- (a) Every person or entity named or admitted as a party to a contested case has an equal right to participate fully in all stages of the proceeding.
- (b) Party status is limited to persons or entities with a legal right, duty, privilege, power, or economic interest that may be directly affected by the outcome of the proceeding or who are entitled to be parties pursuant to a statute or regulation governing the particular proceeding.
(c) Party status will not be conferred on persons or entities that:
- (1) only have an interest in the outcome of the proceeding that is common to members of the general public;
- (2) seek to litigate issues that are not by statute or regulation made part of the administrative proceeding in which party status is sought; or
- (3) are not among the persons or entities described by statute or regulation as eligible to participate in the particular type of administrative proceeding in which party status is sought.
- (d) The administrative law judge has discretion to allow a member of the general public who has not been admitted as a party to testify under oath or affirmation in a contested case. The administrative law judge may set fair and reasonable conditions on such an appearance, and the testimony shall be subject to cross-examination, challenge and rebuttal. After affording all parties a reasonable opportunity to be heard on this issue, the administrative law judge shall determine the extent, if any, to which a member of the general public who is not a party will be allowed to participate in a contested case.
Source Note:The provisions of this §9.15 adopted to be effective November 13, 1997, 22 TexReg 10951.