ORDER
The government has filed a petition for rehearing alleging that statements in the court’s opinion, reported at
In a prior decision,
Lizut v. Department of the Army,
The government is correct that the discussion in James contemplated that, when a petition for review is granted, the board could hear oral arguments, require the filing of briefs, and give the parties an opportunity, upon request, to supplement the original grounds stated in the petition for review or response. This discretionary procedure is, in fact, set forth in 5 C.F.R. § 1201.116. The court’s assumption was based not only on this regulation, but also on its experience in reviewing prior cases where the board has done more than simply decide the issue stated in a petition for review. The government, however, has advised, by way of a declaration of the clerk of the MSPB, that “generally no additional pleadings [other than the petition for review and response of the other party] are accepted by the Board” and that the grant of review and the decision on the merits of the case are announced in a single Opinion and Order.
In view of this enlightenment, the court accepts that its understanding of the board’s actual operating procedures was in error, in that 5 C.F.R. § 1201.116 is rarely available to a party. However, the need for protection of an employee’s rights from a technical waiver appears all the more imperative in view of the board’s one-step review procedure and the restriction of is-' sues contained in 5 C.F.R. § 1201.115. Thus, we reaffirm that the petition for review does not limit the issues before this court. The issues or, as in Lizut, the claims, to be heard in a particular case before this court will be determined on the basis of whether the circumstances of the particular case show that the petitioner or respondent knowingly abandoned or waived claims or issues raised below. A *156 party will, of • course, not generally be heard on any issues raised for the first time on appeal.
In James, upon denial of the petition for review, the unmodified decision of the presiding official became the final decision of the board and all issues raised before the presiding official were appealable. Nothing in the record reveals an affirmative abandonment or waiver of any issue.
In Lizut, the presiding official had dismissed two claims for lack of jurisdiction (one dealing with right to a promotion; the other dealing with the refusal of the agency to take steps to enable Lizut to secure early retirement). This court refused to address the dismissal of these claims and considered only the third claim (dealing with a removal action) with respect to which a petition for review had been filed by the government. Lizut, in response to the government’s petition, expressly endorsed the presiding official’s decision in all respects. A waiver was, thus, effected as to the other claims. Thus, as stated in the original James opinion, Lizut is clearly not applicable here.
Accordingly, IT IS ORDERED THAT:
The petition for rehearing is denied.
