(1) Good cause is a substantial reason or legal justification for failing to appear, to act, or respond to an action. To show good cause, the ALJ must find that a party had a good reason for what they did or did not do, using the provisions of Superior Court Civil Rule 60 as a guideline.
(2) Good cause may include, but is not limited to, the following examples.
(a) You ignored a notice because you were in the hospital or were otherwise prevented from responding; or
(b) You could not respond to the notice because it was written in a language that you did not understand.
(3) For purposes of public assistance cases, good cause has the same meaning as described in RCW
74.08.080. Good cause for not requesting a hearing before the deadline may include, but is not limited to: Military deployment, medical reasons, housing instability, language barriers, or domestic violence.
[Statutory Authority: RCW
34.05.220,
43.17.060,
43.20A.075, and
74.08.080(2). WSR 24-06-040, § 388-02-0020, filed 2/29/24, effective 4/1/24. Statutory Authority: RCW
34.05.020. WSR 00-18-059, § 388-02-0020, filed 9/1/00, effective 10/2/00.]