Haw. Code R. § 18-231-91-09 - Presiding officer of hearings; duties and powers; substitute presiding officers
(a) The director
shall conduct the hearings on an appeal, shall render the decision, and shall
issue such orders and take such actions as may be required; provided that the
director may designate a representative, who shall be the presiding officer, to
conduct the hearings, and make recommendations in writing to the director,
which recommendations shall include recommendations as to findings of fact and
conclusions of law. If the presiding officer's recommendation is adverse to any
party other than the department, the recommended decision shall be served on
the person contesting the citation. The person contesting the citation shall
thereafter have ten calendar days from the date the recommendation is mailed to
file exceptions to the recommendation and to present arguments to the director
in writing. The director shall then personally consider the whole record or
such portion thereof as may be cited by the parties, shall render the decisions
as to findings of fact and conclusions of law in writing, and shall issue such
orders and take such actions as may be further required.
(b) In all hearings, the presiding officer
shall have the power to give notice of the hearing, arrange for the
administration of oaths, examine witnesses, certify to official acts, rule on
offers of proof, receive relevant evidence, regulate the course and conduct of
the hearing, including regulating the manner of any examination of a witness to
prevent harassment or intimidation and ordering the removal of disruptive
individuals, and perform such other duties necessary for the proper conduct of
the hearings.
(c) The presiding
officer may subpoena witnesses and books, papers, documents, other designated
objects, or any other record, however maintained, pursuant to section
231-7,
HRS.
(d) Any of these rules of
practice and procedure may be suspended or waived by stipulation of all the
parties.
(e) The presiding officer
may engage the services of a stenographer, or someone similarly skilled, to
take a verbatim record of the evidence presented at any hearing if requested
for purposes of rehearing or court review. The party making the request shall
be responsible for the fees for the transcript. If a verbatim record is taken,
any other party may request a certified transcript of the proceedings at that
party's cost.
(f) If a presiding
officer is absent from a scheduled hearing or is incapacitated from performance
of duty, the director may designate another representative to serve as a
substitute presiding officer without abatement of the proceedings.
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.
No prior version found.