Ohio Administrative Code
Title 4906 - Power Siting Board
Chapter 4906-2 - Procedure in Cases before the Board
Section 4906-2-02 - Filing of pleadings and other documents
Universal Citation: OH Admin Code 4906-2-02
Current through all regulations passed and filed through September 16, 2024
(A) General provisions
(1) The principal office of the board is
located within the office of the public utilities commission of Ohio. The
official address of the board is: 180 East Broad street, Columbus, Ohio
43215-3793.
(2) Filings for the
board shall be addressed to: "Ohio Power Siting Board, Docketing Division, 180
East Broad Street, Columbus, Ohio 43215-3797."
(3) The internet address of the docketing
division is http://dis.puc.state.oh.us.
(4) The docketing division is open from
seven-thirty a.m. to five-thirty p.m., Monday through Friday, except on state
holidays.
(5) Except as discussed
in paragraph (D) of this rule, no document shall be considered filed with the
board until it is received and date-stamped by the docketing
division.
(6) The board reserves
the right to redact any material from a filed document prior to posting the
document on the docketing information system if the board finds the material to
be confidential personal information, a trade secret, or inappropriate for
posting to its website.
(7) A party
seeking to consolidate a new case with one or more previously filed cases, or
with cases being concurrently filed, shall file a motion to consolidate the
cases.
(B) Paper filing
(1) All applications, complaints, reports,
pleadings, or other documents to be paper filed with the board shall be mailed
or delivered to the docketing division at the address shown in paragraph (A) of
this rule. In addition to the original, any person paper filing a document for
inclusion in a case file must submit the required number of copies of the
document. Information regarding the number of copies required by the board is
available under procedural filing requirements on the docketing information
system website, by calling the docketing division at 614-466-4095, or by
visiting the docketing division at the offices of the commission.
Failure to submit the required copies may result in the
document being stricken from the case file. An administrative law judge may
require a party to provide additional paper copies of any filed
document.
(2) Unless a request for
a protective order is made in accordance with rule
4906-2-21 of the Administrative
Code, concurrent with or prior to receipt of the document by the docketing
division, any document filed with the docketing division will be made publicly
available on the docketing information system.
(C) Facsimile transmission (fax) filing
A person may file documents with the board via fax under the following conditions:
(1) The
following documents may not be delivered via fax:
(a) The application or other initial pleading
that is responsible for the opening of a case.
(b) Any document for which protective or
confidential treatment is requested under rule
4906-2-21 of the Administrative
Code.
(c) A notice of appeal of a
board order to the Ohio supreme court filed pursuant to section
4903.13 of the Revised Code or
service of that notice upon the chairperson.
(2) All documents sent via fax must include a
transmission sheet that states the case number, case title, date of
transmission, number of pages, brief description of the document, and the name
and telephone number of the sender.
(3) The originator of a fax document must
contact the docketing division at (614) 466-4095 prior to sending a fax. A
person must notify the docketing division of its intent to send a document by
fax by five p.m. on the date the document is to be sent. The person must be
prepared to commence transmission at the time the docketing division is
notified.
(4) All documents must be
sent to the fax machine in the docketing division at (614) 466-0313. If that
machine is inoperable, directions for alternative arrangements will be given
when the originator calls to commence a fax. Unrequested documents sent to any
of the board's other facsimile machines will not be relayed to the docketing
division by board employees.
(5)
Excluding the transmission sheet, all documents transmitted by fax must be
thirty pages or less.
(6) All
documents must be legible when received. Illegible documents received via fax
will not be filed. If the document is illegible, the docketing division will
attempt to contact the sender to resolve the problem. The person making a fax
filing shall bear all risk of transmission, including all risk of equipment,
electric, or telephonic failure or equipment overload or backup. Any document
sent by fax that is received in whole or in part after five-thirty p.m. will be
considered filed the next business day.
(7) No document received via fax will be
given confidential treatment by the board.
(8) If a document is delivered via fax, the
party must make arrangements for the original signed document and the required
number of copies of the pleading to be delivered to the board no later than the
next business day. Failure to comply with this requirement may result in the
document being stricken from the case file.
(9) Because a document sent to the board by
fax will be date-stamped, and thus filed, the day it is received by the
docketing division, the originator of the document shall serve copies of the
document upon other parties to the case no later than the date of
filing.
(D) Electronic filing (e-file)
A person may e-file documents with the board under the following conditions:
(1) All filings
must comply with the electronic filing manual and technical requirements at the
docketing information system website and any additional guidelines provided by
the board.
(2) All filings must be
searchable and the electronic file must be able to be reproduced in hard copy
at the same quality as the original.
(3) The service of a
notice of appeal of a board order pursuant to section
4903.13 of the Revised Code upon
the chairperson
shall not be delivered via e-filing:
(4) An applicant may
electronically file a certificate application pursuant to section
4906.06 of the Revised
Code containing the full electronic copy of the
application. The applicant also shall submit three complete
paper copies of the application to the docketing division on the same day that
an e-filing of the application is made and will be expected to provide
additional paper copies or electronic copies upon request.
(5) Provided that a document is not
subsequently rejected by the docketing division, an e-filed document will be
considered filed as of the date and time recorded on the confirmation page that
is electronically inserted as the last page of the filing upon receipt by the
docketing division, except that any e-filed document received after five-thirty
p.m. shall be considered filed at seven-thirty a.m. the next business day. The
docketing division may reject any filing that does not comply with the
electronic filing manual and technical requirements, is unreadable, includes
anything deemed inappropriate for inclusion on the docketing information
system, or is submitted for filing in a closed or archived case. If an e-filing
is rejected by the docketing division, an email message will be sent to inform
the filer of the rejection and the reason for the rejection.
(6) If an e-filing is accepted, notice of the
filing will be sent via electronic mail to all persons who have electronically
subscribed to the case, including the filer. This email notice will constitute
service of the e-filed document upon those persons electronically subscribed to
the case. Upon receiving the email notice that the e-filed document has been
accepted by the docketing division, the filer shall serve copies of the
document in accordance with rule
4906-2-05 of the Administrative
Code upon parties to the case who are not electronically subscribed to the
case.
(7) The docketing division
closes at five-thirty p.m. To allow time for same-day review and acceptance of
e-filings, persons making e-filings are encouraged to make their filings by no
later than four p.m.
(8) The person
making an e-filing shall bear all risk of transmitting a document including,
but not limited to, all risk of equipment, electric, or internet
failure.
(9) If an electronic
filing of a certificate application cannot be made due to electronic or other
problems that prevent either all or part of the certificate application to go
through the docketing division equipment, the applicant shall file the
three
paper copies of the certificate application, five
portable solid-state drives containing the complete
application, and a geographic information systems data drive
with the docketing division in lieu of the electronic filing. The applicant
will then have an additional one business day either to complete the electronic
filing of the certification application or to provide fifteen more paper copies
of the certificate application unless a longer period is granted by the
administrative law judge. If the additional paper copies are made timely, the
certificate application shall be considered filed on the day the electronic
filing could not be made but the three paper copies, the five
portable solid
state drives, and the geographic information systems
data
drives were filed.
(10)
E-filed documents must be complete documents. Appendices or attachments to an
e-filed document may not be filed by other methods without prior approval.
Large documents may be e-filed in parts as long as all parts are e-filed on the
same day.
(11) Except as otherwise
provided by this rule or directed by an administrative law judge, a person
filing a document electronically need not submit any paper copy of an e-filed
document to the docketing division.
(E) The docketing division designates the status of each case under the case number and case name on the docket card. As discussed in this rule, attempts to make filings in certain designated cases will be denied.
(1) An open case is an active
case in which filings may be made.
(2) A closed case is one in which no further
filings may be made without the consent of the administrative law judge. When a
case is closed, any person seeking to make a filing in a case must first
contact the administrative law judge assigned to the case. If the
administrative law judge agrees to permit the filing, the docketing division
will be notified to reopen the case. If an additional filing is permitted, the
case status will be changed to open and service of the filing must be made by
the filer upon the parties to the case in accordance with rule
4906-2-05 of the Administrative
Code.
(3) An archived case is a
closed case that will not be reopened and in which no further filings will be
permitted. If additional activity is thereafter required on any matter
addressed in an archived case, the board will open a new case and designate the
new case as a related case. The docketing information system displays for each
case a related cases tab to provide a link to related cases.
(4) A reserved case is one set aside for
future use. No filings should be made in the case until the party for who it
was reserved makes an initial filing.
(5) A void case is one that was opened in
error and no documents may be filed in it.
Disclaimer: These regulations may not be the most recent version. Ohio may have more current or accurate information. We make no warranties or guarantees about the accuracy, completeness, or adequacy of the information contained on this site or the information linked to on the state site. Please check official sources.
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