§ 3091 - Hearings
§ 3091. Hearings
(a) An applicant for or a recipient of assistance, benefits, or social services from the department for children and families, the office of Vermont health access, and the department of disabilities, aging, and independent living, the department of mental health, or an applicant for a license from one of those departments or offices, or a licensee, may file a request for a fair hearing with the human services board. An opportunity for a fair hearing will be granted to any individual requesting a hearing because his or her claim for assistance, benefits, or services is denied, or is not acted upon with reasonable promptness; or because the individual is aggrieved by any other agency action affecting his or her receipt of assistance, benefits, or services, or license or license application; or because the individual is aggrieved by agency policy as it affects his or her situation.
(b) The hearing shall be conducted by the board or by a hearing officer appointed by the board. The chairman of the board may compel, by subpoena, the attendance and testimony of witnesses and the production of books and records. All witnesses shall be examined under oath. The board shall adopt rules with reference to appeals, which shall not be inconsistent with this chapter. The rules shall provide for reasonable notice to parties, and an opportunity to be heard and be represented by counsel.
(c) The board or the hearing officer shall issue written findings of fact. If the hearing is conducted by a hearing officer the hearing officer's findings shall be reported to the board, and the board shall approve the findings and adopt them as the findings of the board unless good cause is shown for disapproving them. Whether the findings are made by the board, or by a hearing officer and adopted by the board, the board shall enter its order based on the findings.
(d) After the fair hearing the board may affirm, modify or reverse decisions of the agency; it may determine whether an alleged delay was justified; and it may make orders consistent with this title requiring the agency to provide appropriate relief including retroactive and prospective benefits. The board shall consider, and shall have the authority to reverse or modify, decisions of the agency based on rules which the board determines to be in conflict with state or federal law. The board shall not reverse or modify agency decisions which are determined to be in compliance with applicable law, even though the board may disagree with the results effected by those decisions.
(e) The board shall give written notice of its decision to the person applying for fair hearing and to the agency. Unless a continuance is requested or consented to by an aggrieved person, decisions and orders concerning Temporary Assistance to Needy Families (TANF) under Title 33, chapter 11, TANF-Emergency Assistance (TANF-EA) under Title IV of the Social Security Act and medical assistance (Medicaid) under Title 33, chapter 19 shall be issued by the board within 75 days of the request for hearing.
(f) The agency or the appellant may appeal from decisions of the board to the supreme court under Rule 13 of the Vermont Rules of Appellate Procedure. Pending the final determination of any appeal the terms of the order involved shall be given effect by the agency except insofar as they relate to retroactive benefits.
(g) A party to an order or decree of the board or the board itself, or both, may petition the supreme court for relief against any disobedience of or noncompliance with the order or decree. In the proceedings and upon such notice thereof to the parties as it shall direct, the supreme court shall hear and consider the petition and make such order and decree in the premises by way of writ of mandamus, writ of prohibition, injunction, or otherwise, concerning the enforcement of the order and decree of the board as shall be appropriate.
(h)(1) Notwithstanding subsections (d) and (f) of this section, the secretary shall review all board decisions and orders concerning TANF, TANF-EA, office of child support cases, and Medicaid. The secretary shall:
(A) adopt a board decision or order, except that the secretary may reverse or modify a board decision or order if:
(i) the board's findings of fact lack any support in the record; or
(ii) the decision or order implicates the validity or applicability of any agency policy or rule.
(B) issue a written decision setting forth the legal, factual or policy basis for reversing or modifying a board decision or order.
(2) Notwithstanding subsections (d) and (f) of this section, a board decision and order concerning TANF, TANF-EA, office of child support, or Medicaid shall become the final and binding decision of the agency upon its approval by the secretary. The secretary shall either approve, modify or reverse the board's decision and order within 15 days of the date of the board decision and order. If the secretary fails to issue a written decision within 15 days as required by this subdivision, the board's decision and order shall be deemed to have been approved by the secretary.
(3) Notwithstanding subsection (f) of this section, only the claimant may appeal a decision of the secretary to the supreme court. Such appeals shall be pursuant to Rule 13 of the Vermont Rules of Appellate Procedure. The supreme court may stay the secretary's decision upon the claimant's showing of a fair ground for litigation on the merits. The supreme court shall not stay the secretary's order insofar as it relates to a denial of retroactive benefits. (Added 1973, No. 101, § 5; amended 1989, No. 181 (Adj. Sess.); No. 219 (Adj. Sess.), § 9(a); 1993, No. 105, § 1; 1999, No. 147 (Adj. Sess.), § 4; 2005, No. 174 (Adj. Sess.), § 8; 2007, No. 15, § 6; 2007, No. 172 (Adj. Sess.), § 3.)