Ill. Admin. Code tit. 89, § 336.120 - The Administrative Law Judge
a) Appointment of the ALJ
The Chief Administrative Law Judge shall select a trained, impartial ALJ from the available pool to conduct the appeal hearing. The ALJ shall:
1) be an attorney licensed to
practice law in the State of Illinois;
2) possess knowledge and information acquired
through training and/or experience relevant to the field of child and family
welfare law, including familiarity with Department rules, procedures and
functions;
3) not have been
involved in the decision to take the action being appealed or have rendered
legal advice to the decision-maker on the issue; and
4) not have a personal or professional
interest that interferes with exercising objectivity or have any bias against
the parties or issues appealed. An adverse ruling, in and of itself, shall not
constitute bias or conflict of interest.
b) Functions of the ALJ
The Administrative Law Judge shall have all authority allowed under the Illinois Administrative Procedure Act [ 5 ILCS 100 ]. This authority shall include, but is not limited to, the following:
1) conduct a fair, impartial and formal
hearing in which the strict rules of evidence do not apply;
2) provide for the recording of the
hearing;
3) inform participants of
their individual rights and their responsibilities;
4) conduct pre-hearing telephone conferences
between the parties or their authorized representatives to provide information
about the procedural aspects of the hearing, narrow the issues and discuss
possible stipulations and contested points of law, in order to expedite the
actual hearing;
5) have the
authority to recommend changes in the child abuse and neglect report in the
State Central Register;
6) take
necessary steps to develop a full and fair record that contains all relevant
facts;
7) administer an oath or an
affirmation to all witnesses;
8)
quash or modify subpoenas for good cause, including but not limited to
relevance, scope, materiality and emotional harm or trauma to the subpoenaed
witness;
9) allow into evidence all
inculpatory and exculpatory evidence helpful in determining whether an
indicated perpetrator abused or neglected a child, including oral and written
reports and the investigative file, that the ALJ and the Director may rely upon
to the extent of its probative value;
10) allow into evidence previous statements
made by the child relating to abuse or neglect as hearsay exceptions;
11) preserve all documents and evidence for
the record;
12) rule upon
evidentiary issues and contested issues of law at the hearing or take matters
under advisement pending issuance of the written opinion and
recommendation;
13) order the
removal of any person from the hearing room who is creating a disturbance,
whether by physical actions, profanity or conduct, that disrupts the
hearing;
14) identify the issues,
consider all relevant facts and receive or request any additional information
necessary to decide the matter in dispute, including but not limited to
additional testimony, documents, exhibits, briefs, memoranda of law or post
hearing briefs;
15) present a
written opinion and recommendation to the Director after the record of the
administrative hearing is completed or transcript is received, whichever is
later. The written opinion and recommendation shall include a recommended
decision on whether there is a preponderance of evidence of abuse or neglect
based on information in the administrative record. The opinion shall contain
findings of fact, summary of testimony and evidence, conclusions of law and a
recommendation; and
16) the written
opinion and recommendation must also include the basis for excluding any
evidence or disallowing a physician or other professional from testifying by
telephone pursuant to Section
336.170
(Testimony by Telephone).
c) The Chief ALJ shall also:
1) ensure that the administrative hearing is
scheduled at a time and place reasonably convenient for all parties;
2) provide a written notice to the parties
within 10 days after the receipt of a sufficient request for an administrative
hearing, that shall contain the following information:
A) the date and time of the pre-hearing
conference;
B) the reasons that may
be deemed an abandonment of the request for a hearing, thus constituting a
waiver of the right to a hearing;
C) a citation to the ANCRA provision that
grants the Department of Children and Family Services the legal authority and
jurisdiction to hold this hearing;
D) a reference to the particular Sections of
the statutes and administrative rules involved;
E) the allegations that were
indicated;
F) the consequences of
the appellant's failure to participate at the pre-hearing conference;
G) the docket number assigned to this
case;
H) the name and contact
information of the Administrative Law Judge and all parties; and
I) a statement of the parties' rights during
the administrative hearing.
Notes
Amended at 24 Ill. Reg. 7660, effective June 1, 2000
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