Or. Admin. R. 165-001-0036 - Employee Representation at Contested Case Hearings
(1) The Agency's goal in contested case
hearings is to have a full and accurate record upon which the Agency can make
the best decision. To help ensure a full record, the Agency allows employees to
represent the Agency in certain contested case hearings. The employee
representative's role is to represent the Agency in a way that supports
objective fact finding and encourages an open, fair, and efficient
process.
(2) An Agency employee may
represent the Agency in contested case hearings involving violations of ORS
260.035,
260.039,
260.041,
260.042,
260.044,
260.054,
260.055,
260.057,
260.076,
260.078,
260.083,
260.102,
260.112,
260.118, and
260.735.
(3) The representative's responsibilities
include, but are not limited to:
(a)
Presenting evidence;
(b) Asking
questions of all witnesses;
(c)
Presenting information about the facts, and advocating for staff's position
surrounding the facts;
(d)
Presenting information on how the facts apply to the statutes or rules directly
related to the issues in the contested case;
(e) Presenting information comparing Agency
actions in similar situations;
(f)
Presenting information about the literal meaning of the statutes or rules that
apply to the issues in the contested case; and
(g) Presenting information about the
admissibility of evidence or the correctness of procedures being
followed.
(4) The
employee representative may not make legal arguments. "Legal arguments" include
arguments on:
(a) The jurisdiction of the
Agency to hear the contested case;
(b) The constitutionality of a statute or
rule or the application of a constitutional requirement to the Agency;
and
(c) The application of court
precedent to the facts of the particular contested case proceeding.
(5) When an employee represents
the Agency in a contested case hearing, the presiding officer will advise the
employee representative of the way in which objections may be made. This advice
is of a procedural nature and does not change applicable law on waiver or the
duty to make timely objections. If the objections involve legal argument, the
presiding officer will provide reasonable opportunity for the employee
representative to consult legal counsel and permit legal counsel to file
written legal argument within a reasonable time after the conclusion of the
hearing.
Notes
Stat. Auth.: ORS 246.150
Stats. Implemented: ORS 260.232 & 260.995
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