New Jersey Lawyer Volume No. 180 October/November 1996 Approaching Hearsay at Administrative Hearings: Hearsay Evidence and the Residuum Rule
by Joseph R. Morano
Perhaps nothing is more unsettling to the uninitiated than the evidentiary aspects of administrative law. Many
of the evidence rules applied in judicial proceedings simply are not applicable under the Administrative
Procedure Act (APA) and Uniform Administrative Procedure Rules (UAPR).
New Jersey Lawyer June 2003 Procedural Basics of Special Education Hearings
by Joseph R. Morano
Representing a party in an administrative hearing before the New Jersey Office of Administrative Law (OAL)
requires a special understanding of that forum’s unique procedural oddities. While certain specific procedural
requirements vary from agency to agency, for the uninitiated the streamlined procedures and liberal rules of
evidence seem to beckon the unsuspecting practitioner into certain danger - like sirens luring eager sailors
into the rocks.
New Jersey Law Journal, Vol. CLX-No. 8 - Index 705 May 22, 2000 What's New in Agency Practice? Most Everything
A look at lawyers in niches that keep changing with the times
By Henry Gottlieb
All matters arising from N.J.S.A Title 18A and N.J.A.C. Title 6, particularly disputes about teacher tenure; employee compensation, benefits and discipline; student rights; vendors; relations between
school boards; medical treatment and insurance.