Ariz. Admin. Code § R13-5-703 - Appeal to the Council by Employees
A. Appealable actions by employees. An
employee may appeal any disciplinary action that results in the employee's
dismissal, demotion, suspension without pay, forfeiture of accrued leave time,
or reduction of pay.
B. Form of
appeal. To initiate an appeal, an employee shall submit a signed written appeal
to the business manager and the agency head. The appeal must state specific
facts relating directly to the charges on which the appeal is based.
C. Time for appeal. An employee shall file an
appeal within 30 days after being served with the notice of disciplinary
action.
D. Agency responsibility.
An agency shall have the burden of going forward with the case once an appeal
has been filed. An agency must prove by a preponderance of the evidence that it
had just cause to discipline the employee.
E. Effect of appeal. The Council shall
determine whether the employing agency has proven by a preponderance of the
evidence that the employing agency had just cause to discipline the employee.
The Council shall reverse the decision of the agency head if the Council finds
that just cause did not exist for any discipline to be imposed and, in the case
of dismissal or demotion, return the employee to the same position the employee
held before the dismissal or demotion with or without back pay. On a finding
that the agency has not proven just cause to discipline the employee by a
preponderance of the evidence, the Council may recommend a proposed
disciplinary action in light of the facts proven.
F. Agency action after receiving a decision
or recommendation. The agency head or the agency head's designee shall accept,
modify or reverse the Council's decision or accept, modify or reject the
Council's recommendation within fourteen days of receipt of the findings or
recommendation from the Council. The decision of the agency head is final and
binding. The agency head shall send a copy of the agency's final determination
to the employee.
1. Within three business days after receiving
a written request from the employee, the agency shall provide a complete copy
of the investigative file, as well as the names and home or work mailing
addresses of all persons interviewed during the course of the investigation, to
the employee. For the purpose of this subsection, hand-written notes
substantially incorporated within a report are not considered part of the
investigation file.
2. Within 20
days after receiving the investigative file, the employee shall provide all
material relating to the defense of the employee to the agency head.
3. After initial discovery, each party shall
provide all new material relating to the case to the other party within 10 days
after receipt.
4. No later than
five business days before the hearing, or if the hearing is scheduled more than
20 days after the notice of appeal was filed, no later than 10 business days
before the hearing, the agency and the employee shall exchange copies of any
documents that may be introduced at the hearing and that have not been
previously disclosed.
5. No later
than five business days before the hearing, or if the hearing is scheduled more
than 20 days after the notice of appeal is filed, no later than 10 business
days before the hearing, the agency and the employee shall exchange the names
of all witnessed who may be called to testify. A witness may be interviewed at
the discretion of the witness. The parties shall not interfere with any
decision of a witness regarding whether to be interviewed. An agency shall not
discipline, retaliate against, or threaten to retaliate against, any witness
for agreeing or not agreeing to be interviewed or for testifying or providing
evidence in the hearing.
6. No
later than five business days before the hearing, or if the hearing is
scheduled more than 20 days after the notice of appeal was filed, no later than
10 business days before the hearing, the agency and the employee shall provide
all documents that will be used at the hearing and a list of intended witnesses
to the office of the Council.
7. If
a party fails to provide material as required, the Council may preclude its use
at the hearing.
1. On the motion of a party, the Council may
order the deposition of a witness under the following circumstances:
a. The witness does not reside within the
State or is out of state,
b. The
witness is too ill to attend the action before the Council, or
c. The deposition is for the purpose of
discovery in preparing a case before the Council.
2. The requesting party shall pay the expense
of any deposition. An employee of the agency is not entitled to a witness fee
for giving a deposition.
3. The
deposition of a witness who is unavailable to appear at a hearing may be used
in evidence by either party or the Council.
Notes
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No prior version found.