Utah Admin. Code R331-9-4 - Types of Hearing
All hearings conducted before the commissioner or his designee shall be classified in one of the following categories:
(1) Comment Hearing.
This type of hearing is generally characterized as one where:
(a) The primary purpose for the
hearing is to receive information and comments from interested parties
concerning a particular subject pending in the department.
(b) Witness statements are unsworn, voluntary
and normally delivered in a narrative manner subject to no restriction on the
content of the statement except that it be relevant to the matter being
heard.
(c) There is no proof to be
made and so no burden on any party.
(d) The presentation of evidence may be
subject to time restrictions both as to the length of individual statements and
the number of statements that can be made.
(e) The hearing is always public.
(2) Dispute Hearing.
This type of hearing is generally characterized as one where:
(a) The primary purpose is to
receive and examine evidence concerning a disputed application or other
discretionary matter pending before the department.
(b) The burden of proof is upon the party
requesting the approval of the matter at issue.
(c) All testimony is taken under oath and
subject to cross-examination but the evidence itself is generally not
restricted except as to relevancy.
(d) The hearing is usually public, but may be
closed when special circumstances warrant.
(3) Adjudicative Hearing.
This type of hearing is generally characterized as one where:
(a) The primary purpose is to
adjudicate specific charges directed against an individual party or
parties.
(b) Evidence is received
generally in accordance with rules patterned on those applicable to the
admission of evidence and the conduct of trials in the judicial courts of this
state.
(c) No time restriction is
imposed which would deprive any party of an opportunity to present all proper
evidence in the case.
(d) The
hearing may be closed to the public and the record treated
confidentially.
(4) The
commissioner shall have complete discretion to designate a particular hearing
as being for comment, dispute, or adjudicative purposes, and shall so indicate
in the first notice of the hearing. Any party to the hearing or, in the case of
a comment hearing, any interested party who disagrees with the commissioner's
classification may file a motion to change the designation of the hearing from
one type to the other within ten days after public notice of a comment hearing
is first published, or notice of a dispute or adjudicative proceeding is first
mailed to a party to the proceeding who objects to its designation, whichever
applies.
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.