Illinois Administrative Code
Title 80 - PUBLIC OFFICIALS AND EMPLOYEES
Part 100 - MERIT COMMISSION RULES
Section 100.110 - Qualification and Authority of the Hearings Officer
Universal Citation: 80 IL Admin Code ยง 100.110
Current through Register Vol. 48, No. 52, December 27, 2024
a) Qualification of Hearings Officer
A Hearings Officer shall possess a license to practice law in the State of Illinois.
b) Authority of Hearings Officer
The Hearings Officer has the authority to conduct hearings and pre-hearing conferences, to take all necessary action to avoid delay, to maintain order, and to insure the development of a clear and complete record. The Hearings Officer shall have all powers necessary to conduct a hearing, including the power to:
1) Administer
oaths and affirmations;
2) Regulate
the course of hearings, set the time and place for continued hearings, fix
times for filing of documents, provide for the taking of testimony by
deposition if necessary, rule on motions and generally conduct the proceedings
according to this Part, Article 10 of the IAPA and principles of administrative
law as applied by the courts and this subsection;
3) Examine witnesses and direct witnesses to
testify;
4) Limit the number of
times any witness may testify, limit repetitious or cumulative testimony and
set reasonable limits on the amount of time each witness may testify or be
cross-examined;
5) Rule upon offers
of proof and receive relevant evidence;
6) Direct parties to appear and confer for
the settlement or simplification of issues and otherwise conduct pre-hearing
conferences;
7) Dispose of
procedural requests or similar matters;
8) Render findings of fact, opinions and
recommendations for an order of the Commission;
9) Reprimand or exclude from the hearing any
person for indecorous or improper conduct committed in the presence of the
Hearings Officer;
10) Take official
notice of generally recognized facts, administrative rules and regulations, and
statutes;
11) Prepare, in every
contested case, a proposal for decision in accordance with Section 10-45 of the
Illinois Administrative Procedure Act, which shall be forwarded to the parties
in sufficient time to allow the filing of written exceptions and legal
arguments prior to the Commission rendering a final decision;
12) Rule on any substantive or procedural
matters not covered within this Part, such rulings to be subject to the final
review of the Commission; and
13)
Enter any order that further carries out the purpose of this Part.
c) Disqualification of Hearings Officer
1) A Hearings Officer assigned to a
proceeding may, upon written request to and approval of the Merit Commission,
recuse himself or herself.
2)
Whenever any party believes a Hearings Officer for any reason should be
disqualified from conducting, or continuing to conduct, a proceeding assigned
to him or her, such party may file a motion to disqualify the Hearings Officer,
setting forth by affidavit the alleged grounds for disqualification. The
Hearings Officer shall have 7 days after filing of the motion within which to
enter a written ruling. A copy of the ruling shall be served upon all parties.
The Commission may, on its own motion, review rulings denying or granting a
motion for disqualification.
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