Temporary Hearing Officers Amendment Bill
1. Section 3.2 of the Codified Law of The North Pacific is amended to read as follows,
The primary effect of this bill is that Temporary Hearing Officers (THO) are only appointed when there are no Justices available to hear a case at all. For example, if only one Justice had to recuse themselves, under the provisions of this bill the other two Justices would proceed to hear the case as usual. This is unlike the current situation, which would require that one THO would need to be appointed and join them in the case. With the proposed amendment, THOs would be appointed only if all three Justices had to recuse themselves.
There are three reasons why I believe this is a good change.
First, the appointment of THOs is typically a slow process. It often delays cases by at least a week. With the proposed change, these delays would be eliminated, as the court would be able to continue its proceedings uninterrupted by recusals or vacancies. With so many people complaining about the slow pace at which the court handles its business, any change to increase its efficiency should be welcome.
Second, and related to the above, the current system effectively discourages Justices from recusing themselves in the presence of conflicts of interest. Until it becomes absolutely necessary, Justices generally try to avoid having to excuse themselves from a case, to avoid causing the aforementioned delays and in general hinder the proceedings. This is undesirable, as Justices should abstain from cases as soon as it becomes apparent that their impartiality has been compromised.
Third, and perhaps most important, the appointment of THOs is an inherently political decision that introduces all sorts of biases to the way cases are decided. By removing the need for the majority of such appointments, we rid the system from these biases and ensure that justice is delivered in a much more uniform way.
The bill also makes a couple of secondary changes, fixing some technical deficiencies of the current legislation.
The first such deficiency is that the clauses currently in effect appear to require that THOs are appointed any time there are Justice vacancies, not just when there is a case before the court, and that these appointments last until the vacancies are filled. For example, should a Justice resign, current law requires that a THO be appointed and stay in the court until a new Justice is elected. The proposed amendment changes this so that THOs are only needed when there is a case before the court.
The second issue is that current law does not specify what happens if a THO becomes unavailable (say, they have to recuse themselves as well, or become inactive). Though it is reasonable to assume that a new THO appointment would then be made, I believe it is better to specify this explicitly. The proposed amendment does this.
1. Section 3.2 of the Codified Law of The North Pacific is amended to read as follows,
2. Clauses 12 - 19 of Chapter 3 of the Codified Law of The North Pacific are renumbered 10 - 17 respectively.Section 3.2: Appointment of Temporary Hearing Officers
8. When there is a case before the Court; and either all Justice positions are vacant, or all Justices have a conflict of interest; and there are fewer than three Temporary Hearing Officers hearing the case; the Delegate will, with the agreement of the Speaker, promptly appoint the required number of Temporary Hearing Officers.
9. Temporary Hearing Officers must be Regional Assembly members for the duration of their service, and may not have a conflict of interest in the case or concurrently hold any other office.
Section 3.2: Appointment of Hearing Officers
8. If there is a vacancy on the Court, or any Justice is unavailable or has a conflict of interest the remaining Justices will promptly appoint a hearing officer to participate as temporary Justices.
9. If no Justices are available or all Justices have a conflict of interest, the Delegate will promptly appoint the needed hearing officers with the agreement of the Speaker.
10. In implementing the previous clause, any person who has a conflict of interest will be treated as absent.
11. Any hearing officer appointed under this Section must not have a conflict of interest and may not hold any other office while serving as a judicial hearing officer.
8. If there is a vacancy on the Court, or any Justice is unavailable or has a conflict of interest the remaining Justices will promptly appoint a hearing officer to participate as temporary Justices.
9. If no Justices are available or all Justices have a conflict of interest, the Delegate will promptly appoint the needed hearing officers with the agreement of the Speaker.
10. In implementing the previous clause, any person who has a conflict of interest will be treated as absent.
11. Any hearing officer appointed under this Section must not have a conflict of interest and may not hold any other office while serving as a judicial hearing officer.
There are three reasons why I believe this is a good change.
First, the appointment of THOs is typically a slow process. It often delays cases by at least a week. With the proposed change, these delays would be eliminated, as the court would be able to continue its proceedings uninterrupted by recusals or vacancies. With so many people complaining about the slow pace at which the court handles its business, any change to increase its efficiency should be welcome.
Second, and related to the above, the current system effectively discourages Justices from recusing themselves in the presence of conflicts of interest. Until it becomes absolutely necessary, Justices generally try to avoid having to excuse themselves from a case, to avoid causing the aforementioned delays and in general hinder the proceedings. This is undesirable, as Justices should abstain from cases as soon as it becomes apparent that their impartiality has been compromised.
Third, and perhaps most important, the appointment of THOs is an inherently political decision that introduces all sorts of biases to the way cases are decided. By removing the need for the majority of such appointments, we rid the system from these biases and ensure that justice is delivered in a much more uniform way.
The bill also makes a couple of secondary changes, fixing some technical deficiencies of the current legislation.
The first such deficiency is that the clauses currently in effect appear to require that THOs are appointed any time there are Justice vacancies, not just when there is a case before the court, and that these appointments last until the vacancies are filled. For example, should a Justice resign, current law requires that a THO be appointed and stay in the court until a new Justice is elected. The proposed amendment changes this so that THOs are only needed when there is a case before the court.
The second issue is that current law does not specify what happens if a THO becomes unavailable (say, they have to recuse themselves as well, or become inactive). Though it is reasonable to assume that a new THO appointment would then be made, I believe it is better to specify this explicitly. The proposed amendment does this.