Ariz. Admin. Code § R2-17-122 - Ex Parte Communications
Ex parte communications with Board members and staff are prohibited as provided in A.A.C. R2-19-105 . The prohibition applies to any Board member, administrative law judge, or employee of the State of Arizona who is or may reasonably be expected to be involved in the decision making process.
A. In any appeal before the Board, except to the extent
required for disposition of ex parte matters as authorized by law or these
rules of procedure:
2. A Board member, administrative
law judge, or employee of the State of Arizona who is or may reasonably be
expected to be involved in the decision making process shall not make or
knowingly cause to be made an ex parte communication relevant to the merits of
the proceeding to any interested person.
B. A Board member, administrative law judge, or employee of the
State of Arizona who is or may reasonably be expected to be involved in the
decision making process and receives, makes, or knowingly causes to be made a
communication prohibited by this Section shall place all written communications
and all written responses to the communications in the public record of the
proceeding and by oral testimony on the record state the substance of all oral
communications.
C. Any interested person who receives a communication
prohibited by this Section shall file a notice of the communication with the
Clerk and serve a copy on the Solicitor General and all parties to the appeal.
The interested person shall attach to the notice a copy of the communication,
if written, or a summary of the communication, if oral.
D. When the Board is made aware under subsections (B) or (C) of
a communication prohibited by this Section, the Board shall give all parties a
reasonable opportunity to respond to the communication. The Board, to the
extent consistent with the interests of justice and the policy of the
underlying statutes and rules, may require the person responsible for the
communication to show cause why the person's claim or interest in the
proceeding should not be dismissed, denied, disregarded, or otherwise adversely
affected because of the violation.
E. The provisions of this Section apply to an appeal from the
date the notice of appeal is filed to the date on the Board's final
administrative decision, unless the person responsible for the communication
knew the appeal would be noticed, in which case the prohibition applies from
the time that the person acquired the knowledge.
Notes
State regulations are updated quarterly; we currently have two versions available. Below is a comparison between our most recent version and the prior quarterly release. More comparison features will be added as we have more versions to compare.