The Office of Administrative Hearings The Twentieth Annual Report To Governor Douglas A. Ducey Senator Andy Biggs, President of the Senate Representative David M. Gowan Sr., Speaker of the House Pursuant to A.R.S. § 41-1092.01(C)(5) and A.R.S. § 41-1092.01(C)(9) Greg Hanchett, Acting Director October 28th, 2015 Contents I. Introduction and Overview ................................................................................. 1 II. Continued Development of the Office ............................................................... 2 1. Mediation Option for Litigants ................................................................ 2 2. Agency Training on Due Process ........................................................... 2 III. Summary of Agency Use of OAH Services ....................................................... 2 1. Case Management ................................................................................... 2 a. Breakdown of Cases Filed by Agency ................................................. 2 b. Number of Cases Concluded Versus Cases Filed .............................. 4 c. Timeline of Case Management ........................................................... 4 d. Incidence of Continuance .................................................................... 5 2. Evaluation ................................................................................................. 8 a. Results of Public Evaluation ................................................................. 8 b. Incidence of Rehearing and Appeal ...................................................... 9 IV. Acceptance of Administrative Law Judge Decisions by Agencies .............. 10 1. Agency Action ........................................................................................ 10 2. Agency Inaction With Subsequent OAH Certification of Finality ....... 14 V. Motions for Change of Administrative Law Judge Granted Pursuant to A.R.S. § 41-1092.07 ........................................................................................... 14 VI. Violations of A.R.S. § 41-1009 ......................................................................... 14 VII. Recommendations for Changes in the Administrative Procedures Act ..... 14 1. Establish uniform standards for appeal rights notice ........................ 15 2. Establish uniform basis for rehearing. ................................................. 15 3. Conform rehearing and appeal rules .................................................... 15 VIII. Recommendation for Changes or Improvements in Agency Practice with Respect to the Administrative Procedures Act ................................... 15 Recoupment of Costs for Administrative Hearings ................................. 15 I. Introduction and Overview The Office of Administrative Hearings (OAH) was created pursuant to Laws 1995, Chapter 251, adding Arizona Revised Statutes § 41-1092 et seq., and commenced operation on January 1, 1996. Administrative hearings previously provided by regulatory agencies (except those specifically exempted) were transferred to OAH for independent proceedings. In fiscal year 2015 the agency had 13 full-time positions, including the Director, the Office Manager, 7 Administrative Law Judges, and 4 support staff. Our statutory mandate is to “ensure that the public receives fair and independent administrative hearings.” Responsibility: OAH understands its responsibility to create a system that is efficient and cost effective. OAH statistics in FY 2015 indicate agency acceptance of Administrative Law Judge Decisions without modification was 81.74%. Agency acceptance of Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law without modification was 85.28%. Rehearings (.68%) and Appeals (3.05%) were rare. Evaluations by participants continue to indicate that Administrative Law Judges and OAH were rated excellent or good in 90.18% of all responses. Integrity: OAH takes its statutory mandate to provide fair, impartial and independent hearings seriously. Although part of the executive branch, together with its client agencies, OAH maintains a conscious detachment from political issues and the missions of those agencies. Procedures, rulings, and case assignments are at all times kept free of outside pressures to ensure that the parties can be assured that hearings are impartial and independent. Commitment: OAH views commitment as a willingness to advance its mission, including improving the quality of decision-writing. While the Administrative Law Judges must render decisions according to the evidence before them and using their independent judgment, OAH requires that Administrative Law Judges review all decisions that have been modified or rejected by an agency in order to encourage them to identify any possible incorrect citations or other areas where quality can be improved. This commitment is in furtherance of the duty of OAH to provide continuing education to its Administrative Law Judges. Efficiency: Through careful case management the completion rate for cases in FY 2015 was 105%. 1 II. Continued Development of the Office 1. Mediation Option for Litigants With the assistance of the Department of Fire, Building and Life Safety and the Registrar of Contractors, OAH is developing a pilot program to provide mediation services for parties to contested case hearings which emanate from those two agencies. OAH has hired an experienced mediator and has put in place a program which will result in all of the OAH administrative law judges being trained as mediators within 12 months. Mediation services will offer litigants the option of substantially reducing or even eliminating the very costly process of contested case hearing litigation. When cases are successfully mediated, there will be a concomitant reduction in demands on state resources. 2. Agency Training on Due Process OAH has now implemented training for requesting agencies regarding due process considerations under the Uniform Administrative Procedures Act, Title 41, Chapter 6, Article 10. This training consists of a continuing legal education seminar and has been presented to a diverse range of agencies including the Registrar of Contractors, the Structural Pest Control Board and Animal Services Division of the Department of Agriculture, certain divisions of the Department of Public Safety, and the Game and Fish Department. III. Summary of Agency Use of OAH Services 1. Case Management a. Breakdown of Cases Filed by Agency (FY 2015): 4,469 cases were filed with OAH in FY 2015. The distribution among the agencies, boards, commissions, or political subdivisions (Agencies) are as follows (in descending order by number of cases filed): Arizona Health Care Cost Containment System Department of Health Services Department of Child Safety Department of Weights and Measures Registrar of Contractors Arizona Department of Revenue Department of Real Estate State Board of Nursing Department of Education - Special Ed Department of Insurance Arizona Department of Financial Institutions Department of Fire Building and Life Safety - H/C 3,126 253 237 232 174 69 63 57 51 26 22 18 2 Department of Fire Building and Life Safety Arizona State Retirement System Department of Education Department of Environmental Quality Peace Officers Standards and Training Department of Economic Security Arizona Medical Board Department of Gaming Arizona Health Care Cost Containment System - 21 Liquor Licenses and Control State Board of Accountancy Board of Podiatry Examiners Department of Public Safety - Student Transportation Board of Behavioral Health Examiners Department of Water Resources Golden Valley Fire District Arizona Board of Osteopathic Examiners In Medicine and Surgery Arizona State Department of Housing State Board for Charter Schools Board of Dental Examiners Board of Technical Registration Secretary of State Arizona Game and Fish Department Naturopathic Physicians Medical Board Citizens Clean Elections Commission Arizona Early Childhood Development and Health Board Board of Psychologist Examiners Department of Agriculture Department of Public Safety - Concealed Weapons Permit Unit Secretary of State - HAVA Department of Public Safety - Criminal History Records Total 3 14 13 12 12 11 11 10 8 7 4 4 3 3 3 3 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 4469 b. Number of Cases Concluded Versus Cases Filed: In FY 2015, the conclusion rate (defined as cases concluded divided by new cases filed) was 105.00%. Comparison of Cases Filed v. Cases Concluded Cases 4700 4,673 4650 Cases Concluded 4600 Cases Filed (Docketed) 4550 4,469 4500 4450 4400 4350 The following diagram illustrates the proportion of cases that proceeded to full hearing: Disposition of Concluded Cases FY 2015 Vacated by Agency 6% Hearings 31% Vacated by ALJ 63% c. Timeline of Case Management: A.R.S. § 41-1092.05(A) and § 41-1092.08(A) and (B) contemplate a rigorous timeline to expedite hearings and final agency actions. “Appealable agency actions” (defined as actions taken by an agency without a prior hearing) are required to be set for hearing within 60 days of a request by a party. “Contested cases” (defined as proposed actions for which a hearing is required) are required to be set within 60 days of an agency request. Administrative Law Judge Decisions must be transmitted to the agencies within 20 days of the conclusion of the hearing. The agency heads are required to take final action within 30 days of receipt. Boards and Commissions generally must take final action within 5 days of their next scheduled meeting. 4 The following diagram illustrates the average timelines: Average Days Between Selected Events - Appealable Agency Actions v. Contested Cases 60.00 53.90 50.00 46.84 40.00 AAA 30.00 CC 17.16 20.00 14.90 10.00 0.92 9.82 7.96 1.07 0.00 Request for Hearing to Scheduling Scheduling to First Hearing Date Conclusion of Hearing to ALJ Decision ALJ Decision to Agency Action d. Incidence of Continuance: A single continuance in FY 2015 added an average of 42.57 days to the total length of a case. Although 85.76% of all continuance requests were granted in FY 2015, OAH has developed a well-deserved reputation for discouraging “convenience” continuances in favor of those based on “good cause.” This is especially important because of the decrease in the number of Administrative Law Judges due to budget constraints. The frequency of continuances, defined as the number of continuances granted (735) divided by the total number of cases first scheduled (4,469), was 16.5%. The ratio of first hearing settings (5,654) to continued settings on the calendar (735) was 1 to 0.13. The following diagram illustrates the source of continuances: Continuance upon motion of agency 14% Continuance upon motion of non-agency party 86% 5 The following chart is a breakdown of cases actually set for a continued hearing date on the FY 2015 calendar and their sources, by agency. (Note: the numbers in fig. 1, below, differ from those in fig. 2, page 7, because a motion for continuance granted in one fiscal year may result in the continued date being set in the following fiscal year.) ................................................................................................................................................ fig. 1 AGENCY Continued Motion by nonagency party Arizona Board of Osteopathic Examiners In Medicine and Surgery Arizona Department of Financial Institutions Arizona Department of Real Estate Arizona Department of Revenue Arizona Health Care Cost Containment System Arizona Medical Board Arizona State Retirement System Board of Appraisal Board of Behavioral Health Examiners Board of Podiatry Examiners Board of Technical Registration Department of Agriculture Department of Child Safety Department of Economic Security Department of Education Department of Education - Special Ed Department of Environmental Quality Department of Fire Building and Life Safety Department of Fire Building and Life Safety - H/C Department of Gaming Department of Health Services Department of Insurance Department of Racing Department of Real Estate Department of Water Resources Department of Weights and Measures Golden Valley Fire District Liquor Licenses and Control Naturopathic Physicians Medical Board Peace Officers Standards and Training Registrar of Contractors State Board of Nursing Total 6 1 9 4 22 244 3 2 7 1 2 1 1 44 2 4 15 1 1 6 50 7 1 12 3 19 2 2 2 7 78 11 564 Continued Motion by agency party 1 38 2 2 2 1 1 1 15 3 4 5 10 10 95 The following chart reflects the number of motions to continue that were entertained in FY 2015 and the percentage granted: ................................................................................................................................................ fig. 2 Agency Arizona Board of Osteopathic Examiners In Medicine and Surgery Arizona Department of Financial Institutions Arizona Department of Real Estate Arizona Department of Revenue Arizona Health Care Cost Containment System Arizona Medical Board Arizona State Retirement System Board of Appraisal Board of Behavioral Health Examiners Board of Podiatry Examiners Department of Agriculture Department of Child Safety Department of Economic Security Department of Education Department of Education - Special Ed Department of Environmental Quality Department of Fire Building and Life Safety Department of Fire Building and Life Safety H/C Department of Gaming Department of Health Services Department of Public Safety - Student Transportation Department of Insurance Department of Racing Department of Real Estate Department of Water Resources Department of Weights and Measures Golden Valley Fire District Liquor Licenses and Control Naturopathic Physicians Medical Board Peace Officers Standards and Training Registrar of Contractors State Board for Charter Schools State Board of Nursing Total Continuance Granted 7 Continuance Denied Total Motions % Grant ed 1 10 2 28 4 1 10 2 32 100 100 100 88 331 5 2 6 3 4 1 54 3 1 17 2 3 61 1 8 1 1 - 392 6 2 6 3 4 1 62 4 1 18 2 3 84 83 100 100 100 100 100 87 75 100 94 100 100 6 1 84 6 16 12 1 100 50 100 84 0 7 1 18 1 14 3 5 5 7 78 1 31 735 1 1 6 1 3 5 1 6 122 1 7 1 19 1 20 4 5 5 10 83 2 37 857 0 100 100 95 100 70 75 100 100 70 94 50 84 86 2. Evaluation a. Results of Public Evaluation: Since November 1996, OAH has administered an evaluation procedure. A copy of the evaluation is provided to all participants before the hearing. The evaluation form is described in a video played before each hearing, or is otherwise addressed by the Administrative Law Judge. The results are not disclosed to the Administrative Law Judge. Hearing participants place completed evaluations in locked boxes located near the hearing rooms. Those responding are asked to rate the following categories, on a scale of excellent, good, satisfactory, or poor: 1. Attentiveness of the Administrative Law Judge 2. Effectiveness in explaining the hearing process 3. Administrative Law Judge’s use of clear and neutral language 4. Impartiality 5. Effectiveness in dealing with the issues of the case 6. Sufficient space 7. Freedom from distractions 8. Questions responded to promptly and completely 9. Treated courteously The results indicate that satisfaction is high among all groups, with those responding rating OAH excellent to good in 90.18% to 93.98% of responses. All Responses July 1, 2014 - June 30, 2015 100.00% 92.17% 90.00% 93.98% 93.98% 92.17% 90.36% 93.13% 90.18% 92.45% 91.19% 80.00% 70.00% 60.00% 50.00% 40.00% 30.00% 20.00% 10.00% 0.00% 4.82% 3.61% 3.01% 2.41% 3.61% 3.01% 2.41% 1.81% 6.63% 6.75% 6.02% 3.07% 5.63% 1.25% 1.89% 5.66% 3.77% 5.03% Question 1 Question 2 Question 3 Question 4 Question 5 Question 6 Question 7 Question 8 Question 9 Excellent/Good Average 8 Poor An analysis of the unrepresented parties indicates that even among the most vunerable group, OAH is seen to be functioning extremely well. Unrepresented Responses 100.00% 91.03% 88.46% 88.46% 88.46% 89.74% 92.21% 93.24% 89.33% 87.84% 80.00% 60.00% 40.00% 20.00% 0.00% 6.41% 2.56% 6.41% 5.13% 6.41% 5.13% 3.85% 3.85% 7.69% 6.41% 5.19% 2.60% 5.41% 1.35% 1.33% 9.33% 5.41% 6.76% Question 1 Question 2 Question 3 Question 4 Question 5 Question 6 Question 7 Question 8 Question 9 Excellent/Good Average Poor b. Incidence of Rehearing and Appeal: Rehearings are permitted pursuant to A.R.S. § 41-1092.09 under certain conditions. In FY 2015, the rehearing rate (defined as rehearings scheduled divided by cases heard) was .68%. Appeals to Superior Court are provided for pursuant to A.R.S. § 41-1092.08(H). In FY 2015, the judicial appeal rate (defined as judicial appeals taken divided by cases decided on the merits) was 3.05%. As reflected in the following diagram, rehearings and judicial appeals in FY 2015 were relatively rare. Rehearings 3 1 1 2 - AHCCCS Medical Board Behavioral Health Board of Nursing Charter Schools Clean Elections Dental Board Dept. of Child Safety Fire Building and Life Safety Health Services Real Estate Water Resources 9 Appeals 1 1 1 1 1 1 2 2 1 7 2 2 Weights and Measures Registrar of Contractors Special Education State Retirement Totals 1 - 4 5 4 1 8.0 36.0 IV. Acceptance of Administrative Law Judge Decisions by Agencies 1. Agency Action Agency acceptance of the Administrative Law Judge Decisions is high. 81.74% of all decisions acted upon by the agencies were accepted without modification. Agency acceptance was 85.28% if viewed from the vantage point of acceptance of Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law, the core function of the Administrative Law Judge. 25.34% of modifications made by the agencies were in the Recommended Order (penalty portion). FY 2015 Agency Response to ALJ Recommended Decisions Amended Findings/Conclu sions of Law only 10.42% Rejected 4.30% Amended Order only 3.54% Accepted without Modification 81.74% 10 The following chart reports the number of cases in the various categories of agency response. 855 900 800 700 600 500 400 300 200 100 0 Accepted without Modification 45 37 109 Amended Order only Amended Findings/Conclusions of Law only Rejected The following chart reports the breakdown of agency response by agency. This list further illustrates that amendments and rejections are few relative to the decisions accepted. Accountancy Board AHCCCS Board for Charter Schools Board of Behavioral Health Bord of Technical Registration Citizens Clean Elections Dental Examiners Department of Environmental Quality Department of Fire Building and Life Safety Department of Revenue Department of Water Resources Dept. of Child Safety DES-APS DPS- Bus DPS-Crim. History Rec. Financial Institutions First things First Gaming Health Services Insurance Liquor Licenses Medical Board Naturopathic Physicians Medical Board Accept 2 609 0 0 2 0 2 1 Amend Order 1 10 1 0 0 0 0 0 Amend Findings 0 41 0 0 0 0 0 0 Reject 0 18 0 1 0 1 2 0 Total 3 678 1 1 2 1 4 1 2 0 0 58 2 1 0 0 1 1 57 11 1 5 2 0 1 1 0 0 0 1 0 0 2 0 0 1 0 0 1 7 3 0 0 0 0 0 45 0 0 0 0 0 1 10 0 0 0 0 0 0 8 0 0 0 4 0 3 76 5 1 0 1 1 1 112 11 1 6 1 0 0 0 1 11 Notary Nursing Osteopathic Examiners Podiatry Racing Real Estate Registrar of Contractors Secretary State Special Education State Retirement Water Quality Appeals Board Weights and Measures Total 1 20 0 0 0 17 58 1 0 2 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 2 13 0 0 0 1 0 855 0 1 1 0 0 0 9 0 0 1 0 0 37 0 0 0 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 0 2 109 1 22 1 0 0 19 82 1 0 3 1 2 45 1046 In FY 2015, Administrative Law Judges rendered decisions that were contrary in whole or contrary in part to agencies’ original positions in 9.36% of cases. Recommendations Contrary to Original Agency Action FY 2015 ALJ Recommendation Contrary in Whole or in Part 9.36% ALJ Recommendation Affirms 90.64% 12 Agency acceptance of contrary decisions was high at 79.25%. Agency Response to Contrary Recommendations FY 2015 70 59 60 50 40 30 22 20 15 10 10 0 Agency Accepts Contrary Recommendation 55.66% Agency Amends Findings Accepts Order 9.43% Agency Amends Order Accepts Findings of Fact/Law 14.15% Agency Rejects Contrary Recommendation 20.75% The following chart reports the breakdown of agency responses to contrary decisions. Accepted Amended Order Amended Finding Rejected Certfied Total AHCCCS DES-APS State Retirement Behavioral Health Financial Institutions Citizens Clean Department of Child Dental Health Services Weights and Department of Water Insurance Liquor Licenses Nursing Podiatry Water Quality Department of Racing Real Estate Registrar of Secretary of State - 10 16 1 2 14 1 3 1 1 1 1 2 1 - 6 2 0 1 6 - 4 1 1 7 1 5 2 1 - 1 8 0 1 1 1 3 0 23 2 1 1 1 1 24 1 12 10 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 4 18 1 Total 44 10 15 22 15 106 13 2. Agency Inaction With Subsequent OAH Certification of Finality Beginning August 21, 1998, OAH was required to certify the Administrative Law Judge Decision as the final administrative decision if OAH had not received the agency, board or commission’s action accepting, modifying or rejecting the recommended decision within 30 days of transmission. Special rules apply if the board or commission meets monthly or less frequently. A.R.S. § 41-1092.08(D). In FY 2014, 85 Administrative Law Judge Decisions were certified by OAH as final administrative decisions. Agency Registrar of Contractors Department of Weights and Measures Department of Fire Building and Life Safety - H/C Department of Insurance Arizona State Retirement System Arizona Health Care Cost Containment System - 19 Department of Child Safety Department of Public Safety - Criminal History Records Department of Public Safety - Student Transportation Total Certified 37 26 10 6 2 1 1 1 1 85 V. Motions for Change of Administrative Law Judge Granted Pursuant to A.R.S. § 41-1092.07 A.R.S. § 41-1092.01(C)(9)(b) requires that the OAH report the number of motions for change of Administrative Law Judge for bias, prejudice, personal interest or lack of necessary expertise which were filed and the number granted. In FY 2015, 8 motions were filed and none were granted. VI. Violations of A.R.S. § 41-1009 Pursuant to A.R.S. § 41-1092.01(C)(9)(c), OAH reports that it has no knowledge of violations of A.R.S. § 41-1009 by any agency. VII. Recommendations for Changes in the Administrative Procedures Act The regulated community has long complained about inconsistent procedures among the various agencies. The following recommendations point to the areas where uniformity or greater consistency can be accomplished: 14 1. Establish uniform standards for appeal rights notice. Currently there are no standards for how, and with what degree of specificity, appeal rights to Superior Court should be communicated to parties once the agency has acted. 2. Establish uniform basis for rehearing. Parties must research the specific rules of each agency, board or commission to determine the bases for rehearing since there is little uniformity. Standardizing and recapitulating possible bases in Title 41 would make the process easier, particularly for the unrepresented. 3. Conform rehearing and appeal rules. Currently parties have 30 days from service of an agency’s final action, which is presumed after 5 days of mailing to the party’s last known address, to request a rehearing under A.R.S. § 41-1092.09(A)(1) and (C). However, under A.R.S. § 12904(A), parties have 35 days to file an appeal to Superior Court upon service, presumed after 5 days of mailing to the party’s last known address. Conforming the time limits for requesting rehearings and filing appeals will simplify the process by eliminating varying time limits for parties to act on final orders and will allow agencies to frame the effective dates of their final orders to a single date. VIII. Recommendation for Changes or Improvements in Agency Practice with Respect to the Administrative Procedures Act Recoupment of Costs for Administrative Hearings: Billed costs to non-General Fund supported agencies, boards and commissions (ISA agencies), pursuant to A.R.S. § 41-1092.01(E) and (K), could be recouped by them by extending the statutory authority found in isolated statutes to all such ISA agencies. An example of statutory authority for recoupment is found in A.R.S. § 32-128(H), which permits the Board of Technical Registration to recoup certain costs: H. On its determination that a registrant or a home inspector has violated this chapter or a rule adopted pursuant to this chapter, the board may assess the registrant or the home inspector with its reasonable costs and expenses incurred in conducting the investigation and administrative hearing. All monies collected pursuant to this subsection shall be deposited, pursuant to sections 35-146 and 35-147, in the technical registration fund established by section 32-109 and shall only be used by the board to defray its expenses in connection with disciplinary investigations and hearings. Notwithstanding section 35-143.01, these monies may be spent without legislative appropriation. 15