(a) The board
shall, upon receipt of an appeal, order the matter set for hearing. In any
appeal, all parties shall be afforded an opportunity for a hearing after
reasonable notice. Opportunities shall be afforded all parties to present
evidence and support their position on all issues involved. Any procedure may
be modified or waived by stipulation of the parties and informal disposition
may be made of any appeal by stipulation of the parties and informal
disposition may be made of any appeal by stipulation, agreement, consent order,
or default.
(b) The hearing shall
be held at the time and place set forth in the notice of hearing, but may, at
the time and place, be continued from day to day, to a later day, or to a
different place without notice other than the announcement thereof by the
presiding officer at the hearing.
(c) Appeals shall be heard before the board
or its appointee.
(d) When a
proceeding is conducted before the board itself, the proceeding shall be
presided over the chairperson of the board, or, in the chairperson's absence,
by another member designated by the board.
(e) The presiding officer at a proceeding
shall have authority to control the course of the hearing; to hold conferences
on which the parties have had notice, for settling or simplifying issues; to
administer oaths and affirmations; to grant application for and issue
subpoenas; to take or cause depositions to be taken; to rule upon offers of
proof and receive relevant evidence; to limit lines of questioning or testimony
that are irrelevant, immaterial or repetitious; to rule upon all objections,
procedural requests and motions that do not involve the final determination of
proceedings; to dispose of any other matter that normally and properly arises
in the course of the proceeding; and to take all other actions authorized by
chapter 76, Hawaii Revised Statutes, rules of the board, or by any other
statute, that are deemed necessary to the orderly and just conduct of the
hearing.
(f) No member of the
board, or its appointee who has any pecuniary interest in any matter or
business involved in the proceeding; who is related within the second degree by
blood or marriage to any party to the proceeding; who has participated in an
investigation preceding the institution of the proceeding or in a determination
that it should be instituted or in the development of the evidence to be
introduced therein; or where the circumstances fairly give rise to an
appearance of impropriety and reasonably cast suspicion on the person's
impartiality shall be assigned to serve in any proceeding.
(g) The record of the hearing shall be
compiled. The board shall make provisions for recording testimony, but need not
transcribe the record unless requested for purposes of rehearing or court
review. A copy of the record of a hearing or any part thereof may be obtained
as provided under board rules.
(h)
Subpoenas requiring the attendance of witnesses or the production of
documentary evidence from within the State may be compelled at any designated
place of a hearing as may be issued by the presiding officer, any designated
member of the board, or its appointee. Application for subpoenas shall be made
in writing to the board. The application shall specify the particular documents
or data desired and shall show their relevancy to the issues involved.
Applications shall be made at least ten days prior to the hearing. If the
application is made at a later time, the board or its appointees may, in its
discretion, issue subpoenas or continue the hearing or any part thereof or
both. Enforcement of obedience to subpoenas issued and served pursuant to these
rules shall be effected by written application of any member of the board to
any circuit court judge.
(i)
Witnesses summoned shall be paid the same fees and mileage as are paid
witnesses in circuit courts of the State and the fees and mileage shall be paid
by the party at whose instance the witnesses appear. Fees for the depositions
shall be paid by the party at whose instance the depositions are taken.
Witnesses shall be placed under oath or affirmation prior to
testifying.
(j) At the commencement
of the hearing, the presiding officer shall read the notice of hearing and
shall then outline briefly the procedure to be followed.
(k) All parties shall be given reasonable
opportunity to offer testimony with respect to the matters relevant to the
proceeding. All witnesses, before proceeding to testify, shall state their
name, address, and whom they represent at the hearing and shall give such
information respecting their appearance relevant to the proceedings as the
presiding officer may request. The presiding officer shall confine the
testimony to the matters for which the hearing has been called, but need not
apply the technical rules of evidence except as required by statute. Each
witness shall be subject to questioning by members of the board and its
appointees. Each witness shall also be subject to cross-examination by the
adverse party. Each party shall have the right to submit rebuttal evidence and
rebuttal arguments.
(l) The
presiding officer shall take notice of judicially recognizable facts and may
take notice of generally recognizable technical or scientific facts within the
board's or its appointee's specialized knowledge when parties are given notice
either before or during the hearing of the material so noticed and are afforded
the opportunity to contest those facts.
(m) At the hearing, the presiding officer may
require the production of further evidence upon any issue.
(n) After all the evidence has been
presented, the presiding officer shall give the parties an opportunity to
summarize their respective positions. Within a reasonable time after such final
arguments have been completed and all requested memoranda submitted, the
presiding officer shall bring the matter to a close.
(o) The board or its appointee shall permit
parties to file proposed findings and conclusions of law, together with the
reasons thereof at the close of the hearing or within the time specified by the
board or its appointee. The proposal shall be in writing and shall contain
reference to the record and to the authorities relied upon. Copies thereof
shall be furnished to all parties.
(p) Board action on appeals shall be as
follows:
(1) For actions taken by the
superintendent, assistant superintendent, or appointing authority based on
failure to meet performance requirements, the board shall determine whether the
conditions listed in section
76-41(b),
Hawaii Revised Statutes, were met when determining whether or not the action is
with or without merit.
(2) If
reasons for the action by the superintendent, assistant superintendent or
appointing authority are not substantiated in any material respect, the board
shall order that the employee be reinstated in the employee's position, without
loss in pay.
(3) If the reasons are
substantiated or are only partially substantiated, the board shall sustain the
action of the superintendent, assistant superintendent, or appointing
authority; provided that the board may modify the action of the superintendent,
assistant superintendent, or appointing authority if it finds the circumstances
of the case so require and may order the disposition of the case it deems just
provided that the disposition is consistent with laws, rules, and
policies.
(q) In
conducting its business and rendering its decision, the board shall serve as an
appellate body and shall not impinge on the authority of the superintendent in
matters of policy, methodology, and administration. All decisions and orders of
the board shall be made in accordance with personnel rules, policies, and
practices.
Every decision and order adverse to a party to the
proceeding, rendered by the board, shall be in writing or stated in the record
and shall be accompanied by separate findings of fact and conclusions of law.
If any party to the proceeding has filed proposed findings of fact, the board
shall incorporate in its decision a ruling upon each proposed finding
presented. The findings and decisions of the board shall be final on all
appeals, unless an appeal is taken to the circuit court pursuant to section
76-47,
Hawaii Revised Statutes.
(r) In its actions on classification related
appeals, the board shall not consider in its deliberation the classes in other
jurisdictions or the classification of positions in other
jurisdictions.
(s) The board shall,
as soon as practicable and unless otherwise stipulated by the parties, not
later than sixty days after the close of the hearing, notify the parties to the
proceeding of the decision and order. Parties to the proceeding shall be
notified in accordance with board rules.
(t) The charging party, in asserting an
improper action or violation of the statute(s) or rule(s), shall have the
burden of proving the allegations by a preponderance of the evidence.
(u) Unauthorized ex parte communications are
defined as private communications or arguments with members of the board or the
presiding officer as to the merits of a proceeding with a view towards
influencing the outcome of the case, except that the following ex parte
communications shall not be prohibited:
(1)
Those which relate solely to matters which a board member or the hearings
officer is authorized by the board to dispose of on an ex parte
basis;
(2) Requests for information
with respect to the status of a proceeding;
(3) Those which all parties to the proceeding
agree or which the board has formally ruled may be made on an ex parte
basis;
(4) Those with
representatives of any news media on matters of public information.
(v) If the appellant or the
appellant's representative fails to appear before the board as scheduled and
notified, the appeal shall be dismissed with prejudice, and the appellant shall
not be permitted to request another hearing.
(w) The following additional requirements
shall apply to the board and its functions relating to the receiving and
processing of initial pricing appeals:
(1)
After the hearing, the board shall review the facts presented, deliberate and
render a decision which shall conform with the policies, standards, and
guidelines governing initial pricing promulgated by the superintendent. The
board shall not consider in its deliberations, the pricing of classes in other
bargaining units.
(2) Decisions on
initial pricing appeals shall be limited to the appropriate pay grade of the
class and may not require a change in bargaining unit for full
implementation.
(3) All decisions
of the board resulting in a higher pay grade assignment shall be retroactive to
the date of the initial pricing action of the superintendent.
(4) If the evidence submitted indicates
significant changes have occurred in the work of the position, the board shall
remand the case to the superintendent for a classification review.
(5) The person filing the appeal has the
burden of proof.
(6) Substantial
weight shall be given to the technical determination of the superintendent in
pricing the new class.
(x) In its action on appeals filed under
section
8-62-33(b)(1),(2), and (3), the board shall generally confine itself to
the issue of whether legal requirements were met, rules were properly applied,
and appropriate procedures were followed. In the event the board finds that
these requirements were not met or appropriate procedures were not followed,
the board shall remand the case to the superintendent and require that the
process and action be redone in accordance with applicable requirements and
procedures.