- (a) A person who wishes to intervene in an appeal must file a motion to intervene within 30 days after the person knew or should have known that the decision had been appealed to the Board.
(b) A motion to intervene must set forth the basis for the proposed intervention, including:
- (1) Whether the person had a right to appeal the decision under § 4.410 or would be adversely affected if the Board reversed, vacated, set aside, or modified the decision; and
- (2) How and when the person learned of the appeal.
(c) The Board may:
- (1) Grant the motion to intervene;
- (2) Deny the motion to intervene for good cause, e.g., where granting it would disadvantage the rights of the existing parties or unduly delay adjudication of the appeal; or
- (3) Grant the motion to intervene but limit the person's participation in the appeal.
(d) A person may file a motion at any time to file a brief as an amicus curiae.
- (1) The motion must state the person's interest in the appeal and how its brief will be relevant to the issues involved.
- (2) The Board may grant or deny the motion in its discretion. The Board may also allow a person to file a brief as amicus curiae if it denies the person's motion to intervene.
- (e) A person granted full or limited intervenor status is a party to the appeal, while an amicus curiae is not. A person granted amicus curiae status must serve its brief on the parties to the appeal.
[75 FR 64665, Oct. 20, 2010]