Utah Admin. Code R994-508-203 - Criteria for Evaluation of Fee Petition
The appropriateness of the fee will be determined using the following criteria:
(1) the complexity
of the issues involved;
(2) the
amount of time actually spent in;
(a)
preparation of the case;
(b)
attending the hearing;
(c)
preparation of a brief, if required. Unless an appeal is taken to the Court of
Appeals, fees charged for preparation of briefs or memoranda will not
ordinarily be approved unless the ALJ requested or preapproved the filing of
the brief or memoranda; and
(d)
further appeal to the Board, the Court of Appeals, and/or the Supreme
Court.
(3) The quality
of service rendered including:
(a)
preparedness of the representative;
(b) organization and presentation of the
case;
(c) avoidance of undue
delays. A representative should make every effort to go forward with the
hearing when it is originally scheduled to avoid leaving the claimant without
income or an unnecessary overpayment; and,
(d) the necessity of representation. If the
ALJ or the Board determines that the claimant was not in need of representation
because of the simplicity of the case or the lack of preparation on the part of
the representative, only a minimal fee may be approved or, in unusual
circumstances, a fee may be disallowed.
(4) The prevailing fee in the community. The
prevailing fee is the rate charged by peers for the same type of service. In
determining the prevailing fee for the service rendered, the Department may
consider information obtained from the Utah State Bar Association, Lawyer's
Referral Service, or other similar organizations as well as similar cases
before the Appeals Unit.
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.