
The public will be able to see the public proceedings over charges of racism at Yorkshire.
The England and Wales Cricket Board's Disciplinary Commission made a decision after hearing evidence.
Normally, the Cricket Disciplinary Commission is in the public eye.
Azeem Rafiq made claims that led to charges being brought against Yorkshire and seven others.
Rafiq said racism at the club had left him feeling suicidal.
In June of this year, the county, along with former England and Scotland players, were charged.
The hearings are scheduled to start at the end of the month.
He won't engage with the process. He and Pyrah were paid compensation by Yorkshire after they were fired.
The hearings will take place a year after Tom Harrison, the chief executive of the England and Wales Cricket Board, told the Digital, Culture, Media and Sport select committee that English cricket was approaching an emergency over its failure to address racism.
Rafiq's story was described in the report as "typical of an endemic problem across the whole of cricket".
16 staff have left Yorkshire since Rafiq's accusations became public.
The ECB said in June that it had carried out a "thorough and complex" investigation to establish the grounds for the charges against both the county and the individuals involved.
The charges came from alleged breeches of a directive regarding "conduct which is improper or which may be prejudiced to the interests of cricket or which may bring the game of cricket or any cricketer into disrepute" and its anti- discrimination code.
Stephan Shemilt is the Chief Cricket Writer.
The scandal threatens to tear English cricket apart.
Some of the most serious allegations made by Rafiq will be extraordinary if both sides are willing to cross-examine each other.
Rafiq's testimony to a DCMS select committee almost a year ago has reopened wounds for many and it will be bruised.
The whole episode has probably been too damaging to bringclosure for those involved
It won't address the larger issue of discrimination in the game, especially with a report from the Independent Commission for Equity in Cricket due in the New Year.