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* Privacy Policy
Intervention and Participation
- Intervention. Any Person not initially a
Party, who may be substantially and specifically affected thereby and wishes to
intervene or participate in an Adjudicatory so. Except as otherwise provided in this subsection, the petition
shall be subject to section 1.01 (7) (a).
- Form and Content. The
petition shall state the name and address of the Person filing the petition. It
shall describe the manner in which the Person making the petition may be
affected by the proceeding. It shall state why the Agency or Presiding Officer
should allow intervention or participation, any relief sought, and any
supporting law.
- Filing the Petition.
The petition may be filed at any time following a request for an Adjudicatory
Proceeding or an order to show cause, but in no event later than the date of
hearing. Petitions may be allowed at the discretion of the Presiding Officer,
for any Person who is likely to be substantially and specifically affected by
the proceeding, provided all existing Parties are given notice and an
opportunity to respond pursuant to section 1.01 (7) (a).
- Rights of Intervenors.
The Presiding Officer may permit any Person who is likely to be substantially
and specifically affected by the proceeding to intervene. Any Person permitted
to intervene shall have all the rights of a Party, subject to the discretion
of the Presiding Officer to avoid undue delay or unnecessary duplication of
evidence, and shall be subject to all limitations imposed upon a Party.
- Rights of Participants
.
The Presiding Officer may permit any Person who may be affected by a
proceeding to participate. Permission to participate shall be limited to the
right to argue orally at the close of a hearing and to file an amicus brief,
but shall not necessarily make the Person allowed to participate a Party in
interest who may be aggrieved by any result of the proceeding. A Person who
petitioned to intervene and who was allowed only to participate may
participate without waiving his rights to administrative or judicial review of
the denial of his motion to intervene.
- Intervention to Protect the
Environment. Any group of ten or more Persons may intervene collectively as
a Party in any Adjudicatory Proceeding according to G.L. c. 30A, § 10A,
provided that intervention is limited to the issue of actual or probable damage
to the environment as defined in G.L. c. 214 § 7A, and the elimination or
reduction thereof. The petition to intervene pursuant to said Section 10A shall
also state the names and addresses of the members of the group and identify the
member of the group, or the group's attorney, or the group's agent, who will be
the group's representative before the Presiding Officer. The representative
shall have the sole authority to sign papers for the group and to accept service
for the group. Any Paper served on the representative of the group shall be
deemed served on the entire group. If no representative is specifically stated
in the petition, the first Person mentioned in the motion to intervene as a
member of the group shall be deemed the representative of the group. A group
that is permitted to intervene as a Party shall be collectively deemed a single
Party as defined in these rules.
- Permissive Reference. When
a Party to an action relies upon any rule or regulation issued by an Agency
other than the one conducting the proceeding as grounds for a claim or defense,
the Agency having promulgated the rule or regulation on timely application by a
Party and in the discretion of the Presiding Officer, or at the initiative of
the Presiding Officer, may offer a relevant construction, interpretation or
application of the rule or regulation in aid of the resolution of one or more of
the issues involved in the Adjudicatory Proceeding. Any request to the
promulgating Agency shall be in writing and present a neutral statement of the
issue or issues possibly affected by the rule or regulation. The promulgating
Agency may respond in writing as promptly as its resources allow, but in no
event later than 30 days from its receipt of the request. The promulgating
Agency may expressly decline to respond and need not justify its position, and
its failure to respond within the time limited shall be deemed a declination to
do so.
 
Division
of Administrative Law Appeals 133 Portland Street, 3rd floor
Boston, MA 02114
Telephone (617) 727-7060 Fax (617) 727-7248
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