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106 Op. Md. Att'y Gen. 3 (2021)

handle is hein.sag/sagmd0110 and id is 1 raw text is: COLLEGES AND UNIVERSITIES

ADMISSIONS - CRIMINAL HISTORY - WHETHER HIGHER
EDUCATION INSTITUTIONS MAY RESCIND A STUDENT'S
ADMISSION   ON  THE BASIS OF CRIMINAL HISTORY
DISCOVERED AFTER ENROLLMENT - WHETHER THE
MARYLAND FAIR ACCESS TO EDUCATION ACT APPLIES TO
JUVENILE RECORDS
February 18, 2021
The Honorable Jason C. Buckel
Maryland House of Delegates
You have requested our opinion on two questions about the
Maryland Fair Access to Education Act (the Act), which
generally prohibits institutions of higher education from asking
prospective students about criminal history on initial admissions
applications but allows those institutions to later inquire into and
consider criminal history in making decisions regarding
admission and access to campus residency. Md. Code Ann., Educ.
(ED) §§ 26-501 to -506. First, you ask whether the Act permits
an institution to rescind an enrolled student's admission based on
criminal history that the institution discovers after the student has
enrolled at the institution, including to address concerns about
campus safety. Second, you ask whether the Act permits an
institution to inquire into and consider juvenile records as part of
the admissions process.
Before we can answer your first question about whether an
institution may rescind admission after a student has enrolled, it is
necessary to understand when the Act permits an institution to deny
admission based on criminal history or to rescind an offer of
admission, before enrollment, based on such history. According to
the Act's language and legislative history, the General Assembly
apparently contemplated that an institution could adopt a two-step
admissions process as it relates to criminal history. The first step-
that is, the initial admissions application-must generally be blind
to criminal history. See ED § 26-503. If, however, an institution
chooses to ask about criminal history as a second step in the
process-that is, as a separate inquiry following the submission of
an application-the institution may then consider criminal history
when making decisions about admission, as well as about campus
residency, so long as it does not automatically or unreasonably
restrict a student's admission on that basis. ED § 26-504. Although
the Act also requires an institution to develop a written process to

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