30 Tex. Admin. Code § 80.4 - Judges
(a) Applicability and delegation is as
follows:
(1) Any application that is declared
administratively complete on or after September 1, 1999, is subject to this
section.
(2) The commission
delegates to the State Office of Administrative Hearings the authority to
conduct hearings designated by the commission.
(b) The chief administrative law judge will
assign judges to hearings. When more than one judge is assigned to a hearing,
one of the judges will be designated as the presiding judge and shall resolve
all procedural questions. Evidentiary questions will ordinarily be resolved by
the judge sitting in that phase of the case, but may be referred by that judge
to the presiding judge.
(c) Judges
shall have authority to:
(1) set hearing
dates;
(2) convene the hearing at
the time and place specified in the notice for the hearing;
(3) establish the jurisdiction of the
commission;
(4) rule on motions and
on the admissibility of evidence and amendments to pleadings;
(5) designate and align parties and establish
the order for presentation of evidence, except that the executive director and
the public interest counsel shall not be aligned with any other
party;
(6) examine and administer
oaths to witnesses;
(7) issue
subpoenas to compel the attendance of witnesses, or the production of papers
and documents;
(8) authorize the
taking of depositions and compel other forms of discovery;
(9) set prehearing conferences and issue
prehearing orders;
(10) ensure that
information and testimony are introduced as conveniently and expeditiously as
possible, including limiting the time of argument and presentation of evidence
and examination of witnesses without unfairly prejudicing any rights of parties
to the proceeding;
(11) limit
testimony to matters under the commission's jurisdiction;
(12) continue any hearing from time to time
and from place to place;
(13)
reopen the record of a hearing, before a proposal for decision is issued, for
additional evidence where necessary to make the record more complete;
(14) impose appropriate sanctions;
(15) consider additional issues beyond the
list referred by the commission when:
(A) the
issues are material;
(B) the issues
are supported by evidence; and
(C)
there are good reasons for the failure to supply available information
regarding the issues during the public comment period;
(16) for permit applications filed before
September 1, 2015, or applications not referred under Texas Water Code (TWC),
§5.556 or §5.557, extend the proceeding beyond the maximum expected
completion date if:
(A) the judge determines
that failure to grant an extension would deprive a party of due process or
another constitutional right; or
(B) by agreement of the parties;
(17) for permit applications filed
on or after September 1, 2015, and referred under TWC, §5.556 or
§5.557, extend the proceeding beyond 180 days after the first day of the
preliminary hearing or on an earlier date specified by the commission if:
(A) the judge determines that failure to
grant an extension would unduly deprive a party of due process or another
constitutional right; or
(B) by
agreement of the parties with approval of the judge;
(18) for permit applications filed on or
after September 1, 2017, under TWC, §11.122(b-1), extend the proceeding
beyond 270 days after the first day of the preliminary hearing or on an earlier
date specified by the commission if:
(A) the
judge determines that failure to grant an extension would unduly deprive a
party of due process or another constitutional right; or
(B) by agreement of the parities with the
approval of the judge; and
(19) exercise any other appropriate powers
necessary or convenient to carry out his responsibilities.
(d) For the purposes of subsection (c)(16),
(17) and (18) of this section, a political subdivision has the same
constitutional rights as an individual.
Notes
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