Commission Background and Establishment
Advisory Committee to the Office of Administrative Hearings (OAH) Active Advisory
Quarterly Committee on Government Operations Executive Appointment
The Advisory Committee shall: (1) Advise the Chief Administrative Law Judge in carrying out his or her duties; (2) Identify issues of importance to Administrative Law Judges and agencies that should be addressed by the Office; (3) Review issues and problems relating to administrative adjudication; (4) Review and comment upon the policies and regulations proposed by the Chief Administrative Law Judge; and (5) Make recommendations for relevant statutory and regulatory changes.
Public member must not be an employee of DC government.
The Advisory Committee shall consist of the following 8 persons: (1) The Mayor or his or her designee; (2) The Chairman of the Councilor his or her designee; (3) The Corporation Counselor his or her designee; (4) Two agency heads appointed by the Mayor, or their designees, from agencies with cases coming before the Office of Administrative Hearings; (5) Two members of the District of Columbia Bar, appointed by the Mayor, neither of whom shall be employed by the District of Columbia government; and (6) A member of the public, appointed by the Mayor, who is not a member of the District of Columbia Bar.  The Mayor shall chair the Advisory Committee, or may designate an Advisory Committee Chair from among its members.
D.C. Code 2-1831.17 https://code.dccouncil.gov/us/dc/council/code/sections/2-1831.17
Executive Office of the Mayor (EOM) Mayor's Office of General Counsel
No
Commission Appointees
Executive Appointment (Mayor's Order) 3
http://motaboards.theresumator.com/apply/gSABUJ/Advisory-Committee-To-The-Office-Of-Administrative-Hearings-Vacancies-2
Appointed by Mayor 3 3
1 1
Commissioners
Points of Contact
Betsy Cavendish General Counsel Betsy.Cavendish@dc.gov (202) 724-7681
Team MOTA MOTA@dc.gov (202) 727-1372
Confirmation documents
Created on Jan. 21, 2015 at 11:17 AM (EST). Last updated by Walker, Steven on April 17 at  7:03 AM (EDT). Owned by Kaja, Priya.
Priya Kaja
Steven Walker
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When you bring additional fields into a conversion, Quickbase often finds inconsistencies. For example, say you're converting your Companies column into its own table. One company, Acme Corporation, has offices in New York, Dallas and Portland. So, when you add the City column to the conversion, Quickbase finds three different locations for Acme. A single value in the column you're converting can only match one value in any additional field. Quickbase needs you to clean up the extra cities before it can create your new table. To do so, you have one of two choices:

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