A cannabis administrative hearing before an Administrative Law Judge at the Office of Administrative Hearings is a high-stakes, formal legal proceeding — not an informal conversation with regulators. The burden of proof, the rules of evidence, and the procedural requirements that govern OAH proceedings demand experienced legal representation.
The Law Office of Shay Aaron Gilmore prepares and presents cases at every stage of the cannabis administrative hearing process, from pre-hearing discovery and motions practice through ALJ proceedings, agency-level appeals, and Superior Court review under Code of Civil Procedure §1094.5.
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How California Cannabis Administrative Hearings Work
Cannabis administrative hearings in California are governed by the Administrative Procedure Act (Government Code §11500 et seq.) and follow a structured procedural sequence. Understanding each phase — and the deadlines that govern it — is essential for any operator facing a formal proceeding.
Triggering Events and Request Deadlines.
A formal administrative hearing is triggered when an operator receives a notice of hearing, notice of proposed disciplinary action, or citation and files a timely request for hearing. The deadline to request a hearing is specified in the notice — typically 30 days from service for a standard citation, and as few as 15 days for certain disciplinary actions. Missing the deadline waives the right to contest the action. Once a hearing is timely requested, the matter is referred to the Office of Administrative Hearings for scheduling. The DCC retains the right to proceed with the proposed action as a default if the operator fails to appear or withdraws the hearing request.
Pre-Hearing Discovery and Motions.
OAH proceedings allow for prehearing discovery under Government Code §11507.6, including written interrogatories, requests for documents, and the right to inspect and copy documents in the agency’s possession. The scope of discovery at OAH is more limited than Superior Court discovery but can be critical for building a factual record. Motions practice at OAH includes motions to dismiss for lack of jurisdiction, motions in limine to exclude evidence, and requests for continuance. All motions must be filed with the OAH and served on the opposing agency. Strategic use of discovery and pre-hearing motions can significantly shape the outcome of a hearing.
The OAH Hearing.
The OAH hearing is conducted before an Administrative Law Judge assigned by the Office of Administrative Hearings — not by the DCC itself. The hearing resembles a bench trial: both sides present opening statements, call and cross-examine witnesses, introduce exhibits, and make evidentiary objections. The rules of evidence apply, though not as strictly as in Superior Court. In a DCC disciplinary proceeding, the agency bears the burden of proving the violation by a preponderance of the evidence. The hearing is transcribed, and the record created at the hearing is the record that will be reviewed by the DCC Director and, if appealed, by Superior Court. Nothing outside this record may generally be considered on appeal.
The ALJ Proposed Decision and DCC Director Review.
After the hearing, the ALJ issues a proposed decision within 30 days (or such other time as specified). The DCC Director then has 100 days to adopt, modify, or reject the proposed decision under Government Code §11517(c). If the Director adopts the proposed decision without modification, it becomes the final agency action. If the Director modifies or rejects the proposed decision, the Director must allow the parties an opportunity to present written argument on the modifications before a new decision is issued. This two-stage review process — ALJ, then Director — means that a favorable ALJ decision is not the end of the case.
Agency-Level Appeals and Superior Court Review.
If the DCC Director’s final decision is adverse, the operator may seek review by filing a petition for writ of administrative mandamus in California Superior Court under Code of Civil Procedure §1094.5. The Superior Court reviews the administrative record — it does not hold a new trial or hear new evidence (absent specific exceptions). The standard of review for decisions involving a fundamental vested right is independent judgment: the court exercises its own judgment on the evidence rather than deferring to the agency’s findings. For most cannabis licensing decisions, independent judgment review applies because a cannabis license constitutes a fundamental vested right once issued. Preserving all arguments at the administrative level is essential, because arguments not raised before the ALJ are generally forfeited on Superior Court review.
Local Enforcement Hearings: Municipal Administrative Proceedings
| Factor | State (DCC / OAH) | Local (Municipal) |
|---|---|---|
| Governing law | Administrative Procedure Act (Gov. Code §11500) | Local municipal code; varies by jurisdiction |
| Hearing forum | Office of Administrative Hearings; independent ALJ | City or county hearing officer, planning commission, or city council |
| Discovery rights | Gov. Code §11507.6 — limited written discovery | Varies; often more limited than OAH |
| Decision authority | ALJ proposes; DCC Director decides | Hearing officer decides; may be final or subject to city council appeal |
| Superior Court review | CCP §1094.5 writ of administrative mandamus | CCP §1094.5 writ of administrative mandamus |
| License at stake | DCC state license | Local operator permit or conditional use permit |
| Simultaneous proceedings | DCC and local proceedings may run in parallel | Local proceedings may trigger DCC inquiry |
For conditional use permit issues and local land use enforcement, see Real Estate & Land Use.
Representative Matters
Representative administrative law matters in cannabis hearings and appeals include:
- Represented a cannabis manufacturer at a formal OAH hearing arising from alleged track-and-trace violations; presented expert testimony on METRC system errors, resulting in an ALJ proposed decision substantially reducing the proposed penalty.
- Represented a cannabis retailer in an expedited OAH hearing following an emergency license suspension; obtained a stay of the suspension pending the hearing and secured a favorable proposed decision from the ALJ.
- Assisted a cannabis cultivator in the North Bay in a city hearing officer proceeding arising from local ordinance violations; negotiated a compliance plan with the city that allowed continued operations while the operator remediated the violations.

