHN JUBELIRER FILED: July 25, 2023
Maimouna Thiam t/d/b/a Rama Hair Braiding Salon (Petitioner or the Salon)
petitions for review of the Final Adjudication and Order (Final Order) of the Bureau
of Professional and Occupational Affairs (Bureau), State Board of Cosmetology
(Board), issued on March 8, 2022, ordering Petitioner to cease and desist from the
unlicensed practice of cosmetology including natural hair braiding and levying a
civil penalty against Petitioner in the amount of $1,500.00. On appeal, Petitioner
argues that Section 5 of the statute commonly known as the Beauty Culture Law (the
Law),1 which requires a limited license to engage in the commercial practice of
natural hair braiding, violates Petitioner’s due process rights under article I, section 1
1
Act of May 3, 1933, P.L. 242, as amended, 63 P.S. § 511.
of the Pennsylvania Constitution, PA. CONST. art. I, § 1.2 Following our review, we
reverse.
I. BACKGROUND
Petitioner, a single parent of six children, emigrated from Senegal to the
United States in 1993. Although she is taking English classes, Petitioner speaks
Wolof and French, and she reads very little English. (Findings of Fact (FOF) ¶¶ 5-
6.)3 When she was a teenager, Petitioner learned from her mother how to braid hair
using a methodology requiring no chemicals or hot iron, only the use of her hands.
(Id. ¶¶ 3, 7-8.) In 1993, Petitioner “earned a certificate in hairdressing and
cosmetology from Wilfred Academy of Hair and Beauty Culture in New York,” and
she “obtained a license to practice as a hair braider in Florida” in 2014. (Id. ¶¶ 10-
11.) Prior to 2011, Petitioner purchased the Salon in Philadelphia where she had
worked as a natural hair braider for many years. (Id. ¶ 9.) In 2014, Petitioner
attempted to complete the educational requirements for a cosmetology degree.
(Petitioner’s Answer to Order to Show Cause and Request for Hearing (Answer)
¶ 4, Certified Record (C.R.) Item 4.)4 She enrolled in a 150-hour program at Divine,
a cosmetology school in Philadelphia, but because the course was taught in English,
Petitioner had difficulty understanding the instructors and had to use computer
2
Article I, section 1 states: “All men are born equally free and independent, and have
certain inherent and indefeasible rights, among which are those of enjoying and defending life and
liberty, of acquiring, possessing and protecting property and reputation, and of pursuing their own
happiness.” PA. CONST. art. I, § 1.
3
The Findings of Fact are set forth in the Proposed Adjudication and Order, which can be
found as Item 15 in the Certified Record (C.R.). In its Final Order, the Board adopted the Findings
of Fact set forth in the Proposed Adjudication and Order. (See Final Order at 1, C.R. Item 19.)
4
The Reproduced Record consists of the Certified Record which is not properly paginated
in accordance with Pennsylvania Rule of Appellate Procedure, Pa.R.A.P. 2173.
2
translation. (FOF ¶¶ 12-13.) Before withdrawing from Divine, Petitioner purchased
materials and attended classes for two months, but she found the required courses
were not relevant to her natural hair braiding practice. (Answer ¶ 5.) Petitioner did
not complete the program or take the examination because she became ill, and the
school closed before she could return. (FOF ¶ 14.) Due to a health condition,
Petitioner is no longer able to braid hair herself or do other types of work, such as
restaurant work. (Id. ¶ 15.)
Petitioner has never held a natural hair braiding license from the Board for
herself or for the Salon, nor has she obtained any other authorization to practice a
profession or occupation by the Board. (Id. ¶ 1.) Petitioner was not aware that she
could obtain a limited license as a natural hair braider because the Board never
explained this to her in its written communications or through its agents during the
in-person inspections at the Salon. (Answer ¶ 6.) On December 11, 2017, while the
Salon was open, an inspector for the Department of State (Department) conducting
an inspection of the Salon “observed a female employee braiding the hair of a female
customer for compensation.” (FOF ¶ 2.) There was no evidence of any heat irons
or chemicals on the premises. (Id. ¶ 3.) Petitioner was previously cited by the Board
in 2011 and 2014 for maintaining the Salon without a license. (Id. ¶¶ 16-17.)
However, neither the Board nor its agents have ever attempted to communicate with
Petitioner about the charges filed against her in a language she could understand.
(Answer ¶ 7.)
Based on the December 2017 inspection, the Board issued an order to show
cause charging Petitioner with violating Section 2 of the Law, 63 P.S. § 508, by
operating the Salon without a license. (FOF ¶ 18; Order to Show Cause ¶¶ 12-16,
C.R. Item 1.) In her Answer, Petitioner admitted to all the factual allegations, and
3
argued, among other things, that she is otherwise qualified to engage in natural hair
braiding but is unable to obtain a license due to a language barrier, that her practice
does not threaten the public’s health and safety as she does not wash hair or use any
chemicals, and that closing her Salon would result in significant hardship. (Answer
¶¶ 1, 10, 12-13.) Petitioner also asserted several constitutional challenges including
arguments that the Law violates her substantive and procedural due process rights
and her equal protection rights. (Id. ¶¶ 12-14.)
A hearing was conducted before a Hearing Examiner on June 4, 2019, at
which time Petitioner, represented by counsel, testified on her own behalf with the
benefit of a French interpreter. (FOF ¶¶ 19-20.) Petitioner stated she had been
braiding hair since she was 18 years old. (Notes of Testimony, Hearing, 6/4/19,
(N.T.) at 23, C.R. Item 14.) Throughout the years she has worked at the Salon,
Petitioner never received any complaints from customers about health, safety, hair
loss, hygiene, or scalp issues. (Id. at 25.) When Petitioner was issued a citation on
September 12, 2013, she could not understand what it meant without the assistance
of counsel, and the person who cited her spoke to her in English. (Id. at 30-31.) She
was told she would have to “refer to the court” regarding the citation. (Id. at 31.)
Petitioner also needed a lawyer’s assistance to understand the 2017 citation at issue
herein. (Id. at 32.) No one explained to Petitioner the difference between a
cosmetology license and a natural hair braiding license, and, in an effort to comply
with licensing requirements for hair braiders, she enrolled in Divine in 2014. (Id. at
31, 33.) To attend Divine for a 150-hour course, Petitioner paid over $1,000.00 for
a “recession fee” and recommended books, and an additional $25 each day, three
days per week. (Id. at 33-34.) The courses at Divine were taught in English, and
Petitioner could not finish the coursework due to an illness. (Id. at 34.) When she
4
was able to return, Divine had closed. (Id.) Petitioner would have returned to school
if she had been able to find a school in the Philadelphia area that offered a course of
study in natural hair braiding. (Id. at 35.)
Eric Edi,5 a lecturer at Jefferson University and founding member and the
chief operating officer (COO) of the Coalition of African Communities in
Philadelphia (AFRICOM),6 testified on behalf of Petitioner as follows. Dr. Edi is
“[v]ery” familiar with immigrant women from West Africa, many of whom do not
speak fluent English and are involved in the business of professional hair braiding.
(Id. at 40-41.) Since about 2001, Dr. Edi has been involved with issues surrounding
citations of natural hair braiders in the Philadelphia area in his capacity as COO of
AFRICOM. (Id. at 42-43.) Dr. Edi was unaware of any programs in the Philadelphia
area to accommodate the licensing requirements for natural hair braiders, although
he personally knew of at least 20 women in search of such programs and had heard
of others. (Id. at 43, 49.) Some women, who are confused about the requirements
for cosmetology and natural hair braiding licensure, have spent about $3,000.00 to
obtain a cosmetology license, though the course of study offered them no training
for natural hair braiding. (Id. at 44-45, 47-48.) For Petitioner and others similarly
situated, a language barrier and computer illiteracy create problems in passing the
required examination for licensure. (Id. at 45-46.) Dr. Edi was aware of efforts to
open a specialty school for hair braiding in the Philadelphia area four to five years
prior to the hearing, which would have enabled hair braiders to become compliant
with licensure requirements and allow them to train others in the craft. (Id. at 48-
5
Eric Edi initially was referred to as “Dr. Eric Edi,” (N.T. at 28), but throughout his
testimony counsel addressed him as “Mr. Edi.” We will use the former designation.
6
Dr. Edi explained AFRICOM “is a coalition of community based on the mission that [it]
created in 2001 to serve, advocate for African and Caribbean immigrants in Philadelphia and now
in the State of Pennsylvania.” (N.T. at 40.)
5
49.) Dr. Edi was familiar with former Governor Tom Wolf’s Commission on
Licensing Reform (the Commission) wherein former Governor Wolf called for the
total abolishment of the natural hair braiding licensing requirement. (Id. at 49-50.)7
Following the hearing, Hearing Examiner issued a Proposed Adjudication and
Order (Proposed Order) on June 28, 2019, including the findings of fact set forth
above. Hearing Examiner concluded that Petitioner violated Section 2 of the Law
“by maintaining a place for the practice of natural hair braiding for compensation
without being licensed to do so.” (Proposed Order (Prop. Order), Conclusion of Law
(COL) ¶ 3, C.R. Item 15.) Hearing Examiner rejected Petitioner’s argument that she
cannot obtain a license, explaining this “is not an appropriate ground to waive” the
licensing requirement and noted Petitioner has never attempted to obtain a license.
(Id. at 7.) Despite finding that illness prevented Petitioner from completing the 150-
hour course at Divine before the school’s closure in 2014, (FOF ¶¶ 12, 14), Hearing
Examiner stated that when natural hair braiding was first added to the Law,
Petitioner could have obtained a license by demonstrating she had three years of
consecutive experience and completed a 150-hour program within two years of
initial licensure, but she did not do so. (Id. at 7 n. 5). Hearing Examiner did not
opine as to whether there was sufficient record evidence that the Board would have
been “satisfied with the standards provided for licensure” in either New York or
Florida as required by Section 9 of the Law, 63 P.S. § 515, which provides for
7
Petitioner asked Hearing Examiner to take judicial notice of the Commission and of its
recommendation, and Hearing Examiner did so. Petitioner also offered the Commonwealth’s
Bureau of Professional and Occupational License Affairs June 11, 2018, report (Bureau Report),
along with former Governor Wolf’s proposal from his website as exhibits. Those documents were
admitted into evidence without objection as Respondent’s Exhibit 3. (N.T. at 50-51; see Exhibit
(Ex.) R-3 “Review of State Professional and Occupational Licensure Board Requirements and
Processes By direction of [former] Governor Tom Wolf” (Review), Supplemental Record filed
May 5, 2023.)
6
reciprocity. (Id. at 7-8.) Notwithstanding, Hearing Examiner found there was no
requirement that Petitioner complete a program in Pennsylvania, Petitioner never
attempted to pass the required examination based on her training in New York or
sought reciprocity based on her Florida permit, and she never had a licensed
employee oversee the Salon for her. (Id. at 7-8.) Hearing Examiner acknowledged
there have been proposals to eliminate the licensing requirement for natural hair
braiding, but such law had not yet been enacted. (Id. at 8.) Hearing Examiner also
acknowledged Petitioner’s constitutional arguments but explained those were
beyond Hearing Examiner’s and the Board’s review. (Id.) Hearing Examiner
recommended that Petitioner pay a civil penalty of $1,500.00 and that she cease and
desist from the unlicensed practice of cosmetology. (Id. at 10.) In recommending
these sanctions, Hearing Examiner noted that Petitioner had received two prior
citations for maintaining an unlicensed salon and that she was issued a fine for both
citations. (Id.)
On July 1, 2019, the Board filed its Notice of Intent to Review pursuant to
Section 35.226(a)(2) of the General Rules of Administrative Practice and Procedure,
1 Pa. Code § 35.226(a)(2). (C.R. Item 16.) Petitioner filed Exceptions with the
Board on July 31, 2019, wherein she again asserted constitutional challenges and
argued that the penalties recommended by Hearing Examiner were unduly harsh.
(Id. at Item 18.) The Institute for Justice (IJ), which describes itself as “a nonprofit,
public-interest law firm dedicated to defending Americans’ rights to private
property, economic liberty, free speech and educational choice[,]” also filed a letter
in support of Petitioner’s Exceptions. (C.R. Item 17.) It argued that occupational
licensing laws intended to protect the public “have gone too far and are, in too many
instances, denying Americans the opportunity to earn an honest living without any
7
benefit to consumers” and that “[o]ne of the most dramatic examples of excessive
licensing involves natural hair braiding.” (IJ Letter at 1.) As a result of IJ’s efforts,
at least 28 states currently “do not require natural hair braiders to obtain a license to
practice their craft,” which derives from “a rich cultural heritage spanning
millennia.” (Id.) According to IJ, among the states that do not require licensure for
natural hair braiders are the Commonwealth’s neighbors, Delaware, Maryland, and
West Virginia, as well as Vermont, California, Arizona, and Texas. (Id. at 1-2.) IJ
contended that even states that do require a license to braid hair do not have
requirements as onerous as Pennsylvania’s. According to IJ, “[t]hese states (and
their hours requirements) are: Oregon (online module), Missouri (4-6 hour video),
South Carolina (6 hours), Florida (16 hours), Tennessee (16 hours), Alaska (35
hours), New Jersey (40-50 hours), District of Columbia (100 hours), Alabama (210
hours), and Nevada (250 hours).” (Id. at 3 n.3.)
On March 8, 2022, the Board issued its Final Order rejecting Petitioner’s
Exceptions and adopting Hearing Examiner’s Proposed Order in its entirety,
including the Findings of Fact, Conclusions of Law, discussion, and recommended
sanctions. (Final Order at 1.) The Board also added discussion in response to the
Petitioner’s Exceptions. First, the Board stated it did not have the authority to find
the Law and its regulations violate Petitioner’s substantive due process rights. (Id.
at 2.) However, the Board explained that Petitioner had not been charged personally
and, as the owner of the Salon, she had the ability to designate a properly licensed
cosmetologist or natural hair braider to manage the Salon. (Id. at 2-3.) The Board
likewise found no violation of Petitioner’s right to procedural due process because
she had “received reasonable notice of the charges against her and” had been given
the “opportunity to be heard in accordance with [Section 504 of the Administrative
8
Agency Law, 2 Pa.C.S. § 504].”8 (Id. at 3.) To the extent Petitioner claimed she did
not understand the notice, the Board explained the notice states an interpreter may
be requested, which Petitioner’s counsel did request. (Id.) The Board also noted
that Petitioner had been issued two prior citations for the same offense. (Id.)
Next, the Board rejected Petitioner’s claim that the Law denies her equal
protection because the limited licensing requirement cannot be completed by non-
English speakers and fails to recognize hair braiding licenses from other states. (Id.
at 3-4.) The Board again noted it could not consider a constitutional issue but
nonetheless explained that “there is no evidence that [Petitioner] has made any
application to the Board, or that the Board has denied any applications for licensure.
The Board cannot discriminate against an applicant that has not ever sought any
license.” (Id. at 4.) Finally, the Board determined the cease and desist order is not
unduly harsh, for the operation of an unlicensed salon is illegal irrespective of the
financial situation of its operator. (Id.) Viewing itself as having “a vested interest
in deterring” all individuals from operating a cosmetology or a natural hair braiding
salon without a license to protect the health and safety of citizens of Pennsylvania,
the Board found it appropriate to levy the civil penalty recommended by Hearing
Examiner against Petitioner in the amount of $1,500.00. (Id. at 5.) Petitioner
subsequently petitioned this Court for review of the Final Order.9
8
Section 504 states: “No adjudication of a Commonwealth agency shall be valid as to any
party unless he shall have been afforded reasonable notice of a hearing and an opportunity to be
heard. All testimony shall be stenographically recorded and a full and complete record shall be
kept of the proceedings.” 2 Pa.C.S. § 504.
9
A day after filing the petition for review, Petitioner filed an “Application to Stay
Administrative Agency Order Pending Determination on Petition for Review and for Expedited
Consideration of the Motion,” which this Court granted following argument. See Thiam t/d/b/a
Rama Hair Braiding Salon v. Bureau of Pro. And Occupation Affairs, State Bd. of Cosmetology
(Pa. Cmwlth., No. 301 C.D. 2022, filed May 5, 2022) (Cohn Jubelirer, J. single-judge op.)
9
II. PARTIES’ ARGUMENTS
Petitioner presents a single claim for this Court’s review: Whether the Law’s
licensing provisions for natural hair braiders violate Petitioner’s due process rights.
Petitioner argues that “[a]rticle I, [s]ection 1 of the Pennsylvania Constitution
protects an individual’s right to pursue a career or occupation,” and her “livelihood
as a natural hair braider is threatened by the [Board]’s order to shut down her” Salon,
which is the “sole source of income for her family[,] due to her lack of a license.”
(Petitioner’s Brief (Br.) at 10.) Petitioner posits that as she uses no chemicals, dyes,
or sharp instruments in the Salon, the limited licensing regime requiring Petitioner
to obtain an onerous 300 hours of expensive schooling and pass an examination in
English is not rationally related to the minimal health and safety risks posed by
natural hair braiding, particularly given her experience and what natural hair
braiding entails. (Id. at 10-11.) Petitioner further maintains the current licensing
scheme for natural hair braiders “adversely impacts African immigrant women” like
her and their “African American . . . clientele seeking a safe and natural alternative
to” other procedures that utilize dangerous chemicals. (Id.)
Relying upon the Pennsylvania Supreme Court’s decision in Ladd v. Real
Estate Commission, 230 A.3d 1096 (Pa. 2020) (Ladd II),10 and the heightened
rational basis test articulated in Gambone v. Commonwealth, 101 A.2d 634 (Pa.
1954), Petitioner argues a limited licensing scheme like the one at issue herein “must
have a real and substantial relationship to a legitimate government end[] and not
impose burdens . . . that are unduly oppressive or patently unnecessary,” and the
Law, as applied to her, is unduly burdensome notwithstanding the alleged state
interest involved. (Petitioner’s Br. at 13-14.) First, Petitioner contends there are
10
Ladd II reversed and remanded this Court’s previous decision in Ladd v. Real Estate
Commission, 187 A.3d 1070 (Pa. Cmwlth. 2018).
10
neither identified health or safety risks involved with natural hair braiding nor any
evidence of complaints against the Salon or Petitioner. (Id. at 15.) Petitioner also
references published statistics that indicate complaints pertaining to natural hair
braiding are infrequent. (Id. at 15-16.) According to Petitioner, 32 states have no
licensing requirements for natural hair braiders, and since 2017, the Commonwealth
has taken steps to eliminate the requirement. (Id. at 17-19). For example,
Petitioner’s counsel asked Hearing Examiner to take judicial notice of the
Governor’s Commission on Licensing Reform from the Governor’s website. (N.T.
at 49- 50, Ex. R-3.) By way of a 2017 Executive Order, former Governor Wolf
directed the Bureau to conduct a comprehensive review of licensing requirements in
the Commonwealth. (Petitioner’s Br. at 17.) On June 11, 2018, the Bureau issued
the Bureau Report that found overburdensome licensing requirements can be
particularly harmful to immigrant communities and observed that only 3 of
Pennsylvania’s 13 regional comparison states impose licensure requirements on
natural hair braiders. (Id. at 17-18.)
Petitioner next maintains that the Law’s current requirement for 300 hours of
study to be followed by a written examination does not bear a real and substantial
relationship to a government interest with regard to an experienced natural hair
braider’s ability to perform hair braiding services. (Id. at 19.) Petitioner discusses
decisions in other jurisdictions wherein courts have examined what Petitioner deems
to be similar natural hair braiding licensing regimes and determined that they do not
have a real and substantial relation to a government interest. (Id. at 19-21, 25-26.)
Petitioner urges that even if this Court were to find the existence of a real and
substantial relationship between the Law and the Commonwealth’s concern with
health and safety, Petitioner has “show[n] that the licensing requirements under the
11
Law and regulations are overly onerous and oppressive.” (Id. at 22.) This is
especially so in light of the fact that courses of study to meet the licensing
requirements are not readily available in Pennsylvania unless one were to enroll in
a 1,250-hour cosmetology program, which would be taught in English, making it
difficult for Petitioner to learn and would require Petitioner and others similarly
situated to learn unnecessary skills. (Id. at 23-24, 26-28.) Petitioner points out that
emergency medical technicians (EMTs) need only pass a competency exam without
any required coursework, and tattoo artists are not required to obtain any
occupational licenses in the Commonwealth. (Id. at 23.) Petitioner did travel to
Florida where she obtained a hair braiding certificate, which she displayed in the
Salon when she returned to Philadelphia. (Id. at 24-25.)
In response to the Board’s assertion that Petitioner’s due process claim fails
as she could employ a licensed individual to manage the Salon, Petitioner argues her
due process rights are still implicated because the pool of licensed salon managers
would be “miniscule” due to the difficulty in obtaining a hair braiding license. (Id.
at 26.) Citing to a filing by the Board with the Independent Regulatory Review
Commission (IRRC), Petitioner asserts there are only 54 licensed natural hair
braiders in the Commonwealth and 3 hair braiding teachers. (Id. at 27.)
The Board argues that “a law passed by the [G]eneral [A]ssembly is presumed
to be constitutional,” and a review of the Law reveals that its limited licensing
requirements for natural hair braiders have not impinged Petitioner’s substantive due
process rights to pursue her chosen occupation. (Board’s Br. at 9-10.) The Board
points out that following the Supreme Court’s remand in Ladd II, this Court, in a
single-judge opinion, held the Real Estate Licensing and Registration Act’s
12
(RELRA),11 broker licensure requirements of hundreds of hours of real estate
coursework[,]” plus a three-year apprenticeship and an examination were
“minimally related, at best,” to the petitioner’s “short-term property management
services” business and “[s]hould the General Assembly believe this type of activity
needs to be regulated, it may consider establishing less rigorous requirements as it
did for other professions falling under RELRA, like time-share salespersons.”
(Board’s Br. at 12-13 (quoting Ladd v. Real Est. Comm’n (Pa. Cmwlth., No. 321
M.D. 2017, filed Oct. 31, 2022), slip op. at 33-34 n.34 (Wallace, J. single-judge
opinion) (Ladd III).)12 The Board reasons that the natural hair braiding limited
license is just the type of modified law that this Court referenced in Ladd III for
requiring 300 training hours in anatomy, scalp care, natural hair braiding, and
sanitation, “directly relate[s] to ensuring that the practice of natural hair braiding is
done in a manner which promotes public health and safety,” and is narrowly tailored
to that practice. (Board’s Br. at 14, 16.) The Board also finds instructive a decision
of the Sixth Circuit, Bah v. Attorney General of Tennessee, 610 F. App’x 547 (6th
Cir. 2015), and distinguishes those decisions of other jurisdictions upon which
Petitioner relies in her brief in support of her arguments. (Id. at 14-16.)
The Board next argues Petitioner’s assertion that the requirements of the Law
are unduly burdensome because the 300-hour program is difficult to find in the
Commonwealth is not supported by the record. The Board states Dr. Edi’s testimony
was not supported by any documentation but, rather, was based on accounts he stated
he had heard from members of the community. (Id. at 17.) Although the Board
11
Act of February 19, 1980, P.L. 15, as amended, 63 P.S. §§ 455.101-455.902.
12
A single-judge opinion of this Court, while not binding, may be cited for its persuasive
value pursuant to Rule 126(c)(2) of the Pennsylvania Rules of Appellate Procedure, Pa.R.A.P.
126(c)(2).
13
failed to lodge any objection to Petitioner’s testimony at the time of the hearing
before Hearing Examiner, the Board describes her testimony as “confusing” in that
it does not “establish that she was even personally aware of or that she made any
effort to locate any cosmetology schools that would offer a natural hair braiding
curriculum once she returned to Pennsylvania from Florida.” (Board’s Br. at 18
(citing N.T. at 35-36).) The Board asserts this Court cannot consider the filing by
the IRRC referenced in Petitioner’s brief as it was made “in support of a fee increase
regulation promulgated by the Board unrelated to this case” and was not made a part
of the certified record herein. (Id. at 18.) Notwithstanding, the Board posits it is
impossible from the IRRC filing to determine how many of the 158 licensed
cosmetology schools referenced therein offer a curriculum in natural hair braiding
and that the document, which shows there “are 77,854 licensed cosmetologists
compared to 54 licensed natural hair braiders,” seemingly undercuts Petitioner’s
point that the 300 hours required under the Law “is unduly burdensome when 77,854
individuals” completed “the 1,250 hours required for a full cosmetologist license.”
(Id. at 19.) The Board also explains that Petitioner was not personally issued a civil
penalty for performing natural hair braiding without a license but, rather, she was
cited for permitting another unlicensed individual to work in her Salon. According
to the Board, nothing in the Law or its regulations requires Petitioner as the owner
of the Salon to also be a limited license holder, so long as her employees are licensed;
yet Petitioner presented no testimony in this regard or to support her allegations that
the cost to obtain the limited license is prohibitive. (Id. at 20-21.)
Next, the Board argues that while Petitioner may have training and experience
in natural hair braiding, her skills do not override the Commonwealth’s interest in
ensuring that Petitioner can practice that profession in a way that conforms with the
14
Legislature’s desire to protect the health and safety of the consumers; therefore, the
limited licensing requirements under the Law are rationally related to its stated
purpose. (Id. at 22.) The Board reasons that Petitioner’s arguments pertaining to
other states’ regulation of natural hair braiding do little to advance her as-applied
substantive due process challenge because such arguments fail to show either that
Pennsylvania’s regulation of the procedure is “unreasonable, unduly oppressive, or
patently beyond the necessities of the case” or that the Law does not have a real and
substantial relation to the public interest it seeks to advance when applied to the facts
herein. (Id. at 24-25.) The same holds true for Petitioner’s contention that she has
never had complaints about her services or the Salon, for this fact does not eliminate
the General Assembly’s right to regulate her occupation. Finally, the Board urges
this Court not to give weight “to bald assertions” Petitioner makes in her brief to
articles, including a report by the IJ purporting that there are no safety risks
associated with natural hair braiding and public comments by former Governor Wolf
that the natural hair braiding license should be removed, because those
documents/statements are not contained in the record, nor were they presented
before Hearing Examiner. (Id. at 24-25.)13 The Board finds no relevance to
Petitioner’s argument that because she has never been the subject of a health and
safety complaint, she poses no public safety risk and likens such a claim to a health
practitioner who has never had a complaint filed against him or her feeling no need
to submit for a licensure renewal. (Id. at 26.)
13
These allegations are incorrect for numerous reasons as previously discussed. First, in
her Answer, Petitioner did allege that former Governor Wolf proposed eliminating the licensing
requirements. (See Answer ¶ 11.) In addition, the Commission’s recommendation prepared in
response to former Governor Wolf’s proposal was admitted as Exhibit R-3, without objection from
the Board, at the Hearing. (See N.T. at 50-51.) Also, Dr. Edi testified regarding former Governor
Wolf’s efforts in this regard at the hearing. (Id. at 49-50.)
15
III. DISCUSSION
A. General Legal Principles
This Court’s standard of review from a final order by the Board is “whether
constitutional rights were violated, [whether] an error of law [was] committed, or
whether the findings of fact are supported by substantial evidence of
record.” Diwara v. State Bd. of Cosmetology, 852 A.2d 1279, 1282 n.4 (Pa.
Cmwlth. 2004) (emphasis added).
The Pennsylvania Supreme Court has held that
every citizen has an inalienable right to engage in lawful employment.
While a state may regulate a business which affects the public health,
safety, and welfare, it may not, through regulation, deprive an
individual of his right to conduct a lawful business unless it can be
shown that such deprivation is reasonably related to the state interest
sought to be protected.
Sec’y of Revenue v. John’s Vending Corp., 309 A.2d 358, 361 (Pa. 1973) (citing
Dent v. West Virginia, 129 U.S. 114, 121-22 (1889); Moore v. Jamieson, 306 A.2d
283, 308 (Pa. 1973)).
In Diwara, this Court held that the process of natural hair braiding is
encompassed within the Law’s definition of cosmetology, and beauty salon owners
had failed to establish a licensure requirement for braiding hair violated their
substantive due process and equal protection rights under both the United States and
Pennsylvania Constitutions. Id. at 1285-86. In 2006, the General Assembly
amended the Law to expressly include natural hair braiding and created a limited
licensure requirement for natural hair braiding. See Section 2 of the Act of July 7,
2006, P.L. 704, No. 99. “Natural hair braiding” is defined by the Law as
the practice of utilizing techniques that result in tension on hair roots of
individuals, such as twisting, wrapping, weaving, extending, locking or
braiding of the hair. The term does not include the application of
16
dyes, reactive chemicals or other preparations to alter the color or
to straighten, curl or alter the structure of hair.
Section 1 of the Law, 63 P.S. § 507 (emphasis added).
Section 5(b)(3)(i) of the Law provides, in relevant part, that
[t]he [B]oard shall issue the following limited licenses to qualified
applicants:
....
Natural hair braiding license, which shall authorize the holder to engage
in the practice of natural hair braiding only. An applicant for a natural
hair braiding license shall have completed three hundred hours of
[B]oard-approved subjects relating to sanitation, scalp care,
anatomy and natural hair braiding in a cosmetology school and
passed an examination limited to that practice. Licensed natural hair
braiders may operate a salon limited to that license. An applicant may
be permitted to take a written examination upon completion of at least
two hundred fifty hours of instruction in natural hair braiding in a
licensed school of cosmetology. The examination shall include both
theoretical and procedural skill questions as prescribed by the [B]oard.
Any applicant may apply and is eligible for licensure upon (A) passing
the written examination, (B) completion of the required three hundred
hours of [B]oard-approved subjects, and (C) certification by a duly
licensed school of satisfactory completion of all program requirements.
63 P.S. § 511(b)(3)(i) (emphasis added).
Section 2(2) of the Law provides it is “unlawful for any person to practice or
maintain any place for the practice of . . . natural hair braiding . . . for compensation
without” at least a limited license. 63 P.S. § 508(2). According to the Board’s
regulations, either a licensed natural hair braider or a licensed cosmetologist may
apply for a natural hair braiding salon license, and the owner or designated person
in charge must be present to manage the salon and oversee the braiding service,
17
which must be performed by licensed hair braiders during regular business hours.
49 Pa. Code §§ 7.51, 7.62(b)(3), (d).
The regulations also provide alternatives to limited licensure. For instance,
for a limited time following enactment, a person could have applied for a license
based on experience. Specifically, Section 7.31(c) of the regulations states:
(c) Until January 11, 2010, the Board will issue a natural hair braider
license to an applicant who does the following:
(1) Submits the application adopted by the Board.
(2) Pays the required licensing fee in [Section] 7.2 (relating to
fees).
(3) Provides proof that the applicant has practiced natural hair
braiding for [three] consecutive years immediately prior to the
date of the application for licensure.
(i) Proof of practice requires that the applicant provide tax
records of employment and an affidavit from the applicant
and the applicant’s immediate supervisor, where
applicable, verifying the applicant’s practice of natural
hair braiding for [three] consecutive years immediately
prior to the date of the licensure application.
(ii) The Board will accept the information provided and
will impose no penalty upon the applicant for failure to
comply with the licensing provisions in [S]ection 2 of
[Law] . . . that the applicant committed prior to September
5, 2006 . . . .
49 Pa. Code § 7.31(c).14
14
Notably, this regulation makes no mention of an applicant’s need to complete a course
of 150 hours as found by Hearing Examiner. (Proposed Order at 7 n.5.). Also, this option was not
available to Petitioner in 2017 at the time she was issued the citation which gave rise to the instant
appeal.
18
The Law and the regulations also provide for reciprocity. In this regard,
Section 7.31(b) of the regulations states “[a]n individual who meets the criteria for
licensure by reciprocity under [S]ection 9 of the [Law] . . . may obtain a license
without examination.” 49 Pa. Code § 7.31(b). In addition, Section 9 of the Law
reads:
Any person who has practiced or taught cosmetology under a
certificate, license or permit, for not less than two years in another state,
territory, or the District of Columbia, may secure the license required
by this [Law] without an examination or compliance with other
requirements as to age or education: Provided, [t]hat the Board shall
be satisfied that the standards provided for licensure under the laws of
the place wherein the applicant’s license was issued are the same or
substantially the same as those provided for hereunder, that similar
privileges are accorded persons licensed under the laws of the
Commonwealth, that the applicant holds a valid license from the place
wherein he is entitled to practice, and that all the terms and conditions
prescribed by the Board are complied with by the applicant. Such
application shall be accompanied by an affidavit of a licensed physician
that the applicant was examined and is free from all contagious and
infectious diseases, and the license fee required by this [Law].
Students, upon graduating from licensed schools of cosmetology, may
apply for, and receive from the [D]epartment, a temporary license to
practice in the field of cosmetology until the next regular examination
held by the [D]epartment under the provisions of this [Law].
63 P.S. § 515.
Petitioner presents an as-applied constitutional challenge to the Law herein.
This Court has explained the two types of constitutional challenges, facial and as-
applied, as follows:
A facial attack tests a law’s constitutionality based on its text alone and
does not consider the facts or circumstances of a particular case. An
as-applied attack, in contrast, does not contend that a law is
unconstitutional as written but that its application to a particular person
19
under particular circumstances deprived that person of a constitutional
right.
Peake v. Commonwealth, 132 A.3d 506, 516-17 (Pa. Cmwlth. 2015) (citations
omitted). “[A]n as-applied challenge will not necessarily invalidate a law given that
a law ‘may operate in an unconstitutional way as to one particular individual or
company, as to which it may be declared void, and yet may, as to others still be
effective.’” Nigro v. City of Philadelphia, 174 A.3d 693, 700 (Pa. Cmwlth. 2017)
(quoting Pa. R. Co. v. Driscoll, 9 A.2d 621, 632 (Pa. 1939)).
In support of her argument that the Law as applied to her is unduly
burdensome, Petitioner relies in part upon Ladd II, wherein the Pennsylvania
Supreme Court held that, as “a matter of first impression, a short-term vacation rental
manager raised a colorable claim” that the broker licensing requirements codified in
the RELRA “were unconstitutional as applied to her services,” and the Court’s
application therein of the heightened rational basis test first articulated in Gambone.
Id. at 1096, 1115.
The Gambone rational basis test provides:
[A] law which purports to be an exercise of the police power must not
be unreasonable, unduly oppressive or patently beyond the necessities
of the case, and the means which it employs must have a real and
substantial relation to the objects sought to be attained. Under the guise
of protecting the public interests the legislature may not arbitrarily
interfere with private business or impose unusual and unnecessary
restrictions upon lawful occupations.
101 A.2d at 637. In Nixon v. Commonwealth, our Supreme Court stated that to
determine whether one’s substantive due process rights have been violated, a court
must undertake a two-step analysis to determine 1) whether the licensing
requirements are “unreasonable, unduly oppressive, or patently beyond the
20
necessities of the case and” 2) whether those requirements bear “a real and
substantial relation to the objects sought to be obtained,” when applied to the
individual under the circumstances presented in the case. 839 A.2d 277, 287 (Pa.
2003).
Recently, this Court in Ladd III applied the Gambone test in relation to the
real estate broker licensing requirements in RELRA – apprenticeship, instructional
coursework, examinations, and a brick-and-mortar location. Ladd III, slip op. at 28.
The Court recognized the RELRA sought to advance the public interest of protecting
citizens from the fraudulent conduct of individuals engaged in the business of the
real estate trade. Id. The Court further found that some statements of the Supreme
Court in Ladd II remained true. For example, the Court observed that those “who
manage and facilitate rentals of lodging in apartment complexes and duplexes on
behalf of owners are completely exempt from the statute’s broker licensing
requirements,” and individuals “who manage and facilitate rentals in hotels do not
fall under the terms of [the] RELRA at all.” Id. at 33 (quoting Ladd II, 230 A.3d at
1114). The Court found the petitioner’s “business model [was] more closely
analogous to services provided by the[] exempt individuals than to those of a broker,
despite the fact that the statutory definition of ‘broker’ technically catches [the
petitioner] in its net.” Id. (quoting Ladd II, 230 A.3d at 1114) (alterations added).
The Court ultimately held:
[The] RELRA’s broker licensure requirements of hundreds of hours of
real estate coursework, a three-year apprenticeship, and the broker
examination are all minimally related, at best, to [the petitioner]’s short-
term property management services. [The] RELRA’s requirements are
well beyond the necessities of this case. Forcing [the petitioner] to
comply with [the] RELRA’s requirements in no way advances the
General Assembly’s goal of public protection. As a result, this Court
concludes that, as applied to [the petitioner]’s short-term property
21
management services, [the] RELRA’s licensure requirements do not
bear a real and substantial relation to the statutory goal of protecting
“the public from abuse by those who are engaged in the business of
trading real estate.”
Ladd III, slip op. at 33-34 (quoting Ladd II, 230 A.3d at 1106) (alterations added).
This Court also recently considered a facial constitutional challenge to the
Law in Diop v. Bureau of Professional and Occupational Affairs, State Board of
Cosmetology, 272 A.3d 548 (Pa. Cmwlth. 2022), which was brought in the Court’s
original jurisdiction. Specifically, the petitioners in Diop brought facial and as-
applied substantive due process challenges and facial and as-applied equal protection
challenges to the Law’s limited licensing requirements. They argued that as skilled
natural hair braiders who have spent many years honing their craft, they should not
have to pay high tuition costs or suffer a loss of income to earn a license which would
require them to learn techniques that they have previously “mastered or skills that
do not relate to natural hair braiding.” Id. at 557. The petitioners also argued the
Law and its associated regulations deprived them and other natural hair braiders of
the ability to pursue their calling and prevented them from maintaining or expanding
their businesses because they could not find qualified, licensed braiders to meet their
clientele’s demand. As a result, the petitioners raised a facial challenge to the Law’s
limited licensing requirements for natural hair braiders and contended that the Law’s
requirements, as applied to them, also violated their substantive due process rights
as guaranteed in article I, section 1 of the Pennsylvania Constitution. The Diop
petitioners asserted that the Law’s licensing requirements for natural hair braiders
bore “no substantial relationship to the protection of public health, safety, welfare,
or any other legitimate government interest,” and, instead, “serve[d] only
illegitimate economic protectionism.” Id. at 558. Also, in support of their claim that
22
the Law’s licensing requirements for natural hair braiders violated the equal
protection guarantee in article I, section 26 of the Pennsylvania Constitution, PA.
CONST. art. I, § 26,15 both facially and as applied to them, the petitioners further
argued “that the Law treats similarly situated persons differently by allowing
licensed cosmetologists, who lack any training in natural hair braiding, to provide
the service, while denying experienced, but unlicensed, natural hair braiders the
same right.” Diop, 272 A.3d at 558.
The Bureau and Board filed preliminary objections challenging the legal
sufficiency of the petitioners’ claims.16 In ruling on the preliminary objections, this
Court first acknowledged that “[l]egislation enacted by the General Assembly enjoys
a presumption of constitutionality,” and a statute will be declared unconstitutional
only where “it clearly, palpably, and plainly violates the Constitution.” Id. at 563
(quoting Germantown Cab Co. v. Phila. Parking Auth., 206 A.3d 1030, 1041 (Pa.
2019)). Noting that for substantive due process rights to attach, an individual must
have been deprived of a constitutionally protected interest or property right and one’s
right to engage in a licensed profession is not a fundamental right, we applied the
Gambone test to the petitioners’ substantive due process challenge and found the
Law, on its face, was not unconstitutional. Diop, 272 A.3d at 563-64. In doing so,
we observed
the legitimacy of the state purpose is undisputed. The title of the Law,
as amended, is “[t]o promote the public health and safety by providing
for examination, licensing and granting of permits for those who desire
to engage in the profession of cosmetology[.]” Act of July 7, 2006, P.L.
15
Stating “[n]either the Commonwealth nor any political subdivision thereof shall deny to
any person the enjoyment of any civil right, nor discriminate against any person in the exercise of
any civil right.” PA. CONST. art. I, § 26.
16
Preliminary objections also were filed challenging standing and failure to join
indispensable parties, neither of which is at issue here.
23
704, No. 99, § 1. Our Supreme Court has also observed that the Law
and its counterpart commonly referred to as the Barber License Law[,
Act of June 19, 1931, P.L. 589, as amended, 63 P.S. §§ 551-567,] “have
but one purpose, and that is the protection of patrons of barber and
beauty shops.” Dep[’]t of Licenses [&] Inspections, B[]d[.] of License
Inspection [&] Rev[.] v. Weber, . . . 147 A.2d 326, 328 ([Pa.] 1959).
Thus, we consider whether the licensing requirements for natural hair
braiders bear a rational, i.e., “real and substantial,” relationship to the
health and safety of hair salon patrons.
We agree with [the r]espondents that [the p]etitioners have not
demonstrated that the Law, on its face, clearly violates the Pennsylvania
Constitution. Prior to 2006, one seeking to practice natural hair
braiding was required to obtain a cosmetology license with 1,250 hours
of instruction. In 2006, the General Assembly created a limited license
tailored to the practice of natural hair braiding; currently, an applicant
is required to pass a written examination and complete only 300 hours
of Board-approved instruction in professional practices, including
sanitation; sciences, including scalp care and anatomy; and cognitive
and manipulative skills related to natural hair braiding. . . . 63 P.S.
§ 511(b)(3)(i); 49 Pa. Code § 7.129(f). Ensuring that individuals who
offer natural hair braiding services to the public have basic knowledge
of sanitation, scalp care and anatomy is reasonably related to protecting
the safety and health of patrons of hair salons. These licensing
requirements, and the requirement that licensees have training in the
cognitive and manipulative skills related to their chosen profession, are
not “unreasonable, unduly oppressive or patently beyond the
necessities of the case[.]” Gambone, 101 A.2d at 637.
Id. at 564–65 (first, second, and last alteration in original).17 Accordingly, we
sustained the preliminary objection to the facial substantive due process challenge.
Id. at 565. However, and important herein, we held the petitioners’ substantive due
17
With regard to the petitioners’ facial and as-applied equal protection challenges, this
Court observed that “licensed cosmetologists, unlike [the p]etitioners and other unlicensed natural
hair braiders, must receive substantial instruction in various cosmetology skills, including skills
related to natural hair braiding. The two groups are not similarly situated and, thus, [the
p]etitioners’ equal protection claims must fail.” Diop, 272 A.3d at 566.
24
process claim, as applied to them, would continue and directed the respondents to
file an answer.18
B. Application of the Gambone Test
Mindful of the aforementioned statutory authority and caselaw, we consider
the Gambone factors as explicated in Nixon as to whether the Law’s requirement for
Petitioner, who has practiced the art of natural hair braiding for most of her life and
who does not utilize any chemicals or hot irons, to enroll in and finance a course for
300 hours of training and pass an examination in English, is “unreasonable, unduly
oppressive, [and] patently beyond the necessities of the case” as applied to her.
Nixon, 839 A.2d at 287; Gambone, 101 A.2d at 637. The United States Supreme
Court has long held that the government may not arbitrarily interfere with one’s
fundamental right “to follow any lawful calling, business, or profession [she] may
choose[.]” Dent, 129 U.S. at 121. This is because the denial of a license to practice
one’s profession can deprive her of that liberty interest if the reasons for the denial
offend due process. Id. However, when ruling on the constitutionality of
professional licensing requirements for physicians in Dent, the United States
Supreme Court cautioned that occupational licensure is not without constitutional
limits. Government is free to mandate requirements “appropriate to the calling or
profession,” but not those that “have no relation to such calling or profession”
because that would “deprive one of [her] right to pursue a lawful vocation.” Id. at
122. The Dent case continues to be cited nationally and in Pennsylvania for the
proposition that licensing restrictions must have a reasonable connection to an
18
The respondents filed an answer and new matter, to which the petitioners have replied.
There has been no docketed activity in Diop since the filing of the reply to new matter on April 6,
2022.
25
applicant’s fitness or capacity to perform the required work. See, e.g., United States
of America v. Hopkins, 927 F. Supp. 2d 1120 (D.N.M. 2013); Tandon v. State Bd.
of Med., 705 A.2d 1338, 1347-48 (Pa. Cmwlth. 1997).
Petitioner has presented sufficient evidence that the Law’s requirements as
applied to her are unreasonable, the first prong of the Gambone test. Petitioner has
been a natural hair braider since she was a teenager, and this is the only profession
she has ever known. (N.T. at 23-24.) It is likely that Petitioner, who has practiced
her craft for most of her life, would have as much, if not more, skill in the art of
natural hair braiding than the instructors under whose tutelage the Law currently
requires her spend hundreds of hours and to whom she must pay thousands of dollars
to obtain a license. For this reason, much of the time and money Petitioner is
required to spend taking courses to teach her skills she already knows, if she is
fortunate enough to find a course specific to natural hair braiding, or skills entirely
unrelated to natural hair braiding, if she is forced to take a broader cosmetology
course, is unnecessary. Computer literacy also complicates learning for Petitioner.
(N.T. at 45-46.) This is compounded by the fact that the classes are taught in
English, in which Petitioner is not fluent. (N.T. at 34.)
Petitioner also has established the Law as applied to her is unduly oppressive,
another factor in the first prong of the Gambone test, in that without a license her
livelihood will be erased, and she has no other financial resources upon which to
rely if the Salon is forced to close. (N.T. at 36.) Both Petitioner and Dr. Edi, the
latter of whom the Hearing Examiner described as “a witness with expertise in the
culture of the community engaged in natural hair braiding and the availability of
formal training,” (Prop. Order at 2), spoke to the unavailability and cost-prohibitive
nature of schooling for natural hair braiders, (N.T. at 34-35, 43-45, 48-49). For this
26
reason, although Petitioner has not been prohibited from operating the Salon so long
as she employs licensed natural hair braiders, finding natural hair braiders to operate
and work in the Salon is hampered by the same lack of training facilities and
language barriers applicable to her.19 Three hundred hours of education followed by
an examination in English is also beyond necessity for Petitioner, who has been
braiding hair for years and has never had any complaints about the Salon or the
manner in which she braids hair. (N.T. at 25.)
The Bureau Report is relevant to Petitioner’s due process claim and supports
her repeated suggestion that the limited licensing requirements under the Law
unduly burden her because there are few schools in Pennsylvania and no schools in
the Philadelphia area that offer the necessary 300-hour natural hair braiding
program. (Petitioner’s Br. at 11, 19, 23, 27.) As the Bureau Report makes evident,
any concerns the Bureau may have for patrons of natural hair braiding services can
be addressed with less stringent licensing requirements. Former Governor Wolf’s
Executive Order 2017-03 led to the creation of a Commission on Licensing Reform,
which
directed the commissioner of [the Bureau] to work with each board and
commission to undertake a critical and comprehensive review of the
following for each profession licensed:
• The number of regional states that require the same or
equivalent license as Pennsylvania;
• Processes, licensing and renewal fees, training, and continuing
education requirements;
• Whether the above referenced requirements and fees are set in
statute, regulation, or policy;
and
19
At the time of the hearing, Petitioner explained she had a health issue related to her hands
that have become distorted due to her years of braiding hair. (N.T. at 36.)
27
• Any automatic criminal history bans, specifying the crime or
conviction trigger and the length of the licensure ban.
For all of the above, the Executive Order directs the commissioner to
benchmark Pennsylvania requirements against regional averages. As
defined in the Executive Order, regional states include Ohio, West
Virginia, Maryland, Delaware, New Jersey, New York, Massachusetts,
Rhode Island, Connecticut, New Hampshire, Vermont, and Maine. In
any case where Pennsylvania exceeds the regional average, additional
information is provided on the Commonwealth’s requirements and
whether they are necessary to protect the health and safety of residents.
(Bureau Report at 4-5.) The examination resulted in the preparation of the 600-page
Bureau Report, which included, inter alia,
• The number of disciplinary actions imposed on licensees each year
for the past five years, including fines, penalties, license
suspensions, and other disciplinary actions;
• The ten most frequent disciplinary actions resulting in a fine;
• Interstate Compacts or Reciprocity Agreements; and
• Demographic information about the composition of the boards and
commissions and the licensed population.
(Id. at 5.) The Commission stressed that
while licensure is the strictest form of occupational regulation, there are
a variety of other options—ranging from private certifications, to
bonding and insurance requirements, to registration and certification—
which can be utilized to help protect the public and ensure high quality
delivery of services, without creating an unnecessary bar to entry to a
profession.
(Id.) Yet, while the trend nationally is for states to examine the need for existing
licensing requirements, the General Assembly has introduced licensure bills in
recent legislative sessions to register additional occupations. (Id. at 11.)
With regard to natural hair braiding, the Bureau Report revealed that in early
2017 “South Dakota Governor Dennis Daugaard signed legislation to exempt natural
28
hair braiding from the practice of cosmetology, becoming the 21st state to deregulate
this occupation.” (Id.) In a similar vein, since the 2012 release of a report
commissioned by Michigan Governor Rick Snyder, “Michigan has de-licensed eight
professions . . . and has eliminated requirements in” other areas, including the
number of training hours necessary to obtain a barber’s license. (Id.) Nebraska also
has reformed the licensing process for hair braiders. (Id. at 10). Hair braiders in
Connecticut are not required to obtain a cosmetology license. (Id. at 62.)
Pennsylvania is one of only four states in the regional comparison group that requires
hair braiders to obtain a cosmetology license, albeit a limited license, along with
Massachusetts, New Jersey, and Vermont. (Id. at, 62.)20
Since the publication of the Bureau Report cited by Petitioner, legislation was
reintroduced in 2021 to eliminate licensing requirements for natural hair braiders in
Pennsylvania. See S.B. 60 (Reg. Sess. 2021-2022) and H.B. 591 (Reg. Sess. 2023-
2024). The stated purpose of the latter proposed legislation seeks to “reform
Pennsylvania’s approach to occupational licensing and create jobs and opportunities
for small business entrepreneurs across the state.” H.B. 591 Memorandum (Reg.
Sess. 2023-2024). Noting that “overregulation stifles the industry’s potential[]” by
requiring all beauty professionals to spend thousands of dollars and hours to attend
cosmetology programs in areas where practitioners are already skilled and have a
client base, the bill seeks to allow niche practitioners to “be able to use their skills
to fully realize their small business aspirations and pay taxes instead of being forced
to work in underground economies.” Id.
20
The Board indicates that since the report was issued, both Vermont and Massachusetts
have eliminated the requirement for natural hair braiding licensure, and New Jersey instituted
limited licensure requirements. (Board’s Br. at 23 n.2.)
29
When discussing the Ladd line of cases, the Board acknowledged that “[i]t is
clear from the holding by [this] Court in granting Ladd’s challenge that if [the]
RELRA had included a specific limited licensing provision narrowly tailored to
Ladd’s chosen profession, her claim would have failed.” (Board’s Br. at 13.) In
light of all of the foregoing, we find the requirement for Petitioner to enroll in a
course for 300 hours of training and pass an examination in English is not narrowly
tailored to Petitioner’s chosen profession of natural hair braiding. Rather, Petitioner
has shown them to be excessively onerous, cost prohibitive and/or unavailable, and
unnecessary for a natural hair braider with Petitioner’s expertise in the craft.
Gambone, 101 A.2d at 637; Ladd III, slip. op at 33. As Petitioner has demonstrated
the Law’s limited licensing requirements for natural hair braiders is “unreasonable,
unduly oppressive, or patently beyond the necessities of the case,” as applied to her,
we next must determine whether those requirements bear “a real and substantial
relation to the” public interest they seek to advance. Nixon, 839 A.2d at 287.
The General Assembly’s enactment of Section 5(b)(3)(i) of the Law evinces
an understanding that the amount of training necessary for natural hair braiding does
not rise to the level of training needed to be a fully licensed cosmetologist.
Notwithstanding, in carving out limited licensure requirements under the Law for
natural hair braiders, the Legislature did not do so in a way that is reasonably tailored
to meet the State’s health and safety interests in protecting the clientele who will
seek the type of service that Petitioner provides, Ladd III, slip op. at 33-34, nor do
the limited licensing requirements for 300 hours of education bear a “real and
substantial relation” to the public interest they seek to advance. Nixon, 839 A.2d at
287. First, the Board has not provided sufficient evidentiary support to show natural
hair braiding poses significant health or safety risks to consumers or the public that
30
can be served by the requirements of the Law. The Board presented no evidence to
contradict Petitioner’s testimony that there have been no complaints against either
her or the Salon, nor did it present evidence of health risks associated with hair
braiding or pertaining to the frequency of complaints against natural hair braiding
facilities in general. In fact, the majority of states have no requirements for natural
hair braiders. (Bureau Report at 11, 62.) Conversely, Petitioner’s inability to
continue to operate the Salon for lack of a license will rob her of the only profession
she knows. Certainly, the state has an interest in protecting the health and safety of
patrons and of assuring that those who offer natural hair braiding have some basic
knowledge of sanitation. However, the Board’s licensing requirements for Petitioner
to take a 300-hour course devoted to scalp care, anatomy, and training in the
cognitive and manipulative skills of natural hair braiding and pass an examination
in English to engage in a trade which requires no chemicals, heat, sharp instruments,
or dyes, and which Petitioner has practiced without complaint for decades, is not
rationally related to the advancement of that interest.
C. Other Jurisdictions’ Holdings
Our decision in this regard can be guided by the holdings in other jurisdictions
upon which Petitioner relies. For example, Petitioner cites the holding in Cornwell
v. Hamilton, 80 F. Supp. 2d 1101, 1108 (S.D. Cal. 1999), wherein a California
district court granted summary judgment in favor of an African hair braider whose
technique of “locking” hair for compensation was similar to that of hair braiding.
The plaintiff asserted an as-applied challenge to California’s Barbering and
Cosmetology Act,21 claiming “that the regulatory scheme treats persons performing
21
Cal. Bus. & Prof. Code §§ 7301-7368, 7389-7389.5, 7395.1-7427.
31
different skills as if their professions were one and the same, i.e., it attempts to
squeeze two professions into a single, identical mold.” Id. at 1103. Applying a
rational basis test, the district court held that in light of the “almost nonexistent”
threat of injury or disease the practice posed and the fact that very few hours of the
required training were devoted to health concerns, California’s requirement for an
African hair stylist to take a 1600-hour cosmetology course and pass a licensing
exam was not rationally related to a legitimate government interest as applied to
plaintiff. Id. at 1107, 1113, 1118-19.22 Petitioner also looks to Clayton v. Steinagel,
885 F. Supp. 2d 1212 (D. Utah 2012), which cites to and relies upon Cornwell’s due
process analysis. Id. at 1215, n.9. Therein, an unlicensed African hair stylist who
only braided hair brought an action challenging the constitutionality of Utah’s
cosmetology/barber school’s curriculum and licensing scheme as applied to her. In
finding an insufficient rational relationship between public health and safety and the
required regulatory scheme as applied to the plaintiff, the court found, inter alia, that
“[i]t was undisputed [therein] that the legislature never considered African hair
braiding when creating its licensing scheme” and that “[b]y the state’s own
admission, 1400 to 1600 of the 2000 hours of the mandatory curriculum are
irrelevant to African hair braiding, yet [the plaintiff] is still required to take those
classes, and be tested on those topics, in order to braid hair.” Id. at 1214-15.
22
The Ninth Circuit overturned the Cornwell court’s equal protection analysis in Merrifield
v. Lockyer, 547 F.3d 978, 985 (9th Cir. 2008). Therein, the plaintiff engaged in “non-pesticide
animal damage prevention and bird control,” as opposed to most pest controllers, who used
pesticide-based practices, and challenged the application of California’s pest control license
requirements claiming that he should be exempt from such license requirements because he did
not use pesticides. Id. at 980. Citing Cornwell, he argued that treating him the same as pesticide-
based pest controllers violated his rights to equal protection. Id. at 980, 984. The Ninth Circuit
rejected this argument, distinguishing the cases on their facts, but essentially upheld Cornwell’s
substantive due process analysis. Notwithstanding, clearly, the concern with working with
pesticides is distinguishable from our focus on natural hair braiding.
32
The Board argues the facts herein are more analogous to those presented in
Bah. Therein, African hair braiders in Tennessee were required to complete 300
hours or 9 credit hours of training to obtain a natural hairstylist cosmetology license.
Bah, 610 F. App’x at 549. Like Petitioner, the Bah plaintiffs argued that the
requirements were unduly burdensome as applied to them because they were well
skilled in their art, which they performed safely and without the need for chemicals,
and were cost prohibitive, which prevented them from pursuing their chosen
livelihood. Applying a rational basis test, the court found the fact that the plaintiffs
already knew “how to perform their craft” did “not negate Tennessee’s legitimate
interest in public health and safety.” Id. at 551. The court opined that professionals
sometimes are already skilled in their craft before attending formal schooling and
attaining licensures, but that fact “alone does not negate the state’s interest in
ensuring that [those] professionals receive training before they are unleashed onto
the public.” Id. The court also found that the plaintiffs’ pleading of facts that
African hair braiding is safer than alternative chemical treatments and declaring “in
a conclusory fashion that African hair braiding is generally ‘safe’ do not factually
negate Tennessee’s legitimate interest in public health, safety, and welfare.” Id. at
552 (citation omitted).
Of course, this Court is not bound by the Bah decision whose logic is less
convincing herein where the Legislature has established onerous requirements for
the licensure of natural hair braiders, but, ironically, requires no training for one to
hold oneself out as a tattoo artist, which necessarily involves the use of sharp objects,
chemicals, and dyes, or for EMTs, who are responsible for others’ lives on a daily
basis. While we acknowledge the Commonwealth’s interest in protecting the health
and safety of Petitioner’s clientele, we find the rigors of the Law as applied to
33
Petitioner, who is well skilled in her craft which requires the use of only one’s hands,
does not bear a substantial relation to that interest. Nixon, 839 A.2d at 287;
Gambone, 101 A.2d at 637. In fact, as applied to Petitioner, the Law works in
contravention to the state’s professed interest in health and safety. For example,
being required “to spend scarce time and resources on learning irrelevant skills,[]
actually impedes development of knowledge in their own craft. Thus, it aggravates
the very harms the State seeks to avoid.” Cornwell, 80 F. Supp. 2d at 1112.
IV. CONCLUSION
In light of the foregoing and upon applying the Gambone test, we hold that
Petitioner has presented sufficient evidence to establish that the Law’s limited
license requirements set forth in Section 5(b)(3)(i) are unconstitutional as applied to
her as they are violative of Petitioner’s constitutional right to pursue her chosen
occupation under article I, section 1 of the Pennsylvania Constitution. While it may
be reasonable for the Legislature to regulate the natural hair braiding industry, the
requirement for 300 hours of training and an examination in English to ensure
Petitioner, who has practiced the art of natural braiding for most of her life, is
properly trained in basic areas like sanitation, anatomy, and scalp care and possesses
the cognitive and manipulative skills necessary to braid hair is unduly burdensome.
Petitioner and Dr. Edi testified regarding the difficulty Petitioner and others in the
Philadelphia area face in finding a school to meet the Law’s requirements, which
will make it nearly impossible for Petitioner to hire licensed natural hair braiders to
operate the Salon. They also spoke of the costliness of such training and the
unavailability of accommodations to address Petitioner’s language barrier.
Moreover, the Law is not reasonably related to protecting the safety and health of
34
patrons of the Salon, where Petitioner uses no chemicals, dyes, or heat, and she has
been practicing her craft for most of her life without complaint. Nixon, 839 A.2d at
287; Gambone, 101 A.2d at 637. For these reasons, we reverse the Board’s March
8, 2022 Order.
__________________________________________
RENÉE COHN JUBELIRER, President Judge
35
IN THE COMMONWEALTH COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA
Maimouna Thiam t/d/b/a :
Rama Hair Braiding Salon, :
Petitioner :
:
v. : No. 301 C.D. 2022
:
Bureau of Professional and :
Occupational Affairs, State :
Board of Cosmetology, :
Respondent :
ORDER
NOW, July 25, 2023, the Final Adjudication and Order of the Bureau of
Professional and Occupational Affairs, State Board of Cosmetology, dated March 8,
2022, is REVERSED.
__________________________________________
RENÉE COHN JUBELIRER, President Judge
IN THE COMMONWEALTH COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA
Maimouna Thiam t/d/b/a :
Rama Hair Braiding Salon, :
Petitioner :
:
v. :
:
Bureau of Professional and :
Occupational Affairs, State :
Board of Cosmetology, : No. 301 C.D. 2022
Respondent : Argued: April 3, 2023
BEFORE: HONORABLE RENÉE COHN JUBELIRER, President Judge
HONORABLE CHRISTINE FIZZANO CANNON, Judge
HONORABLE STACY WALLACE, Judge
OPINION NOT REPORTED
DISSENTING OPINION
BY JUDGE FIZZANO CANNON FILED: July 25, 2023
Notwithstanding the majority’s careful analysis, I respectfully dissent.
Although I am sympathetic to Ms. Thiam’s need to earn a living, I believe the facts
as proposed by the Hearing Officer (HO) and found by the State Board of
Cosmetology (Board) preclude this Court from sustaining an as-applied
constitutional challenge to the licensing statute here.
Ms. Thiam asserts only an as-applied constitutional challenge to
Pennsylvania’s statutory natural hair-braiding license requirement. A challenge to
the constitutionality of a licensing statute is subject to rational basis analysis. See
Diwara v. State Bd. of Cosmetology, 852 A.2d 1279, 1283-84 (Pa. Cmwlth. 2004).
A rational basis for the licensing requirement is not hard to discern. Section 1 of the
statute commonly known as the Beauty Culture Law1 defines “natural hair braiding”
as “the practice of utilizing techniques that result in tension on hair roots of
individuals, such as twisting, wrapping, weaving, extending, locking or braiding of
the hair . . . .” 63 P.S. § 507. It is easy to see that safe and healthy practices should
be followed by those engaging in techniques that cause tension on hair roots and,
thus, on the scalp. Similarly, beyond the safety of the braiding techniques
themselves, the need for sanitary practices, including cleanliness of hands and
surfaces, is self-evident, and the legislature has an interest in promoting such
practices. A licensing requirement clearly bears a rational relation to that interest.
See Diwara, 852 A.2d at 1284 (explaining that in conducting a rational basis
analysis, “the reviewing court is free to hypothesize reasons which the legislature
could have had for the classification, i.e., the courts are free to hypothesize a
legitimate state goal which the classification serves [and] the legislature is not
required to provide evidence to justify its classification”).
Applying a rational basis analysis here, I am forced to conclude that the
Board was correct in determining that the evidence was insufficient to sustain Ms.
Thiam’s burden of proving that the licensing statute was unconstitutionally
oppressive as applied to her. The Board may use an HO to take evidence, although
the Board itself is the ultimate fact finder. Bentley v. Bureau of Pro. & Occupational
Affs., State Bd. of Cosmetology, 179 A.3d 1196, 1201 (Pa. Cmwlth. 2018) (citing
Pellizzeri v. Bureau of Pro. and Occupational Affs., 856 A.2d 297, 301 (Pa. Cmwlth.
2004)). Here, the Board adopted the HO’s proposed findings of fact. Reproduced
1
Act of May 3, 1933, P.L. 242, as amended; 63 P.S. §§ 507-527 added by the Act of July
7, 2006, P.L. 704.
CFC - 2
Record (RR), Item #20 at 1-2.2 Those facts, as found by the Board, are insufficient
to sustain Ms. Thiam’s as-applied constitutional challenge. Most notably, the Board
found as a fact that Ms. Thiam failed to show that she was unable to get a natural
hair braiding license, either for her salon or individually. Ms. Thiam failed to show
that she ever applied for either license but was denied by the Board. Id. at 4 & App.
A at 7. The record also fails to establish that such an application would have been
futile.
Additionally, regarding an individual license, although Ms. Thiam
asserted that she does not speak much English, the Board’s examiner routinely deals
with language issues. RR, Item #20, App. A at 7. Thus, the Board implicitly rejected
Ms. Thiam’s argument that her language hardship precluded her from obtaining a
license. Id., Item #20 at 1-2 (adopting the HO’s findings of fact).
Ms. Thiam also failed to show that her New York cosmetology
certification was insufficient to support granting her a Pennsylvania limited license.
She entered into evidence a certificate that she completed a cosmetology course at
an academy in New York. RR, Item #20, App. A at 3. However, the record is bare
of evidence concerning what subjects were covered in that course, how many hours
of study and practical training it entailed, whether it satisfied the requirements to
obtain a limited natural hair braiding license – or even a full cosmetology license –
in Pennsylvania, or whether Ms. Thiam ever submitted it with an application to the
Board. See Section 5(b)(3)(ii) of the Beauty Culture Law 63 P.S. § 511(b)(3)(ii)
(requiring 300 hours of instruction in “[B]oard-approved subjects relating to sanitation,
scalp care, anatomy and natural hair braiding in a cosmetology school . . .”).
2
The reproduced record is not properly paginated as required by Rule 2173 of the
Pennsylvania Rules of Appellate Procedure, Pa.R.A.P. 2173. Citations here to the reproduced
record are in accord with the numbering and designations used therein.
CFC - 3
Notably, the statute does not specifically require that the instruction be taken in a
Pennsylvania cosmetology school. See 63 P.S. § 511(b)(3)(ii); RR, Item #20, App.
A at 7. Thus, the record fails to establish that Ms. Thiam’s New York certification
was insufficient to qualify her to seek a natural hair braiding license in Pennsylvania.
Ms. Thiam similarly entered into the record a copy of her registration
to practice natural hair braiding in Florida. RR, Item #20, App. A at 11-12. Section
9 of the Beauty Culture Law contains a reciprocity provision that allows anyone who
has practiced any form of cosmetology for at least two years under a license from
another state to obtain a Pennsylvania license if the Board is satisfied that the
standards provided for licensure under the laws of the other state are substantially
the same as in Pennsylvania. 63 P.S. § 515. However, Ms. Thiam offered no
evidence of how long she practiced hair braiding in Florida. Thus, she failed to offer
any evidence to demonstrate whether or not her Florida license would have allowed
her to become licensed in Pennsylvania. RR, Item #20, App. A at 8.
Further, the HO rejected Ms. Thiam’s claim that the course of
instruction she took in Philadelphia in 2013 was not relevant to hair braiding. Cf.
Diwara, 852 A.2d at 1285 (Pa. Cmwlth. 2004) (concluding that natural hair braiders
had not met their burden of proof in an as-applied constitutional challenge to the
licensing statute, where there was insufficient evidence that cosmetology schools do
not provide instruction rationally related to natural hair braiding). In that regard,
there was evidence that Ms. Thiam’s difficulties with English and some health issues
were the primary reasons for her failure to complete that course and obtain a limited
natural hair braiding license. RR, Item #20, App. A at 4.
Moreover, the HO observed that Ms. Thiam could have obtained a
Pennsylvania limited license prior to 2010 without any education or examination
CFC - 4
requirement, but she did not do so. RR, Item #20, App. A at 7 n.5. Under Section
5(b) & (c) of the Beauty Culture Law, the instruction and examination requirements
for a natural hair braiding license were inapplicable to anyone who applied for a
license within a year after promulgation of the Board’s applicable regulations and
provided proof of at least three consecutive years of natural hair braiding practice
immediately prior to submitting the application; the licensee then had two years to
complete 150 hours of cosmetology instruction including “scalp care, hygiene and
occupational safety.” 63 P.S. § 511(b) & (c).3 The Board adopted its final
regulations in January 2009. 39 Pa. Bull. 219 (2009). Thus, Ms. Thiam had until
January 2010 to apply for a license without having to take courses or take an
examination. Thereafter, she could have taken half the number of hours of courses,
spreading them out over two years, and she still would not have needed to take the
examination. However, she did not take advantage of that opportunity, and the
record contains no explanation for her failure to do so.
In short, overall, the HO gave very little mitigating weight to Ms.
Thiam’s asserted challenges in trying to get a license. RR, Item #20, App. A at 10;
see also Bentley, 179 A.3d at 1200 n.3 (Pa. Cmwlth. 2018) (noting that “[t]he weight
to be given to evidence of mitigating circumstances is a matter of agency
discretion”). The HO weighed the evidence and found it insufficient to sustain Ms.
Thiam’s burden of proof, and the Board adopted that finding. In light of the facts as
found by the HO and adopted by the Board, I am forced to agree with the Board that
the record does not support a conclusion that the licensing statute is
unconstitutionally oppressive as applied to Ms. Thiam. Rather, the findings of fact
3
Section 7.43 of the Board’s subsequently enacted regulations specified that the 150 hours
of education must include 50 hours on scalp care, 50 hours on hygiene, 25 hours on occupational
safety, and 25 hours on natural hair braiding techniques. 49 Pa. Code § 7.43.
CFC - 5
indicate that Ms. Thiam’s failure to obtain a natural hair braiding license are fairly
attributable to her own inaction rather than any unavoidable language barrier or other
hardship. I believe, therefore, that the only way to reach a conclusion of as-applied
unconstitutional oppression would be through factual findings that would
impermissibly contradict those of the Board.
In addition, although we are told legislation is pending that would
alleviate the licensing burden for natural hair braiders, it has not yet been enacted,
and its pendency does not render the existing licensing statute unconstitutional. As
this Court recently observed in rejecting a facial constitutional challenge to the
natural hair braiding license requirement, “[t]he legislature has decided to regulate
natural hair braiding services, and it is for the legislature, not this Court, to decide
whether deregulation of such services is warranted.” Diop v. Bureau of Pro. &
Occupational Affairs, State Bd. of Cosmetology, 272 A.3d 548, 564 (Pa. Cmwlth.
2022).4
For these reasons, I believe that the Board’s decision must be affirmed.
Accordingly, I respectfully dissent.
__________________________________
CHRISTINE FIZZANO CANNON, Judge
4
Diop was brought in this Court’s original jurisdiction. We sustained preliminary
objections to the petitioners’ facial constitutional challenge but allowed part of the as-applied
challenge to survive preliminary objections. However, there has been no docket activity in the
case since the last pleading was filed in April 2022. Thus, there has been no final as-applied ruling
in Diop.
CFC - 6