63.1
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Rights of Parties
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All
parties
to a hearing shall be
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informed of the time and place of the hearing,
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given access to the
protest
, request for redress, or report
to be considered at the hearing,
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allowed reasonable time to prepare for the hearing, and
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allowed to have a representative present throughout the
hearing of the evidence but, in a
protest
involving a
breach of a rule of
Part 2
,
3
or
4
, the representatives of boats shall habe been on board
at the time of the incident unless
there is good reason for the protest committee to decide
otherwise.
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If a
party
does not come to a hearing, the protest committee
may proceed with the hearing in their absence.
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63.2 |
Hearings
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The protest committee shall hear each
protest
or request
delivered unless it allows it to be withdrawn.
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The protest committee may combine hearings which arise from
the same or very closely connected incidents into one hearing.
However, a hearing under rule 69 shall not be combined with
any other type of hearing.
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If the validity requirements are met, the protest committee may
change the type of case if it is appropriate to do so having
considered the information in the case, including any evidence
given during a hearing.
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If the protest committee decides to protest a boat under
rule 60.4(c)(2)
, it shall close the current hearing, deliver a protest in
accordance with the
rules
, and then hear the original and new
protests
together.
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A hearing involving
parties
in different events conducted by
different organizing authorities shall be heard by a protest
committee acceptable to those authorities.
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63.3
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Conflict of Interest
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A protest committee member shall declare any possible
conflict of interest
as soon as possible after becoming aware of it.
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A
party
to the hearing who believes a protest committee
member has a
conflict of interest
shall object as soon as
possible.
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A protest committee member with a
conflict of interest
shall not be a member of the protest committee for the hearing,
unless:
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all
parties
consent, or
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the protest committee decides that the
conflict of interest
is not significant.
However, for World Sailing major events, or for other events
as prescribed by the national authority of the venue, a person
who has a
conflict of interest
shall not be a member of the
protest committee.
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When deciding whether a
conflict of interest
is significant, the
protest committee shall consider
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the views of the
parties
,
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the level of the conflict,
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the level of the event,
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the importance to each
party
of the case, and
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the overall perception of fairness.
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Any written information provided under
rule 63.6(b)
shall include any
conflict of interest
declared by a protest committee member,
and any decision by the protest committee under
rule 63.3(c)(2)
.
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63.4
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Hearing Procedure
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The protest committee shall first consider validity. The hearing
shall be closed if
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a
protest
or request is invalid, or
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a
protest
was made under
rule 60.4(c)(1)
and there was no injury or serious damage.
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The protest committee shall take the evidence of the
parties
present at the hearing, their witnesses, and any other evidence
it considers necessary. Hearsay evidence is admissible.
However, the protest committee may exclude evidence which
is irrelevant or unduly repetitive.
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A
party
present at the hearing may question any person who
gives evidence.
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A member of the protest committee who saw the incident shall,
as soon as reasonably possible, declare this fact to the
parties
attending the hearing.
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A witness shall be excluded from the hearing when not giving
evidence, except for a witness who:
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is also a party, or
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is a member of the protest committee.
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63.5
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Decisions
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The protest committee shall consider the evidence and decide
what weight to give it. It shall then find the facts based on the
balance of probabilities (unless an applicable
rule
requires
otherwise), and then apply the
rules
to those facts to make its
conclusions and a decision.
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Decisions shall be made by simple majority vote. When there
is an equal division of votes, the chair of the hearing may cast
an additional vote.
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If there is a conflict between
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two or more
rules
that must be resolved before a decision
can be made, and
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those
rules
are in the notice of race, the sailing
instructions, or any of the other documents that govern
the event under item (g) of the definition
rule
,
then the protest committee shall apply the rule that it believes
will provide the fairest result for all boats affected.
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If the protest committee is in doubt about the meaning of a
class rule, it shall refer its questions, together with the relevant
facts, to an authority responsible for interpreting the rule. In
making its decision, the protest committee is bound by the
authority's reply.
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63.6
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Informing the Parties and Others
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The protest committee shall promptly inform the
parties
to the
hearing of the facts found, the applicable
rules
, the decision,
the reasons for it, any penalties imposed, and any redress
given.
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If requested by a
party
in writing within seven days of being
informed of the decision, the above information shall be
provided promptly in writing and the protest committee may, if
it considers it relevant to do so, prepare or endorse a diagram.
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The protest committee may publish the above information after
any hearing, including a hearing under rule 69, unless it
decides there is good reason not to do so.
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The protest committee may direct that the above information is
to be confidential to the
parties
.
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If the protest committee penalizes a boat under a class rule, it
shall send the above information to the relevant class rule
authorities.
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63.7
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Reopening a Hearing
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The protest committee may reopen a hearing if it decides
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a
party
was unavoidably absent from the hearing,
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it may have made a significant error, or
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significant new evidence has become available within a
reasonable time.
However, a protest committee shall reopen a hearing when
required to do so by the national authority under
rule 71.3
or
R5
.
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A
party
to the hearing may request a reopening by delivering a
written request to the race office (or by such other method as
stated in the sailing instructions) no later than 24 hours after
being informed of the decision. The request shall identify the
reason for making it. However, on the last scheduled day of
racing the request shall be delivered
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within the protest time limit if the requesting
party
was informed of the decision on the previous day;
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no later than 30 minutes after the
party
was informed of the decision on that day.
A request that does not comply with this rule is invalid.
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The protest committee shall consider all requests to reopen a
hearing. When a request to reopen is being considered, or when
the hearing is reopened,
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if based only on new evidence, a majority of the
members of the protest committee shall, if practicable, be
members of the original committee;
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if based on a significant error, the protest committee
shall, if practicable, have at least one new member.
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