My project since the beginning of the year has been creating US Sailing Hearing Decision Forms. With lots of feedback so far, they are released as the official forms for the US, and I am including the forms and supporting documentation here for your reference.
Documents included:
- Instructions - Please read this document to understand a bunch of tips and tricks for efficient use of the forms
- Standard Wording in Microsoft Word
- Standard Wording in PDF
- Hearing Decision Template in Microsoft Word
- Hearing Decision Template in Fillable PDF
- Hearing Decision Template in Printable PDF
Personally, I'm not totally in favour of the approach US Sailing has taken (in the decision form and standard wordings), but I'm not bound by US Sailing (MNA) so my opinion is not really relevant.
Well done.
John P, when you say Many appeals reveal things like committees completely skipping validity, do you mean many appeals are upheld because of validity/invalidity because protest committees failed to consider it, or just that they failed to document their consideration.
When I first trained as a judge we never used to write up validity for valid protests, because the crusty old judges used to say "If the protest wasn't valid we wouldn't be holding this hearing."
I think not documenting a clearly valid protest is generally ok, but if a "sea lawyer" appeals on the basis that "I never heard him say protest, therefore it should have been invalid," having a fact in the form that the protestor hailed protest 3 seconds after the incident makes quick work for an appeals committee. Without that, the appeals committee would send a question to the original committee asking for a fact about whether 'protest' was hailed and if so, when. Having the text on page 1 lets you not clog the general facts/conclusion/decision with non-part 2 items and makes it more likely you have the relevant fact at appeal.
I can see the approach you're going for, and I think you have done a sterling job at achieving those goals. If that is what a huge MNA like US Sailing decides, then fine.
I personally prefer the Decision Form to be only that - a decision write-up. Concise and to the point, rather than a functional checklist which I think is what you are aiming for. Don't get me wrong, I promote the use of checklists as part of the hearing process, and I always use a checklist myself.
Similarly, the standard wording document is amazing (most scenarios we are likely to ever come across are covered, all correctly referenced to RRS etc.). As a training tool, it's second-to-none - Anyone can learn from that document.
But I am wary of such detailed prescription in both for two reasons.
Interestingly, you mentioned many appeals with key steps missed by less well-trained (not-trained) protest committees.
Sailing is one of the few sports which takes into account, with the appeal system, non-expert officiating. While slightly cumbersome, the appeals system provides a disgruntled competitor with a chance to challenge the results. It also provides a filter ensuring a certain threshold of disgruntlement before it is activated. (In a game of soccer, decisions are made on-the-spot and there is no recourse for poor decisions. Once a penalty is awarded and scored, that's it.)
So I don't see appeals as a bad thing. It's an added layer of 'cushioning' for the range of pc chair abilities out there.
So all-in-all, I aim to maintain the standards of hearings through good training of principals and procedures - at least of our NJs. But like you said, your forms are there to assist Joe-Average PC chair who has little or no training. I can totally see that too.
Good job.
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Just an observation on the form design:
That's all.
Cheers.