Question Submitted by: Chairman Troy L. Wilson, Workers' Compensation Commission

2014 OK AG 14
CourtOklahoma Attorney General Reports
DecidedOctober 31, 2014
StatusUnpublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 2014 OK AG 14 (Question Submitted by: Chairman Troy L. Wilson, Workers' Compensation Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oklahoma Attorney General Reports primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

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Question Submitted by: Chairman Troy L. Wilson, Workers' Compensation Commission, 2014 OK AG 14 (Okla. Super. Ct. 2014).

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OSCN Found Document:Question Submitted by: Chairman Troy L. Wilson, Workers' Compensation Commission
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Question Submitted by: Chairman Troy L. Wilson, Workers' Compensation Commission
2014 OK AG 14
Decided: 10/31/2014
Oklahoma Attorney General Opinions


Cite as: 2014 OK AG 14, __ __

¶0 This office has received your request for an official Attorney General Opinion in which you ask, in effect, the following questions:
1. If the Workers' Compensation Commission ("Commission"), in hearing appeals from judgments, decisions, or awards made by administrative law judges, arbitrators or appeals committees, is not subject to Article II of the Administrative Procedures Act,

75 O.S.2011 & Supp.2014, §§ 250 - 323, governing individual proceedings, may the Commission lawfully enter into executive session under the Open Meeting Act, 25 O.S.2011 & Supp.2014, §§ 301 - 314, to deliberate in order to render decisions on the appeals brought before them?
2. If the Commission is not permitted to enter into executive session under the Open Meeting Act, is the Commission permitted to deliberate regarding the appeals by virtue of the deliberative process privilege?
3. If the Commission is not permitted to deliberate outside of a public meeting under the Open Meeting Act or under the deliberative process privilege, is there another statutory provision or privilege permitting the Commission to maintain the confidentiality of the deliberative process?

¶1 In 2013 the Oklahoma Legislature enacted a comprehensive overhaul of the Workers' Compensation System, in which they created a new statutory body named the Oklahoma Workers' Compensation Commission ("Commission"). 2013 Okla. Sess. Laws ch. 208. The legislation contains three separate acts: the Administrative Workers' Compensation Act, 85A O.S.Supp.2013, §§ 1 - 125, the Oklahoma Employee Injury Benefit Act, id. §§ 200 - 213, and the Workers' Compensation Arbitration Act, id. §§ 300 - 328. Part of the Administrative Workers' Compensation Act that you referenced in your letter,1 id. § 19(F), provides that "[a]ll appeals or disputes arising from actions of the Commission shall be governed by provisions of this act and the Commission shall not be subject to the provisions of the Oklahoma Administrative Procedures Act, except as provided in this act." Id. (emphasis added). In addition, the law requires that the Commission's hearings are to be open to the public. Id. § 72(B).

¶2 The Commission is charged with three types of appeals. Under the new law a party may appeal a decision made by an administrative law judge to the Commission, and the Commission is authorized to reverse, modify, or affirm the trial judge's decision. Id. § 78(A). Second, the Commission is required to review adverse benefit determinations under the Oklahoma Employee Injury Benefit Act. This act provides that the Commission, sitting en banc, is to hear petitions for review on adverse benefit decisions made by appeal committees of an employer's benefit plan. Id. § 211(B)(5)-(6). Finally, the Commission is charged with hearing motions to confirm, modify, correct, or vacate an arbitrator's award. Id. § 322.

¶3 In light of all of these requirements, your questions relate to the ability of the Commission to confidentially deliberate during these appeal proceedings outside the presence of the parties and the public in executive session or outside of a public meeting.

The Workers' Compensation Commission Cannot Deliberate in Executive Session Under the Open Meeting Act, 25 O.S.Supp.2013, §§ 301 - 314, Nor Otherwise Confidentially Deliberate Pursuant to Any Other Statutory Provision or Privilege.

¶4 All agencies, unless exempted, are subject to the Oklahoma Administrative Procedures Act ("APA"), which provides specific statutory procedures that govern individual proceedings or hearings in Article II. 75 O.S.2011, § 250.1. The APA states, in relevant part, "[d]eliberations by administrative heads, hearing examiners, and other persons authorized by law may be held in executive session pursuant to paragraph 8 of subsection B of Section 307 of Title 25 of the Oklahoma Statutes." Id. § 309(D). The reciprocal provision is found in the Open Meeting Act's section authorizing executive sessions. 25 O.S.2011, § 307(B)(8). That provision authorizes public bodies to hold executive session for the purpose of "[e]ngaging in deliberations or rendering a final or intermediate decision in an individual proceeding pursuant to Article II of the Administrative Procedures Act[.]" Id. The Open Meeting Act, which governs all statutorily defined meetings2 of public bodies, restricts executive sessions3 to the specifically enumerated reasons listed in the act. Id. § 307(A).

¶5 The Legislature plainly expressed its intent in the Open Meeting Act that "[a]ll meetings of public bodies . . . shall be held at specified times and places which are convenient to the public and shall be open to the public, except as hereinafter specifically provided." Id. § 303 (emphasis added). In light of this clear expression of legislative intent, we turn to Oklahoma Supreme Court precedent that provides, "[a] court is required to apply a plain, direct reading to an examined statute. If a statute is plain, unambiguous and its meaning clear, and no occasion for the application of the rules of construction exist, a statute will be accorded the meaning expressed by the language used." Mangrum v. Fensco, Inc., 1999 OK 78, ¶ 12, 989 P.2d 461, 464. Further, "[t]he Court presumes that the Legislature expressed its intent and that it intended what it expressed. Statutes are interpreted to attain that purpose and end championing the broad public policy purposes underlying them." Ledbetter v. Howard, 2012 OK 39, ¶ 12, 276 P.3d 1031, 1035 (footnotes omitted).

¶6 The statutes in question are clear in their meaning. Public bodies are permitted to engage in deliberations in an executive session for purposes of an individual proceeding, under both the APA and Open Meeting Act provisions, only when used in conjunction with the procedures found in Article II of the APA. By purposefully exempting the Commission from the APA, the Legislature removed the Commission's ability to confidentially deliberate under this provision. As the statutory language is clear we can only conclude that the Commission cannot meet in executive session for the purposes of holding deliberations in an individual proceeding.

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