12-10-12; Home Away From Home = Big Bucks in IL WC; HR Strategies to Limit WC Repeaters; Long-Range Plans to Anticipate Obamacare; Government Ghost Payroller Double-Dip and much more

Synopsis: Home Away from Home Now Equals Big Bucks in IL WC. Shouldn’t a Worker Be Working to Get Workers’ Comp Benefits? Costs Are Certain to Again Soar.

 

Editor’s comment: We sadly announce another unprecedented, gut-wrenching and controversial appellate ruling for Illinois business and the whole defense industry. A problem with the wild expansion of the “traveling employee” concept is we don’t see any true “cure.” We also assure everyone all trades-workers including plumbers, pipefitters, electricians and anyone else who arguably “travels” has complete WC coverage of everything they do on and off work during the pendency of any work assignment. We don’t think that wild expansion of the IL WC Act was warranted or makes any sense in this current economy.

 

In The Venture-Newberg Perini Stone and Webster v. Illinois Workers' Compensation Commission, 2012 IL App (4th) 110847WC (December 6, 2012), claimant was a pipefitter. If you don’t know it, many pipefitters live something of a vagabond existence, happily traveling to wherever there is highly paid and specialized work. When they get there, they make a lot of money but they usually either take and live in trailers, RV’s or choose to live in low-cost but slightly more expensive motels/hotels during the work. When the work is over, they are laid off and move on to the next job in Illinois or wherever there is similar work.

 

In this claim, Claimant came from a Springfield union hall. He was provided work on a temporary assignment in beautiful Cordova, IL which has the oldest drag strip in the United States along with its nuclear power plant where we assume claimant was on assignment. For those of you that don’t know, Cordova, IL is near the Quad Cities or about 180 miles north and west of Springfield. Claimant went up there and our research indicates he moved by his own choice and expense into the Lynnwood Lynks & Lodge in Thomson, Illinois, 25 miles northeast of Cordova. For reasons we can’t tell, the Appellate decision calls this facility the Lynwood “Resort.” There is no question claimant moved in and was staying at this location for the duration of his temporary assignment.

 

Claimant's accident occurred while traveling from this motel to the power plant to work as a pipefitter. He wasn’t on duty and wasn’t being paid a dime while driving or being driven to work. There is no indication claimant was performing any work in the vehicle—he was “going to and coming from” work at the time of injury. The vehicle in which he was riding apparently skidded on ice on a public highway and he suffered injuries. The Commission’s ruling awarded 71+ weeks of TTD so claimant was off all work for over a year following the occurrence. The Springfield Arbitrator assigned denied the claim—while we don’t have access to his written ruling, we feel confident he accurately found claimant wasn’t working at the time of injury, wasn’t on the clock and wasn’t afforded WC benefits for those reasons. We strongly agree with him.

 

The IWCC reversed in a split decision. The Commission majority implemented what we have told our clients and readers is the magic term “traveling employee” to find any action claimant was performing starting with his trip to the Cordova area until his return to his home near Springfield was globally covered under our IL WC Act. In reversing the Arbitrator, the Commission asserted it was “reasonable and foreseeable” claimant would travel a direct route from his lodging to the plant—we have literally no idea why that finding makes any legal or factual difference of any kind. We are certain it was similarly “reasonable and foreseeable” claimant would eat, sleep, bathe, breathe and comb his hair most days. So he and his compadres drove straight to work that day. Who cares? Take a look for the “hidden meaning” of these words below.

 

The Circuit Court reversed and reinstated the award of the Arbitrator denying the claim. The matter moved to the IL Appellate Court, Workers’ Comp Division.

 

In a 3-2 split ruling, the Appellate Court reinstated the decision of the Commission awarding substantial benefits. The Appellate majority did not include the member of the panel from the appellate district in which Springfield sits, Justice John Turner. We assume this is why the majority opinion was written by Justice Thomas Hoffman of Chicago. We assure our readers Justice Hoffman has a great intellect but has authored many controversial rulings both within the WC arena and outside our issues. Justice Hoffman penned the ruling in Metropolitan Water Reclamation District of Greater Chicago v. IWCC where “street risk” first came into our lexicon to award benefits in an unexplained street fall-down for what we feel were risks common to the public.

 

Please remember like the terms “street risk” and “odd-lot total and permanent,” the word “traveling” doesn’t appear and isn’t defined in the Illinois Workers’ Compensation Act or Rules Governing Practice. Like other extralegislative judicial devices or nomenclature in the IL WC field, once one moves to define terms like “street risk,” “odd-lot” and “traveling employee” outside the Act and Rules, you can literally do whatever you like because there are no rules, law or “stars to guide” your trip. If one court ruling says something outside the legislation and rules, other court rulings can pick up and expand the concepts at their whim because there are no boundaries on what one can conjure up if one becomes inclined to do so.

 

Therefore, relying on a 2010 ruling he wrote named Cox v. IWCC, Justice Hoffman and this appellate majority ruled a “traveling employee” is any worker “who travels away from the employer’s premises.” Well, folks, that is just about everyone but office and factory workers working at their posts. All trades-workers, lawyers, truck drivers, police officers, firefighters, garbage collectors, home healthcare workers; basically everyone at some point in their work can reach the hallowed status of “traveling employee” because most of us work outside an office or fixed work site. Please also remember 99% of all staffing workers work “away from the employer’s premises.” Actually, a worker working from home is a “traveling employee” by that definition and injuries working in one’s home should be covered.

 

As we feel the Illinois courts are operating wholly outside the legislation and rules, we don’t know if Justice Hoffman and the majority feel “traveling employee” is a transient or permanent status—by that we mean, are you only a traveling employee when you are on a “travel” or if you ever travel, do you attain and then remain a “traveling employee” as a workers’ comp status for your whole career? Only the shadow knows, folks because we don’t have any definition other than what our courts tell us.

 

Please note the status of “traveling employee” should provide global coverage of any and every injury from the minute the worker walks out of their door until they get to work, start getting paid, go off work and then walk back into their home. Justice Hoffman and the majority in Coxruled “as a general rule, a traveling employee is held to be in the course of his employment from the time that he leaves home until he returns.” So even though you aren’t being paid and your employer has literally no control over what you are doing before and after being at work until you reach home (if you go home), the employer still “owns” full liability for your personal and non-work-related actions and decisions.

 

However, while it appears to us our reviewing courts are conjuring, calling up and creating this expanded body of WC coverage, there is another requirement. Citing a 1980 ruling named Howell Tractor v. IC, the Appellate majority indicates “the test of whether a traveling employee's injury arose out of and in the course of his employment is the reasonableness of the conduct in which he was engaged at the time of his injury and whether that conduct might have been anticipated or foreseen by [the employer].” We want our readers and everyone to understand this “legal standard” means basically any action by a human that isn’t completely insane or wholly unexpected from the moment they leave their home to go to work until they return is now covered by workers’ comp in this state. We consider that to be a gigantic expansion of WC coverage—for the vast majority of workers, we have no true accident defense or limitation of “arising out of and in the course of” employment as the Act appears to require. Please remember between the Cox ruling and this current decision, the Illinois legislature again restated the need for accidents to “arise out of and occur in the course of” employ—perhaps this majority missed that restatement of the limits in our law or perhaps we again need the legislation to again be clarified.

 

What does this truly mean? Is there a bottom line? Well, if we are all magically “traveling employees” in this state and everything we might reasonably and foreseeably do is covered, falling on ice walking down your own stairs at home would now be covered by IL WC. The woman from New South Wales who had a light fixture strike her on the head during romance in a hotel room would be covered if she were from this state. A firefighter at a convention who was wrestling like a schoolboy and tore his shoulder got IL WC benefits as a “traveling employee.” A street cop turning to give directions was covered when he claimed he strained his back. Do we truly want to cover all activities of off-duty truck drivers in truck stops under IL WC? Global WC coverage of any and all accidents be they personal or professional is global coverage—once we expand beyond the parameters of the legislation and rules, you lose any thresholds, limits or boundaries. Illinois appears to have gone that route to the detriment of us all.

 

Claimant in this Venture-Newberg-Perini Stone and Webster v. IWCC ruling was staying at a temporary home on a temporary assignment. He was traveling “to and from work” which is a status that should never be covered under workers’ compensation—you drive to work however you drive and you pick your route and take your own risks in doing so. Unless the IL Supreme Court takes and reversed this ruling, claimant has already been awarded over $70K in TTD for we feel should be a non-work-related occurrence. He will probably receive several hundred thousand dollars more in WC benefits that no state should award.

 

Skip the WC legislative “hair-cuts” we were discussing last week. In our view, if we keep expanding WC coverage in this fashion, we may move past California, Montana and Alaska to Number 1 in the whole country in WC costs. Underwriting WC risk in this state is going to be almost impossible to do. If you don’t think the folks at major Illinois employers like Caterpillar, Nestlé, Boeing, United Airlines and others are looking at what we are doing and shaking their heads in disgust and thinking of moving elsewhere, you aren’t paying attention.

 

As a final note, we have been brainstorming to try to find a “cure” or path out of this mess. One thought we had was to follow the trucking industry for “owner-operator” coverage. A union employer like this one might tell the workers they can’t start work unless and until they pay for their own WC coverage. We aren’t sure if there are any other paths out of this interesting predicament—if you have any thoughts, please let us know.

 

We appreciate your thoughts and comments. Please post them on our award-winning blog.

 

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Synopsis: Dealing with and Blocking Repeat WC Claimants.

 

Editor’s comment: Thoughts from our HR experts at KCB&A.

 

      Safety policy approaches to block/terminate WC “repeaters” are

 

·         One-strike—Start/promulgate a global safety policy providing workers can only suffer a single “at-fault” injury and receive a written warning.

 

o   Thereafter, if they suffer a second “at-fault” injury, you will pay the benefits if the claim is accepted but the employee is terminated when the “at-fault” decision is reached.

o   In union environments, your unions have to sign up for this challenging approach. We have had success in getting some unions to cooperate.

 

·         Three-strike—Same as “one-strike but two “at-fault” events are allowed and termination occurs with the third such event.

 

·         Be sure to post/promulgate this safety policy in your workplace and in your employee/personnel manual.

 

·         Please remember it is arguably harder to “manage” return to work if you have terminated the worker.

 

·         It is also harder to avoid wage loss differential claims if you terminate workers because you can’t bring them back to the same position.

 

      No lump sum settlements for “at-fault” events.

 

·         Some clients will not settle or provide a lump sum on WC claims where the employee was found to be “at-fault.”

 

·         These clients will require any WC claim to be tried in that setting and pay out any permanency on a weekly basis, as appropriate.

 

      Getting release/resignation on all WC settlements.

 

·         Some of our clients now refuse to ever settle a WC claim without the employee leaving their current job.

 

·         It is possible claimant may get more money if you try the claim but lots of folks will take fast money and quit, if that is what you require.

 

·         KCB&A has a global release/resignation—if you have interest, send a reply.

 

      Another concern you might consider is 24-hour or “same-shift” accident reporting. This doesn’t directly address repeaters but it is another aggressive HR tool.

 

·         One of our clients requires same-shift or 24-hour accident reporting—they terminate for late-reported accidents. They may pay WC benefits but the employee is terminated.

 

·         This approach does make everyone safety-conscious and if something goes wrong, all workers know they need to be sure you know about it quickly or face termination.

 

·         Unions have to back up the concept. Signs about reporting requirement have to be posted everywhere about the requirement.

 

The aggressive defense experts at KCB&A can assist with any and all of these HR approaches—if you have interest, send a reply. We appreciate your thoughts and comments.

 

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Synopsis: Mark your calendar—Obamacare and Its New Punitive Costs Are Coming at U.S. Business in One Year. What Can/Should You Do Now to Be Ready?

 

Editor’s comment: The Play-or-Pay-Penalties provisions of Obamacare will become effective in one full year on January 1, 2014. You may want to anticipate that challenge and take steps/make decisions about it right now. At that time, U.S. employers with at least 50 full-time employees, including full-time equivalents, will be required to pay a significant per-employee penalty to the U.S. Government if they fail to provide legislatively defined health coverage to full-time employees. For example, a company with 50 employees that doesn’t provide healthcare coverage will owe $150,000 in penalties, starting on 1/1/2014! Specifically, the employer will have to provide minimum essential coverage (MEC) to all full-time employees and dependents in order to avoid that penalty if a single full-time employee receives a tax credit or cost-sharing reduction. In addition, the MEC has to be affordable and must provide minimum healthcare value.


If you have concerns about the possibility of a per-employee penalty, consider these options right now:


1. Opt for “Play and/or Pay”

 

If you want to avoid per-employee penalties, you will have to offer the requisite affordable MEC. Alternatively, you may decide to not offer coverage, pay the applicable penalty, and redesign compensation arrangements for full-time employees.


2. Opt for Hybrid Approach.

 

In between offering affordable MEC and not offering any healthcare coverage, there are "hybrid" approaches where a U.S. employer can offer healthcare coverage to a portion of its population and pay the applicable penalty for the remainder. For example, you could structure employee contributions so low-wage earners qualify for a subsidy and then pay the $3,000 penalty for those employees who elect coverage through a healthcare exchange.

 

You may also create a healthcare plan for a select group of employees and pay a $2,000 penalty for all full-time employees, provided the arrangements meet federal nondiscrimination rules.


3. Hire/Retain More Part-Time Employees.

 

Although part-time employees are included in determining whether you are a large employer with at least 50 full-time employees or full-time equivalent employees, employers do not have to provide health coverage for part-time employees. Employers who do not cover part-time employees, however, must be careful in categorizing these employees each measurement period.

 

4. Hire Less Employees or Split Up Your Business Groups into Smaller Units.

 

We are confident some companies may be better served and save millions to become smaller. If you have 195 employees today, we feel some employers may split into four independent companies with less than 50 workers each. The companies are going to have to be truly “independent” and we are sure there will be federal watchdogs snooping into how the companies are operated. If you want to consider this option, we vote you do it last week and not wait until next year when it will appear more obvious and potentially create heightened scrutiny.

 

5. Call/write/email Your Healthcare Broker.

 

We are confident your broker is going to be on the point with developments and what you are going to need. All solid healthcare brokers should be able to do the “math” on what is best for your business in this new challenging and potentially business-disruptive environment. If you aren’t getting the right answers from your broker, send us a reply and we can make solid recommendations for Midwest healthcare brokers who know these concerns.

 

To Do List


Your "To-Do List" may vary. Here are planning tips/thoughts:

 

  • Set up HR systems/documentation to classify new and ongoing employees as full-time, part-time, variable or seasonal.
  • Clearly define independent contractors as such—watch out for employee misclassification issues; if you need help on the topic, send a reply.
  • Insure independent contractors are not common law employees and have their own healthcare coverage—we urge you to confirm that fact in any agreement with an independent contractor.
  • Identify measurement and stability periods.
  • Make sure healthcare/benefit plan documents cover all employees who are determined to be full-time employees within the applicable measurement period throughout the stability period.
  • Amend plan documents to insure employees who switch from full-time to part-time don't lose coverage until the end of the stability period.
  • Consider providing employees with information about total compensation, including the total cost of health benefits to include both employer and employee contributions.
  • For collectively bargained or union workers, insure full-time employees are, provided with affordable MEC under the terms of the CBA and future bargaining agreements contain language that will allow you to redesign plans as needed.

 

We appreciate your thoughts and comments. Please post them on our award-winning blog.

 

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Synopsis: Government Ghost Payroller Double-Dipping to Stay at Work and Get Both Pension/Regular Pay?

 

Editors comment: The IL Supreme Court just took this case so we will have to wait and see what they do with it.

 

In Prazen v. Shoop, No. 115035, 4th Dist., Claimant was ordered by his Pension Board to return $307,100.50 in early retirement incentives where he hadn’t retired!! After taking retirement, Plaintiff self-incorporated and returned to the same municipal job from which he “retired” and was receiving both pension and salary at the same time.

 

Our Illinois Appellate Court, in reversing the Pension Board found the IL legislature did not grant the Pension Board the power to “pierce the corporate veil” to find Plaintiff’s corporation was a sham device to circumvent the return-to-work restrictions under Section 141.1(g) of the IL Pension Code. If this decision stands, every municipal worker may be able to retire, incorporate and legally “double-dip” if their government employee will allow it.

 

If that isn’t completely clear, this guy took early retirement in a gov’t pension system that is unbelievably badly funded and rapidly running out of money. He was the Peru, IL Electrical Department head and ostensibly took a buyout and early retirement.

 

Despite receipt of early retirement benefits and his pension, he then started a corporation composed of himself, his wife and a daughter.

 

Operating with the City mayor’s knowledge, he continued to work as the Peru, IL Electrical Dep’t head as an “independent contractor” and continued to be double-paid well over $100K in pension and salary for the next 12 years before he or his corporation finally stopped working for the City and actually “retired.”

 

We not only think these actions should be reversed, we feel this should be against the law and future situations should have criminal implications. We appreciate your thoughts and comments.

 

12-4-12; "Reverse-The-Illinois-WC-Reforms" Effort is Ongoing; Arik Hetue on Anti-Price-Fixing Drug Pricing Rules in IL; John Campbell analyzes important Exclusive Remedy Ruling and much...

Synopsis: No “Haircuts” Here—Plaintiff/Petitioner Attorneys in Illinois Won’t Stop Stripping Out Defenses In Our Courts. Please assume the “Reverse-the-IL-WC-Reforms” effort is proceeding apace.

 

Editor’s comment: We are pretty sure the concept of an IL workers’ comp “haircut” started with Governor Quinn in February 2012. He asserted lots of different things in state government like pensions and WC benefits would be cut. He was quoted as saying “Everybody is going to get a haircut. No one will get scalped – that’s the basic concept.” At the most recent SafeWorks Annual Convention, prominent claimant attorney David Menchetti confirmed the “haircut” approach was the intent of the 2011 Reforms to the IL WC Act. We joined with Dave in our hope IL WC benefits would be brought back into a middle-range of the U.S. so we didn’t stick out so much and make existing and future Illinois employers feel Illinois would be a bad place to expand or start new businesses.

 

The main problem we feel present with trying to make Illinois workers’ compensation reasonable is our rabid Petitioners’ Bar and/or ITLA with very successful and well-to-do work comp lawyers across our state who don’t want a “haircut” and don’t want spiraling IL WC benefits to become moderate and reasonable. These lawyers know how to change the law without any need to go to the two major branches of government—they don’t care about executive branch or Governor Quinn who has the worst approval ratings in the history of approval ratings. Looking at the legislative branch, the Claimant lawyers also understand Senate President Cullerton and Speaker Madigan have to deal with lobbyists and legislators and public attention, all of which are challenging to say the least.

 

So constitutional scholars, what’s left? If you want to rapidly and dramatically change our Illinois workers’ compensation system, move to our Courts. Why the Illinois Courts—well, the Plaintiff/Petitioner Bar legally and ethically donates millions to Supreme, Appellate and Trial Court judges/justices when they are running for election. Those judges/justices are the best paid in the nation (making more than the Governor and more than twice what legislators earn) and qualify for pensions very quickly. Those judges/justices have a tendency to invite supportive lawyers to host/fund campaign receptions for them, attend victory parties and perhaps share a cup of java at a later time. It doesn’t take a quantum leap to contemplate legal controversies and other issues might be discussed along the way. At present, one could donate jillions to a judicial campaign, the judge/justice could win and Illinois law does not require disclosure of that fact to the other side prior to what are supposed to be fair and impartial hearings.

 

If you aren’t sure, the WB Olson v. IWCC ruling we recently reported is the first salvo in this “Reverse-the-IL-WC-Reforms” effort. The Plaintiff-Petitioner’s Bar doesn’t like vocational rehabilitation other than when they completely control voc rehab. In that case, claimant’s counsel got a ruling that may now mandate IL employers have to pay for his personal choice of voc rehab provider. His choice of voc rehab provider may be completely inept and not find claimant a job for years and years. Understanding that is a complete WC-claim-train-wreck, following the WB Olsonappellate ruling, IL employers may still be required to pay endless and expensive TTD benefits and the full cost of the valueless voc efforts. Does anyone think this new and unprecedented model for voc rehab is going to save Illinois businesses money? Is there any state in the United States that has a voc rehab system that goofy? Does anyone care this claimant attorney is a sworn member of our Commission, as he is on the Illinois Workers’ Compensation Advisory Board with the power to recommend hiring, suspension or termination of the Arbitrators he appears before every day? Are we the only folks who view that as an actual or potential conflict?

 

What’s next? Well, we have now seen several Plaintiff/Petitioner lawyers, including the eminent claimant lawyer we mention above, who want to take control of the IME process. They are touting and promulgating a year 2000 ruling in Griffin v. Mark Vend99 WC 22267 by now Justice Quinn. The goal of the claimant bar is to remove any responsibility that a claimant sign a medical release and/or provide a history to a physician who is performing an independent medical examination. The ruling states:

 

Plaintiff’s employer never introduced any medical evidence because its doctor never examined the plaintiff. The employer argues that the plaintiff did not properly submit to the physical examination required by 820 ILCS 305/12 because she would not provide a complete medical history., details of the accident, and a description of her job duties to the doctor selected by the employer to conduct the exam (Dr. Levin). Plaintiff was instructed by her attorney to only respond to questions about her medical condition during the physical examination. Section 12 requires that an employee submit to a physical examination “for the purpose of determining the nature, extent and probably duration of the injury received by the employee.” Nothing in this statute requires any more information from an employee than the plaintiff was willing to disclose. Furthermore, plaintiff’s employer failed to accede to a compromise solution offered by the Arbitrator that would have provided a the employer’s doctor with an agreed statement of facts so that questioning of the plaintiff would not have been necessary. Lastly, the questionnaire that plaintiff refused to complete and which led to Dr. Levin’s refusal to examine her was not made part of the record.

 

We assure our readers the more rabid members of the IL Plaintiff/Petitioner bar are now telling their clients not to “cooperate” with IME’s and advising them to refuse to sign releases or otherwise provide any medical history to the IME doctors. We consider this approach silly and completely unnecessary. That said, we are fairly confident there are some claimant lawyers who aren’t going to stop until they control every aspect of the IL workers’ compensation system. Our strongest hope is to tell all the members of the defense community—let the IWCC handle this one and deal with whatever they do. Right now, the IWCC is generally fair and moderate. We feel they are sensitive to the concerns of both sides. There is literally no need or value that will be derived in appealing this newly concocted issue to the Circuit and Appellate Courts. As we saw in WB Olson v. IWCC, you are going to lose every aspect of the claim before our judiciary and their ruling will then become Illinois law. We assume the claimant bar is next going to attack nurse case management and UR and surveillance and anything else that might provide any balance or defense for employers in our IL WC system. Watch this space for any new developments.

 

FYI, we looked up the Griffin v. Mark Vend claim on the IWCC website. It appears the case was dismissed and claimant did not receive either an award or settlement.

 

We appreciate your thoughts and comments. Please post them on our award-winning blog.

 

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Synopsis: Finally! The IWCC implements new “combo-drug” price fixing rules, bringing some sanity back to the world of WC medication pricing. We applaud all those involved for a rare instance of rapid and reasonable reform in Illinois.

 

Editor’s comment: We have previously advised you of the egregious practice of “repackaging” medication and selling it out of a doctor’s office. As discussed in previous law updates, the 2011 amendments to the Act had this tiny provision snuck into the legislation that was unassuming and innocuous, however it ended up potentially costing Illinois business millions of dollars. The provision has at long last be modified.

 

Repackaging drugs is a process by which a pharmaceutical shop essentially comes in and sets up a dispensary in a doctor’s office. They will take 10 cent medication, put it in a new bag, and slap a 75 cent price tag on it, then have the doctors hand out the medication at patient visits. Meanwhile, the outside vendor will issue charges to the payor without complicating the doctor’s practice. It is a clear price gouge, but unfortunately the practice was written into law by unwitting or uncaring politicians.

 

The proposed rules were published in the Aug. 17 issue of the Illinois Register, and according to the IWCC website, they took effect as of November 20, 2012. The amendment that took effect reads as follows:

 

If a prescription has been repackaged, the Average Wholesale Price used to determine the maximum reimbursement shall be the Average Wholesale Price for the underlying drug product, as identified by its National Drug Code from the original labeler.

 

What this does is essentially eliminate the increase in price that could have been created by the repackaging process. We applaud our legislators and the Commission for recognizing a problem, and moving rapidly to resolve it in a very reasonable manner.

 

Per the IWCC website notification, the final text of the rule will be published in the December 7, 2012 edition of the Illinois Register. This article was researched and written byArik D. Hetue, J. D. who can be reached for question or comment at ahetue@keefe-law.com.

 

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SynopsisAlthough Plaintiff may have felt “robbed” of her right to sue her employer for civil damages, the Appellate Court correctly followed the exclusive remedy provision in the Workers’ Compensation Act and affirmed the summary dismissal of the Circuit Court.

 

Editor’s Comment: In Glasgow v. Associated Banc-Corp, 2012 IL App (2d) 111303 (November 20, 2012) Plaintiff, a bank teller, filed a personal injury suit against her employer for physical and psychological injuries sustained during armed bank robbery. Specifically, Plaintiff alleged her employer/defendants “knowingly, willfully, [and] purposely failed, with obvious intent and outrageous conduct, [to] provide adequate bank security to deter and/or prevent the robbery.” Plaintiff’s complaint alleged the robbery was not accidental, but that, because of Defendants’ failure to implement increased security measures to deter robberies, there was a “direct invite” to rob. Plaintiff sought punitive damages against Defendants for their “outrageous conduct”.

 

Aside from the obvious strain of logic in this complaint, Plaintiff also pursued and was provided benefits under the Workers’ Compensation Act for her injuries. Her election of workers’ compensation benefits was but one of the reasons the Appellate Court continued to deny her prayer for relief in this separate civil action. The Court cited the exclusive remedy provision in Section 5(a) of the Act, explaining that “no common law or statutory right to recover damages from the employer for injury or death sustained by any employee while engaged in his line of duty as such employee, other than the compensation herein provided, is available to any employee who is covered by the provisions of this Act, to anyone wholly or partially dependent upon him, the legal representatives of his estate, or any one otherwise entitled to recover damages for such injury.” 820 ILCS 305/5(a) (West 2008).

 

While the Court made clear intentional acts of an employer to harm an employee are not immune from civil suit, “intentional inaction” by an employer is not the type of intent which could give rise to an exception to the exclusive workers’ compensation remedy. Therefore, the lack of adequate security at the bank, even if proven, is insufficient to prove intent to harm the employee. Further, once an employee has collected compensation on the basis that his or her injuries were compensable under the Act, the employee cannot then allege that those injuries fall outside the Act’s provisions (Court cited Collier v. Wagner Castings Co., 81 Ill. 2d 229, 241 (1980). Accordingly, the Court concluded, once Plaintiff applied for and accepted workers’ compensation benefits, she was barred from pursuing this intentional-tort action against Defendants.

 

We feel the Court correctly applied the law and properly drawn the boundaries of any potential civil action by an employee after a work injury. Just as a claimant’s negligence shall not bar their right to workers’ compensation benefits, an employer’s negligence shall not permit a double recovery under both the Workers’ Compensation Act and civil recovery. This theory of “intentional negligence” formulated by Plaintiff was correctly identified as legal sophistry and summarily dismissed accordingly.

 

11-27-12; How Do We Defend and Win "Repetitive Working" Claims; Top Ten Mistakes in OSHA Recordability; Ellen Keefe-Garner on Dealing with Work-Related Suicide and much more

Synopsis: Aggressive Defense Handling of IL WC Claims—How Do You Defend and Win “Repetitive Working” Claims?

 

Editor’s comment: Our lawyers at KCB&A are focused on paying the claims we owe but fighting as aggressively, passionately and as fervently as possible where we can on claims our clients have to win. One growing “problem” we see in the IL WC matrix is the growth of “repetitive working” claims and how the WC defense industry is struggling with them.

 

What is a “repetitive working” claim?—it is onset of pain without a defined accident, trauma or unforeseen occurrence. We feel workers pick the heaviest task or tool in their job duties and try to point to that work as the source of their problems. Lots of older workers and wily younger workers are signing up for Illinois’ generous WC benefits but don’t want to deal with the uncertainty of an unpredictable incident. So when they have any medical issue, like spontaneous sore knees, one way to cash in is to blame the sore body part on “work.” What such workers are doing across the state is to say, “ouch, my [insert body part] hurts” and then say the problem is due to “work.”

 

On the Defense Side, Don’t Call It an “Accident” or “Injury” unless it is a True “Accident” or “Injury”

 

An accident or acute injury is something unforeseen and unexpected. One phenomenon we have seen, particularly with nurse case managers, is many veteran NCM’s and defense claims handlers will describe or label any medical condition as an “accident” or “injury” if the worker says their pain started in the workplace.  For one example, if you have a forklift operator with a sore knee they say started from getting off their forklift, in our view, they haven’t suffered an “accident,” they simply have a sore knee. Acute pain or soreness in the adult knee without any history of trauma is usually associated with the degenerative development of bone-marrow edema and/or joint effusion. In this setting, bone marrow edema can be caused by various non-work-related disorders ranging from septic arthritis with or without osteomyelitis, inflammatory and degenerative arthritis, to transient osteoporosis, spontaneous osteonecrosis and acute synovitis. If you aren’t willing to fight such conditions, you may pay lots of money when they randomly arise—you basically own that leg for hip and knee replacements and all the sequalae that might ensue.

 

We have seen nurse case managers call the onset of chronic knee pain an “accident at work.” Such NCM’s will then get an independent medical exam where they tell the expert medical examiner the worker/examinee with transient onset of knee pain suffered an “accident at work” and ask the doctor if the “accident” is related to work. It is a very solid physician who will see through such questions and ask if there was actually an acute occurrence in the investigation or initial medical history. In our view, the use of the words “accident” or “injury” is very poor nomenclature, as it implies an accident or an injury occurred. The defense attorneys at KCB&A would instead indicate this claimant suffered “onset of pain” or spontaneous onset of knee pain while at work. Where there is no incidence of trauma or an unexpected event in the reporting or investigation, please don’t provide a label for an event that isn’t present.

 

What about “Repetitive Trauma”—Isn’t that Compensable?

 

We have some problems with calling the random onset of pain from activities of daily life as being due to “repetitive trauma” or repetitive injury based upon our example of the job duties of occasionally getting on and off forklifts. Most IL Arbitrators don’t feel getting on and off a forklift at the beginning of an eight-hour shift, at a single morning work break, at a lunch break, at an afternoon break and at the end of the day a lot of stress to the body. In our view, they aren’t going to feel that is “repetitive trauma” like a work task performed hundreds of times an hour. Please remember, if you don’t investigate and document the true work situation, the employee can say anything they want at a hearing.

 

So if we are going to defend such claims, you need

 

ü  An outline or specifics or investigation of how many times in a day, week or month this worker may have been getting on and off a forklift.

ü  You have to be able to prove it was four times a shift or forty times each hour.

ü  You have to determine if the forklift step is an inch, six inches or two feet off the work floor/surface.

ü  It might be important to know the surfaces the forklift runs on and whether such surfaces were in level, dry, well-lit and clean.

ü  You may also consider getting confirmation the forklifts being used were all in a normal and ordinary state of repair and were being used by numerous other similarly situated workers without any complaint about maintenance or safe use.

 

We also don’t want any client to have a worker say they got hurt using any equipment without getting the maintenance and safety records of that equipment. Like any Boy/Girl Scout, be prepared to show the equipment in question was in a normal and ordinary state of repair. As soon as possible following a report of a repetitive working problem, have a supervisor “test” or at least use/observe the equipment to insure it is working properly and didn’t fail—you have to “prove a negative” to show things weren’t broken and worked fine.

 

Next, you might want to look on the web about the ergonomics of stepping on and off forklifts and how that differs, if at all, from routine activities of daily life. You also want to pull and save security videos to give any IME doctor the real picture of the job and work duties before they reach their expert opinions. Such videos also help the Arbitrators to see what really goes on in your workplace and how much stress might be involved.

 

We make these points specifically to confirm if you accept and pay substantial benefits for what we characterize as a “repetitive working” claim, you may be on the hook and/or implicitly accept any claim for foot, knee, hip, back, neck and shoulder pain for anyone working for this company who wants to point to stepping on and off forklifts as the “cause” of those problems. All of those body parts/areas are used and are arguably “stressed” when one gets on or off a forklift.

 

Do These Approaches work—Can We Truly Defend “Repetitive Working” claims?

 

Youbetcha--we want all of our readers to know the 16 lawyers at KCB&A fight and win claims on a regular basis in Illinois, Indiana, Wisconsin and Michigan. If you give us the tools and evidence, we are aggressive and relentless. But we can’t win without our clients’ help and assistance in aggressively investigating claims, documenting/authenticating defenses and possible WC fraud. If you need help in ramping up your accident investigation protocols, send a reply. Please post your thoughts on our award-winning blog.

 

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Synopsis: Ten OSHA Recordkeeping Mistakes You Have to Know and Avoid.

 

Editor’s comment: The OSHA experts at KCB&A keep seeing our clients making the same recordkeeping errors and wanted to give you our expert thoughts and advice. All employers should be on the lookout for common errors on maintaining your OSHA 300 logs. Here is our list of ten major mistakes U.S. employers may make on your OSHA 300 logs:

 

1.    Work restrictions in relation to OSHA recordability

 

The most common error is failing to understand what an OSHA-recordable work restriction is. Many employers honestly believe an injury may not be recordable as a work restriction if the injured employee still can perform some work. Employers try to avoid OSHA recordability by assigning office work to injured truck drivers. Other employers may think a case is not recordable if the employee still can perform work within his or her job description. For example, they give purely sedentary welding work to ironworkers who otherwise would climb ladders.

 

However, OSHA's regulations (29 C.F.R. § 1904.7(b)(4)(i)-(ii)) state a restriction occurs when either one of two circumstances occur:

 

      The employer keeps an occupationally injured employee from performing one or more “routine functions” of his job; or

      A licensed health care professional recommends the employee not perform one or more “routine functions” of his job. “Routine function” is defined as a work activity regularly performed at least once per week. For an injured ironworker who now is unable to climb ladders, the case is recordable because he typically climbs ladders every day.

 

2.    “Light or medically modified duty” may cause OSHA recordability

 

Another typical error is the perception light or medically modified duty is not a work restriction. An OSHA recordkeeping regulation (§ 1904.7(b)(4)(vii)) indicates light or medically modified duty can indeed amount to a work restriction and cause recordability. In fact light or medically modified duty is presumptively a restriction according to the regulation cited.

 

OSHA watchdogs take this regulation to mean “light or medically modified duty” is a recordable work restriction unless the physician affirmatively states the injured worker may perform all of their routine job duties and work a full shift. If you are faced with nebulous restrictions, we tell our clients and readers when faced with vague restrictions such as “light duty,” you have to then contact the physician and get details on what work duties the worker may not perform. If the restricted duty is one the worker regularly performs at least once a week, an OSHA recordable case must be entered on the 300 log.

 

3.    Always remember the injured worker is an important “witness” and can’t be ignored

 

A typical mistake is to fail to give proper weight to the report of the injury offered by the injured worker. Employers sometimes discount a worker's version of injury because there were “no witnesses.” However, the injured worker is a witness and if he or she says they twisted their knee when he stepped on an oily surface, the worker's account must be given as much weight as circumstances warrant. You have to remember, sometimes the employee's statement may be enough. If you feel it is not enough and the event should be disputed, an employer has to document and authenticate your disputes.

 

4.    Overreliance on late reporting as a basis for disputing an injury

 

Our clients sometimes fail to record an injury on their OSHA 300 log because the worker did not report the event timely or on the same day. Some employers assert a worker’s failure to immediately report is fatal to credibility, especially if the failure violated your “as-soon-as” accident reporting rule. Such reasoning is understandable but can cause issues. Although the worker’s failure to immediately report an injury may violate your accident-reporting protocols, it does not necessarily mean a work-related injury did not occur. You still have to consider whether the worker’s account is reliable and whether there is other defense evidence to dispute the report.

 

5.    Trying to understand aggravation of pre-existing conditions in relation to OSHA recordability

 

Another common mistake is our clients and readers make is misunderstanding OSHA's test for recordability of a workplace aggravation of a non-occupational injury or condition. Employers may hope if an on-the-job incident caused a true flare-up of a condition that originally arose off the job or with a previous employer, such aggravation is not OSHA recordable. Such a perspective may be incorrect. Please also note OSHA's regulations on this point can be misleading. Consider an employee who runs a marathon and gets sore knees on vacation, returns to work and picks up a small box. Suppose the lifting of the small box causes a flare-up of knee pain that started during the marathon race and causes the worker to either require medical treatment or makes them unable to perform normal weekly duties. Is such a problem OSHA recordable? It would be understandable for an employer to think lifting incident may be ignored as insignificant in relation to the overall issue. First, the principal provision on aggravation in the regulations §1904.5(b)(3) says an aggravation is not recordable unless the current workplace “significantly” aggravated a preexisting non-occupational condition. Second, the preamble to the regulations describes the provision as not “requir[ing] the recording of cases involving only minor aggravation of preexisting conditions.” So a reasonable employer might think the regulations permit you to distinguish between significant and insignificant aggravations. Employers can and should be forgiven for being confused by a regulation which speaks of “significant” aggravation but requires you to record a case the cause of which is 99.99 percent non-occupational.

 

6.    The influence of non-OSHA criteria for work-related problems, aggravations and work restrictions

 

Another issue arises when physicians and employers apply non-OSHA criteria for work-relatedness, aggravations and restrictions. For example, employers commonly ask a doctor whether an aggravation is work-related. Often an OccDoc might respond the “major” cause was non-occupational. Such a response reflects the physician's common-sense test for work-relatedness or aggravation or a given state's workers' compensation causation statute. This analysis does not reflect OSHA's definition of aggravation, which does not require analysis of “major” causes.

 

This issue also affects work restrictions. Workers' compensation TPAs/insurance carriers urge employers to keep workers working. Risk, safety and health managers who succeed in keeping injured workers working find it difficult, when reviewing a case for OSHA recordability, to place the case on the 300 log as an OSHA recordable restriction.

 

7.    Common sense first aid can be recordable

 

Under the OSHA recordkeeping regulations, medical treatment is recordable unless it falls within an exception in the regulations, one of which is “first aid.” The regulations list all treatment comprising “first aid.” Accordingly, we encounter employers who feel if treatment is first aid, it is not recordable. However, as OSHA created its own special and highly restricted definition of “first aid,” there is a difference between first aid in common parlance and “first aid” within the meaning of the OSHA regulations.

 

8.    Prescription drugs in relation to recordability

 

OSHA's recordkeeping rules state use of a prescription drugs is recordable as medical treatment. Employers often overlook, however, that a physician's recommendation for an employee to use even a non-prescription drug at “prescription strength” is recordable.

 

9.    What to do about “Battling Physicians”

 

Employers may try to avoid a recordable case by asking a second physician for their opinion on whether medical treatment or a work restriction recommended by, a previous physician was needed, or whether an injury or aggravation is occupational. This seems permitted by OSHA's regulations, which twice state that, “If you receive recommendations from two or more physicians or other licensed health care professionals, you may make a decision as to which recommendation is the most authoritative, and record the case based upon that recommendation.” The trouble is that OSHA's regulations fail to make clear distinctions OSHA enforcement officials can make. Under these distinctions, a second doctor can affect recordability caused by a first physician, and sometimes not.

 

10.  Recordability can change as a work-related condition changes

 

Once an injured worker stops reporting for work because of long-term injury leave, record keepers may forget to keep track of days away from work and put them on the OSHA 300 log. The same thing frequently occurs when injured employees make subsequent physician visits sometime after an injury; on these occasions, restrictions may be later imposed, medical treatments given or drugs prescribed of which the employer is unaware. Employers need to establish a system for keeping tabs on subsequent events and for making sure your record keepers consistently track them. If not, recordable cases or data might slip through the cracks and not be reflected on the employer's OSHA 300 log.

 

We have several OSHA experts on staff at KCB&AOur hourly rates are dramatically more reasonable than the giant national law firms who want to keep this as mystical and mystifying as possible. We are happy to provide clarity and simplicity to this area of law. If you have concerns or issues with OSHA or recordability, please send an email or call at any time.

 

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Synopsis: Investigating Suicide in the Workplace must involve careful vetting of causation, thoughts from our respected nurse-lawyer Ellen Keefe-Garner, J.D., R.N. B.S.N.

 

Editor’s comment: Statistics show suicide is the 11th leading cause of death In the U.S. and is in fact a more frequent cause of death than homicide, which is the 13th leading cause of death. If an employee commits suicide, whether at work or outside of work, questions can arise as to whether the death is or should be compensable under workers’ compensation law. In order for any injury or death to be compensable in WC, it must be related to or “causally connected” to work. In workers’ compensation, proof of causation requires death by suicide arise out of and in the course of the employment.  Arising out of the employment means that some act or element of employment is or was a causative factor in the suicide.

 

Petitioners sometimes try to push the limits of causation by trying to prove a suicide was prompted by or caused by a work-related event even though the suicide happened outside of work. This occurs because the value of a workers’ compensation death case in Illinois is a minimum of approximately $615 thousand dollars with a maximum potential recovery of over $1.6 million dollars. 

 

Importantly, employers should recognize the fact of an employee’s death by suicide at work does not automatically mean the death is or is not causally related to work. For instance, if a distraught employee commits suicide at work because of depression prompted by a recent divorce, the suicide should not arise out of the employment and should not be causally related to employment, even though it occurred at work. In contrast, if a distraught employee commits suicide at home to avoid some extreme pain arising from a work-related injury, some courts have found a causal relationship between the death by suicide and the work-related accident even though the suicide was committed at home and not at work. 

 

In the oft-quoted Illinois case of Harper v. Industrial Commission (from 1962), a worker who had sustained a back injury at work committed suicide after leaving work in the middle of the morning. A workers’ compensation award to the widow was ultimately appealed all the way up to the Supreme Court of Illinois since the death had not occurred at work. The Illinois Supreme Court ultimately upheld the award to Decedent’s widow, finding there was sufficient proof of a direct causal relationship between the work-injury and the suicide. Based on the proof of a sufficient causal connection to the work accident, the Court held it was not necessary to prove the precise mental condition suffered by Decedent at the time of the suicide.

 

In contrast, in the later Illinois case of Goldsamt v Industrial Commission, our Supreme Court affirmed the denial of benefits for injuries resulting to an employee who lost both of his legs after attempting to commit suicide by jumping out of a 9th story window at work. Although the employee argued his suicide attempt was due to stress from work, the key to the denial of benefits in Goldsamt was the presence of the employee’s mental illness unrelated to the work environment. In other words, the Court held evidence of the employee’s long-standing depression and obsessive-compulsive disorder militated against a direct or a sufficient causal link between his suicide attempt and depression from work problems. Ultimately, the Supreme Court upheld the lower courts’ findings indicating Petitioner’s depression arose from causes that were not “work-related” and, therefore, not compensable.

 

Given that causation is such an important factor in any workers’ compensation case related to an employee’s suicide (or suicide attempt) at work, employers must do a careful investigation to determine the cause of any employee’s suicide. In other words, a suicide death must be diligently treated like any other work-related accident involving a fatality. Before an investigation is completed, no assumptions should be made that a suicide will or will not be compensable even though it arose as a result of an intentional and self-inflicted act unrelated to work.

 

Of course, when the employer becomes aware of an employee’s suicide at work, the employer should contact the police and OSHA to report the death so a full investigation as to the cause of the death can be started. However, the involvement of these outside investigators should not prevent the employer from doing its own investigation as to the cause of the suicide. Any employer in such a circumstance should gather and preserve important evidence, like a suicide note or statements made by Decedent to co-workers. Ultimately, any workers’ compensation claim that arises out of a suicide death or a suicide attempt will center on issues related to causation. In other words, the main question at trial and later on appeal will be whether the employee’s suicide ultimately arose out of and in the course of the employment.

 

One other caution in dealing with workplace fatalities—you have to remember witnesses to a sudden, shocking event and “first-responders” may also become claimants if they suffer psychological or related mental issues as a result of the unforeseen occurrence on the job. Following the Supreme Court’s rule in Pathfinder v. Industrial Commission, you have to reach out to such workers and provide care, as needed.

 

This article was researched and written by Ellen Keefe-Garner, J.D., R.N. B.S.N. Please feel free to send questions or concerns to Ellen at emkeefe@keefe-law.com