TITLE 28.INSURANCE

Part 2. TEXAS WORKERS' COMPENSATION COMMISSION

Chapter 112. SCOPE OF LIABILITY FOR COMPENSATION

The Texas Workers' Compensation Commission (the commission) proposes amendments to §112.102 concerning Agreements between Motor Carriers and Owner Operators, §112.200 concerning Definition of Residential Structures, and §112.402 concerning Determination of Equivalent Benefits for Professional Athletes. Recent rule review identified the need for amendments to these rules to reflect current Texas Labor Code citations.

The Texas Register published text shows words proposed to be added to or deleted from the current text, and should be read to determine all proposed changes.

Proposed §112.102(f) corrects the Texas Workers' Compensation Act citation from §3.24 to §406.005.

Proposed §112.200 corrects the Texas Workers' Compensation Act citation from §3.06 to §406.142,

Proposed §112.402 corrects the Texas Workers' Compensation Act citations from Texas Civil Statutes, Article 8308, 3.075 to Texas Labor Code, §406.095.

Brent Hatch, Director of Customer Services, has determined that for the first five-year period the proposed rule is in effect there will be no fiscal implications for state or local governments as a result of enforcing or administering the rule.

Local government and state government as a covered regulated entity will be impacted in the same manner as described later in this preamble for persons required to comply with the rule as proposed.

Mr. Hatch has also determined that for each year of the first five years the rule as proposed is in effect, the public benefits anticipated as a result of enforcing the rule will be the use of current statutory citations. The amendments are necessary only for the purpose of updating outdated references.

There will be no anticipated economic costs to persons who are required to comply with the rule as proposed.

There will be no costs of compliance for small businesses. There will be no adverse economic impact on small businesses or micro-businesses.

Comments on the proposal must be received by 5:00 p.m., April 4, 2005. You may comment via the Internet by accessing the commission's website at www.twcc.state.tx.us and then clicking on "Rules" and then clicking on "Proposed Rules for Comment." This medium for commenting will help you organize your comments by rule chapter. You may also comment by emailing your comments to RuleComments@twcc.state.tx.us or by mailing or delivering your comments to Linda Velasquez, Legal Services, Mailstop #4-D, Texas Workers' Compensation Commission, 7551 Metro Center Drive, Suite 100, Austin, Texas 78744.

Commenters are requested to clearly identify by number the specific rule and paragraph commented upon. The commission may not be able to respond to comments that cannot be linked to a particular proposed rule. Along with your comment, it is suggested that you include the reasoning for the comment in order for commission staff to fully evaluate your recommendations.

Based upon various considerations, including comments received and the staff's or commissioners' review of those comments, or based upon the commissioners' action at the public meeting, the rule as adopted may be revised from the rule as proposed in whole or in part. Persons in support of the rule as proposed, in whole or in part, may wish to comment to that effect.

A public hearing on this proposal will be held at the Austin central office of the commission (7551 Metro Center Drive, Suite 100, Austin, Texas) on a date to be announced. Those persons interested in attending the public hearing should contact the Commission's Office of Executive Communication at (512) 804-4430 to confirm the date, time, and location of the public hearing for this proposal. The public hearing schedule will also be available on the commission's website at www.twcc.state.tx.us .

Subchapter B. APPLICATION TO GENERAL CONTRACTOR/SUBCONTRACTOR AND MOTOR CARRIER/OWNER OPERATOR

28 TAC §112.102

The amendment is proposed under the Texas Labor Code, §402.061, which authorizes the commission to adopt rules necessary to administer the Act; Texas Labor Code, §406.005, which requires employers to notify employees of workers' compensation coverage; the Texas Labor Code, §406.095 which allows certain professional athletes to elect coverage under the Act or under contract agreement; Certain Professional Athletes, Texas Labor Code, §406.121 through §406.127 which address the coverage of certain independent contractors, and Texas Labor Code, §406.141 through §406.146 which address coverage of certain building and construction workers.

No other code, statute, or article is affected by this rule action.

§112.102.Agreements between Motor Carriers and Owner Operators.

(a) A motor carrier and an owner operator may enter into an agreement which requires the owner operator to assume the responsibilities of an employer for the performance of work.

(b) An agreement made under subsection (a) of this section shall be made at or before the time the contract for the work is made and shall:

(1) be in writing;

(2) state that the owner operator assumes the responsibilities of an employer for the performance of work;

(3) contain the signatures of both parties;

(4) indicate the date the agreement was made, the term the agreement will be effective, the estimated number of workers affected by the agreement, the federal tax identification number of the parties; and

(5) be provided to the insurance carrier of the motor carrier within 10 days of execution.

(c) A motor carrier and an owner operator may enter into an agreement under which the motor carrier provides workers' compensation insurance coverage to the owner operator and the owner operator's employees.

(d) An agreement made under subsection (c) of this section shall be made at or before the time the contract for the work is made and shall:

(1) be in writing;

(2) indicate whether the motor carrier will make a deduction for the premiums;

(3) contain the signatures of both parties;

(4) indicate the date the agreement was made, the term the agreement will be effective, the estimated number of workers affected by the agreement, the federal tax identification number of the parties; and

(5) be filed with the commission in Austin and the insurance carrier of the motor carrier within 10 days of execution.

(e) The workers' compensation insurance coverage provided by the motor carrier under the agreement shall take effect no sooner than the date on which the agreement was executed and deductions for the premiums shall not be made for coverage provided prior to that date.

(f) The motor carrier shall be required to give the owner operator's employees the notice required under the Texas Workers' Compensation Act, §406.005 [ §3.24(c) ], when such an agreement is made.

This agency hereby certifies that the proposal has been reviewed by legal counsel and found to be within the agency's legal authority to adopt.

Filed with the Office of the Secretary of State on February 18, 2005.

TRD-200500763

Susan Cory

General Counsel

Texas Workers' Compensation Commission

Earliest possible date of adoption: April 3, 2005

For further information, please call: (512) 804-4287


Subchapter C. APPLICATION TO CERTAIN BUILDING AND CONSTRUCTION WORKERS

28 TAC §112.200

The amendment is proposed under the Texas Labor Code, §402.061, which authorizes the commission to adopt rules necessary to administer the Act; Texas Labor Code, §406.005, which requires employers to notify employees of workers' compensation coverage; the Texas Labor Code, §406.095 which allows certain professional athletes to elect coverage under the Act or under contract agreement; Certain Professional Athletes, Texas Labor Code, §406.121 through §406.127 which address the coverage of certain independent contractors, and Texas Labor Code, §406.141 through §406.146 which address coverage of certain building and construction workers.

No other code, statute, or article is affected by this rule action.

§112.200.Definition of Residential Structures.

For purposes of the Texas Workers' Compensation Act (the Act), §406.142 [ §3.06 ], "residential structures" are buildings used as a family dwelling or multi-family dwelling, limited to a single-family residence, a duplex, a triplex, and a quadraplex. All other types of structures used for living purposes shall be considered commercial structures, and shall only be included within the scope of the Act, §406.142 [ §3.06 ], if they do not exceed three stories or 20,000 square feet.

This agency hereby certifies that the proposal has been reviewed by legal counsel and found to be within the agency's legal authority to adopt.

Filed with the Office of the Secretary of State on February 18, 2005.

TRD-200500764

Susan Cory

General Counsel

Texas Workers' Compensation Commission

Earliest possible date of adoption: April 3, 2005

For further information, please call: (512) 804-4287


Subchapter E. PROFESSIONAL ATHLETES ELECTION OF COVERAGE

28 TAC §112.402

The amendment is proposed under the Texas Labor Code, §402.061, which authorizes the commission to adopt rules necessary to administer the Act; Texas Labor Code, §406.005, which requires employers to notify employees of workers' compensation coverage; the Texas Labor Code, §406.095 which allows certain professional athletes to elect coverage under the Act or under contract agreement; Certain Professional Athletes, Texas Labor Code, §406.121 through §406.127 which address the coverage of certain independent contractors, and Texas Labor Code, §406.141 through §406.146 which address coverage of certain building and construction workers.

No other code, statute, or article is affected by this rule action.

§112.402.Determination of Equivalent Benefits for Professional Athletes.

(a) Medical care available to a professional athlete subject to the Texas Workers' Compensation Act (the Act), Texas Labor Code, §406.095 [ Texas Civil Statutes, Article 8308-3.075 ], is equal to or greater than medical benefits under the Act if:

(1) the athlete is entitled to all health care reasonably required by the nature of the work-related injury as and when needed, including all health care that:

(A) cures or relieves the effects naturally resulting from the work-related injury;

(B) promotes recovery; or

(C) enhances the ability of the employee to return to or retain employment; and

(2) the employer's liability for health care is not limited or terminated in any way by the contract or collective bargaining agreement.

(b) When the athlete is not eligible for lifetime income benefits or when the athlete's legal beneficiaries are not eligible for death benefits under the Act, weekly benefits available to a professional athlete subject to the Act, §406.095 [ Article 8308-3.075 ], are equal to or greater than the income benefits provided under the Act if the total amount of the payments provided for in the contract or collective bargaining agreement is equal to or greater than the maximum weekly benefit available under the Act multiplied by 104.

(c) When the athlete is entitled to lifetime income benefits under the Act, weekly benefits available to a professional athlete subject to the Act, §406.095 [ Article 8308-3.075 ], are equal to or greater than the income benefits provided under the Act if equal to or greater than the maximum weekly benefit available under the Act.

(d) When the athlete's legal beneficiaries are entitled to death benefits under the Act, weekly benefits available to the legal beneficiaries of a professional athlete subject to the Act, §406.095 [ Article 8308-3.075 ], are equal to or greater than the death benefits provided under the Act if equal to or greater than the maximum weekly benefit available under the Act.

This agency hereby certifies that the proposal has been reviewed by legal counsel and found to be within the agency's legal authority to adopt.

Filed with the Office of the Secretary of State on February 18, 2005.

TRD-200500765

Susan Cory

General Counsel

Texas Workers' Compensation Commission

Earliest possible date of adoption: April 3, 2005

For further information, please call: (512) 804-4287


Chapter 133. GENERAL MEDICAL PROVISIONS

Subchapter E. COMPELLING PRODUCTION OF DOCUMENTS

28 TAC §133.401, §133.403

The Texas Workers' Compensation Commission (the commission) proposes amendments to §133.401 and §133.403, concerning Orders for Production of Documents and Noncompliance; Enforcement. The amendments expand the commission staff who can request issuance of an order to produce and update statutory citation.

The Texas Register published text shows words proposed to be added to or deleted from the current text, and should be read to determine all proposed changes.

The proposed amendments to §133.401(a) and (c), revise the rule to allow all commission employees, rather than only Medical Review employees, to submit a written request to the executive director or designee to issue an order for the production of documents and clarify what documents may be requested.

The proposed amendment to §133.403(a) deletes an outdated citation and replaces it with a citation to the current codified version of the Texas Workers' Compensation Act.

Mr. Allen McDonald, Medical Review Director, has determined that for the first five-year period the proposed rules are in effect there will be no fiscal implications for state or local governments as a result of enforcing or administering the rules.

There will be no fiscal implication for local governments with respect to enforcing or administering the proposed amendments to the rules, as local government has no regulatory role in the rule amendments as proposed.

Local government and state government as covered regulated entities will be impacted in the same manner as described later in this preamble for persons required to comply with the rules as proposed.

Mr. McDonald has also determined that for each year of the first five years the rules as proposed are in effect the public benefits anticipated as a result of enforcing the rules will be additional clarity and updated citations which make the rules easier to understand.

There will be no anticipated economic costs to persons who are required to comply with the rules as proposed.

There will be no costs of compliance for small businesses. There will be no adverse economic impact on small businesses or micro-businesses.

Comments on the proposed rule amendments must be received by 5:00 p.m., April 4, 2005. You may comment via the Internet by accessing the commission's website at www.twcc.state.tx.us and clicking on "Rules" then clicking on "Proposed Rules for Comment." This medium for commenting will help you organize your comments by rule chapter. You may also comment by emailing your comments to RuleComments@twcc.state.tx.us or by mailing or delivering your comments to Linda Velasquez at the Office of the General Counsel, Mailstop #4-D, Texas Workers' Compensation Commission, 7551 Metro Center Drive, Suite 100, Austin, TX 78744.

Commenters are requested to clearly identify by number the specific rule (e.g., 133.401 and 133.403) commented upon. The commission may not be able to respond to comments that cannot be linked to a particular proposed rule. Along with your comment, it is suggested that you include the reasoning for the comment in order for commission staff to fully evaluate your recommendations.

Based upon various considerations, including comments received and the staff's or commissioners' review of those comments, or based upon the commissioners' action at the public meeting, the rule as adopted may be revised from the rule as proposed in whole or in part.

A public hearing on this proposal will be held at the Austin central office of the commission (7551 Metro Center Drive, Suite 100, Austin, Texas) on a date to be announced. Those persons interested in attending the public hearing should contact the Commission's Office of Executive Communications at (512) 804-4430 to confirm the date, time, and location of the public hearing for this proposal. The public hearing schedule will also be available on the commission's website at www.twcc.state.tx.us .

The amendments are proposed under the Texas Labor Code §402.61, which authorizes the commission to adopt rules necessary for the implementation and enforcement of the Texas Workers' Compensation Act; Texas Labor Code §413.052, which requires the commission to adopt rules to establish procedures enabling the commission to compel the production of documents; and Texas Labor Code §415.021, which allows the commission to establish an administrative penalty against a person who commits an administrative violation.

No other code, statute, or article is affected by these rules actions.

§133.401.Orders for Production of Documents.

(a) The executive director or designee may issue an order for the production of documents upon the written request of an employee of the commission, [ medical review division ] which establishes good cause for issuance.

(b) The request for issuance of an order for the production of documents shall be sufficient to establish good cause if it contains:

(1) a description of the documents sought with adequate particularity;

(2) the name of the person believed to be in possession of the documents and the address or location where the documents are believed to be; and

(3) a statement that such documents are needed in an identified matter.

(c) An order for the production of documents may be issued at any time to obtain documents relating to a matter within the authority of the commission [ division of medical review ].

§133.403.Noncompliance; Enforcement.

(a) Noncompliance with an order for the production of documents is punishable as an administrative violation under Texas Labor Code §415.021(b)(3) [ Texas Civil Statutes, Article 8308-10.21(b)(3) ], with a penalty not to exceed $10,000.

(b) In addition to initiation of administrative violation proceedings, compliance with an order for the production of documents may be enforced by means of a civil proceeding filed in a district court in Travis County.

This agency hereby certifies that the proposal has been reviewed by legal counsel and found to be within the agency's legal authority to adopt.

Filed with the Office of the Secretary of State on February 18, 2005.

TRD-200500767

Susan Cory

General Counsel

Texas Workers' Compensation Commission

Earliest possible date of adoption: April 3, 2005

For further information, please call: (512) 804-4287


Chapter 134. BENEFITS--GUIDELINES FOR MEDICAL SERVICES, CHARGES, AND PAYMENTS

Subchapter C. MEDICAL FEE GUIDELINES

28 TAC §134.303

The Texas Workers' Compensation Commission (the commission) proposes a new rule, §134.303, concerning the 2005 Dental Fee Guideline.

This new rule is proposed to update reimbursement guidelines for dental services provided in the Texas workers' compensation system. The proposed rule establishes new reimbursement guidelines for dental services by applying a multiplier of 200% to the fees listed in the most current Texas Medicaid Dental Fee Schedule. The increase in the multiplier from the current 125% to 200% is intended to strike the proper balance between establishing fair and reasonable guidelines for medical services fees that ensure continuing quality of medical care and achieving effective medical cost control. The proposed new rule severs the dental component of the Medical Fee Guideline, contained within §134.202 of this title, concerning Medical Fee Guideline (MFG) for dental services provided on or after June 1, 2005, and creates a standalone Dental Fee Guideline responsive to current economic indicators in this segment of the medical services market.

Dental fees, as a subset of medical fees, must satisfy the standards for medical fees established in Texas Labor Code §413.011. Subsection (d) of that section requires guidelines for medical services fees to be fair and reasonable and designed to ensure the quality of medical care and to achieve effective medical cost control. The guidelines may not provide for payment of a fee in excess of the fee charged for similar treatment of an injured individual of an equivalent standard of living and paid by that individual or by someone acting on that individual's behalf. The commission must consider the increased security of payment afforded by the Texas Workers' Compensation Act in establishing the fee guidelines.

More recent statutory requirements added to §413.011 of the Texas Labor Code also require that the commission use health care reimbursement policies and guidelines that reflect the standardized reimbursement structures found in other health care delivery systems with minimal modifications to those reimbursement methodologies as necessary to meet occupational injury requirements. In order to achieve standardization, the statute additionally requires the commission to adopt the most current reimbursement methodologies, models, and values or weights used by the federal Health Care Financing Administration (HCFA), (now known as the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS)), including applicable payment policies relating to coding, billing, and reporting, and may modify documentation requirements as necessary to meet the requirements of Texas Labor Code §413.053 (relating to Standards of Reporting and Billing). The commission is required to develop conversion factors or other payment adjustment factors in determining appropriate fees, taking into account economic indicators in health care. However, the commission may not adopt conversion factors or other payment adjustment factors based solely on those factors as developed by the HCFA.

The current reimbursements for professional dental services are established by §134.202(c)(4) of this title, concerning Medical Fee Guideline (MFG). The MFG provides maximum allowable reimbursement (MAR) amounts for health care providers (HCPs) treating injured workers in Texas. For dental treatments and services, the established MAR amount in the MFG is the Texas Medicaid Dental Fee Schedule multiplied by 125%, as the national Medicare system does not provide for reimbursement to professional dental health care providers. The proposed rule increases the multiplier to 200% to ensure continued access to quality dental services.

The proposed rule will be applicable to professional dental services provided on or after June 1, 2005. The proposed rule additionally clarifies that for professional dental services provided August 1, 2003 through May 31, 2005, §134.202 of this title (relating to Medical Fee Guideline) shall be applicable. Professional dental services provided December 1, 1996 through July 31, 2003 shall be reimbursed in accordance with §134.302 of this title, concerning the commission's previous Dental Fee Guideline.

Commission staff met with dental providers to discuss the current reimbursement methodology contained in §134.202 of this title (relating to Medical Fee Guideline). That reimbursement is currently set at 125% of the Texas Medicaid Dental Fee Schedule. The dental representative member of the commission's Medical Advisory Committee offered a sampling of 16 dental procedure codes as representative dental services that might be provided in workers' compensation cases. This sampling information contained preferred provider organization reimbursement amounts and the dental representative's usual, customary, and reasonable (UCR) charges. This data was compared to published dental reimbursement amounts for workers' compensation systems in three other states (Kansas, North Carolina, and Florida). The data reflected that total average reimbursement for the 16 codes ranged from 105% (Florida) to 261% (UCR) of the Texas Medicaid Dental Fee Schedule.

The commission also met with carrier representatives and held a stakeholders meeting. A preproposal rule draft was shared with interested parties prior to the stakeholder meeting. As a result of the October 14, 2004 meeting, the commission requested system participants, providers and carriers, to submit their charge and reimbursement information relating to their 20 most frequently utilized dental codes for the 12-month period prior to the implementation of the current Medical Fee Guideline. The commission received additional significant information from three carriers, the Texas Dental Association, and Medata, a health care information data collection service. The commission also received information from a limited number of providers and payers. This data reflected that total average reimbursement for a larger sampling of 33 dental procedure codes ranged from 206% (TMIC) to 293% (Travis County) of Texas Medicaid Dental Fee Schedule.

Texas Labor Code §413.011 requires the commission to adopt necessary conversion factors or payment adjustment factors to establish fair and reasonable reimbursement in the Texas workers' compensation system. Additionally, the commission must take into account economic indicators in health care and the requirements found in subsection (d) of §413.011. The statute also states that the commission shall not adopt a conversion or payment adjustment factor based solely on those factors developed by the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (formerly HCFA). Consistent with the information received from the system stakeholders, the commission is proposing a new multiplier of 200% to be applied to the most current Texas Medicaid Dental Fee Schedule reimbursement rates for professional dental treatments and services.

In considering subsection (d) of §413.011, the proposed multiplier establishes fair and reasonable reimbursement that is designed to ensure continued access to quality care, along with appropriate medical cost control.

Dental treatments and services are infrequently provided in the workers' compensation system and, as such, are unlikely to be a significant contributor to Texas' high medical costs per claim. The proposed multiplier for dental treatment and services is higher than that of the current Medical Fee Guideline because the multiplier of 125%, as now applied to the Texas Medicaid Dental Fee Schedule, has been determined to be at the lower end of the average reimbursements for the dental procedure codes analyzed by commission staff. The recommended multiplier of 200% has been chosen to ensure continued access to quality dental care for injured workers, and is responsive to the cited economic indicators in this segment of the medical services market.

Proposed new §134.303 establishes reimbursements for professional dental treatments and services. The proposed new rule provides standardized reimbursement methods and billing procedures by aligning the workers' compensation reimbursement structure with the structures used by CMS and the Texas Medicaid Program.

Proposed subsection (a) of the rule establishes the applicability of this guideline to reimbursements for professional dental services provided on or after June 1, 2005. The proposed rule additionally clarifies that for professional dental services provided August 1, 2003 through May 31, 2005, §134.202 of this title (relating to Medical Fee Guideline) shall be applicable. Professional dental services provided December 1, 1996 through July 31, 2003 shall be reimbursed in accordance with §134.302 of this title, concerning the commission's previous Dental Fee Guideline. Specific provisions contained in the Texas Workers' Compensation Act and commission rules shall take precedence over any provision adopted or utilized by Texas Medicaid in administering the Texas Medicaid Dental Fee Schedule. Proposed subsection (a) establishes that Independent Review Organization (IRO) decisions regarding medical necessity are made on a case-by-case basis. The commission will monitor IRO decisions to determine whether commission rulemaking action would be appropriate. Proposed subsection (a) additionally provides that whenever a component of the Texas Medicaid Dental Fee Schedule is revised and effective, use of the revised component shall be required for compliance with commission rules, decisions and orders for services rendered on or after the effective date of the revised component. This will prevent the proposed rule from falling out of synchronization with the Texas Medicaid Dental Fee Schedule and will achieve the standardization goals established in Texas Labor Code §413.011.

Proposed subsection (b) of the rule requires system participants to utilize the Texas Medicaid Dental Fee Schedule, including its coding, billing, reporting, and reimbursement of dental treatments and services, in effect on the date a service is provided, with further application of any additions or exceptions in this section. This allows for the basic reimbursements of the Texas Medicaid Dental Fee Schedule to be applied to the Texas workers' compensation system.

Proposed subsection (c) establishes the method to be used for determining the maximum allowable reimbursement (MAR) for dental treatments and services in the Texas workers' compensation system. In establishing the multiplier of 200% to be applied to the current Texas Medicaid Dental Fee Schedule for the rule, the commission considered the statutory requirements and objectives and utilized current commission reimbursement levels, available dental provider payer information, and other states' workers' compensation reimbursements for comparable dental treatment and services.

Proposed subsection (c) also provides that for products and services for which the Texas Medicaid Dental Fee Schedule does not establish a value, the carrier shall assign a relative value, which may be based on nationally recognized published relative value studies, published commission medical dispute decisions, and values assigned for services involving similar work and resource commitments.

If multiple procedures are performed during the same operative session, proposed subsection (d) provides for reimbursement of the procedure with the highest MAR value at 100% of its MAR, and reimbursement for each subsequent procedure at 50% of its MAR value.

Proposed subsection (e) provides that reimbursement for dental laboratory procedures is bundled with the maximum fees for the associated dental procedures. No additional reimbursement shall be due.

Proposed subsection (f) provides that in all cases as established by this rule, reimbursement for dental treatment and services is the lesser of the MAR amount; the healthcare provider's usual and customary charge; or workers' compensation negotiated and/or contracted amount that applies to the billed service(s).

Allen McDonald, Director of the Medical Review Division, has determined that for the first five-year period the proposed rule is in effect, there will be minimal fiscal implications for state or local governments as a result of enforcing or administering the rule.

Local government and state government, as covered regulated entities, will be impacted in the same manner as for persons required to comply with the rule as proposed.

Mr. McDonald has also determined that for each year of the first five years the rule as proposed is in effect, the public benefits anticipated as a result of enforcing the rule will be to ensure access to dental treatments and services for injured workers as a result of raising reimbursements.

Health care providers will benefit from this rule by receiving increased reimbursement for the infrequent provision of dental services in the workers' compensation system.

Employers will benefit from the injured workers' prompt return to work and the potential for decreased premiums.

Carriers will benefit from the injured workers' prompt return to work and decreased indemnity payments.

The increase in the multiplier to be applied to the Texas Medicaid Dental Fee Schedule, from 125% to 200%, will result in a slight increase in total reimbursements for system participants required to comply with the rule. As an example, a major state agency reported the use of only eight dental codes, used a total of nine times, for the 12-month period of August 1, 2002 through July 31, 2003. Based on this reported activity, it is estimated that this major state agency's reimbursement for dental services would increase less than $1,000.

Dental treatments and services are infrequently required in the workers' compensation system. Although the commission has not collected dental billing and reimbursement information, based on information provided by carriers, the commission estimates that total dental reimbursement is less than $5 million per year. Comparatively, this represents less than 0.3% of the greater than $1.6 billion total system medical costs in 2003. Additionally, the commission clarifies that the proposed multiplier of 200% to be applied to the Texas Medicaid Dental Fee Schedule is comparable to the estimated average fair and reasonable reimbursement made under the application of §134.302 of this title (related to Dental Fee Guideline) in effect December 1, 1996 through July 31, 2003.

Consequently, there will be minimal anticipated economic costs to persons who are required to comply with the rule as proposed. It is also anticipated that there will be minimal costs of compliance for small businesses. Accordingly, there will be no adverse economic impact on small businesses or micro-businesses. The minimal costs of compliance for small businesses and micro-businesses as compared to large businesses will be proportionately the same.

Comments on the proposed rule must be received by 5:00 p.m., April 4, 2005. You may comment via the Internet by accessing the commission's website at www.twcc.state.tx.us , clicking on "Rules," and then on "Proposed Rules For Comment." This medium for commenting will help you organize your comments. You may also comment by emailing your comments to RuleComments@twcc.state.tx.us or by mailing or delivering your comments to Linda Velasquez, Legal Services, Mailstop #4-D, Texas Workers' Compensation Commission, 7551 Metro Center Drive, Suite #100, Austin, Texas 78744-1609.

Commenters are requested to clearly identify by number the specific rule and paragraph (e.g., 134.303 (a)(1), 134.303(b)(2), etc.) commented upon. The commission may not be able to respond to comments that cannot be linked to a particular proposed rule. Along with your comment, it is suggested that you include the reasoning for the comment in order for commission staff to fully evaluate your recommendations.

Based upon various considerations, including comments received and the staff's or commissioners' review of those comments, or based upon the commissioners' action at the public meeting, the rule as adopted may be revised from the rule as proposed in whole or in part. Persons in support of the rule as proposed, in whole or in part, may wish to comment to that effect.

Persons in support or opposition of the rule as proposed, in whole or in part, are encouraged to comment to that effect. The failure to comment accordingly is not indicative of support or opposition.

A public hearing on this proposal will be held at the Austin central office of the commission (7551 Metro Center Drive, Suite #100, Austin, Texas 78744-1609) on a date to be announced. Those persons interested in attending the public hearing should contact the Commission's Office of Executive Communication at (512) 804-4430 to confirm the date, time, and location of the public hearing for this proposal. The public hearing schedule will also be available on the commission's website at www.twcc.state.tx.us .

The new rule is proposed under Texas Labor Code §402.061, which authorizes the commission to adopt rules necessary to administer the Act; Texas Labor Code §408.021, which entitles injured employees to all health care reasonably required by the nature of the injury as and when needed; Texas Labor Code §413.002, which requires the commission's Medical Review Division monitor health care providers, insurance carriers and claimants to ensure compliance with commission rules; Texas Labor Code §413.007, which sets out information to be maintained by the commission's Medical Review Division; Texas Labor Code §413.011, which mandates that the commission by rule establish medical policies and guidelines; Texas Labor Code §413.012, which requires review and revision of the medical policies and fee guidelines at least every two years; Texas Labor Code §413.013, which requires the commission by rule to establish programs related to health care treatments and services for dispute resolution, monitoring, and review; Texas Labor Code §413.014, which requires express preauthorization by the insurance carrier for health care treatments and services; Texas Labor Code §413.015, which requires insurance carriers to pay charges for medical services as provided in the statute and requires that the commission ensure compliance with the medical policies and fee guidelines through audit and review; Texas Labor Code §413.016, which provides for refund of payments made in violation of the medical policies and fee guidelines; Texas Labor Code §413.017, which provides a presumption of reasonableness for medical services fees that are consistent with the medical policies and fee guidelines; Texas Labor Code, §413.019, which provides for payment of interest on delayed payments refunds or overpayments; and Texas Labor Code §413.031, which provides a procedure for medical dispute resolution.

The new rule is proposed under the Texas Labor Code §§402.061, 408.021, 413.002, 413.007, 413.011, 413.012, 413.013, 413.014, 413.015, 413.016, 413.017, 413.019, and 413.031.

The previously cited sections of the Texas Labor Code are affected by this proposed rule action. No other code, statute, or article is affected by this proposal.

§134.303.2005 Dental Fee Guideline.

(a) Applicability of this rule is as follows:

(1) This section applies to professional dental services provided in the Texas Workers' Compensation system.

(2) This section shall be applicable to professional dental services provided on or after June 1, 2005. For professional dental services provided August 1, 2003 through May 31, 2005, §134.202 of this title (relating to Medical Fee Guideline) shall be applicable. For professional dental services provided December 1, 1996 through July 31, 2003, §134.302 of this title (relating to Dental Fee Guideline) shall be applicable.

(3) Specific provisions contained in the Texas Workers' Compensation Act (the Act), or Texas Workers' Compensation Commission (commission) rules, including this rule, shall take precedence over any provision adopted by or utilized by Texas Medicaid in administering the Texas Medicaid Dental Fee Schedule. Independent Review Organization (IRO) decisions regarding medical necessity are made on a case-by-case basis. The commission will monitor IRO decisions to determine whether commission rulemaking action would be appropriate.

(4) Whenever a component of the Texas Medicaid Dental Fee Schedule is revised and effective, use of the revised component shall be required for compliance with commission rules, decisions and orders for services rendered on or after the effective date of the revised component.

(b) For coding, billing, reporting, and reimbursement of dental treatments and services, Texas Workers' Compensation system participants shall apply the Texas Medicaid Dental Fee Schedule in effect on the date a service is provided with any additions or exceptions in this section.

(c) To determine the maximum allowable reimbursements (MARs), the following apply:

(1) The fees listed for the procedure codes in the Texas Medicaid Dental Fee Schedule shall be multiplied by 200%.

(2) For products and services for which the Texas Medicaid Dental Fee Schedule does not establish a value, the carrier shall assign a relative value, which may be based on nationally recognized published relative value studies, published commission medical dispute decisions, and values assigned for services involving similar work and resource commitments.

(d) If multiple procedures are performed during the same operative session, the following multiple procedures rule shall be utilized:

(1) reimbursement of the procedure with the highest MAR value is 100% of its MAR; and

(2) reimbursement for each subsequent procedure is 50% of its MAR value.

(e) Reimbursement for dental laboratory procedures is bundled with the maximum fees for the associated dental procedures. No additional reimbursement shall be due.

(f) In all cases, reimbursement shall be the lesser of the:

(1) MAR amount;

(2) health care provider's usual and customary charge; or

(3) workers' compensation negotiated and/or contracted amount that applies to the billed service(s).

This agency hereby certifies that the proposal has been reviewed by legal counsel and found to be within the agency's legal authority to adopt.

Filed with the Office of the Secretary of State on February 18, 2005.

TRD-200500768

Susan Cory

General Counsel

Texas Workers' Compensation Commission

Earliest possible date of adoption: April 3, 2005

For further information, please call: (512) 804-4287


Chapter 140. DISPUTE RESOLUTION--GENERAL PROVISIONS

28 TAC §140.1, §140.4

The Texas Workers' Compensation Commission (the commission) proposes amendments to §140.1 and §140.4, concerning Definitions and Conduct and Decorum. The amendments are proposed to correct the wording regarding referrals for administrative violations and to correct cites to the codified version of the Texas Workers' Compensation Act.

The Texas Register published text shows words proposed to be added to or deleted from the current text, and should be read to determine all proposed changes.

Proposed amendments to §140.1, relating to Definitions, change statutory citations to the current codified version of the Act.

In proposed §140.4, relating to Conduct and Decorum, current rule language in subsection (c) is amended to more accurately reflect that the presiding officer has the authority to enforce proper conduct and decorum by referring an action to the commission's division of Compliance and Practices for consideration as a possible administrative violation or taking other appropriate action.

Dorian Ramirez, Director of Hearings, has determined that for the first five-year period the proposed rules are in effect, there will be no fiscal implications for state or local governments as a result of enforcing or administering the rules.

Local government and state government as a covered regulated entity will be impacted in the same manner as described later in this preamble for persons required to comply with the rule as proposed.

Ms. Ramirez has also determined that for each year of the first five years the rules are in effect the public benefit will be additional clarity and updated citations which make the rules easier to understand. There will be no costs of compliance for small businesses. There will be no adverse economic impact on small businesses or micro-businesses.

System participants will benefit by additional clarity and updated citations which make the rule easier to understand.

Comments on the proposal must be received by 5:00 p.m., April 4, 2005. You may comment via the Internet by accessing the commission's website at www.twcc.state.tx.us and then clicking on "Rules" and then clicking on "Proposed Rules for Comment." This medium for commenting will help you organize your comments by rule chapter. You may also comment by emailing your comments to RuleComments@twcc.state.tx.us or by mailing or delivering your comments to Linda Velasquez, Legal Services, Mailstop #4-D, Texas Workers' Compensation Commission, 7551 Metro Center Drive, Suite 100, Austin, Texas 78744.

Commenters are requested to clearly identify by number the specific rule and paragraph commented upon. The commission may not be able to respond to comments that cannot be linked to a particular proposed rule. Along with your comment, it is suggested that you include the reasoning for the comment in order for commission staff to fully evaluate your recommendations.

Based upon various considerations, including comments received and the staff's or commissioners' review of those comments, or based upon the commissioners' action at the public meeting, the rule as adopted may be revised from the rule as proposed in whole or in part. Persons in support of the rule as proposed, in whole or in part, may wish to comment to that effect.

A public hearing on this proposal will be held at the Austin central office of the commission (7551 Metro Center Drive, Suite 100, Austin, Texas) on a date to be announced. Those persons interested in attending the public hearing should contact the Commission's Office of Executive Communication at (512) 804-4430 to confirm the date, time, and location of the public hearing for this proposal. The public hearing schedule will also be available on the commission's website at www.twcc.state.tx.us .

The amendments are proposed under the Texas Labor Code, §402.061, which authorizes the commission to adopt rules necessary to administer the Act; Texas Labor Code, §410.025, which authorizes the commission to prescribe the time within which a benefit review conference shall be scheduled; Texas Labor Code, §410.027, which authorizes the commission to adopt rules governing the procedures under which benefit review conferences are conducted; Texas Labor Code, §410.111, which authorizes the commission to provide rules governing the procedures under which arbitration is conducted; Texas Labor Code, §410.157, which authorizes the commission to adopt rules governing the procedures under which contested case hearings are conducted.

The previously cited sections of the Texas Labor Code are affected by this rule action. No other code, statute, or article is affected by this rule action.

§140.1.Definitions.

The following words and terms, when used in this part, shall have the following meanings, unless the context clearly indicates otherwise.

(1) Benefit dispute--A disputed issue arising under the Texas Workers' Compensation Act (the Act) in a workers' compensation claim regarding compensability or eligibility for, or the amount of, income or death benefits.

(2) Benefit proceeding--A proceeding pursuant to the Act, Chapter 410 [ Article 6 ], conducted by a presiding officer to resolve one or more benefit disputes. Benefit proceedings include benefit review conferences, benefit contested case hearings, appeals, and, after January 1, 1992, arbitration.

(3) Director of the hearings division--The director of the Division of Hearings and Review, or his delegatee.

(4) Party to a proceeding--A person entitled to take part in a proceeding because of a direct legal interest in the outcome.

(5) Presiding officer--The commission employee, or independent arbitrator, assigned to conduct a proceeding. Presiding officers include benefit review officers, hearing officers, and appeals panel members, and, after January 1, 1992, arbitrators.

(6) Special accommodations--Individuals and equipment necessary to allow an individual who does not speak English or who has a physical, mental, or developmental handicap to participate in a proceeding. The term includes spoken language translators and sign language translators.

(7) Stipulation--A voluntary accord between parties to a benefit contested case hearing regarding any matter relating to the hearing that does not constitute an agreement, as defined by the Act, §401.011(3) [ §1.02(3) ], or a settlement, as defined by the Act, §401.011(40) [ §1.02(43) ].

§140.4.Conduct and Decorum.

(a) The presiding officer may at the beginning of any proceeding and during the course of that proceeding establish rules of decorum to be followed during the proceeding. The presiding officer may also establish times for beginning the proceeding, for recesses, and for ending the proceeding.

(b) Parties and participants in a proceeding shall conduct themselves with dignity, shall show courtesy and respect for one another and for the presiding officer, shall follow the decorum prescribed by the presiding officer at the proceeding, and shall adhere to the beginning times of the proceeding, and to the times established for each recess and for ending the proceeding.

(c) To maintain and enforce proper conduct and decorum at a proceeding, and to enforce promptness at a proceeding, the presiding officer may take appropriate action, including, but not limited to:

(1) issuing a warning;

(2) excluding any person from the proceeding;

(3) recessing the proceeding; and

(4) referring an action for possible enforcement as [ writing ] an administrative violation.

This agency hereby certifies that the proposal has been reviewed by legal counsel and found to be within the agency's legal authority to adopt.

Filed with the Office of the Secretary of State on February 18, 2005.

TRD-200500770

Susan Cory

General Counsel

Texas Workers' Compensation Commission

Earliest possible date of adoption: April 3, 2005

For further information, please call: (512) 804-4287


Chapter 145. DISPUTE RESOLUTION--HEARINGS UNDER THE ADMINISTRATIVE PROCEDURE ACT

28 TAC §§145.1 - 145.28

(Editor's note: The text of the following sections proposed for repeal will not be published. The sections may be examined in the offices of the Texas Workers' Compensation Commission or in the Texas Register office, Room 245, James Earl Rudder Building, 1019 Brazos Street, Austin.)

The Texas Workers' Compensation Commission (the commission) proposes the repeal of §§145.1 - 145.28, concerning Dispute Resolution--Hearings Under the Administrative Procedure Act. The repeal is proposed to remove rules addressing procedures for hearings that are now governed by the State Office of Administrative Hearings (SOAH) procedural rules in Title 1, Chapter 155 of the Texas Administrative Code (arising under the Texas Workers' Compensation Act). There are no dispute resolution hearings pending under the rules proposed to be repealed; therefore, the rules are no longer needed.

Heidi Jackson, Director of Claims Services, has determined that for the first five-year period the repeals are in effect there will be no fiscal implications to state or local governments.

Local government and state government as a covered regulated entity will be impacted in the same manner as described for persons required to comply with the proposed repeal.

Ms. Jackson has also determined that for each year of the first five years the repeals are in effect the public benefits anticipated as a result of the proposed repeals will be that unnecessary and unused rules will no longer be in the commission's rules. This prevents confusion regarding what rules should be used.

There will be no anticipated economic costs to persons who are required to comply with the repeal of these rules. There will be no costs of compliance for small businesses. There will be no adverse economic impact on small businesses or micro-businesses. The cost of compliance for small businesses as compared to large businesses will be zero because the repeals do not affect cost.

Comments on the proposal must be received by 5:00 p.m., April 4, 2005. You may comment via the Internet by accessing the commission's website at www.twcc.state.tx.us and then clicking on "Rules" and then clicking on "Proposed Rules for Comment." This medium for commenting will help you organize your comments by rule chapter. You may also comment by emailing your comments to RuleComments@twcc.state.tx.us or by mailing or delivering your comments to Linda Velasquez, Legal Services, Mailstop #4-D, Texas Workers' Compensation Commission, 7551 Metro Center Drive, Suite 100, Austin, Texas 78744.

Commenters are requested to clearly identify by number the specific rule and paragraph commented upon. The commission may not be able to respond to comments that cannot be linked to a particular proposed rule. Along with your comment, it is suggested that you include the reasoning for the comment in order for commission staff to fully evaluate your recommendations.

Based upon various considerations, including comments received and the staff's or commissioners' review of those comments, or based upon the commissioners' action at the public meeting, the rules as proposed for repeal, may be repealed or may be repealed only in part. Persons in support of the rules repeal, as proposed, in whole or in part, may wish to comment to that effect.

A public hearing on this proposal will be held at the Austin central office of the commission (7551 Metro Center Drive, Suite 100, Austin, Texas) on a date to be announced. Those persons interested in attending the public hearing should contact the Commission's Office of Executive Communication at (512) 804-4430 to confirm the date, time, and location of the public hearing for this proposal. The public hearing schedule will also be available on the commission's website at www.twcc.state.tx.us .

The repeal is proposed under the Texas Labor Code, §402.061, which authorizes the commission to adopt rules necessary to administer the Act, Texas Labor Code, §402.073, which authorizes the commission and SOAH to adopt a memorandum of understanding governing administrative procedure law hearings conducted by SOAH for the commission and authorizes SOAH to conduct certain hearings; Texas Labor Code, §413.031(k) that provides for a SOAH hearing after certain medical disputes; Texas Labor Code, §413.055(c) that provides for a SOAH hearing to contest an interlocutory medical order of the commission; Texas Labor Code, §411.049 that provides a hearing for an employer to contest findings of the commission under the Hazardous Employer Program; Texas Labor Code, §408.0231(e) that provides for a hearing on certain sanctions by the commission against a doctor or insurance carrier; Texas Labor Code, §415.034 that provides for a hearing to contest administrative violation sanctions initiated by the commission; and Texas Government Code, §2003.050 concerning procedural rules by SOAH.

No other code, statute, or article is affected by this rule action.

This proposed repeal affects the following statutes: Texas Labor Code, §§402.061, 402.073, 413.031(k), 413.055(c), 411.049, 408.0231(e), 415.034 and Texas Government Code §2003.050.

§145.1.Scope and Applicability.

§145.2.Definitions.

§145.3.Requesting a Hearing.

§145.4.Notice of Hearing.

§145.5.Statement of Matters Asserted.

§145.6.Venue.

§145.7.Appearance.

§145.8.Withdrawal of Hearing Request.

§145.9.Informal Disposition.

§145.10.Filing Instruments; Furnishing Copies.

§145.11.Administrative Procedure and Texas Register Act Prehearing Conference.

§145.12.Request for Alternative Dispute Resolution.

§145.13.Discovery and Production of Documents and Things for Inspection, Copying, or Photographing.

§145.14.Subpoenas; Depositions.

§145.15.Ex Parte Communications.

§145.16.Conduct and Decorum.

§145.17.Hearing Officer's Authority.

§145.18.Parties' Rights in Hearings.

§145.19.Failure To Appear.

§145.20.Recording the Hearing.

§145.21.Evidence.

§145.22.Reimbursement, Travel Expenses, and Fees for Witnesses and Deponents.

§145.23.Decision of the Hearing Officer.

§145.24.Special Provisions for Imposing Sanctions Pursuant to the Texas Workers' Compensation Act, §2.09(f).

§145.25.Special Provisions for Administrative Penalties.

§145.26.Record of the Hearing.

§145.27.Transcript or Duplicate of the Hearing Audiotape.

§145.28.Expenses To Be Paid by Petitioner.

This agency hereby certifies that the proposal has been reviewed by legal counsel and found to be within the agency's legal authority to adopt.

Filed with the Office of the Secretary of State on February 18, 2005.

TRD-200500771

Susan Cory

General Counsel

Texas Workers' Compensation Commission

Earliest possible date of adoption: April 3, 2005

For further information, please call: (512) 804-4287


Chapter 148. HEARINGS CONDUCTED BY THE STATE OFFICE OF ADMINISTRATIVE HEARINGS

The Texas Workers' Compensation Commission proposes new §§148.1 - 148.23 concerning procedures governing certain hearings, conducted by the State Office of Administrative Hearings, to adjudicate disputes arising under the Texas Workers' Compensation Act (the Act). The commission also proposes simultaneous repeal of current §§148.1 - 148.28. These procedures are not applicable to benefit disputes, governed by Chapters 140, 142, and 143 of this title (related to Dispute Resolution-General Provisions; Benefit Contested Case Hearing; and Review by the Appeals Panel, respectively). These new procedural rules are proposed in order to reflect changes in other commission rules and practices, to coordinate commission rules with changes to the procedural rules of the State Office of Administrative Hearings, to clarify the requirements for the commission's processing of requests for subpoenas and for the issuance of commissions requiring depositions, and to provide related policies of the commission as, for example, the party who has the burden of proof in the contested case hearing.

Proposed new §148.1 incorporates the existing definitions of terms in current §148.2(1)-(4) and (6)-(9) with revisions. In addition, newly defined terms or acronyms are included in subsections (2), (6), (7), (9) and (13). In subsection (1), the definition of "Act" eliminates surplus verbiage "as specified in the Act." Subsection (2) adds a new definition for "Administrative Law Judge or ALJ" to be consistent with terminology used by the State Office of Administrative Hearings (SOAH) in its procedural rules in Chapter 155, Title 1 (relating to Rules of Procedure). Proposed new subsection (5) defines "Commission Representative" to reflect the practice of the commission to designate a commission representative only for some contested cases. The term "hearing officer" in existing subsection (5) has not been included because SOAH utilizes the terms "Administrative Law Judge" or "ALJ" instead. New subsection (6) defines "contested case" utilizing the basic definition in the Texas Government Code, §2001.003(1) and also includes references to sections of the Texas Labor Code that address contested cases handled by SOAH involving the Texas Workers' Compensation Act (Act). New subsection (7) defines the acronym "IRO" because Independent Review Organizations, established in accordance with Insurance Code article 21.58C, perform certain reviews of health care under the Act and their decisions may be reviewed de novo in SOAH contested cases. Subsection (8) revises the definition of "Party" to specifically include a state agency named or admitted as a party because the commission and certain other state agencies (for example, the State Office of Risk Management) can be parties to SOAH contested cases. New subsection (9) defines a "person" utilizing the basic definition in the Texas Government Code, §2001.003(5). New subsection (13) defines "TWCC Chief Clerk" because the TWCC Chief Clerk is the person designated by the commission to receive important forms, notifications, and other documents from SOAH and persons and parties to SOAH contested cases.

Proposed new §148.2 includes the "Scope and Applicability" provisions currently contained in §148.1 with clarifying changes.

New subsection (a) adds the term "contested case," as defined in proposed new §148.1 (relating to Definitions), to specify the type of hearings and to add the words "before the SOAH" to limit the applicability of these rules to contested cases where the Act provides for SOAH hearings. Other changes clarify and update the subsection.

New subsection (b) summarizes the cases that the commission's Chapter 148 rules will govern and specifies certain, related policies of the commission applicable to such cases (for example, the burden of proof policies contained in proposed new §148.14 (relating to Burden of Proof)).

Proposed new subsection (c) incorporates the provisions of existing §148.1(b) except that the reference to Texas Labor Code, §408.023 is replaced with a reference to Texas Labor Code, §408.0231 because the latter section is the section that includes a right to a hearing. Also, the phrase "and in other cases not subject to §402.073(b) is added to clarify that the TWCC Commissioners render the final decision in cases not subject to Act, §402.073(b).

Proposed new §148.3: (1) clarifies how a person or state agency, including the staff of the commission, may send the commission a request for a contested case hearing before SOAH; (2) specifies how the "deemed" date of receipt for a request will be determined by the commission; (3) specifies how the commission will handle requests for contested case hearings after initial decisions are made in certain medical dispute cases; (4) specifies that late filings will be dismissed; and (5) specifies how requests for correction of clerical errors will be handled when made with a request for a hearing. Existing §148.3(a) has been deleted and replaced with new proposed subsection (a) to clarify the date, under the various provisions of the Act, when the 20-day rule limitations period for filing a request for a hearing begins.

New subsection (b) establishes the date when a request for a hearing, other than a request made pursuant to Texas Labor Code §413.031 for certain medical disputes, will be deemed as filed with TWCC.

New subsection (c) specifies requirements for a request for a SOAH contested case hearing after an initial medical dispute decision has been rendered either by the commission's Medical Review division for a medical fee dispute or an IRO for an applicable medical necessity dispute. This subsection does not apply to requests for SOAH hearings after an IRO decision with respect to prospective medical necessity of spinal surgery (where such requests must be filed in accordance with §133.308(v) of this title (relating to Medical Dispute Resolution by Independent Review Organization). In addition, this rule does not apply to case reviews completed pursuant to the commission's alternate medical dispute process in accordance with §133.309 of this title (relating to Alternate Medical Necessity Dispute Resolution by Case Review Doctor) because under that rule the decision of the case review doctor constitutes the final administrative decision.

New subsection (d) clarifies that a request for a SOAH hearing will be dismissed if filed later than twenty days after receipt of the original medical dispute decision.

New subsection (e) specifies how a request for a SOAH hearing will be handled by the commission if that request also contains a request for correction of a clerical error in the original decision.

New subsection (f) addresses correction of clerical errors discovered by the commission.

New subsection (g) specifies that the commission will send the request for hearing to SOAH within 20 working days of receipt unless a decision is withdrawn in accordance with proposed new §148.8 of this title (relating to Withdrawal of Hearing Request) or unless the parties have been notified of the commission's intent to revise the order or decision pursuant to subsections (e) or (f). While decisions will be forwarded as soon as practical, the maximum period of time should allow the parties time to informally resolve disputed matters and to then withdraw the request for hearing or should allow the commission adequate time to initiate a clerical correction process based upon information provided to it or based upon its review of the prior decision.

New subsections (h) and (i) contain the provisions of existing §148.3(c) and (d) but the term "adverse action" has been deleted as unnecessary.

Proposed new §148.4 provides that the commission may revise an order or decision of the Medical Review Division to correct a clerical error either at the request of one or more parties to such an order or decision or by decision of the commission's Executive Director or his designee. This is a companion section to proposed new §148.3 and, in contrast, only addresses correction of a clerical error not associated with a request for a hearing. The procedures are similar to the procedures in proposed new §148.3 except that the commission's actions will be taken not later than 30 days after a request for clerical correction is received from a party and the commission's action in any particular request, shall either be to: (1) issue and deliver to the parties a corrected order or decision, (2) advise the parties in writing that the order or decision was correct as originally entered, or (3) advise the parties in writing that the order or decision cannot be corrected pursuant to this section (for example, if the requested clerical correction is not determined to be a clerical error issue). If a clerical correction is made by decision of the commission's executive director or his designee, the correction may be made either without notice to the parties (for example, concerning an obvious error or errors requiring immediate correction) or by a procedure that includes notice of the intended correction, a period for receiving response, and action of the commission's executive director or designee under the three options summarized previously.

Proposed new §148.5 includes provisions of existing §148.4 except that existing subsections (a) and (d) have been deleted because related commission policies are addressed elsewhere (in proposed new Chapter 149 and in the SOAH procedural rules).

New subsection (a) contains provisions of existing §148.4(b) except for: (1) revisions in accordance with the definitions in proposed new §148.1 of this title (relating to Definitions); (2) additional language "and upon receipt of the docket number, location and setting date from SOAH" to recognize information that must be received from SOAH before a notice of hearing can be sent in accordance with Texas Government Code, §2001.052; (3) additional language "a notice regarding failure to appear and default judgments" to emphasize possible actions in a case pursuant to SOAH's procedure rule at §155.55 of title 1 (relating to Failure to Attend Hearing and Default); and (4) additional language "...and any rules involved, nature of the hearing..." to clarify that rules will be specified only when any rules are involved and that the nature of the hearing will be specified in compliance with Texas Government Code, §2001.052(a)(1).

New subsection (b) contains provisions of existing §148.4(c) except to use terms defined in proposed new §148.1 of this title (relating to Definitions) and to clarify some of the notice information requirements may be provided by the commission's representative and, if so, would not be provided by the TWCC Chief Clerk.

Proposed new §148.6 includes the addition of "Texas" to the "Austin, Travis County" location for SOAH contested case hearings and deletes the provisions concerning appearing at the hearing or participating by telephone conference call because those procedures are specified in SOAH's rule in §155.45 of title 1 (relating to Participation by Telephone).

Proposed new §148.7 does not include the language contained in current §148.7 because the SOAH rules of procedure in Chapter 155 of Title 1 (relating to Rules of Procedure) preempt TWCC procedural rules and because the SOAH rules address appearance and representation generally. However, because the Act contains specific requirements on representation of injured employees and insurance carriers and because the commission has interpreted those requirements in its rules in Chapter 150 of this title (relating to Representation Of Parties Before The Agency Qualifications of Representatives), new §148.7 addresses the additional qualification requirements for representatives of injured employees and insurance carriers.

Proposed new §148.8 clarifies that a request for withdrawal of hearing request should be sent to the TWCC Chief Clerk if the written request for withdrawal is submitted before a case is received by SOAH or after a proposal for decision is received from SOAH. Otherwise, the request should be submitted to SOAH in accordance with its procedure rules in Title 1, Chapter 155 (relating to Rules of Procedures). The last sentence of existing subsection (a) is deleted because a SOAH ALJ will make a legal determination of whether any subsequent requests for hearing constitute or include the same subject matters as a previous request for hearing and, if so, whether and how the subsequent hearing should proceed. Subsection (b), addresses the commission's withdrawal of a medical dispute decision and should result in reduced expenses for all parties. The decision-maker will be able to withdraw or amend the small percentage of decisions containing an obvious error, omission, or procedural defect when identified in requests for hearing, without necessitating formal hearings.

Proposed new §148.9 is the same as current §148.9 except for substitution of the acronym "ALJ" for "Hearing Officer" in accordance with the revised definitions in §148.1 of this title (relating to Definitions).

Existing §148.10 (relating to Filing Instruments; Furnishing Copies) has been deleted because such procedures are addressed in SOAH's rules in Chapter 155 of Title 1 (relating to Rules of Procedure). Proposed new §148.10 provides that a request for issuance of a subpoena shall be directed to the TWCC Chief Clerk in the commission's central office. SOAH has noted in the adoption of its rule §155.31(e) in Title 1 (relating to Discovery) that "... requests for issuance of subpoenas or commissions (requiring depositions) shall be directed to the referring agency. The absence of any reference to subpoenas for witnesses at hearing means the referring agency's subpoena rules apply." (27 TexReg 3336). A request for a subpoena shall include the following six requirements: (1) the actual subpoena, attached to the request, for TWCC to execute, (2) the name and address of the sheriff or constable to whom the subpoena should be addressed on the actual subpoena, (3) a good faith, itemized estimate of the anticipated, reimbursable costs that the requestor will pay to the person being subpoenaed calculated in accordance with §2001.089 of the Texas Government Code and a deposit for the same amount in the form of a negotiable instrument satisfactory to the commission, (4) as placed on the actual subpoena: the name, address and title, if any, of the witness, the date, time, and place where the witness is to appear and give testimony, the docket number of the SOAH proceeding, and a statement showing date of execution and return of the subpoena to the TWCC Chief Clerk (to be completed by the constable or sheriff upon service of the subpoena to the witness), (5) if the subpoena is for the production of books, records, writing, or other tangible items, a specific, detailed description of the items sought to be produced along with the information in number (4) above, and (6) a description of the reasonable steps to avoid imposing undue burden or expense on the person served.

The information specified is necessary for the commission to issue the subpoena under Texas Government Code §2001.089 and to provide the witness with specific instructions on where to appear and, if applicable, what to bring. The deposit is required under the authority of Texas Government Code §§2001.089 and 2001.103. However, the party or agency requesting the subpoena is responsible for paying the applicable witness expenses under Texas Government Code §2001.103(b). The requirement for information showing "good cause" for the issuance of a subpoena is found in Texas Government Code §2001.089. One of the elements of "good cause" is a showing that the information sought from the witness is not available to the requestor from other sources. Lueg v. Tewell , 572 S.W.2d 97, 102 (Tex. App. - Corpus Christi 1978, no writ) citing Ex Parte Shepperd , 513 S.W.2d 813, 816 (Tex. 1974). Such case law interpreted "good cause" when that showing was required under the Texas Rules of Civil Procedure. While the "good cause" requirement subsequently was deleted in the Texas Rules of Civil Procedure, those Rules do require a party requesting a subpoena to take reasonable steps to avoid imposing undue burden or expense on the person served. The requestor, as part of the information showing good cause for the issuance of the subpoena, must provide a description of the reasonable steps to avoid imposing undue burden or expense on the person to be served with the subpoena. Finally, if a person fails to comply with a subpoena, enforcement actions provided in the rule are based upon authority provided in Texas Government Code, §2001.201 or Texas Labor Code §402.042(b)(3) and (9).

The commission solicits comments on possible alternatives that would satisfy the APA requirement of a deposit to the commission for the amount of anticipated costs to be incurred by the witness and the APA requirement upon the requesting party to pay the witness for those costs.

Existing §148.11 (relating to APA Prehearing Conference) has been deleted because its procedures have been preempted by SOAH in accordance with §2003.050(b), Government Code and SOAH's adoption of its procedural rules in Chapter 155 of Title 1 (relating to Rules of Procedure). Proposed new §148.11 provides that a request for the issuance of a commission requiring deposition shall be directed to the TWCC Chief Clerk in the commission's central office. SOAH has noted in the adoption of its rule §155.31(e) in Title 1 (relating to Discovery) that "...requests for issuance of subpoenas or commissions (requiring depositions) shall be directed to the referring agency." (27 TexReg 3336). The proposed rule requires that a request for issuance of a commission requiring deposition include: (1) the actual commission requiring deposition, attached to the request, for the TWCC Chief Clerk to execute; (2) the name and address of the applicable officer to take the deposition; the date, time, and place where either the witness is to appear and give testimony or where the written responses are to be sent; a detailed description of any items the witness will be required to produce; and a statement showing date of execution and return of the commission to the TWCC Chief Clerk (to be completed by the officer designated to take the deposition upon service of the commission requiring deposition to that officer); (3) a good faith, itemized estimate of the anticipated, reimbursable costs that the requestor will pay to the person being deposed calculated in accordance with §2001.094 and a deposit for the same amount in the form of a negotiable instrument satisfactory to the commission; and (4) coordination by the requestor with the other party or parties and with the witness to determine a mutually agreeable location and time for the attendance of the witness and a statement whether such coordination has been made and whether the proposed location and time is by mutual agreement with the parties and witness.

The information specified is necessary for the TWCC to issue the commission requiring deposition, to provide the witness with specific instructions on where to appear or send the written responses and, if applicable, what to bring, and to reduce the expense to the commission and to other parties of having to reissue one or more commissions requiring deposition because the requestor had not attempted to coordinate an agreed time, date, and, if applicable, place with the other party or parties and with the witness. The deposit is required under the authority of Texas Government Code §§2001.094 and 2001.103. However, a party or agency requesting the commission requiring deposition is responsible for paying the applicable witness expenses under Texas Government Code §2001.103(b).

Proposed subsection (b) provides that the issuance of a commission for an oral deposition is not required if the witness is a party or is retained by, employed by, or otherwise subject to the control of a party. This provision allows the parties to agree to such depositions in accordance with SOAH's rule at §155.31(n) of Title 1 (relating to Discovery).

Proposed subsection (c) prohibits the taking of a deposition of a member of an agency, board or commission after a hearing date for the contested case has been set in accordance with Texas Government Code §2001.095. Proposed subsection (e) refers to special provisions of the APA concerning depositions, for example, Texas Government Code §§2001.096, 2001.097, 2001.098, 2001.099, 2001.100, 2001.101, and 2001.102. Finally, if a person fails to comply with a deposition, enforcement actions provided in the rule are based upon authority provided in Texas Government Code §2001.201 or Texas Labor Code §402.042(b)(9).

The commission solicits comments on possible alternatives that would satisfy the APA requirement of a deposit to the commission for the amount of anticipated costs to be incurred by the witness and the APA requirement upon the requesting party to pay the witness for those costs.

Existing §148.12 (relating to Request for Alternative Dispute Resolution) has been deleted because such procedures are addressed in SOAH's rules in Title 1, §155.33(d) (relating to Orders) and §155.37 (relating to Settlement Conferences). Proposed new §148.12 contains the provisions in existing §148.15 (relating to Ex Parte Communications).

Existing §148.13 (relating to Discovery and Production of Documents and Tangible Things for Inspection Copying or Photographing) has been deleted because such procedures are addressed in SOAH's rules in Title 1, §155.31 (relating to Discovery). Proposed new §148.13 contains provisions in existing §148.20 (relating to Recording the Hearing) with revisions. Subsection (a) has been revised to delete provisions now more fully addressed in SOAH's rule in §155.43 of Title 1 (relating to Making a Record of Contested Case) and clarify that the petitioner in a contested case is responsible for all costs associated with making a record of the hearing, including the costs of the court reporter at the hearing and the costs of the preparation of a verbatim record if one is required. Where more than one party is seeking affirmative relief, such costs will be assessed equally. The parties can agree to their own arrangements for a court reporter or allocation of associated costs among the parties. The commission finds the petitioner as the proper party to pay such costs since the petitioner has requested the hearing, e.g. disputing a previous decision in a medical dispute or an action taken by the commission after preliminary notices and opportunity for input have been received and considered.

Subsection (b) provides that a party, electing to use a means of making a record that is in addition to the means specified in SOAH's rules (currently §155.43 of Title 1 relating to Making a Record of Contested Case), is responsible for all associated costs of making that record and, if a verbatim transcript is made, shall provide SOAH and the commission with a copy of the audiotape or videotape free of charge. If a transcript is made, the party shall provide the commission with the original of the transcript free of charge. The responsibility for such costs has been made in accordance with Texas Government Code §2001.059(b) and Texas Labor Code §402.064. The party requesting the additional services should pay for those services. In addition, the commission often has a need to review the record of the hearing, for example, the videotape or other type of transcript. In an appropriate case, the commission staff may confirm, in writing, that the copy is either not needed or that the delivery of the copy can be delayed for a specified period of time or until a specified event occurs.

Existing §148.14 (relating to Subpoenas; Depositions) has been deleted because both discovery devices are now covered in proposed new §§148.10 (relating to Hearings Subpoenas to Compel Attendance and Subpoenas Duces Tecum) and 148.11 (relating to Commissions to Compel Attendance for Deposition). Proposed new §148.14 specifies the particular sections of the Act where the commission will have the burden of proof in hearings. These include hearings on sanctions under §402.072, sanctions on a doctor or an insurance carrier under §408.0231, identification of a hazardous employer based, at least in part, upon a fatality under §411.0415, findings by the commission relating to hazardous employers under §411.049, and administrative penalty assessments and other sanctions under §§415.021, 415.023, 415.032, and 415.034.

The burden of proof will be upon the party seeking relief in hearings conducted pursuant to §408.024 (when an insurance carrier seeks to be relieved of liability for health care that otherwise would be payable), §413.031 (when a party seeks to change the result of an initial medical dispute decision rendered by the commission's Medical Review division or an Independent Review Organization), and §413.055 (when a party disputes an interlocutory medical order issued by the commission pursuant to the rigorous requirements of §133.306 of this title (relating to Interlocutory Orders for Medical Benefits)). In each of these situations the party requesting the hearing is either seeking: (1) to overturn a previous decision of the commission after a previous proceeding has been held in which the party has had the opportunity to present its position and support its position or (2) is seeking to overturn liability normally established for a medical benefit under other provisions of the Act and the commission's rules. Setting the burden of proof upon the party contesting an earlier decision is in accordance with general judicial practices and encourages finality (and resulting reduction in dispute costs to system participants) of the original decision.

The burden of proof will be upon the Certified Self-Insurer in hearings conducted under §407.046 (concerning revocation of a certificate of authority to self-insure) because §407.046(d) of the Act impliedly places that burden by stating: "If the certified self-insurer fails to show cause why the certificate should not be revoked, the commission immediately shall revoke the certificate." In addition, the burden of proof will be upon the Certified Self-Insurer in hearings conducted under §407.133 (for failure to pay an assessment to the Texas Certified Self-Insurer Guaranty Association (TCSIGA) under Texas Labor Code §§407.124 and 407.125) because the Certified Self-Insurer will be attempting to overturn an assessment, determined in part by TCSIGA under criteria specified in those sections of the Texas Labor Code and the provisions in Chapter 407 of the Texas Labor Code that assign to TCSIGA vital roles to fulfill (for example, §407.042 requiring the approval of TCSIGA before the commission votes to issue a certificate of authority and §407.130 specifying TCSIGA as a party in interest in a proceeding involving a workers' compensation claim against an impaired employer whose compensation obligations have been paid or assumed by TCSIGA. The burden of proof shall be upon the party challenging the decision of the Director of the commission's Self-Insurance division in hearings conducted under §407.066 because that decision was made after input from various parties, who can present their various positions and support those positions prior to the rendering of the Director's decision.

The burden of showing a timely filing or good cause when an allegation of untimely filing has been made rests with the employer under §120.2 of this title (relating to Employer's First Report of Injury) because §120.2 establishes that burden of proof.

Subsection (b) specifies an exception to proof by preponderance of the evidence for IRO appeals. Section 133.308(w) of this title (relating to Medical Dispute Resolution by Independent Review Organizations) provides: "In all appeals from reviews of prospective or retrospective necessity disputes, the IRO decision has presumptive weight."

Existing §148.15 (relating to Ex Parte Communications) has been deleted because the same provisions are contained in proposed new §148.12. Proposed new §148.15 contains the provisions of existing §148.22 with revisions.

Subsection (a) lists the types of hearings where the SOAH ALJs render final decisions in accordance with §402.073(b) of the Act (relating to Cooperation With State Office of Administrative Hearings).

The provisions of existing §148.22(b) thru (d) have not been included in proposed new §148.15 because of the preemption by SOAH in accordance with §2003.050(b), Government Code and SOAH's adoption of its procedural rules in Chapter 155 of Title 1 (relating to Rules of Procedure) and because Texas Labor Code §401.021(1)(A) specifically excludes Subchapter F of the APA as a subchapter that governs a proceeding or hearing under the Act. Subchapter F of the APA includes §2001.141 that specifies the requirements for findings of fact and conclusions of law, separately stated, among other requirements of a final order. Texas Labor Code §401.021(1)(D) does include §2001.141(c) that provides: "Findings of fact may be based only on the evidence and on matters that are officially noticed."

New subsection (b) includes the compliance provisions in existing §148.22(e) with revisions: (1) to change the term "hearing officer" to "ALJ" consistent with proposed section 148.1 (relating to Definitions); (2) to add language that will notify the recipient of the order in a compliance action of the date the compliance action must be completed, to determine the date of receipt of the order according to §102.5 of this title (relating to General Rules for Written Communications to and from the Commission), and to ensure that any administrative penalty is specified as a certain dollar amount and that the order will specify a period of time for payment of any administrative penalty not to exceed 30 days from the date that the order is received; and (3) to delete the last, existing sentence as unnecessary. Compliance orders must have language necessary to ensure that the recipient of such orders knows exactly what is required and when such action needs to be taken. In addition, if timely action does not occur as ordered, the Commission will be able to take proper enforcement actions.

New subsection (c) specifies the manner of service of SOAH decisions to allow such service to be accomplished by a verifiable means that must be documented in the hearing file. This change recognizes existing and future changes in technology as well as the need for documentation of the service so that TWCC can take any necessary further actions (for example, actions that may be needed to enforce orders) after it receives the hearing file from SOAH. For the same reasons, additional language has been added to ensure that service by personal delivery is documented to contain the date of delivery and the person, any business title, and the person's business address that received the delivery.

New subsection (d) contains the provisions in current §148.22(h), with revisions. This subsection specifies the date when a SOAH decision becomes final. Current provisions are revised: (1) to change the term "hearing officer" to "ALJ" consistent with proposed section 148.1 (relating to Definitions); (2) to specify the date as the date of receipt determined in accordance with §102.5 of this title (relating to General Rules for Written Communications to and from the Commission); and (3) to delete the last, existing sentence as unnecessary. The added provisions should ensure that the date a SOAH decision becomes final is determined consistently.

New subsection (e) contains the provisions of existing §148.22 (i) that the SOAH decision constitutes the exhaustion of administrative remedies with two revisions: (1) the term "hearing officer" is changed to "ALJ" consistent with proposed section 148.1 (relating to Definitions), and (2) a clarification that no motion for rehearing is required pursuant to the APA or otherwise.

New subsection (f) contains the provisions for judicial review under the authority of the Act and the APA.

Proposed new §148.16 contains the provisions of existing §148.23.

Subsection (a) has been revised to replace the reference to §408.023 of the Act with §408.0231 of the Act because the latter is the section that includes a right to a hearing. Additional language has been added to reference other possible cases under §402.073(b) of the Act that require a proposal for decision. The last sentence of existing §148.23(a) has been deleted because the procedures have been preempted by SOAH in accordance with §2003.050(b), Government Code and SOAH's adoption of its procedural rules in Chapter 155 of Title 1 (relating to Rules of Procedure) and specifically §155.59 (relating to Proposal for Decision).

Subsection (b) describes the basis for the proposal for decision, requires it be in writing and contain information cited in proposed new §149.9 of this title (relating to Proposals for Decision in accordance with the Act, §§402.072, 407.046, and 408.0231).

New subsection (c) requires that SOAH furnish the proposal for decision to the TWCC Chief Clerk and that SOAH shall furnish the proposal for decision, by verifiable means, to the parties to the hearing and retain information on the date, address, person or entity served and the means of service to the parties to the hearing. These revisions will allow TWCC to determine the date of service of the proposal for decision so that the due dates for any exceptions by the parties can be determined.

New subsection (d) addresses the filing of briefs and exceptions to the proposal for decision and requires that the parties furnish their briefs and exceptions both to the SOAH ALJ and to the TWCC Chief Clerk so that commission staff may monitor the case and expeditiously make preparations for presentation of the case to the Commissioners.

New subsection (e) contains the provisions of existing §148.23(g) revised to require that the parties furnish their briefs and replies both to the SOAH ALJ and to the TWCC Chief Clerk so that commission staff may monitor the case and expeditiously make preparations for presentation of the case to the Commissioners. In addition, the ten-day time limit would be changed to 15 days in accordance with SOAH's rule at §155.59 of Title 1 (relating to Proposal for Decision).

New subsection (f) contains the provisions of existing §148.23(h) revised to provide that the TWCC commissioners shall consider a case no later than 120 days either from the date the SOAH ALJ provides a proposal for decision or, if any exceptions or replies are filed by the parties, then the date of the ALJ's comments or response to such exceptions or replies. If the ALJ communicates to the commission that no ALJ response will be made to the exceptions or replies of the parties, the date of that ALJ communication to the commission will be the date when the 120 days commences. If the ALJ does not respond after exceptions or replies are filed, the 120-day period commences upon expiration of the 15-day period allowed for the ALJ response in SOAH's rules at §155.59(c)(4) of Title 1 (relating to Proposal for Decision). In addition, notification of the final decision of the Commissions will be made by verifiable means to reflect past and future changes in technology. The last sentence of existing §148.23(h) is not included and is no longer necessary because the applicable provisions are contained in §102.5 of this title (relating to General Rules for Written Communications to and from the Commission).

New subsections (g) and (h) contain the provisions of existing §148.23(i) revised to clarify that no motion for rehearing will be considered. No motion for rehearing will be considered because §401.021(1)(A), Labor Code specifically excludes Subchapter F of the APA as a subchapter that governs a proceeding or hearing under the Act. Subchapter F of the APA includes §§2001.145, 2001.146, and 2001.147 concerning motions for rehearing. Judicial review is in accordance with the Act and the APA §§2001.171, 2001.172, and 2001.174.

Proposed new §148.17 contains the provisions of existing §148.24 revised to : (1) change the term "hearing officer" to "ALJ" consistent with §148.1 of this title (relating to Definitions), (2) correct a reference to proposed §148.15(c) of this title, and (3) to note that the charged party shall file with the TWCC Chief Clerk rather than the commission's executive director.

Proposed new §148.18 contains the provisions of existing §148.25, revised to change the term "hearing officer" to "ALJ" consistent with §148.1 of this title (relating to Definitions).

Proposed new §148.19 contains the provisions of existing §148.26 revised to include videotape, if that method was used in the SOAH hearing.

Proposed new §148.20 revises and clarifies the provisions in existing §148.27.

Subsection (a) specifies the amounts determined under the APA §2001.103 as the maximum amounts of reimbursement for a non-party witness who is subpoenaed or required to participate in a deposition.

Subsection (b) places the responsibility upon the party who is requesting the subpoena, the commission requiring deposition, or otherwise compelling the attendance of a witness, to pay the reasonable and necessary expenses of such witness in accordance with the APA, §2001.103(b).

Subsection (c) specifies that a party's failure to pay required witness expenses shall be deemed a violation of a commission rule.

Subsection (d) contains the documentation and information required by the commission from the party requesting the subpoena or commission requiring deposition, prior to refund of the deposit made under proposed §148.10(b)(3) or §148.11(d)(3). Such documentation and information is needed because: (1) the commission has previously issued the subpoena or commission requiring deposition that commands the witness to appear, (2) the party requesting the subpoena or commission requiring deposition is required to pay the reasonable and necessary costs of the witness, (3) any failure by the party to pay the required witness expenses may result in the witness seeking assistance from the commission for the unpaid but incurred expenses, (4) the commission has not been appropriated funds for payment of such expenses, and (5) the required deposit from the requesting party may be needed to resolve any failure of the party to pay the expenses of a non-party witness.

Proposed new §148.21 contains the provisions in existing §148.28 revised to include the authority in the APA §2001.177 for the commission to require the party requesting judicial review to pay the expenses of preparing a certified copy of the entire record of the case.

Proposed new §148.22 specifies that a person commits an administrative violation by violating a commission rule if that person fails to comply with an order of the ALJ. Persons and parties, either participating in SOAH hearing or required to be witnesses in such hearings, must comply with ALJ orders. If noncompliance occurs, then TWCC may take administrative sanction actions as authorized under the Act.

Proposed new §148.23 specifies that any final order of SOAH is a final order of the commission and may be enforced by the commission under the Act, the APA, or commission rules. In addition, if an interim SOAH order survives the entry of a final order, the sending of a proposal for decision to the commission, or the dismissal or withdrawal of a case, such interim order will be considered an order of the commission and may be enforced by the commission in a manner permitted by the Act, the APA, or the rules of the commission. Examples of such orders are specified as orders to reimburse, orders to pay reasonable and necessary medical costs, orders to pay administrative fines, orders to refund, orders assessing attorney fees, orders assessing costs, and orders imposing discovery sanctions. This new section should provide additional support to ensure compliance with SOAH orders.

Allen McDonald, director of the commission's Medical Review division, has determined that for the first five-year period the proposed sections are in effect there will be fiscal implications for state or local governments as a result of enforcing or administering the new sections. While the dollar amounts of the fiscal implications cannot be determined because of the uncertainty of the number of hearings to be held in the future, costs for the hearings held by the State Office of Administrative Hearings will be reimbursed by the commission as required by law.

Allen McDonald, director of the commission's Medical Review division, has also determined that for each year of the first five years the new sections as proposed are in effect the public benefit anticipated as a result of enforcing the sections will be to provide fair and efficient procedures for the conduct of those commission contested case hearings which will be conducted by State Office of Administrative Hearings administrative law judges.

The anticipated economic costs to persons who are required to comply with the rule as proposed cannot be accurately estimated. There may be economic costs to persons who are required to comply with the sections as proposed due to filings of contested case documents being made at SOAH as well as with the TWCC Chief Clerk. There also may be economic costs to persons who request the commission to issue subpoenas or commissions requiring depositions due to the requirements to make a deposit of costs with the commission and the requirement to pay witness expenses. The amount of any additional costs to persons due to the filing requirements cannot be accurately estimated because the number of filings in a case varies depending on many factors. The amount of any economic costs due to the commission's process and requirements for issuing subpoenas and commissions requiring depositions cannot be accurately estimated because the number of such requests and the costs that may be incurred by the witnesses could vary substantially. In addition, the cost of mailing a filing is generally dependent on the weight of the mailed documents. There may, also, be reduced costs in hearings for many parties in hearings involving issues of medical fees and services because of the procedures allowing for the commission to correct clerical errors in medical dispute decisions. There will be no adverse economic impact on small or micro-businesses. There will be no difference in anticipated costs of compliance for small businesses as compared to large businesses.

Comments on the proposal must be received by 5:00 p.m., April 4, 2005. You may comment via the Internet by accessing the commission's website at www.twcc.state.tx.us and then clicking on "Rules" and then clicking on "Proposed Rules for Comment." This medium for commenting will help you organize your comments by rule chapter. You may also comment by emailing your comments to RuleComments@twcc.state.tx.us or by mailing or delivering your comments to Linda Velasquez, Legal Services, Mailstop #4-D, Texas Workers' Compensation Commission, 7551 Metro Center Drive, Suite 100, Austin, Texas 78744.

Commenters are requested to clearly identify by number the specific rule and paragraph commented upon. The commission may not be able to respond to comments that cannot be linked to a particular proposed rule. Along with your comment, it is suggested that you include the reasoning for the comment in order for commission staff to fully evaluate your recommendations.

Based upon various considerations, including comments received and the staff's or commissioners' review of those comments, or based upon the commissioners' action at the public meeting, the rules as proposed for repeal, may be repealed or may be repealed only in part. Persons in support of the rules repeal, as proposed, in whole or in part, may wish to comment to that effect.

A public hearing on this proposal will be held at the Austin central office of the commission (7551 Metro Center Drive, Suite 100, Austin, Texas) on a date to be announced. Those persons interested in attending the public hearing should contact the Commission's Office of Executive Communication at (512) 804-4430 to confirm the date, time, and location of the public hearing for this proposal. The public hearing schedule will also be available on the commission's website at www.twcc.state.tx.us .

28 TAC §§148.1 - 148.28

(Editor's note: The text of the following sections proposed for repeal will not be published. The sections may be examined in the offices of the Texas Workers' Compensation Commission or in the Texas Register office, Room 245, James Earl Rudder Building, 1019 Brazos Street, Austin.)

The repealed rules are proposed under the Texas Labor Code, §401.021(1), which specifies the provisions of the Administrative Procedure Act that are applicable to the commission; §402.061, which authorizes the commission to adopt rules necessary to administer the Texas Workers' Compensation Act; §402.071, which specifies that the commission shall establish qualifications for "representatives" as defined by §401.011(37), Texas Labor Code; §402.072, which specifies that only the commission may impose certain types of sanctions; §402.073, which authorizes SOAH to conduct certain hearings; §407.046(b) and (c), which authorizes a hearing when the commission proposes to revoke a certificate of authority granted to a certified self-insurer; §407.066, which provides for a hearing after the director of the commission's division of self-insurance regulation resolves a dispute concerning the deposit, renewal, termination, release, or return of all or part of the security, liability arising out of the submission or failure to submit security, or the adequacy of the security or reasonableness of the administrative costs, including legal fees, that arise among: a surety, an insurer of an agreement of assumption and guarantee of workers' compensation liabilities, an issuer of a letter of credit, a custodian of the security deposit, a certified self-insurer, or the Texas Certified Self-Insurer Guaranty Association; §407.133, which authorizes the commission, after a hearing, to suspend or revoke the certificate of authority to self-insure of a certified self-insurer who fails to pay an assessment required under §407.124, Texas Labor Code; §407.023, which authorizes the commission to establish criteria for deleting doctors from the commission's list of approved doctors; §408.0231(e), which provides for a hearing on certain sanctions by the commission against a doctor or insurance carrier; §408.024, which authorizes a hearing if the commission intends to relieve an insurance carrier of liability for health care that is furnished by a health care provider or another person selected in a manner inconsistent with the requirements of Subchapter B, Chapter 408, Texas Labor Code; §411.0415, which provides that the commission may request a hearing if the commission determines that the case history of an employee's fatality indicates that the employer or the work environment was a proximate cause of the fatality, §411.042, which providers for the notification process by the commission to identify an employer as a hazardous employer; §411.049(b), which provides for a hearing for an employer to contest findings of the commission under the Hazardous Employer Program; §413.014, which authorizes the commission to adopt rules that provide that preauthorization and concurrent review are required for specified health care treatments and services; §413.031(k), which provides for a SOAH hearing after the original decision in certain medical disputes; §413.055 that provides a hearing to a party that disputes an interlocutory order of the commission for the payment of all of part of medical benefits; §415.021, which authorizes the commission to assess administrative penalties against a person who commits an administrative violation and to enter a cease and desist order against a person who engages in certain types of conduct; §415.032, which provides the commission's notification process for a possible administrative violation and the request for hearing process by the charged party; §415.034(a), which provides for a hearing to contest administrative violation sanctions by the commission; and Texas Government Code, §2001.003, which provides definitions of terms used in the Administrative Procedure Act; §2001.061, which prohibits certain types of ex parte communications in hearings; §2001.062, which provides the process for a decision by the state agency after SOAH has issued a proposal for decision; §2001.089, which provides for the process for a state agency to issue a subpoena; §2001.090 which provides for official notice of certain evidence and for use of the special skills or knowledge of the state agency and its staff in evaluating evidence; §2001.094, which provides the process for a state agency to issue a commission requiring deposition; §§2001.171, 2001.174, 2001.176, and 2001.177, which provide a process for judicial review after a final administrative decision has been rendered in a contested case hearing and which authorize a state agency, by rule, to require a party who appeals such a decision to pay all or a part of the cost of preparation of the original or a certified copy of the record of the agency proceeding that is required to be sent to the reviewing court; and §2003.050 concerning procedural rules by SOAH.

No other code, statute or article is affected by this rule action.

§148.1.Scope and Applicability.

§148.2.Definitions.

§148.3.Requesting a Hearing.

§148.4.Notice of Hearing.

§148.5.Statement of Matters Asserted.

§148.6.Venue.

§148.7.Appearance and Representation.

§148.8.Withdrawal of Hearing Request.

§148.9.Informal Disposition.

§148.10.Filing Instruments; Furnishing Copies.

§148.11.APA Prehearing Conference.

§148.12.Request for Alternative Dispute Resolution.

§148.13.Discovery and Production of Documents and Tangible Things for Inspection, Copying or Photographing.

§148.14.Subpoenas; Depositions.

§148.15.Ex Parte Communications.

§148.16.Conduct and Decorum.

§148.17.Hearing Officer's Authority.

§148.18.Parties' Rights in Hearings.

§148.19.Failure To Appear.

§148.20.Recording the Hearing.

§148.21.Evidence.

§148.22.Decision of the Hearing Officer.

§148.23.Proposal for Decision by the Hearing Officer.

§148.24.Special Provisions for Administrative Penalties.

§148.25.Record of the Hearing.

§148.26.Transcript or Duplicate of the Hearing Audiotape.

§148.27.Reimbursement, Travel Expenses, and Fees for Witnesses and Deponents.

§148.28.Expenses To Be Paid by Party Seeking Judicial Review.

This agency hereby certifies that the proposal has been reviewed by legal counsel and found to be within the agency's legal authority to adopt.

Filed with the Office of the Secretary of State on February 18, 2005.

TRD-200500773

Susan Cory

General Counsel

Texas Workers' Compensation Commission

Earliest possible date of adoption: April 3, 2005

For further information, please call: (512) 804-4287


28 TAC §§148.1 - 148.23

The new rules are proposed under the Texas Labor Code, §401.021(1), which specifies the provisions of the Administrative Procedure Act that are applicable to the commission; §402.061, which authorizes the commission to adopt rules necessary to administer the Texas Workers' Compensation Act; §402.071, which specifies that the commission shall establish qualifications for "representatives" as defined by §401.011(37), Texas Labor Code; §402.072, which specifies that only the commission may impose certain types of sanctions; §402.073, which authorizes SOAH to conduct certain hearings; §407.046(b) and (c), which authorizes a hearing when the commission proposes to revoke a certificate of authority granted to a certified self-insurer; §407.066, which provides for a hearing after the director of the commission's division of self-insurance regulation resolves a dispute concerning the deposit, renewal, termination, release, or return of all or part of the security, liability arising out of the submission or failure to submit security, or the adequacy of the security or reasonableness of the administrative costs, including legal fees, that arise among: a surety, an insurer of an agreement of assumption and guarantee of workers' compensation liabilities, an issuer of a letter of credit, a custodian of the security deposit, a certified self-insurer, or the Texas Certified Self-Insurer Guaranty Association; §407.133, which authorizes the commission, after a hearing, to suspend or revoke the certificate of authority to self-insure of a certified self-insurer who fails to pay an assessment required under §407.124, Texas Labor Code; §407.023, which authorizes the commission to establish criteria for deleting doctors from the commission's list of approved doctors; §408.0231(e), which provides for a hearing on certain sanctions by the commission against a doctor or insurance carrier; §408.024, which authorizes a hearing if the commission intends to relieve an insurance carrier of liability for health care that is furnished by a health care provider or another person selected in a manner inconsistent with the requirements of Subchapter B, Chapter 408, Texas Labor Code; §411.0415, which provides that the commission may request a hearing if the commission determines that the case history of an employee's fatality indicates that the employer or the work environment was a proximate cause of the fatality, §411.042, which providers for the notification process by the commission to identify an employer as a hazardous employer; §411.049(b), which provides for a hearing for an employer to contest findings of the commission under the Hazardous Employer Program; §413.014, which authorizes the commission to adopt rules that provide that preauthorization and concurrent review are required for specified health care treatments and services; §413.031(k), which provides for a SOAH hearing after the original decision in certain medical disputes; §413.055 that provides a hearing to a party that disputes an interlocutory order of the commission for the payment of all of part of medical benefits; §415.021, which authorizes the commission to assess administrative penalties against a person who commits an administrative violation and to enter a cease and desist order against a person who engages in certain types of conduct; §415.032, which provides the commission's notification process for a possible administrative violation and the request for hearing process by the charged party; §415.034(a), which provides for a hearing to contest administrative violation sanctions by the commission; and Texas Government Code, §2001.003, which provides definitions of terms used in the Administrative Procedure Act; §2001.061, which prohibits certain types of ex parte communications in hearings; §2001.062, which provides the process for a decision by the state agency after SOAH has issued a proposal for decision; §2001.089, which provides for the process for a state agency to issue a subpoena; §2001.090 which provides for official notice of certain evidence and for use of the special skills or knowledge of the state agency and its staff in evaluating evidence; §2001.094, which provides the process for a state agency to issue a commission requiring deposition; §§2001.171, 2001.174, 2001.176, and 2001.177, which provide a process for judicial review after a final administrative decision has been rendered in a contested case hearing and which authorize a state agency, by rule, to require a party who appeals such a decision to pay all or a part of the cost of preparation of the original or a certified copy of the record of the agency proceeding that is required to be sent to the reviewing court; and §2003.050 concerning procedural rules by SOAH.

No other code, statute or article is affected by this rule action.

§148.1.Definitions.

The following words and terms, when used in this chapter, shall have the following meanings, unless the context clearly indicates otherwise:

(1) Act --The Texas Workers' Compensation Act, Texas Labor Code, §§401.001 et. seq.

(2) Administrative Law Judge or ALJ --The administrative law judge (ALJ) designated by the State Office of Administrative Hearings (SOAH) to preside over the hearing.

(3) APA --The Administrative Procedure Act, as specified in the Government Code, Chapter 2001.

(4) Commission --The Texas Workers' Compensation Commission.

(5) Commission Representative --The attorney or representative that may be designated by the executive director of the commission to represent the commission.

(6) Contested Case --A proceeding held by the State Office of Administrative Hearings in which the legal rights, duties, or privileges of a party are to be determined by an agency after an opportunity for adjudicative hearing as defined in the Texas Government Code, §2001.003, subject, however, to the provisions of the Act as codified in the Texas Labor Code, Title 5, Subtitle A, including §§401.021(1), 411.049, 413.031, 413.055, 415.034, 402.073, 407.046, and 408.0231, 408.023, 408.024 and the rules adopted by the commission, in particular this chapter.

(7) IRO --An Independent Review Organization, established in accordance with Insurance Code article 21.58C, performing reviews of health care under the Act.

(8) Party --A person or state agency named or admitted as a party.

(9) Person --An individual, partnership, corporation, association, governmental subdivision, or public or private organization that is not a state agency as defined in the APA.

(10) Petitioner --The person who has filed a written request for a hearing in accordance with these procedures.

(11) Respondent --The person responding to the petitioner's request for a hearing.

(12) SOAH --The State Office of Administrative Hearings.

(13) TWCC Chief Clerk --The Chief Clerk of Proceedings within the Hearings Division in the central office of the commission.

§148.2.Scope and Applicability.

(a) Scope of these rules . Except for benefit disputes, governed by chapters 140, 142, and 143 of this title (relating to Dispute Resolution-General Provisions; Dispute Resolution-Benefit Contested Case Hearing; and Dispute Resolution-Review by the Appeals Panel), these rules govern all contested case hearings to adjudicate disputes before the SOAH arising under the Act.

(b) Coordination with SOAH's Procedural Rules . The procedural rules of the commission govern the following procedural matters and also provide related policies of the commission:

(1) matters arising before a case is transferred by the commission to SOAH;

(2) matters arising after a proposal for decision or after the entire case is received from SOAH;

(3) requests for the issuance of a subpoena and related matters; and

(4) requests for issuance of a commission requiring deposition and related matters.

(c) Applicability of the Administrative Procedure Act . The sections of the APA enumerated in the Texas Labor Code, §401.021(1), apply to the hearings governed by this chapter. In hearings involving those sanctions defined by the Act, §§402.072, 407.046, 408.0231, and in other cases not subject to §402.073(b), the commissioners render the final decision and the provisions of the APA, §2001.062 will be followed.

§148.3.Requesting a Hearing.

(a) When requests are due . The person requesting a hearing shall file a written request addressed to the TWCC Chief Clerk, in accordance with the instructions provided in the TWCC notice letter regarding submission of an appeal, not later than 20 days after:

(1) receipt of a findings and decision from the medical review division on a review of a medical service or a medical fee under the Act, §413.031(a), (b), (c), and (k), or;

(2) receipt of an IRO decision under the Act, §413.031, except with respect to a prospective necessity dispute regarding spinal surgery in which case the request shall be filed in accordance with §133.308 of this title (relating to Medical Dispute Resolution by Independent Review Organization), or;

(3) receipt of a commission refund order issued pursuant to a commission audit or review;

(4) receipt of an interlocutory order for payment under the Act, §413.055, or;

(5) receipt of a notice of administrative violation under the Act, §415.032; or

(6) receipt of a notice of identification as a hazardous employer under the Act, §411.042; or

(7) receipt of a notice of sanction under the Act, §408.0231; or

(8) receipt of a notice of the intent of the commission to determine the legal rights, duties, or privileges of a party within the scope of §148.2 of this title (relating to Scope and Applicability).

(b) Date deemed filed or received . When a request for a hearing is addressed to the TWCC Chief Clerk but is sent to an office other than the TWCC Chief Clerk, the date filed or received shall be the date the request is received in the central office. When a request for a hearing is not addressed to the TWCC Chief Clerk, it will not be considered as received by the Commission unless it is actually received by the TWCC Chief Clerk. Otherwise, a request for a hearing is deemed filed as of the date of the TWCC date stamp placed on the document or other evidence of receipt.

(c) Requests under §413.031 of the Act . If the request for a hearing is based on a receipt of a findings and decision from the medical review division on a review of a medical service or a medical fee under the Act, §413.031, or receipt of an IRO decision under the Act, §413.031, (except with respect to a prospective necessity dispute regarding spinal surgery in which case the request shall be filed in accordance with §133.308 of this title (relating to Medical Dispute Resolution by Independent Review Organization and except with respect to disputes handled in accordance with §133.309 of this title (relating to Alternate Medical Necessity Dispute Resolution by Case Review Doctor)), to be deemed a request for hearing the request shall:

(1) contain a statement indicating that it is a request for a hearing;

(2) include a copy of the findings and decision on which a hearing is being requested; and

(3) be signed by a requestor or respondent as defined by §133.305 of this title (relating to Medical Dispute Resolution - General), or its representative.

(4) include a certificate of service demonstrating that the request has been sent to the other party in accordance with the requirements of §133.307 of this title (relating to Medical Dispute Resolution of a Medical Fee Dispute), or §133.308 of this title (relating to Medical Dispute Resolution by Independent Review Organization) in substance as follows: "I hereby certify that I have on this ____________ day of ____________, 20__, served a copy of the attached instrument on (state the name of the other parties on whom a copy was served) by (state the manner of service.)"

(d) Late filings . A written request for hearing filed with the TWCC Chief Clerk later than 20 days after receipt of a notice of a matter set forth in subsection (a) of this section shall be dismissed.

(e) Request for correction of clerical error . If the request for hearing is a request to correct a clerical error, the executive director, or the director's designee, may at any time prior to delivery of the request for a hearing to SOAH, revise the order or decision to correct the clerical error.

(1) When a party requests a correction of clerical error and intends that request to constitute a request for hearing pursuant to this section, the request shall:

(A) meet all of the requirements of subsection (c) (1) - (4) of this section;

(B) include markings on a copy of the findings and decision indicating the alleged error; and

(C) state the requested correction, and the reasons for making it.

(2) A party affected by the proposed correction to the order or decision may file a response to the request with the TWCC Chief Clerk no later than 10 days after receipt of a party's request for correction of clerical error.

(3) After notice and opportunity to respond under paragraph (2) of this subsection, the commission shall either:

(A) issue and deliver to the parties a corrected order or decision; or

(B) deliver the request for hearing to SOAH.

(f) Correction of clerical error discovered by commission . Upon receipt of a request for hearing, the executive director, or the director's designee, may at any time prior to delivery of the request for a hearing to SOAH, advise the parties in writing by verifiable means of the commission's intent to revise the order or decision to correct the clerical error.

(1) Any party affected by the proposed correction to the order or decision may file a response to the notice with the TWCC Chief Clerk no later than 10 days after receipt of the notice of the commission's intent to revise the order or decision.

(2) Following notice of the commission's intent to revise the order or decision, and after notice and opportunity to respond under paragraph (1) of this subsection, the commission shall either:

(A) issue and send to the parties a corrected order or decision; or

(B) send the request for hearing to SOAH.

(g) Delivery of request . The commission shall send the request for a hearing to SOAH within twenty working days of receipt, if the decision has not been withdrawn under the provisions contained in §148.8 of this title (relating to Withdrawal of Hearing Request), unless the parties have been notified of the commission's intent to revise the order or decision pursuant to subsections (e) or (f) of this section.

(h) Notice of alleged violation . If the notice is a notice of alleged violation, the person charged must file an answer not later than the 20th day after the date of receipt of the notice. The answer must either consent to the proposed sanction, and remit the amount of the penalty, if any, or request a hearing.

(i) Commission request for hearing . Notwithstanding the provisions of subsection (a) of this section, the commission may request a hearing as permitted by the Act and the implementing rules to the Act, including, but not limited to the Act, §407.046(b) and §411.0415(c).

§148.4.Correction of Clerical Error in Medical Review Division Decisions or Orders Absent a Request For Hearing.

(a) Correction of clerical error at request of party . Notwithstanding the provisions of §148.3 of this title (relating to Requesting a Hearing), the executive director or the director's designee may at any time revise an order or decision of the medical review division to correct clerical error:

(1) at the request of a party or parties affected by the order or decision; or

(2) on the executive director or the director's designee's decision.

(b) Contents of request . When a party requests correction of clerical error, the request must:

(1) include a copy of the order or decision marked to indicate the alleged error;

(2) state the requested correction, and the reasons for making it;

(3) be filed with the medical review division; and

(4) include a certificate of service demonstrating that the request has been sent to all other parties affected by the order or decision in substance as follows: "I hereby certify that I have on this ____________ day of ____________, 20__ served a copy of the attached instrument on (state the name of the other parties on whom a copy was served) by (state the manner of service.)"

(c) Time to file response . A party affected by the proposed correction to the order or decision may file a response to the request no later than 10 days after receipt of the request.

(d) Notice of action . No later than 30 days after the request was filed under subsection (b) of this section, the medical review division shall either:

(1) issue and deliver to the parties a corrected order or decision;

(2) advise the parties in writing that the order or decision was correct as originally entered; or

(3) advise the parties in writing that the order or decision cannot be corrected pursuant to this section.

(e) Correction of clerical error on the motion of the executive director or the executive director's designee . When a clerical error is corrected on the decision of the executive director or the executive director's designee, a copy of the corrected order or decision will be delivered to all affected parties. A clerical error may be corrected on the decision of the executive director or the executive director's designee without prior notice to the parties.

(f) Notice of intent to revise decision or order at discretion of executive director or director's designee . Notwithstanding the provisions of subsection (e) of this section, when the executive director or the director's designee intends to correct a clerical error, at the discretion of the executive director or the director's designee, a notice may be sent advising the parties in writing by verifiable means of the intent to revise the order or decision to correct the clerical error.

(1) Any party affected by the order or decision may file a response to the notice with the medical review division no later than 10 days after receipt of the notice of the commission's intent to revise the order or decision.

(2) No later than 30 days after notice of the commission's intent to revise the order or decision, and after notice and opportunity to respond under paragraph (1) of this subsection, the commission shall either:

(A) issue and deliver to the parties a corrected order or decision;

(B) advise the parties in writing that the order or decision was correct as originally entered; or

(C) advise the parties in writing that the order or decision cannot be corrected pursuant to this section.

(g) Request for correction of clerical error versus request for hearing . A request to correct clerical error shall not be deemed a request for hearing unless it complies with the requirements specified in §148.3(e) of this title (relating to Requesting a Hearing).

§148.5.Notice of Hearing.

(a) Notice of hearing . Except as provided in subsection (b) of this section, and upon receipt of the docket number, location and setting date from SOAH, and no later than ten days before the hearings date, the TWCC Chief Clerk shall notify the parties in writing, by a verifiable means, of the date, time, place and nature of the hearing; the docket number; the legal authority and jurisdiction under which the hearing will be held; a reference to the particular sections of the statutes and any rules involved; a notice regarding failure to appear and default judgments, and a short, plain statement of the matters asserted. The reference to the statutes and any rules involved, nature of the hearing, and the short, plain statement may be provided by the commission's representative, and, if so, would not be provided by the TWCC Chief Clerk.

(b) Notice of hearing under the Act, §407.046(b) . No later than 30 days before the hearing date, SOAH shall notify, in writing, a certified self-insurer and the TWCC Chief Clerk of the date, time, place, and nature of a hearing concerning the intent of the commission to revoke a certificate of self-insurance under the Act, §407.046. The notice shall contain a reference to the particular sections of the statute and any rules involved; and a short, plain statement of the matters asserted, including the grounds for the proposed revocation action. The reference to the statutes and rules involved, nature of the hearing, and the short, plain statement may be provided by the commission's representative, and, if so, would not be provided by the TWCC Chief Clerk.

§148.6.Venue.

Hearings are held in Austin, Travis County, Texas.

§148.7.Representation.

(a) Representation of injured employees or insurance carriers . Pursuant to §402.071 of the Act (relating to Representatives) and §150.03 of this title (relating to Representatives: Written Authorization Required), a person representing an injured employee or insurance carrier in a contested case hearing shall not receive a fee for providing representation under this subtitle unless the person is an adjuster representing an insurance carrier or licensed to practice law.

(b) Fee defined . For the purposes of this section, "fee" means any remuneration received directly or indirectly, in cash or in kind. It includes voluntary contributions. The provision of representation before SOAH as an extension of, or in addition to, other services for which a fee was paid shall be considered receipt of a fee for providing representation as specified in sections 401.011(37) and 402.071 of the Act and section 150.03 of this title (relating to Representatives: Written Authorization Required).

(c) Representation by employee . The prohibitions in subsections (a) and (b) of this section do not preclude representation by a person who receives a salary as an employee of the person represented to perform services in the usual course and scope of the employer's business.

(1) For the purposes of this subsection, "employee" means a person in the service of another under a contract of hire, whether express or implied, or oral or written.

(2) The term "employee" does not include:

(A) an independent contractor or the employee of an independent contractor; or

(B) a person whose employment is not in the usual course and scope of the employer's business.

(d) Ombudsman Program . This section does not apply to persons performing duties pursuant to the Act, Chapter 409, Subchapter C.

(e) Administrative violation . A person commits an administrative violation if that person receives a fee for providing representation under circumstances prohibited by this section. A violation of this section shall be deemed a violation of a commission rule.

§148.8.Withdrawal of Hearing Request.

(a) The petitioner may, at any time before the decision and order is signed, submit a written request to withdraw the request for a hearing. If the written request is made before the case is received by SOAH or after a proposal for decision is received from SOAH, the request should be sent to the TWCC Chief Clerk. Otherwise, the request should be submitted to SOAH in accordance with its procedure rules in Title 1 Chapter 155 (relating to Rules Of Procedures).

(b) Notwithstanding the provisions of subsection (a) of this section, a findings and decision of the commission's medical review division in a review of a medical service or medical fee under the Act, §413.031, or receipt of an IRO decision from the medical review division on a review of a medical service or a medical fee under the Act, §413.031, except with respect to a prospective necessity dispute regarding spinal surgery in which case the request shall be filed in accordance with §133.308 of this title (relating to Medical Dispute Resolution by Independent Review Organization), may be withdrawn by the commission within fifteen working days after the commission receives the request for hearing before SOAH.

§148.9.Informal Disposition.

At any time prior to the signing of the decision by the ALJ or the commission, informal disposition of any case may be made by a written stipulation, an agreed settlement or consent order, or default.

§148.10.Hearings Subpoenas to Compel Attendance and Subpoenas Duces Tecum.

(a) Issuance of subpoena . A request for issuance of a subpoena shall be directed to the TWCC Chief Clerk in the commission's central office. On the written request of any party in compliance with the requirements set forth below, and a showing of good cause, the commission shall issue a subpoena addressed to the sheriff or any constable to require the attendance of a witness and production of books, records, paper or other objects that may be necessary and proper for the purpose of the proceedings. The determination of good cause under this section shall include consideration of whether the issuance of the subpoena would cause undue burden or expense to the person served.

(b) Request for subpoena . A request for issuance of a subpoena shall be in writing addressed to the TWCC Chief Clerk, contain a showing of good cause, and shall comply with the following:

(1) The request shall include the subpoena sought to be issued prepared for the signature of the TWCC Chief Clerk.

(2) The subpoena shall be addressed to a sheriff or constable for service in accordance with the APA, §2001.089. The request shall contain the name and address of the applicable sheriff or constable.

(3) The request shall include a good faith, itemized estimate of the amount likely to accrue under §148.20 of this title (relating to Reimbursement, Travel Expenses, and Fees for Witnesses and Deponents) and include a deposit of the same amount as required by Texas Government Code §2001.089(2) (relating to Issuance of Subpoena). The deposit shall be a certified check, money order, or other negotiable instrument satisfactory to the commission.

(4) If the subpoena is for the attendance of a witness, the written request and accompanying subpoena shall contain the name, address, and title, if any, of the witness, the date, time and place where the person is to appear and give testimony, the docket number of the SOAH proceeding, and a statement showing date of execution and return of the subpoena to the TWCC Chief Clerk.

(5) If the subpoena is for the production of books, records, writings, or other tangible items, the written request and accompanying subpoena sought shall contain a specific, detailed description of the items sought to be produced, the date, time, and place where the person is to appear and give testimony and produce the requested items, the docket number of the proceeding, and a statement showing date of execution and return of the subpoena duces tecum to the TWCC Chief Clerk.

(6) A description of the reasonable steps to avoid imposing undue burden or expense on the person served.

(c) Failure to comply with subpoena . If a person fails to comply with a subpoena, the commission, acting through the attorney general, or the party requesting the subpoena, may bring suit to enforce the subpoena in a district court in Travis County. This remedy is not exclusive. The commission may enforce the subpoena in any manner permitted by the Act, the APA, or the rules of the commission.

§148.11.Commissions to Compel Attendance for Deposition.

(a) Issuance of commissions . A request for issuance of a commission requiring deposition shall be directed to the TWCC Chief Clerk in the commission's central office. On the written request of any party in compliance with the requirements set forth below the commission shall issue a commission addressed to the several officers authorized by statute to take depositions in accordance with the APA, §2001.094. On the written request of any party in compliance with the requirements set forth below the TWCC Chief Clerk shall issue a commission to require that the witness appear and produce, at the time the deposition is taken, books, records, papers, or other objects that may be necessary and proper for the purpose of the proceeding.

(b) Commission not required for party . The issuance of a commission requiring deposition is not required if the witness is a party or is retained by, employed by, or otherwise subject to the control of a party. Service of the notice of oral deposition upon the party or the party's representative shall be sufficient.

(c) Deposition of a member of an agency, board or commission . The deposition of a member of an agency, board or commission shall not be taken after a hearing date has been set.

(d) Requests for commissions requiring deposition . A request for a commission requiring deposition shall be in writing addressed to the TWCC Chief Clerk and shall comply with the following:

(1) The request shall include the commission requiring deposition sought to be issued prepared for the signature of the TWCC Chief Clerk.

(2) The commission requiring deposition shall be addressed to an officer authorized by statute to take a deposition in accordance with the APA, §2001.094. The request shall contain the name and address of the applicable officer authorized to take the deposition, the date, time and place where either the witness is to appear and give testimony or where the written deposition responses are to be sent, a detailed description of any items the witness will be required to produce, and a statement showing date of execution and return of the commission requiring deposition to the TWCC Chief Clerk.

(3) The request shall include a good faith itemized estimate of the amount likely to accrue under §148.20 of this title (relating to Reimbursement, Travel Expenses, and Fees for Witnesses and Deponents) and include a deposit of the same amount as required by Texas Government Code §2001.094(a) (related to Issuance of Commission Requiring Deposition). The deposit shall be certified check, money order, or other negotiable instrument satisfactory to the commission.

(4) The party seeking the commission requiring deposition should coordinate with the other party or parties and with the witness to determine a mutually agreeable location and time for the attendance of the witness. The request for commission requiring deposition shall state whether such coordination has been made and whether the proposed location and time is by mutual agreement with the parties and witness.

(5) The party seeking the commission requiring deposition which includes a requirement for production should coordinate with the other party or parties, and with the person from whom production is sought, to determine a mutually agreeable location and time for the requested production. The request for the commission requiring deposition shall state whether such coordination has been made and whether the proposed location and time is by mutual agreement with the parties and the person from whom production is sought.

(e) Application of the APA . Matters related to deposition conduct, use, opening, and any other matters relating to depositions not covered by these rules shall be in accordance with the requirements of the APA, Chapter 2001.

(f) Failure to comply with commission requiring deposition . If a person fails to comply with a commission requiring deposition, the commission, acting through the attorney general, or the party requesting the subpoena or commission, may bring suit to enforce the subpoena or commission in a district court in Travis County. This remedy is not exclusive. The commission may enforce the subpoena or commission requiring deposition in any manner permitted by the Act, the APA, or the rules of the commission.

§148.12.Ex Parte Communications.

The APA, §2001.061 applies to commissioners and employees of the commission and to the hearings officers of SOAH. It provides that:

(1) unless required for the disposition of ex parte matters authorized by law, members or employees of an agency assigned to render a decision or to make findings of fact and conclusions of law in a contested case may not communicate, directly or indirectly, in connection with any issue of fact or law with any agency, person, party, or their representatives, except on notice and opportunity for all parties to participate; and

(2) under the APA, §2001.090, a member of an agency or employees of an agency assigned to render a decision or to make findings of fact and conclusions of law in a contested case, including SOAH, may communicate ex parte with employees of the commission, who have not participated in any hearing in the case for the purpose of utilizing the special skills or knowledge of the commission and its staff in evaluating the evidence.

§148.13.Recording the Hearing.

(a) Arrangement for court reporter and costs . In cases in which a court reporter is required, on the commission's own initiative or at the request of a party or when required by SOAH rules or the ALJ of a case, the commission will arrange for a court reporter. The Petitioner is responsible for all associated costs including the costs of the court reporter at the hearing and the costs associated with preparation of a verbatim record if one is required. In cases in which more than one party is seeking affirmative relief, the costs will be assessed equally. Nothing in this section precludes the parties from entering into their own agreement regarding arrangements for a court reporter or allocation of associated costs.

(b) Recording by a party . A party electing to use a means of making a record that is in addition to the means specified in SOAH's rules or by the ALJ is responsible for all associated costs. If a verbatim record is made, the party shall provide the commission and SOAH with a copy of the audiotape or videotape free of charge. If a transcript is made, the party shall provide the commission with the original of the transcript free of charge.

§148.14.Burden of Proof.

(a) Burden of proof . The Commission has the burden of proof in hearings pursuant to the Act §§402.072, 408.0231, 411.0415, 411.049, 415.021, 415.023, 415.032 and 415.034, (except issues under §§120.2(g) and (h) of this title (relating to Employer's First Report of Injury). The burden of proof rests with the party seeking relief in hearings conducted pursuant to the Act, §§408.024, 413.031, and 413.055. The burden of proof rests with the certified self-insurer in hearings conducted pursuant to the Act, §407.046 and §407.133. The burden of proof rests with the party(ies) requesting the hearing challenging the position of the staff of the Self-Insurance Division in hearings conducted pursuant to the Act, §407.066. The burden of proof of showing timely filing or good cause when an allegation of untimely filing has been made rests with the employer in issues under §120.2 of this title (relating to Employer's First Report of Injury).

(b) Proof . Proof required to prevail at a contested case hearing shall be by a preponderance of the evidence, except in cases of appeals pursuant to §133.308 of this title (relating to Medical Dispute Resolution by Independent Review Organization) in which case the decision of the IRO shall be given presumptive weight.

§148.15.Final Decision by the ALJ.

(a) Decision . In contested cases held under the Act, §§411.049, 413.031, 413.055, and 415.034, and after all evidence has been heard, the ALJ shall adjourn the hearing.

(b) Entry of orders . The ALJ shall enter orders that are necessary to implement the decision and when the order requires any action or compliance, it shall contain a period of time, normally not to exceed 30 days from the date the order is received, for such action or compliance to be completed. Receipt of an order will be determined by §102.5 of this title (relating to General Rules for Written Communication to and from the Commission). If it is determined an administrative penalty violation has occurred, the decision shall set forth the amount of the penalty assessed and shall order payment within a period of time not to exceed 30 days from the date that the order is received. Any penalty assessed by the ALJ for an administrative violation shall be in accordance with the Act, §415.021(c).

(c) Furnishing decision . The decision shall be sent immediately to the parties or their representatives by verifiable means that shall be documented in the hearing file. If the decision is furnished by personal delivery, a receipt verifying personal delivery and containing the date of delivery and the person, any business title, and person's business address that received the delivery shall be made by the person who makes the personal delivery, and shall be date-stamped and placed in the hearing file.

(d) Finality of decision . The ALJ's decision is final on the date it is received as determined by §102.5 of this title (relating to General Rules for Written Communications to and from the Commission).

(e) Exhaustion of administrative remedies . The notification to a party of the ALJ's final decision constitutes exhaustion of all administrative remedies. No motion for rehearing pursuant to the APA or otherwise will be entertained.

(f) Judicial Review . A party dissatisfied with a decision of the ALJ may seek judicial review as provided by the Act and in accordance with the APA, §§2001.171, 2001.172, 2001.174, and 2001.176.

§148.16.Proposal for Decision by the ALJ.

(a) Proposal For Decision . In contested cases held under the Act, §§402.072, 407.046, and 408.0231, and in other cases not subject to §402.073(b) of the Act (relating to Cooperation with SOAH), and after all evidence has been heard, the ALJ shall adjourn the hearing.

(b) Description of Proposal Decision . The proposal for decision shall be based solely upon the record of the individual case. It shall be in writing and include information specified in §149.9 of this title (relating to Proposals for Decision in accordance with the Act, §§402.072, 407.046, and 408.0231).

(c) Furnishing decision . SOAH shall furnish the proposal for decision to the TWCC Chief Clerk and shall furnish the proposal for decision by verifiable means and retain information on the date, address, person or entity served, and the means of service to the parties to the hearing. The TWCC Chief Clerk shall notify the Chief of Staff and the General Counsel of the receipt of a proposal for decision from SOAH.

(d) Filing of briefs and exceptions . Any party may file briefs and exceptions to the proposal for decision, with SOAH and the TWCC Chief Clerk, for consideration by the ALJ and the commission no later than 15 days after receiving the proposal for decision. Any brief and exceptions filed by any party shall be served by that party on all other parties in the manner provided by §§155.23 (relating to Filing Documents or Serving Documents on the Judge) and 155.25 (relating to Serving a Document to Parties) except that an additional copy shall be served upon the TWCC Chief Clerk in accordance with §102.5 of this title (relating to General Rules for Written Communications to and from the Commission).

(e) Filing replies . Any party may file a reply to a brief and exceptions filed under subsection (f) of this section, with SOAH and the TWCC Chief Clerk, for consideration by the ALJ and the commission no later than ten days after the filing of the brief and exceptions. Any reply filed by any party shall be served by that party on all other parties in the manner provided by §§155.23 (relating to Filing Documents or Serving Documents on the Judge) and 155.25 (relating to Serving a Document to Parties) except that an additional copy shall be served upon the TWCC Chief Clerk in accordance with §102.5 of this title (relating to General Rules for Written Communications to and from the Commission).

(f) Decision by the commission . The commission shall consider the case at a posted meeting of the commission, no later than 120 days after SOAH provides the commission with the proposal for decision, or the date of the ALJ's comments or response to any exceptions or briefs and any replies to such exceptions or briefs or the expiration of the ALJ's deadline for such response in accordance with §155.59 of this title (relating to Proposal for Decision). Parties to a contested case will be notified of the final decision of the commissioners by verifiable means.

(g) Exhaustion of administrative remedies . The notification to a party of the commission's final decision constitutes exhaustion of all administrative remedies. No motion for rehearing will be considered.

(h) Judicial Review . A party dissatisfied with a decision of the commission may seek judicial review as provided in the Act in accordance with the APA. Judicial review will be in accordance with the Act and the APA §§2001.171, 2001.172, and 2001.174.

§148.17.Special Provisions for Administrative Penalties.

Required response to assessment of administrative penalty . Not later than the 30th day after a party receives notification of the ALJ's decision assessing an administrative penalty, under §148.15(c) of this title (relating to Final Decisions of the ALJ), the charged party shall file with the TWCC Chief Clerk:

(1) the full amount of the penalty, in the form of a cashier's check, a certified check, or a certified draft; or

(2) a bond for the full amount of the penalty. The bond must be:

(A) executed by a licensed surety company authorized to do business in Texas;

(B) approved by the commission;

(C) made payable to the Texas Workers' Compensation Commission; and

(D) must be effective until all judicial review is final.

§148.18.Record of the Hearing.

The record of the hearing includes:

(1) all pleadings, motions, and intermediate rulings;

(2) evidence received or considered;

(3) a statement of matters officially noticed;

(4) questions and offers of proof, objections, and rulings on them;

(5) proposed findings and exceptions;

(6) any decision, opinion, report or proposal for decision by the officer presiding at the hearing and any decision by the commission; and

(7) all staff memoranda or data submitted to or considered by the ALJ or members of the agency who are involved in making the decision.

§148.19.Transcript or Duplicate of the Hearing Audiotape or Videotape.

(a) A party may submit a request to the commission for a transcript of the hearing audiotape or videotape. The requestor shall pay the cost of the transcript, as established by the commission.

(b) A party may submit a request to the commission for a duplicate of the hearing audiotape or videotape. The requestor shall pay the cost of the duplication, as established by the commission.

§148.20.Reimbursement, Travel Expenses, and Fees for Witnesses and Deponents.

(a) Reimbursement of witness or deponent . A witness or deponent who is not a party and who is served with a subpoena or otherwise compelled to attend any hearing or proceeding to give a deposition or to produce books, records, papers, or other objects that are necessary for the proceeding is entitled to receive reimbursement for travel, meals, lodging, and other amounts as specified and limited in the APA, §2001.103 (relating to Expenses of Witness or Deponent):

(b) Reasonable and necessary expenses and service . The party requesting the subpoena or commission or otherwise compelling the attendance of a witness at any hearing or proceeding to give a deposition or produce books, records, papers, or other objects shall be responsible for the payment, of any expense, incurred in serving the subpoena, as well as reasonable and necessary expenses incurred by a nonparty witness who appears in response to the subpoena.

(c) Failure to pay expenses . The party requesting the subpoena or commission or otherwise compelling the attendance of a witness at any hearing or proceeding to give a deposition or produce books, records, papers, or other objects shall pay the witness the amount accrued under this section. Failure to pay the witness the amount accrued when sought shall be deemed a violation of a commission rule.

(d) Return of deposit . After the Commission's Chief Clerk has received, from the party requesting the subpoena or commission to take deposition, sufficient documentation of all requests by the witness for payment of witness expenses and sufficient proof of payment of all amounts due to the non-party witness or deponent, the commission will return the amount of any deposit required under §§148.10(b)(3) and 148.11(d)(3) of this title (relating respectively to Hearings Subpoenas To Compel Attendance and Subpoenas Duces Tecum and Commissions To Compel Attendance For Depositions).

§148.21.Expenses To Be Paid By Party Seeking Judicial Review.

(a) Upon receiving a copy of a petition filed in district court which seeks judicial review of a final decision in a contested case decided under this chapter, the commission shall prepare a certified copy of the entire record of the proceeding under review, including a transcript of the hearing audiotape, and transmit it to the reviewing court.

(b) The commission shall assess to the party seeking judicial review, expenses incurred by the commission in preparing this copy, including transcription costs, in accordance with the APA §2001.177 (relating to Costs of Preparing Agency Record). Upon request, the commission shall consider the financial ability of the party to pay the costs or any other factor that is relevant to a just and reasonable assessment of costs. If the party seeking judicial review is an injured employee, the commission shall not charge for duplicating the record.

§148.22.Failure to Appear or Comply with Order or Decision, Administrative Violation.

A person commits an administrative violation if that person in the status of a party, or otherwise within the jurisdiction of SOAH (for example, a witness), in a contested case hearing or proceeding before SOAH, fails to comply with an order of the ALJ to include any final decisions issued. Failure to comply with such order or decision shall be deemed a violation of a commission rule.

§148.23.Commission Enforcement of Orders.

Any final order of SOAH is a final order of the commission and may be enforced by the commission in any manner permitted by the Act, the APA, or the rules of the commission. After conclusion of the administrative process, any SOAH order which survives the entry of a final order, the sending of a proposal for decision to the commission, or the dismissal or withdrawal of the case from the SOAH docket, regardless of upon whose motion the dismissal or withdrawal was granted, is an order of the commission and may be enforced by the commission in any manner permitted by the Act, the APA, or the rules of the commission. Examples of enforceable orders include, but are not limited to, orders to reimburse, orders to pay reasonable and necessary medical costs, orders to pay administrative fines, orders to refund, orders assessing attorney fees, orders assessing costs, and orders imposing discovery sanctions.

This agency hereby certifies that the proposal has been reviewed by legal counsel and found to be within the agency's legal authority to adopt.

Filed with the Office of the Secretary of State on February 18, 2005.

TRD-200500772

Susan Cory

General Counsel

Texas Workers' Compensation Commission

Earliest possible date of adoption: April 3, 2005

For further information, please call: (512) 804-4287


Chapter 149. MEMORANDUM OF UNDERSTANDING WITH THE STATE OFFICE OF ADMINISTRATIVE HEARINGS

The Texas Workers' Compensation Commission (the commission) proposes new §§149.1 - 149.10 concerning an interagency agreement between the commission and the State Office of Administrative Hearings (SOAH) for administrative law judges of SOAH to conduct certain contested case hearings under the Workers' Compensation Act (the Act). The commission also proposes simultaneous repeal of current §§149.1-149.10. New commission procedural rules for such hearings have simultaneously been proposed in Chapter 148 of this title (relating to Hearings Conducted by the State Office of Administrative Hearings). The interagency agreement between the commission and SOAH is required by §402.073(a) of the Texas Labor Code.

The proposed new rules include elimination of provisions of existing Chapter 149 rules that have been preempted by SOAH in accordance with §2003.050(b), Texas Government Code and SOAH's adoption of its procedural rules in Chapter 155 of Title 1 (relating to Rules of Procedures). SOAH declined to adopt any specific procedural rules of the commission. (22 TexReg 12721). SOAH has stated that its procedural rules are not intended to affect agency rules that pertain to events that occur before SOAH takes jurisdiction or after SOAH loses jurisdiction over a case and that agencies may have their own procedural rules in areas not covered by SOAH procedural rules. (22 TexReg 12720). SOAH has stated that its procedural rules were established "...to continue with the general, established practice at SOAH that the referring agencies initially issue subpoenas and commissions. ...The general procedure has worked efficiently for SOAH, and referring agencies have been able to handle the task as a ministerial matter without confusion. ...the SOAH ALJ will rule on motions to quash the subpoena or commission based on lack of a showing of good cause or for other alleged deficiencies." (22 TexReg 12728).

Proposed new §149.1 includes definitions of terms contained in current §149.2, with revisions to the definition of "contested case" to include additional references to hearings in the Act, and would add new definitions for the acronyms "APA" (the Administrative Procedure Act) and "IRO" (an Independent Review Organization).

Proposed new §149.2 includes the "General Statement" in existing §149.1, with clarifying changes. The general statement sets out the purpose of the Memorandum of Understanding between the commission and SOAH.

Proposed new §149.3 contains the provisions in current §149.3, updates reference to forms used by system participants to request SOAH hearings, and contains guidelines for the length of time for hearings to be set. Subsection (c) has been added to provide commission policy relating to the need for prompt hearings depending on the type of contested case referred to SOAH.

Proposed new §149.4 sets out and clarifies the contents of a notice of hearing in a SOAH case and the time period for providing such notice.

Proposed new §149.5 references the statutes and rules governing SOAH hearings. The rule does not include the "Filing Requirements" currently contained in §149.6 because these provisions are preempted by SOAH's procedural rules.

Proposed new §149.6 contains updated and clarifying provisions concerning statutory confidentiality requirements.

Proposed new §149.7 allows withdrawal of a findings and decision of the commission's medical review division or an IRO decision within 15 working days of the date the request for hearing is received by the Commission. Procedures for accomplishing this withdrawal and subsequent dismissal are also addressed in this section.

Proposed new §§149.8, 149.9, and 149.10 contain the provisions of existing §§149.7, 149.8 and 149.9 with minor modifications. The current requirement to utilize the Texas Rules of Form is deleted to allow use of other citation formats. Language is included to allow for changes that have occurred and will occur in technology for verifiable means of transmittal, and to allow amendment of a proposal for decision by an ALJ or comments by an ALJ. A requirement has been added that SOAH find in a proposal for decision whether the commission is authorized by the Act or commission rules to take disciplinary or sanction action against the Petitioner in the SOAH hearing.

Existing provisions in current §149.10 are deleted because those provisions concern the 1995-1996 transfer of hearings to SOAH and are no longer needed.

Allen McDonald, director of the commission's Medical Review division, has determined that for the first five-year period the proposed sections are in effect there will not be fiscal implications for state or local governments as a result of enforcing or administering the new proposed amendments. The procedures currently utilized by parties to SOAH contested case hearings are those contained in the existing rules of the commission and SOAH and those procedures have not been revised to cause any significant fiscal implications.

Allen McDonald, director of the commission's Medical Review division, has also determined that for each year of the first five years the sections as proposed are in effect the public benefit anticipated as a result of enforcing the sections will be to provide fair and efficient procedures for both the commission and SOAH to handle requests for certain contested case hearings under the Texas Workers' Compensation Act. While the anticipated economic costs to individuals, who are required to comply with the new proposed amendments, cannot be accurately estimated, because the complexity, duration and number of future hearings is unknown, the new proposed amendments are not anticipated to increase the average, procedural costs of a contested case hearing. There may be economic costs to persons who are required to comply with the proposed new amendments due to filings of contested case documents being made at SOAH as well as with the TWCC Chief Clerk especially after a proposal for decision is made by an ALJ at SOAH. There will be no difference in anticipated costs of compliance for small businesses as compared to large businesses.

The commission staff posted a pre-proposal draft rule for informal public input on the commission's website from January 11, 2005 through January 21, 2005. The commission reviewed the input and other available information, sought clarification, and now proposes these rule amendments.

Comments on the proposal must be received by 5:00 p.m., April 4, 2005. You may comment via the Internet by accessing the commission's website at www.twcc.state.tx.us and then clicking on "Rules" and then clicking on "Proposed Rules for Comment." This medium for commenting will help you organize your comments by rule chapter. You may also comment by emailing your comments to RuleComments@ twcc.state.tx.us or by mailing or delivering your comments to Linda Velasquez, Legal Services, Mailstop #4-D, Texas Workers' Compensation Commission, 7551 Metro Center Drive, Suite 100, Austin, Texas 78744.

Commenters are requested to clearly identify by number the specific rule and paragraph commented upon. The commission may not be able to respond to comments that cannot be linked to a particular proposed rule. Along with your comment, it is suggested that you include the reasoning for the comment in order for commission staff to fully evaluate your recommendations.

Based upon various considerations, including comments received and the staff's or commissioners' review of those comments, or based upon the commissioners' action at the public meeting, the rules as proposed for repeal, may be repealed or may be repealed only in part. Persons in support of the rules repeal, as proposed, in whole or in part, may wish to comment to that effect.

A public hearing on this proposal will be held at the Austin central office of the commission (7551 Metro Center Drive, Suite 100, Austin, Texas) on a date to be announced. Those persons interested in attending the public hearing should contact the Commission's Office of Executive Communication at (512) 804-4430 to confirm the date, time, and location of the public hearing for this proposal. The public hearing schedule will also be available on the commission's website at www.twcc.state.tx.us .

28 TAC §§149.1 - 149.10

(Editor's note: The text of the following sections proposed for repeal will not be published. The sections may be examined in the offices of the Texas Workers' Compensation Commission or in the Texas Register office, Room 245, James Earl Rudder Building, 1019 Brazos Street, Austin.)

The repealed rules are proposed under the Texas Labor Code, §401.021(1), which specifies the provisions of the Administrative Procedure Act that are applicable to the commission; §402.061, which authorizes the commission to adopt rules necessary to administer the Texas Workers' Compensation Act; §402.071, which specifies that the commission shall establish qualifications for "representatives" as defined by §401.011(37), Texas Labor Code; §402.072, which specifies that only the commission may impose certain types of sanctions; §402.073, which authorizes SOAH to conduct certain hearings; §§402.082 thru 402.092, which require that information in or derived from a commission claim file regarding an injured employee and information maintained in an investigation file of the commission be kept confidential; §407.046(b) and (c), which authorizes a hearing when the commission proposes to revoke a certificate of authority granted to a certified self-insurer; §407.066, which provides for a hearing after the director of the commission's division of self-insurance regulation resolves a dispute concerning the deposit, renewal, termination, release, or return of all or part of the security, liability arising out of the submission or failure to submit security, or the adequacy of the security or reasonableness of the administrative costs, including legal fees, that arise among: a surety, an insurer of an agreement of assumption and guarantee of workers' compensation liabilities, an issuer of a letter of credit, a custodian of the security deposit, a certified self-insurer, or the Texas Certified Self-Insurer Guaranty Association; §407.133, which authorizes the commission, after a hearing, to suspend or revoke the certificate of authority to self-insure of a certified self-insurer who fails to pay an assessment required under §407.124, Texas Labor Code; §407.023, which authorizes the commission to establish criteria for deleting doctors from the commission's list of approved doctors; §408.0231(e), which provides for a hearing on certain sanctions by the commission against a doctor or insurance carrier; §408.024, which authorizes a hearing if the commission intends to relieve an insurance carrier of liability for health care that is furnished by a health care provider or another person selected in a manner inconsistent with the requirements of Subchapter B, Chapter 408, Texas Labor Code; §411.0415, which provides that the commission may request a hearing if the commission determines that the case history of an employee's fatality indicates that the employer or the work environment was a proximate cause of the fatality, §411.042, which providers for the notification process by the commission to identify an employer as a hazardous employer; §411.049(b), which provides for a hearing for an employer to contest findings of the commission under the Hazardous Employer Program; §413.014, which authorizes the commission to adopt rules that provide that preauthorization and concurrent review are required for specified health care treatments and services; §413.031(k), which provides for a SOAH hearing after the original decision in certain medical disputes; §§413.0511 thru 413.0514, which provide that certain information collected, assembled, or maintained by or on behalf of the commission under §§413.0511 or 413.0512 constitutes an investigation file for purposes of §402.092, Texas Labor Code and must be kept confidential except as otherwise specified in those sections; §413.055 that provides a hearing to a party that disputes an interlocutory order of the commission for the payment of all of part of medical benefits; §415.021, which authorizes the commission to assess administrative penalties against a person who commits an administrative violation and to enter a cease and desist order against a person who engages in certain types of conduct; §415.032, which provides the commission's notification process for a possible administrative violation and the request for hearing process by the charged party; §415.034(a), which provides for a hearing to contest administrative violation sanctions by the commission; Texas Government Code, §2001.003, which provides definitions of terms used in the Administrative Procedure Act; §2001.051, which provides an opportunity for a contested case hearing under the Administrative Procedure Act, §2001.052, which provides for the required contents of a notice of hearing in a contested case hearing; §2001.058, which provides for consideration by SOAH of agency rules and limitations upon a state agency making changes to a finding of fact or conclusion of law made by SOAH; §2001.061, which prohibits certain types of ex parte communications in hearings; §2001.062, which provides the process for a decision by the state agency after SOAH has issued a proposal for decision; §2001.089, which provides for the process for a state agency to issue a subpoena; §2001.090 which provides for official notice of certain evidence and for use of the special skills or knowledge of the state agency and its staff in evaluating evidence; §2001.094, which provides the process for a state agency to issue a commission requiring deposition; §§2001.171, 2001.171, 2001.174, 2001.176, and 2001.177, which provide a process for judicial review after a final administrative decision has been rendered in a contested case hearing and which authorize a state agency, by rule, to require a party who appeals such a decision to pay all or a part of the cost of preparation of the original or a certified copy of the record of the agency proceeding that is required to be sent to the reviewing court; and §2003.050 concerning procedural rules by SOAH.

No other code, statute or article is affected by this rule.

§149.1.General Statement.

§149.2.Definitions.

§149.3.Referral of Contested Case to SOAH.

§149.4.Notice of Hearing.

§149.5.Filing Requirements.

§149.6.Hearings.

§149.7.Final Orders in Accordance with the Act, §§411.049, 413.031 and 415.034.

§149.8.Proposals for Decision in Accordance with the Act, §§402.072, 407.046, and 408.023.

§149.9.Custody of the Hearing Record.

§149.10.Transition of Hearings from the Commission to SOAH.

This agency hereby certifies that the proposal has been reviewed by legal counsel and found to be within the agency's legal authority to adopt.

Filed with the Office of the Secretary of State on February 18, 2005.

TRD-200500774

Susan Cory

General Counsel

Texas Workers' Compensation Commission

Earliest possible date of adoption: April 3, 2005

For further information, please call: (512) 804-4287


28 TAC §§149.1 - 149.10

The new rules are proposed under the Texas Labor Code, §401.021(1), which specifies the provisions of the Administrative Procedure Act that are applicable to the commission; §402.061, which authorizes the commission to adopt rules necessary to administer the Texas Workers' Compensation Act; §402.071, which specifies that the commission shall establish qualifications for "representatives" as defined by §401.011(37), Texas Labor Code; §402.072, which specifies that only the commission may impose certain types of sanctions; §402.073, which authorizes SOAH to conduct certain hearings; §§402.082 thru 402.092, which require that information in or derived from a commission claim file regarding an injured employee and information maintained in an investigation file of the commission be kept confidential; §407.046(b) and (c), which authorizes a hearing when the commission proposes to revoke a certificate of authority granted to a certified self-insurer; §407.066, which provides for a hearing after the director of the commission's division of self-insurance regulation resolves a dispute concerning the deposit, renewal, termination, release, or return of all or part of the security, liability arising out of the submission or failure to submit security, or the adequacy of the security or reasonableness of the administrative costs, including legal fees, that arise among: a surety, an insurer of an agreement of assumption and guarantee of workers' compensation liabilities, an issuer of a letter of credit, a custodian of the security deposit, a certified self-insurer, or the Texas Certified Self-Insurer Guaranty Association; §407.133, which authorizes the commission, after a hearing, to suspend or revoke the certificate of authority to self-insure of a certified self-insurer who fails to pay an assessment required under §407.124, Texas Labor Code; §407.023, which authorizes the commission to establish criteria for deleting doctors from the commission's list of approved doctors; §408.0231(e), which provides for a hearing on certain sanctions by the commission against a doctor or insurance carrier; §408.024, which authorizes a hearing if the commission intends to relieve an insurance carrier of liability for health care that is furnished by a health care provider or another person selected in a manner inconsistent with the requirements of Subchapter B, Chapter 408, Texas Labor Code; §411.0415, which provides that the commission may request a hearing if the commission determines that the case history of an employee's fatality indicates that the employer or the work environment was a proximate cause of the fatality, §411.042, which providers for the notification process by the commission to identify an employer as a hazardous employer; §411.049(b), which provides for a hearing for an employer to contest findings of the commission under the Hazardous Employer Program; §413.014, which authorizes the commission to adopt rules that provide that preauthorization and concurrent review are required for specified health care treatments and services; §413.031(k), which provides for a SOAH hearing after the original decision in certain medical disputes; §§413.0511 thru 413.0514, which provide that certain information collected, assembled, or maintained by or on behalf of the commission under §§413.0511 or 413.0512 constitutes an investigation file for purposes of §402.092, Texas Labor Code and must be kept confidential except as otherwise specified in those sections; §413.055 that provides a hearing to a party that disputes an interlocutory order of the commission for the payment of all of part of medical benefits; §415.021, which authorizes the commission to assess administrative penalties against a person who commits an administrative violation and to enter a cease and desist order against a person who engages in certain types of conduct; §415.032, which provides the commission's notification process for a possible administrative violation and the request for hearing process by the charged party; §415.034(a), which provides for a hearing to contest administrative violation sanctions by the commission; Texas Government Code, §2001.003, which provides definitions of terms used in the Administrative Procedure Act; §2001.051, which provides an opportunity for a contested case hearing under the Administrative Procedure Act, §2001.052, which provides for the required contents of a notice of hearing in a contested case hearing; §2001.058, which provides for consideration by SOAH of agency rules and limitations upon a state agency making changes to a finding of fact or conclusion of law made by SOAH; §2001.061, which prohibits certain types of ex parte communications in hearings; §2001.062, which provides the process for a decision by the state agency after SOAH has issued a proposal for decision; §2001.089, which provides for the process for a state agency to issue a subpoena; §2001.090 which provides for official notice of certain evidence and for use of the special skills or knowledge of the state agency and its staff in evaluating evidence; §2001.094, which provides the process for a state agency to issue a commission requiring deposition; §§2001.171, 2001.171, 2001.174, 2001.176, and 2001.177, which provide a process for judicial review after a final administrative decision has been rendered in a contested case hearing and which authorize a state agency, by rule, to require a party who appeals such a decision to pay all or a part of the cost of preparation of the original or a certified copy of the record of the agency proceeding that is required to be sent to the reviewing court; and §2003.050 concerning procedural rules by SOAH.

No other code, statute or article is affected by this rule.

§149.1.Definitions.

The following words and terms, when used in this chapter, shall have the following meanings, unless the context clearly indicates otherwise.

(1) Act -- The Texas Workers' Compensation Act, Texas Labor Code, §§401.001 et. seq.

(2) ALJ -- The Administrative Law Judge assigned by the State Office of Administrative Hearings.

(3) APA -- The Administrative Procedure Act, as specified in the Government Code, Chapter 2001.

(4) Commission -- The Texas Workers' Compensation Commission.

(5) Contested Case -- A proceeding in which the legal rights, duties, or privileges of a party are to be determined by an agency after an opportunity for adjudicative hearing as defined in the Government Code, §2001.003, subject, however, to the provisions of the Act as codified in the Texas Labor Code, Title 5, Subtitle A, including §§401.021(1), 411.049, 413.031, 413.055, 415.034, 402.073, 407.046, and 408.0231; and the rules adopted by the commission, in particular Chapter 148 of this title (relating to Hearings Conducted by the State Office of Administrative Hearings).

(6) IRO -- An Independent Review Organization, established in accordance with Insurance Code article 21.58C, performing reviews of health care under the Act.

(7) MOU -- The Memorandum of Understanding executed by the commission in accordance with this chapter.

(8) SOAH -- The State Office of Administrative Hearings.

(9) TWCC Chief Clerk -- The Chief Clerk of Proceedings within the Hearings Division of the commission.

§149.2.General Statement.

(a) The Act, §402.073, mandates the commission and the chief administrative law judge of SOAH to adopt by rule an MOU governing contested case hearings held by SOAH under the Act.

(b) The MOU is necessary to accomplish the efficient and expeditious hearing of matters to be heard by SOAH under the Act, §402.073 by establishing the procedures to be used by each agency and clearly delineating each agency's responsibilities. Additionally, the MOU is necessary to inform the public of each agency's responsibilities and the procedures for the institution, conduct and determination of proceedings before SOAH on behalf of the commission.

(c) Chapter 149 rules constitute the MOU between the Commission and SOAH. The MOU provides procedures for referring a case to SOAH, the notice of hearing, proposals for decision, final orders, and custody of the hearing record, and related matters.

§149.3.Referral of Contested Case to SOAH.

(a) Referral of a contested case to SOAH may be made only by the commission. The referral is initiated by filing with SOAH a Request to Docket Case form. The TWCC Chief Clerk will ensure that the appropriate areas are marked on the SOAH form to provide additional notification of the confidentiality provisions as specified in §149.6 of this title (relating to Confidentiality of Records). In addition to filing the appropriate form, a referral also consists of the following items:

(1) all pleadings in the case, including but not limited to, the agency's findings and decision, requests for hearing, complaints, petitions, applications, motions, or such other documents produced by the commission describing agency action relating to the contested case;

(2) a current service list; and

(3) notification of any statutory deadlines imposed by statute or rule involving the contested case.

(b) Not later than ten days after receiving the Request to Docket Case form, SOAH shall assign the case a docket number and provide the docket number and a confirmation of the date, time, and place of hearing to the commission within the limitations specified in §148.5 of this title (relating to Notice of Hearing). The SOAH docket clerk will coordinate the assignment of hearing dates with the TWCC Chief Clerk so that hearings are scheduled both for the efficient use of ALJs and commission representatives in such cases. Following receipt of a request for an assignment of judge, SOAH shall assign an ALJ and shall notify all parties and the commission in writing of the ALJ assigned to the case.

(c) SOAH shall utilize its best efforts to set hearings involving issues of preauthorization under the Act, §§413.014 and 413.055, for a date no more than 30 days after SOAH has received the Request to Docket Case form. SOAH shall utilize its best efforts to set a hearing to consider a proposed penalty under the Act, Chapter 415, Subchapter B, no earlier than 60 days after SOAH has received the Request to Docket Case form. In all other cases under the Act, SOAH shall set such cases for a date within a 90-day period after receiving the Request to Docket Case form.

§149.4.Notice of Hearing.

(a) Except as provided in subsection (b) of this section and upon receipt of the docket number, location and setting date from SOAH and no later than ten days before the hearing date, the TWCC Chief Clerk shall notify the parties in writing, by a verifiable means, of the date, time, place, and nature of the hearing; the docket number; the legal authority and jurisdiction under which the hearing will be held; a reference to the particular sections of the statutes and any rules involved; a notice regarding failure to appear and default judgment, and a short, plain statement of the matters asserted. The reference to the statutes and any rules involved, nature of the hearing, and the short, plain statement may be provided by the commission's representative, and, if so, would not be provided by the TWCC Chief Clerk. After the initial notice is sent by the commission, the ALJ may issue additional notices of the time, date, and place of the hearing as needed.

(b) No later than 30 days before the scheduled hearing date for a hearing conducted under the Act, §407.046(b), SOAH will issue a notice of hearing to the certified self-insurer and to the TWCC Chief Clerk according to the procedures specified in §148.5(b) of this title (relating to Notice of Hearing).

§149.5.Hearings.

(a) Hearings, including prehearing proceedings, on contested cases shall be conducted in accordance with the APA, subject to the provisions of the Act, the commission's rules, SOAH's rules of procedure and any other applicable law and accompanying regulations.

(b) SOAH shall notify the TWCC Chief Clerk of the date, time, and location of the hearing utilizing its best efforts to make such notification within ten days after receiving from the TWCC Chief Clerk a Request to Docket Case form.

§149.6.Confidentiality of Records.

(a) SOAH shall ensure that the confidentiality provisions of the Act, §§402.082 through 402.091, 402.092, 411.034, 413.0513, and 413.0514 and the Code of Federal Regulations, Title 20, §§603.6 and 603.7 (for information obtained from the Texas Workforce Commission or its successor agencies), will be followed, including requests for release of documents or information made confidential under the Act or other applicable law.

(b) Unless authorized by law, SOAH will not identify the name of a claimant for workers' compensation coverage under the Act or other information contained in or derived from the commission's claim file for such a claimant in listings of docketed cases or in other documents distributed to persons other than to the commission and the parties to a contested case involving that claimant.

(c) If a party or a member of the public files a written request with the TWCC Chief Clerk and with SOAH that a hearing be conducted as a hearing open to the public, the ALJ shall consider that request and issue a ruling prior to the opening of the hearing to the public.

(d) Any request for a hearing open to the public shall be filed with the TWCC Chief Clerk and with SOAH at least seven days prior to the first day of the hearing unless the ALJ allows a shorter filing period upon a showing of good cause.

(e) When considering a request that a hearing be open to the public, the ALJ's considerations shall include, but are not limited to, whether the hearing would contain information made confidential under the Act or other applicable laws. If confidential information would be included, then the ALJ may consider whether any procedure could be devised and utilized which would allow a hearing to be open to the public without violating the confidentiality provisions of the Act, other applicable laws, other applicable regulations, and agreements required by those laws or regulations or without causing an undue burden on the commission or the parties to the hearing.

(f) While SOAH will have temporary custody of the hearing records, the Executive Director of the commission retains statutory authority as custodian of records and is ultimately responsible, as the originating agency, for the release or non-release of the information. Therefore, should any information, which may be confidential under the Act, commission rules, or other law, be requested from SOAH by any person or entity, SOAH shall follow all legal requirements necessary to ensure that the confidential information or document is not released, unless specifically required by law, and shall provide such request to the commission's executive communication division immediately upon receipt.

(g) Pursuant to §413.031(c) of the Act, the commission shall be responsible for publishing any SOAH decisions required to be published by that section on its Internet website. SOAH shall as soon as practicable deliver to the commission a version of the decision in an electronic format.

(h) SOAH and the commission have responsibilities for compliance with the Texas Public Information Act, Chapter 552, Government Code. Each agency maintains information that may be considered confidential or exempt from disclosure under laws administered by that agency. To the extent required by law, each agency is responsible for replying to all public information requests for information maintained by that agency. Each agency will promptly notify the other agency of the receipt of a Texas Public Information Act request relating to confidential or exempt records obtained from the other agency and will coordinate responses as necessary.

§149.7.Action Upon Withdrawal of Decision.

If a findings and decision of the commission's medical review division in a review of a medical service or medical fee under the Act, §413.031, or an IRO decision under the Act, §413.031, is withdrawn by the commission within fifteen working days after the commission receives the request for hearing before SOAH the commission shall file a request to withdraw the case from the SOAH docket. SOAH shall then issue an order dismissing the case without prejudice from the SOAH docket. This provision does not apply to a prospective medical necessity dispute regarding spinal surgery, in which case the request shall be filed in accordance with §133.308 of this title (relating to Medical Dispute Resolution by Independent Review Organization).

§149.8.Final Orders in Accordance with the Act, §§411.049, 413.031, 413.055 and 415.034.

(a) The ALJ shall prepare and issue the decision and order for contested cases under the Act, §§411.049, 413.031, 413.055, and 415.034. The decision shall include findings of fact, conclusions of law, and the order(s) of the ALJ. The Government Code, §2001.058(d) does not permit the commission to attempt to influence the ALJ's findings of fact, conclusions of law, or the ALJ's application of the law to the facts in any proceedings except by proper evidence and legal argument. Unless otherwise provided by statute or rule, the ALJ shall issue a decision and order no later than the 60th day after the date the record is finally closed. In cases involving issues of preauthorization under the Act, §413.014, the ALJ shall make a good faith effort to expedite the issuance of the final order and to issue the final order no later than 30 days after the record in the case is closed.

(b) SOAH shall serve true and correct copies of the transmittal letter and the decision and order by verifiable means upon the parties and shall provide a copy of such documents to the TWCC Chief Clerk.

(c) SOAH shall place a confidentiality stamp on each page of the final order.

§149.9.Proposals for Decision in Accordance with the Act, §§402.072, 407.046, and 408.0231.

(a) After holding a hearing pursuant to the Act, §§402.072, 407.046, and 408.0231, and in other cases not subject to §149.8 of this title (relating to Final Orders in Accordance with the Act, §§411.049, 413.031, 413.055 and 415.034), the ALJ shall prepare a proposal for decision not later than 60 days after the date of the hearing.

(b) The proposal for decision shall contain:

(1) a statement of the reasons upon which the decision is based;

(2) findings of fact based on the evidence presented and matters officially noticed;

(3) conclusions of law based upon the findings of fact and other legal requirements of the law; and

(4) the sanction or order recommended by the ALJ; and

(5) a conclusion of whether the commission is authorized by the Act or commission rules to take disciplinary or sanction action against the Petitioner.

(c) The proposal for decision may also contain:

(1) a summary of the evidence presented by each party; and

(2) a list of all mitigating circumstances and a list of all aggravating circumstances, separately stated, which are necessary for the commissioners to have a complete understanding of the case.

(d) SOAH shall serve a copy of the transmittal letter and the proposal for decision by verifiable means on each party or attorney of record and the TWCC Chief Clerk.

(e) Although filed with SOAH, exceptions and replies are the primary methods by which a party may communicate with the agency's decision maker. Notwithstanding, upon review of any exceptions and replies filed pursuant to §148.16(d) and (e) of this title (relating to Proposal for Decision by the Administrative Law Judge) the ALJ may amend the proposal for decision if the ALJ deems it is appropriate to do so. If the ALJ believes comments other than an amendment are necessary, the administrative law judge may issue a letter to the commission with service of copies to all parties by verifiable means. Any amendments or comments by the ALJ under this subsection shall be due to the TWCC Chief Clerk not later than fifteen working days after receipt of any briefs and exceptions and replies thereto. If such amendments or comments are not received within the twenty working days, the Commission will proceed under the assumption that the ALJ does not intend to make any changes to the existing proposal for decision.

(f) SOAH shall forward the completed record in a case, including the proposal for decision, any amended proposal for decision, and any proposed order to the TWCC Chief Clerk utilizing its best efforts to ensure that such record is forwarded no later than ten days after the later of the deadline for the filing of any exceptions or replies has passed or the issuance of an amended proposal for decision.

(g) SOAH shall place a confidentiality stamp on each page of the proposal for decision.

§149.10.Custody of the Hearing Record.

(a) SOAH shall maintain the official record in a contested case from the time the commission refers the case to SOAH until the conclusion of the administrative hearing process. The commission may also maintain a copy of the record. The conclusion of the administrative hearing process occurs when:

(1) there is the entry of a final order by an ALJ;

(2) the ALJ enters an order to withdraw or dismiss a case from the SOAH docket either by the granting of a party's motion or on the ALJ's own motion; or

(3) the ALJ sends the proposal for decision to the commission.

(b) Prior to the conclusion of the administrative hearing process, any request for a copy of the record may be directed either to SOAH or the commission. Requests for official copies shall be directed to SOAH as the official custodian authorized to certify as to the completeness of the record before the conclusion of the administrative hearing process. SOAH shall consider the confidentiality provisions of the Act, §§402.081 - 402.091 and other applicable laws before denying release or releasing the requested information within the procedures specified in §149.6 of this title (relating to Confidentiality of Records).

(c) After the conclusion of the administrative hearing process, the official custodian of the record shall be the commission. SOAH shall deliver the official record, including the hearing audiotape, to the TWCC Chief Clerk along with a certified statement that the documents delivered constitute the complete record in the case. Any request for a copy or transcript of the record shall then be directed to the commission. The commission shall have the authority to certify as to the completeness of the record.

This agency hereby certifies that the proposal has been reviewed by legal counsel and found to be within the agency's legal authority to adopt.

Filed with the Office of the Secretary of State on February 18, 2005.

TRD-200500766

Susan Cory

General Counsel

Texas Workers' Compensation Commission

Earliest possible date of adoption: April 3, 2005

For further information, please call: (512) 804-4287