2-2-2015; Walker Wants to Whack Wisc WC--Will Rauner Follow?; Can IL Wage Loss Settlements Ever Be "Fair?"; LHWCA Enforces Statutory Notice Req'ment as the States Do and more

Synopsis: Walker Wants to Whack Wisconsin WC--Will Rauner Follow?

 

Editor’s comment: Workers’ comp watchers across the Midwest U.S. were stunned to see a memo come out of Cheese-land where it appears Governor Scott Walker is trying to break up or “de-form” their quiet and generally reasonable workers’ compensation system. Labor representatives and attorneys say they are concerned about a report Gov. Scott Walker’s two-year budget plan will call for “drastic” changes in Wisconsin’s well-regarded system for compensating injured workers.

 

Please note the most recent Oregon WC premium rankings puts Wisconsin almost right in the middle of the United States—they are 23d with an index rate of 1.92  and they are 104% of the median of all states. Our Cheese-brothers/sisters were previously 12th in the Oregon 2012 WC premium rate survey so they are tracking precisely where Illinois wants to be in the next two years.

 

It seems someone in the Wisconsin Worker’s Comp Division leaked an unsigned memo authored by a person with knowledge of the potential changes to the worker’s compensation program states the Walker administration plans to upend the current one-stop-shop for injured workers, employers and insurance companies by dividing responsibilities among various agencies that don’t currently handle or understand workers’ comp law and rules. These are changes the anonymous author claims will “clearly have a negative impact on our stakeholders.”

 

The memo, dated Jan. 15, was sent to “WC Stakeholders” and is filled with shorthand and acronyms aimed at people knowledgeable about the WI WC system. The Wisconsin State Journal obtained the memo last week, and it was circulated among the media by Sen. Jon Erpenbach, D-Madison, on Monday. If you want the link to the memo, send a reply. The author declined to be identified publicly for fear of being terminated. Among the changes the memo outlines would be allowing companies and injured workers to reach their own settlements.without approval by the WC Division. Currently, all such agreements must be approved by the Division’s ALJ’s or administrative law judges. The same rules apply in IL workers’ compensation—the concept is to insure injured workers get fair settlements within a reasonable range for other similar injuries.

 

In addition, the memo states ALJ’s and the Division would no longer be available to answer questions from the public, injured workers, employers and insurance companies and instead focus only on rendering decisions in contested cases. This “no-questions-answered” concept wouldn’t be much of a change to Illinois WC practice as our WC administrators rarely answer questions but direct interested parties to attorneys on both sides. We feel this newly proposed Wisconsin approach may lead to more litigation and not less.

 

We are also advised the Governor wants to end the practice of using certified court stenographers for contested hearings—this practice would change the concept of appeals in reliance on transcripts. We are unsure what other system for recording hearings would replace transcripts and the CSRs who create them.

 

Another aspect of the plan would reportedly remove the Worker’s Compensation Division from the Wisconsin Department of Workforce Development and split its future duties between two different agencies, the Office of the Commissioner of Insurance and the Department of Administration, according to the memo. As we outline above, neither agency has anything to do with Wisconsin workers’ comp at present so a rocky and confusing transition may take place. Governor Walker is scheduled to unveil this budget proposal tomorrow Feb. 3.

 

Like IL WC, the cost of administering Wisconsin’s WC program is paid for by worker’s compensation insurers and self-insured employers who remit a yearly fee in proportion to their size. Taxpayers and injured workers do directly not pay for the WC system. For the Wisconsin WC administration, any reorganization would not add or subtract from the 2015-17 Wisconsin budget’s bottom line.

 

What will it mean to Illinois WC?

 

It is hard to tell but we are certain our current Governor Bruce Rauner closely watches the actions of Governor Walker in Wisconsin and Governor Daniels in Indiana. We salute him for doing so, as they are close competitors of our state. Of the three states of Illinois, Wisconsin and Indiana, Illinois has been the worst-run under Democratic control for well over a decade and we have major financial issues including over $110B in debt that is going up at a rate close to $20M every day of the year. As we have said over and over, we do feel the IL WC system can be readily reformed without the need to battle over legislation in Springfield. We are happy to advise Governor Rauner’s staff and/or any of our readers on how to get this done quickly and smoothly—all you have to do is ask. In our view, what Governor Walker is doing in Wisconsin is much too radical and he is trying to “fix-something-that-isn’t-broken.” We don’t feel confusion and chaos is a way to make things better for any of the component players in the WC arena.  

 

We hope assume Governor Rauner is going to listen to KCB&A and other IL WC participants to make his goals known and let everyone help him to reach them. Gov. Rauner’s first State of the State speech is later this week so we will see what he has to say and report it for our readers next week.

 

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

 

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Synopsis: Will Illinois’ Workers’ Comp System Ever “Settle” Wage Loss Claims Fairly?

 

Editor’s comment: After last week’s KCB&A Update article about how the defense industry may counter/defend expensive and questionable wage loss differential claims with “dispatch,” we had numerous readers write and call to confirm one of the unquestionable “kinks” or anomalies in settling such claims. In short, we feel the current method of documenting and settling such claims is challenging and may even be borderline fraud. We look to our readers for guidance on closing this claims “loophole” moving forward.

 

IL WC wage loss differential claims are supposed to be lifetime benefits with the assumption the worker will have “permanent restrictions” for the rest of their life. The supposed permanent restrictions can be obtained from an FCE that takes four hours of testing. As we have told our readers and lots of FCE providers, we think FCE’s in IL WC are over-utilized and not scientifically significant, so as to justify hundreds of thousands of dollars in WC settlements being paid.

 

We see lots of claimants coached on how to “fail” such testing to justify the restrictions to be entitled to weekly tax-free benefits for life. Please note the IL WC Act was changed to allow for payments to be challenged for five years or sixty months. When this issue was litigated, our Petitioner-oriented reviewing courts ruled such benefits could only be changed if the “disability” changed. The courts indicated it didn’t make any difference if the worker receiving weekly benefits was making ten times more money than when the benefit level was set, the worker was still entitled the same lifetime benefit. We consider this a controversial approach that doesn’t match the legislative intent of the amendment.

 

The challenging issue is how wage loss differential claims are handled in lump sum settlements. If an Illinois wage loss differential settlement is lumped out for let’s say $350,000, the money is usually called “loss of use of the body as a whole” and/or put on other body parts. IL Employers don’t get “credit” for such settlements if a later claim is made by the same workers. Such settlements occur without the employee “admitting to” the supposed permanent lifetime job change. This sets up the situation in which an injured worker could get a large amount of money to then “recover” from the permanent restrictions to return to the same trade and then suffer another injury and start the path to getting another large settlement. We had a claim where a worker did this four times before we got the fifth such claim. We were able to stop the claimant and his attorney when we got all the prior records and settlements.

 

We have tried to draft settlement contract language confirming the worker can never accept a future job requiring lifting higher than their supposed “permanent restrictions.” Arbitrators and opposing counsels refused to agree with or approve such settlements, asserting we were unfairly limiting the workers’ future rights. We responded to outline our position double or triple wage loss differential settlements in one lifetime was tantamount to workers’ comp fraud. Most of the Petitioners’ attorneys and Arbitrators said to raise that issue when dealing with the second or third such settlement.

 

What do you think? Should lump sum wage loss differential settlements be handled differently? How do you feel they should be worded? Is this the sort of issue that should be brought to the IL Workers’ Comp Advisory Board or the IWCC for their guidance? We appreciate your thoughts and comments.

 

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Synopsis: Lack of Timely Notice for “Repetitive Working” Claim Fails at Longshore WC As It Should In State WC Claims.

 

Editor’s comment: In Mack v. SSA Cooper, LLC., Claimant Mack worked as a longshoreman for 16 years and retired in 2005, when he last worked for SSA Cooper, LLC. Mack filed a claim under the LHWCA, alleging degenerative disc disease was an “occupational disease” related to his working conditions, including lashing, running a bulldozer, driving the lift and using heavy rods, cables, and turnbuckles. He did not allege our outline a true “accidental injury” or unforeseen occurrence of any kind.

 

Claimant testified he stopped working in 2005 because his legs started cramping and his doctor told him he had a disc pressing against a nerve, requiring surgery. The employer controverted the claim, indicating its first notice or knowledge of the claim was on October 31, 2013, more than eight years after Mack last worked for them. At the hearing before the ALJ the employer argued Claimant failed to make a prima facie showing because he improperly alleged an occupational disease claim and, to support such a claim, the conditions causing the harm must be present in a peculiar or increased degree by comparison with employment in general.

 

The ALJ indicated back problems qualified as an occupational disease and therefore was immaterial to the 20(a) presumption. The medical evidence showed Claimant suffered from a back condition requiring surgery, meaning Claimant established he suffered a harm. Mack’s job was described as tough, heavy, physical work that included bending, stooping, and lifting heavy objects. These conditions were felt to cause, aggravate or accelerate his degenerative condition. Thus, the ALJ held Claimant established the prima facie elements and was entitled to the §20(a) presumption. 

 

The crux of the case was the statutory date of injury. The question of whether Claimant was entitled to benefits under the LHWC Act depended on a determination of when he was aware or should have been aware his employment and injury were related. The ALJ found there was substantial evidence that Mack had not given sufficient notice to entitle him to the §20(b) presumption for Sections 12 or 13. The ALJ further found Mack should have reasonably been aware his injury was related to his work on August 8, 2005 when he first sought treatment for his back condition. The ALJ also noted the  record was replete with evidence Mack was aware, or reasonably should have been aware, of a causal relationship between his injury and his work through both medical advice and loss of wage-earning capacity. 

 

There was no question Claimant testified he became aware in 2005 he was disabled from longshoring because of his back surgery. Mack also said he last worked on August 8, 2005 because he was totally disabled, and he had not worked since then, and his doctor had told him there was no way possible he could return to work at the docks. These statements showed a direct causal link between Mack’s  work and injury as well as an immediate impact on his wage capacity. The ALJ pointed out, regardless of Mack’s proclaimed lack of awareness, the appropriate standard for determining the date of injury was not subjective, but objective. The medical advice showed Mack should reasonably have been aware of the relationship between his injury and his job in August 2005. There was nothing in the record to indicate SSA knew of Mack’s injury prior to the October 15, 2013 notice.  In summary, the ALJ found the record showed Mack knew or reasonably should have known his injury was related to his employment and his disability affected his wage-earning capacity. The ALJ found Mack failed to provide a satisfactory reason for the late notice. SSA properly raised an objection to the failure to give timely notice, and would be greatly prejudiced if the failure were excused. Accordingly, the ALJ held Mack’s claim is time-barred and the claim was denied.

 

The ruling was issued on January 12, 2015 and may be appealed. We are simply reporting this decision and it is not our intention to affect the outcome of the litigation in any way. The defense team at KCB&A handles and defends LHWCA and Jones Act claims—if you have questions or concerns about one, send a reply.

 

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Synopsis: Dr. Michael Vender and the great specialists at Hand to Shoulder Associates Now Have Office Hours in Belvidere, IL.

 

Editor’s comment: Dr. Vender is one of the top hand surgeons in the United States and has a great team of docs working with him. They have announced they are bringing their practice to Belvidere to provide solid care for workers in that area. Hand to Shoulder Associates began in the early 1970?s as a single physician hand surgery practice located in the growing industrial area of Elk Grove Village, Illinois. Over the last 40 years, they have grown to become a renowned center of excellence, recognized across the Midwest U.S. for specialization in injuries and problems of the shoulder, elbow, wrist and hand. The first replantations of upper extremity amputations in the greater Chicago-area were performed by one of the co-founders of HSA in the 1970s. 

 

With their main office still located in the northwest suburbs of Chicago, HSA is the largest non-university single specialty hand group and one of the largest in the Midwest. They have six board certified or board eligible orthopedic surgeons, each having additional training in the upper extremity and microvascular surgery. They operate numerous office locations throughout the Chicago area.

 

Their main number is 847 956-0099. Their website is http://www.handtoshoulders.com/

 

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Synopsis: Illinois WC Rates Jump Again and Your PPD Reserves May Be Wrong(!) and Need Retroactive Updating. Send a Reply to Get a Free Copy of Shawn R. Biery’s Updated IL WC Rate-Sheet!

 

Editor's  comment: There continues to be an upward spiral of IL WC rates. Starting in the 1980’s, the IL WC Act provides a formula which effectively insures no matter how poor the IL economy is doing, our WC rates keep climbing.

 

We caution our readers to pay attention to the fact the IL WC statutory maximum PPD rate is now $725.81. When it was published, this rate changed retroactively from July 1, 2014 to present. If you reserved a claim based on the prior rate for the period from July 1 to right now, your reserves are wrong. If you have a claim with a date of loss after July 2014 and a max PPD rate, you need to take a look and see if the new maximum PPD rate applies. If this isn’t clear, send a reply to Shawn at sbiery@keefe-law.com.

 

The current TTD weekly maximum has risen to $1,361.79. A worker has to make over $2,042.69 per week or $106,219.62 per year to hit the new IL WC maximum TTD rate. Do such folks truly need full TTD value? Does any state in the United States have a TTD maximum that high?

 

The new IL WC minimum death benefit is 25 years of compensation or $510.67 per week x 52 weeks in a year x 25 years or $663,871.00! The new maximum IL WC death benefit is $1,361.79 times 52 weeks times 25 years or a lofty $1,770,327.00 plus burial benefits of $8K. On top of this massive benefit, Illinois employers/governments have to pay COLA increases.

 

The best way to make sense of all of this is to get Shawn Biery’s colorful, updated and easy-to-understand IL WC Rate Sheet. If you want it, simply reply to Shawn at sbiery@keefe-law.comand he will get a copy routed to you before they raise the rates again!

1-26-2015; Can IL WC End Wage Diff Claims with "Dispatch?"; Shawn Biery Publishes Updated IL WC Rate Sheet; IL Supreme Ct Decides Atty Fee Dispute and more

Synopsis: Can the IL WC Defense Industry End Wage Diff Claims with “Dispatch?” Enter Our Contest!!!

 

Editor’s comment: Illinois workers’ compensation is a strange and unusual place to manage claims. We continue to see decisions like the Village of Deerfield v. IWCC where certified rehab counselors on both sides provided challenging opinions indicating the best paying job this government worker could obtain was at or around our minimum wage of $8.25-10 per hour. We consider that outcome embarrassing to all WC system participants. On behalf of the taxpayers of Deerfield, IL and our readers in the insurance/business community, we are infuriated with some voc experts and rulings in reliance on them by IL Arbitrators and Commission. Because of such rulings, we feel taxpayers and Illinois businesses are spending millions more on IL work comp than they should. We feel that challenging voc approach has to be rejected at all stages. We look forward to the day when conservative Arbitrators tell the CRC’s to go back and find Petitioner a better-paying job before they issue a final decision. We can do better than minimum wage, people.

 

‘Bad Job Right Away’—the IL WC claim handler’s nightmare

 

If you’ve been around the Illinois workers’ compensation system for a while, you know that one of the biggest crises facing all Illinois employers is what we call ‘Bad Job Right Away.’ This tactic is designed to take full advantage of Section 8(d-1) in the IL WC Act which provides for wage differential benefits calculated by taking the difference between what the employee could be making in the job when injured and whatever they are “able to make” following an accidental injury. The problem with this concept is many trades involve employees who are paid high wages because their jobs primarily require brawn and not brains. They are paid high wages because they are able to endure the rigors of doing heavy work in dangerous environments. What some of them are doing when they suffer injuries once considered ‘part of the job’ such as operated knees, shoulders or backs is to try to get out of their trade and cash in on novice claims management by the carrier or third party administrator (TPA). The problem in handling wage diff claims for insurance carriers/TPA’s is the need to lump them out to reach closure—what appear to be lifetime benefits are very rarely paid over anyone’s life. As you will see below, the settlements may be enormous.

 

Wily petitioners’ attorneys know that. So when a tradesman, truck driver or nurse suffers an operated shoulder (or knee, elbow or back) that will render it difficult to return to the same work, the tradesperson is advised to complain to their doctor to get a goofy FCE that contradicts all the ongoing findings by a registered physical therapist in weeks of physical therapy. The goal of the FCE for Petitioner and his counsel is to provide work restrictions which arguably push the injured worker out of their trade. Please note Petitioners’ attorneys in this state beg, plead and fight to have FCE’s ordered by an arbitrator to obtain the all-important work restriction. Once the worker with a sore shoulder has the restriction, he or she is then coached to look for a ‘bad job right away.’

 

Why would anyone want a ‘bad’ or lower paying job?

 

Short answer: to maximize their workers’ comp claim for wage loss diff benefits. The tradesperson who takes a minimum wage job after an injury may have a claim for wage loss at the maximum amount allowed by law—currently $1,021.34 per week or about $53K on a tax-free basis each year until they reach 67. Wage loss based upon Section 8(d-1) of the Illinois Workers’ Compensation Act is calculated at 2/3 of the difference between what the employee could be making at the time of the finalization of the claim and what they were making when injured. Starting in 2006, the cap is the Statewide Average Weekly Wage which is already $1,021.34 a week and rising.

 

For a 25-year-old wage-earner, who won’t hit 67 for 42 years, they would have a wage loss with a full value of $2,226,000 (or $1,021.34 x 52 weeks x 42 years). That’s lottery-winning money for an operated shoulder claim and may be 5-7 times more than amputation rates. Even if one would take the present discounted value of all that money, it is still exponentially more than the typical award of 10-15% BAW for most operated shoulder claims.

 

Why do they want the ‘bad job’ right away?

 

No one really wants the ‘bad job’ because they might have to starve for a while compared to the high scale they were used to living on, even if they are receiving TPD. They also might have to work in a less than likeable job environment. The employee will rush to get a lower paying job and similarly hurry to seek wage differential benefits determined so they lock in their lifetime claim at a high value. After that happens, they will try to get the carrier or TPA to lump out the benefits—once they get the lump sum, they are ready to return to regular work or start a business they always wanted to start, and the ‘bad job’ will soon be a distant memory. While it may smell like fraud, it is perfectly legal.

 

This strategy, if properly implemented, is difficult to counter—many employers want to get rid of a problem employee. Many treating physicians are thrilled to get rid of a chronic complainer and feel that they have done their job when they get the employee back to limited work. And it is really difficult to continue to try to place someone in a better paying job once they have obtained employment—in fact, the ‘bad job’ itself generally makes it difficult to have the wily claimant continue their job search.

 

How Do You and All Risk Managers/Claims Handlers Stop this Silliness?—With “Dispatch.”

 

We have advised our readers about “no touch” freight driving jobs for job candidates who get CDL’s or Commercial Driver’s Licenses. If you want information on that concept, sent a reply. We also learned there are lots of seated dispatch jobs in the logistics and transportation industry that can be done for reasonable to above-average pay with relatively limited training. Here are numerous open and well-paid dispatch jobs we found in about thirty seconds of searching on the web:

 

911 Dispatcher Part-Time

River Grove

IL

Part-Time

911 Police/Fire Dispatcher

Leyden

IL

Full-Time

911 Police/Fire Dispatcher

Oak Lawn

IL

Full-Time

911 Police/Fire Dispatcher

Cicero

IL

Full-Time

911 Police/Fire EXPERIENCED Dispatcher PART-TIME

Oak Lawn

IL

Part-Time

Call Taker Dispatcher-Superior

Elmhurst

IL

Full-Time

 

We are now running a contest you can enter. We learned there are 911 Dispatch jobs and lots of other dispatch jobs across the entire state of Illinois. The description of the 911 Dispatcher job tasks are seated or sedentary work; High school or GED equivalent accepted and some training/experience required.

 

These jobs pay well to very well—we saw one job in a north suburb of Chicago which paid $88,000 a year with full benefits in a union position. For the vast majority of injured workers, sedentary jobs that pay that much money would completely eliminate IL WC wage loss differential claims. There are all sorts of dispatch jobs out there in our state. A quick search onIndeed.com, Monster.com or www.dispatcherjobs.com will bring lots of hits.

 

Enter to Win!! Find Non-Dispatch Jobs that Fill the Bill.

 

We are also asking our readers and offering prizes for the best response on non-dispatch sedentary jobs that will end lottery-level wage loss differential work comp claims. We don’t want our clients or any business/government to have to pay millions to a worker for a simple operated shoulder or knee. Do you know of open jobs in our state that are similar to dispatch jobs? We are looking for

 

·         Seated or sedentary work;

·         High school or GED equivalent;

·         Private sector or state/local/U.S. government jobs;

·         Jobs that have continuous openings are a plus;

·         Six months or less of training required; and

·         Starting pay from $15 per hour or more.

 

Please send them in and next week, we will share the best “wage-loss-differential-busting jobs” with our readers. KCB&A will send a prize to every participant. We appreciate your thoughts and comments. Please post them on our award-winning blog.

 

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Synopsis: Illinois WC Rates Jump Again and Your PPD Reserves May Be Wrong(!) and Need Retroactive Updating. Send a Reply to Get a Free Copy of Shawn R. Biery’s Updated IL WC Rate-Sheet!

 

 

Editor’s comment: There continues to be an upward spiral of IL WC rates. Starting in the 1980’s, the IL WC Act provides a formula which effectively insures no matter how poor the IL economy is doing, our WC rates keep climbing.

 

We caution our readers to pay attention to the fact the IL WC statutory maximum PPD rate is now $725.81. When it was published, this rate changed retroactively from July 1, 2014 to present. If you reserved a claim based on the prior rate for the period from July 1 to right now,your reserves are wrong. If you have a claim with a date of loss after July 2014 and a max PPD rate, you need to take a look and see if the new maximum PPD rate applies. If this isn’t clear, send a reply to Shawn at sbiery@keefe-law.com.

 

The current TTD weekly maximum has risen to $1,361.79. A worker has to make over $2,042.69 per week or $106,219.62 per year to hit the new IL WC maximum TTD rate. Do such folks truly need full TTD value? Does any state in the United States have a TTD maximum that high?

 

The new IL WC minimum death benefit is 25 years of compensation or $510.67 per week x 52 weeks in a year x 25 years or $663,871.00! The new maximum IL WC death benefit is $1,361.79 times 52 weeks times 25 years or a lofty $1,770,327.00 plus burial benefits of $8K. On top of this massive benefit, Illinois employers/governments have to pay COLA increases.

 

The best way to make sense of all of this is to get Shawn Biery’s colorful, updated and easy-to-understand IL WC Rate Sheet. If you want it, simply reply to Shawn at sbiery@keefe-law.comand he will get a copy routed to you before they raise the rates again!

 

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Synopsis: Illinois Supreme Court Decides Another WC Attorney Fee Dispute.

 

Editor’s comment: Along with Alvarado v. IWCCwe now see a second WC dispute made it all the way through the trial and appellate court to our highest court.

 

In Ferris, Thompson and Zweig, Ltd. v. Espositothe dispute involved the question of subject matter jurisdiction between the Illinois Workers’ Compensation Commission and the Circuit Courts. The Court held that an attorney fee dispute based upon referral agreements wherein a Plaintiff attorney referred new workers’ compensation claims to Defendant attorney fell within the Circuit Court’s jurisdiction and wasn’t properly litigated at the IWCC.

 

Plaintiff sued Defendant in Circuit Court claiming they had a written agreement for Plaintiff to act as co-counsel in representing two women who had IL workers’ compensation claims.  After the cases settled, Defendant stiffed Plaintiff on its share of fees. When the civil complaint was filed, Defendant moved to dismiss the suit, contending the claim fell within the jurisdiction of the Workers’ Compensation Commission. Defendant relied on section 16a(J) of the Workers’ Compensation Act, which provides “[a]ny and all disputes regarding attorneys’ fees,” including disputes related to division of fees, shall be heard by the Commission. 

 

The Circuit Court denied the motion and, following trial, Defendant appealed. Upon review from the Appellate Court opinion affirming the Circuit Court, the IL Supreme Court also affirmed. Our highest court held the Commission did not have jurisdiction because the dispute did not require determination of the amount of fees charged for representing claimants before the Commission or an apportionment of those fees between attorneys who represented the claimants before the Commission. Plaintiff here had not represented the claimants before the Commission. Instead, the dispute was merely a routine breach-of-contract action based entirely on the referral agreement.

 

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

 

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Synopsis: Engage Directly with Experts in the Workers' Comp Arena at this Year's Illinois Workers' Comp Forum.

 

Editor’s comment: Do you administer workers’ compensation claims? Are you involved in strategic planning? Concerned with medical costs and utilization? Looking for a better understanding of workers' compensation?

 

Then you won't want to miss the Illinois Workers' Comp Forum, now in its 5th year. Moved to downtown Chicago at Loyola's Quinlan School of Business on May 4-5, 2015, the event provides attendees the opportunity to hear perspectives from and engage directly with experts in the workers' comp arena including:

 

  • Joan Vincenz, Managing Director – Workers’ Compensation and Managed Care, United Airlines
  • Gene Keefe, Esq., Partner, Keefe, Campbell, Biery & Associates, LLC
  • Don Phillips, Safety Coordinator, City of Naperville
  • Devin Stoll, Human Resources Manager, Cintas Corporation

 

Download the brochure and view their complete list of speakers. Visit their website or call: (646) 807-8555 to reserve your seat today. We look forward to seeing you this May in Chicago. 

 

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Synopsis: KCB&A is looking for:

 

  • A nursing home defense lawyer and
  • A veteran WC claims handler for both IL and IN claims—the position is located in downtown Chicago.

 

If you or someone you know is qualified and interested, please send resumes in confidence via reply to this Update.

1-19-15; Will IL Reviewing Courts Ever "Hear the Other Side?"; Oops, Employer Lists EEOC Charge in SEC Filing, by Brad Smith; Choice Between Brain Specialist or Internist, review by John Karis and...

Synopsis: Will the IL Supreme Court and Appellate Court, WC Division Ever “Hear the Other Side?”

 

Editor’s comment: Way back in October 2013, the Illinois Chamber of Commerce was increasing efforts to reform Illinois’ workers' compensation system. They issued a comprehensive report that took aim at reviewing court justices and their court opinions for "activism" the business group says hurt our state's economy. In the report called "The Impact of Judicial Activism in Illinois," our State Chamber detailed 19 reported ruling in which it confirmed decisions by the Illinois Workers’ Compensation Commission would have limited benefits to injured workers but the rulings were overturned or otherwise eviscerated by our venerated Appellate and Supreme Court justices. The report can be viewed online at:

 

http://ilchamber.org/wp-content/uploads/2012/05/1WorkersComp.pdf.#sthash.UHiFD4yl.dpuf

 

As a result, the report says, at least some of the benefits or cost-reductions promised and adopted by the Illinois Legislature from the 2011 Amendments to the IL WC Act had not arrived. "The pattern of adverse decisions being rendered by Illinois courts in workers' compensation cases is such that an employer or insurance company may well conclude that, no matter how egregious the indignity" it has no choice but to settle and pay, the report says. "The judiciary is not in line with policy objectives aimed at promoting job growth."


Illinois now has the seventh-highest workers’ compensation insurance premiums of the 50 states, when it used to be somewhere in the middle. Political squabbling over the judiciary and its rulings on workers' rights is far from new in Illinois. In 11 of 19 cases reviewed in the report, IWCC rulings denying benefits were overruled, the report says. In seven of those cases "the court overturned or significantly departed from long-standing precedent."

 

Audi Alteram Partem – Hear the Other Side

 

We were looking up other things when we saw the Latin phrase above that is at the top of the Illinois Courts website. We have surveyed numerous lawyers on both sides in an informal setting to ask the last time the Illinois Supreme or Appellate Court returned a ruling for the defense side of the bar. The last one anyone could recall was Airborne Express v. IWCC. That decision limited overtime as part of the average weekly wage unless it was mandatory—the ruling was published in March 2007 which is almost eight years ago. In our view, the “other side” has almost disappeared when it comes to workers’ compensation rulings by our reviewing courts.

 

We did have one person who responded to the survey point out the IL Supreme Court reversed the Venture-Newberg Perini Webster & Stone ruling and they felt that was a defense outcome. We point out it might be construed in that fashion and salute the august members of the Supreme Court for getting it right, in our respectful view. However, it is hard to be happy about a claim that had to go all the way to our highest court to avoid having a truly anomalous legal concept cause the Illinois workers’ compensation system to completely ruin our state’s economy. What we are looking for is a decision, like Airborne Express above that limited WC costs and/or benefits in a favorable way from the start to the end.

 

What We Continue to See

 

Case after case where benefits are still being unanimously increased due to the phenomenon of what we call “judicial legislation” or new and unprecedented decisions which expand IL WC benefits. We point to the

 

·         Village of Deerfield v. IWCC in which the worker was provided a doubled-up award of lifetime wage loss differential benefits along with weekly PPD for the body-as-a-whole for his shoulder.

 

·         Beelman Trucking v. IWCC ruling where an injured worker could receive an award of lifetime total and permanent disability benefits along with a very expensive doubled-up weekly PPD benefit for statutory loss;

 

·         Forest Preserve District of Will County v. IWCC where the Illinois courts redefined the “shoulder” to no longer be part of the “arm” so as to strip out the credit employers had for decades for multiple shoulder/arm injuries;

 

·         Village of Villa Park v. IWCC where walking a staircase at work six times in an eight hour shift was considered to be frequent and the ruling actually indicated Petitioner was somehow “forced” to use the stairs in a police station(?) so as to cause the fall-down on clean, dry, well-lit stairs to be compensable;

 

·         Interstate Scaffolding v. IWCC and Matuszczak v. IWCC where workers on light work can’t be cut off from TTD when they disqualified themselves from work due to the commission of acts that were criminal in nature.

 

What we aren’t hearing is “the other side.” We hope there may someday be a single Appellate Court justice of the five venerated members of that judicial body who will present the “other side” in a dissent or in a majority opinion. As we have indicated on many occasions, our IL Supreme Court has three Republicans on the seven-member panel. They control the makeup of the penultimate reviewing panel. We again ask why are there no business representatives on the “activist” appellate panel below?

 

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

 

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Synopsis: Proceed With Caution When Disclosing EEOC Charges in SEC Filings! Important Seventh Circuit Ruling Reversing Employer’s Summary Judgment Victory Due to Employer Including Employee’s EEOC Complaint in SEC Filing. Analysis by Bradley J. Smith, J.D.

 

Editor's Comment: The Seventh Circuit recently reversed the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Wisconsin’s grant of summary judgment to International Monetary Systems Ltd. (“IMS”). In Greengrass v. International Monetary Systems Ltd., the employee sued her former employer, IMS, alleging it retaliated against her for filing a charge with the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (“EEOC”), when IMS named her in its annual SEC filings and casted her complaint as “meritless.” As a result, the employee argued she was unable to obtain new employment. 


 

The Eastern District Court granted summary judgment in favor of IMS finding the employee lacked evidence demonstrating a causal link between her EEOC filing and the alleged retaliatory act. In reversing the District Court, the Seventh Circuit reasoned the employee did make out a prima facie case of retaliation by showing she engaged in a statutorily protected activity, and further demonstrated IMS engaged in an adverse employment action when it disclosed her name in its SEC filings. The Court reasoned this could allow a jury to find IMS listed her name because she filed the EEOC charge of discrimination. 

 

The Seventh Circuit found in 2008, IMS never mentioned the employee filed a charge in its SEC disclosures. The Court further found an email sent by IMS’s general counsel stating it could avoid a “large damages award,” because without the EEOC’s involvement, the employee “likely [will not] have the resources for a lengthy court fight.” Thus, the Seventh Circuit held, a reasonable jury could find IMS intended to retaliate against the employee when IMS finally learned the EEOC was giving credence to the employee’s charge of discrimination, and subsequently filed its SEC disclosure in April 2009 listing the EEOC charge. 

 

It seems from the tenor of the opinion the general counsel’s email to the management team was the driving force behind reversing the District Court’s entry of summary judgment for IMS and determining IMS’s alleged intent to retaliate. Moreover, the timing of the SEC filing also drew into question the employer’s decision to subsequently include the employee’s charge in its SEC disclosure in April 2009. The Seventh Circuit viewed the continuous shifts in policy by not including and then including the employee’s charge in the SEC filings as evidence of pretext. 

 

Consequently, public companies should be cautious about what they include in their public filings regarding charges or employment lawsuits pending against them. This information could be deemed retaliatory as it makes it difficult for former employees to find future re-employment opportunities.

 

We appreciate your thoughts and comments. The research and writing of this article was performed by Bradley J. Smith, J.D. Bradley can be reached with any questions regarding Title VII, employment law, and general liability defense at bsmith@keefe-law.com.

 

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Synopsis: IL WC Appellate Court Confirms Physician selected by Petitioner’s Lawyer Trumps Nationally Renowned Physician Selected by Respondent. Thoughts and analysis by John A. Karis, J.D.

 

Editor’s comment: In Bob Red Remodeling Inc. v. IWCC (issued December 31, 2014) our Workers’ Compensation Division of the Appellate Court of Illinois explained the basis for not suspending benefits and locking in a total and permanent disability award when an employee chose to follow advice of his treating internist rather than a prominent expert. Petitioner suffered an accepted and serious work-related accident on July, when he fell 11 feet from a rooftop. He was transported by ambulance to Advocate Illinois Masonic Hospital where a CT scan revealed small temporal lobe contusions and a seven millimeter hemorrhage. Petitioner speaks Polish but not English.

 

At Respondent’s behest, Petitioner was examined by Dr. Felise Zollman who is a national specialist and teacher in the field of closed head trauma with a resume and accomplishments of the highest order. Right now, she is the Lead on Memory Disorders and Co-Lead in the Head Injury Program at NorthShore University HealthSystem. She diagnosed moderate brain trauma; a right-knee meniscus tear; and left shoulder pain and stiffness with no range-of-motion limitation. She also diagnosed mild degenerative lumbar spine changes and depression, “likely secondary to” traumatic brain injury. She believed Petitioner’s condition was causally related to his work injury. She recommended a neuropsychological assessment to be conducted by a doctor fluent in Polish to evaluate residual cognitive impairment. Respondent authorized the course of treatment recommended by Dr. Zollman. Petitioner refused to participate in anything but the exam.

 

Petitioner was examined by Dr. Forys, at the request of his attorney. Dr. Forys is board-certified in internal medicine but is not a brain/head injury specialist that we can tell. General internal medicine physicians or internists are primary-care doctors who perform physical exams and treat a wide spectrum of common illnesses in adult men and women—to our understanding, they wouldn’t take the lead on a brain injury claim but would typically refer such a patient and a chart to a specialist for obvious reasons. Dr. Forys diagnosed Petitioner with a traumatic brain injury, knee pain, and shoulder pain. He recommended Zoloft which is used for anxiety. A physical examination revealed a depression in Petitioner’s skull. Dr. Forys opined Petitioner’s condition was permanent and would not improve. He felt Petitioner would need assistance with all activities of daily living.

 

Thereafter Dr. Zollman reevaluated Petitioner and she opined his treatment “should be geared towards psychological and psychiatric care.” Dr. Zollman believed Dr. Forys was not providing appropriate care and  he was not “current in his understanding of traumatic brain injury.” She disagreed Petitioner’s condition would worsen, as a traumatic brain injury is not a degenerative event. Respondent moved to terminate payment of benefits under the IL WC Act, arguing Petitioner’s failure to obtain appropriate care in accordance with Dr. Zollman’s recommendations constituted an injurious practice.

 

The Arbitrator denied Respondent’s motion to terminate benefits, and he found Petitioner was permanently and totally disabled. He noted Respondent was arguing Petitioner’s failure to follow Dr. Zollman’s recommendations regarding appropriate treatment constituted an injurious practice. Specifically, Dr. Zollman recommended vestibular rehabilitation for vertigo; further neuropsychological testing; speech therapy; and psychological testing and perhaps counseling for depression. The Arbitrator then observed Petitioner had, in fact, “undergone a long course of treatment by qualified physicians and therapists.” Further, after stating the credentials of Drs. Zollman and Forys, the Arbitrator expressly found Dr. Forys more “credible.” As such, the Arbitrator concluded Respondent had not shown Dr. Zollman’s careful recommendations offered a reasonable prospect of restoring Petitioner to a level at which he could perform work. Accordingly, he found Petitioner’s failure to follow her recommendations was not a basis for terminating benefits in accordance with section 19(d) of the Act. The IWCC affirmed. The Circuit Court went on to find the IWCC did not abuse its discretion in denying Respondent’s motion to terminate benefits in accordance with section 19(d) of the Act. The Commission noted Petitioner had, in fact, “undergone a long course of treatment by qualified physicians and therapists.” After reciting Drs. Zollman’s and Forys qualifications, the Commission found Dr. Forys more credible.

 

On appeal to the Appellate Court, Respondent outlined the Commission should have granted its motion to suspend benefits due to Petitioner’s refusal to follow Dr. Zollman’s recommendations regarding medical treatment. Section 19(d) of the Act provides, in pertinent part, “If any employee shall persist in insanitary or injurious practices which tend to either imperil or retard his recovery or shall refuse to submit to such medical, surgical, or hospital treatment as is reasonably essential to promote his recovery, the Commission may, in its discretion, reduce or suspend the compensation of any such injured employee.” In accordance with this provision, “benefits may be suspended or terminated if the employee refuses to submit to medical, surgical, or hospital treatment essential to his recovery, or if the employee fails to cooperate in good faith with rehabilitation efforts.” Interstate Scaffolding, Inc. v. Illinois Workers’ Compensation Comm’n. They also cited our IL Supreme Court which has stated, “[i]f a Petitioner’s response to an offer of treatment is within the bounds of reason, his freedom of choice should be preserved even when an operation might mitigate the employer’s damages.” Rockford Clutch Division, Borg-Warner Corp. v. Industrial Comm’n.

 

The Appellate Court noted Respondent was complaining Petitioner chose to follow the advice of his treating physician rather than Dr. Zollman. The Appellate Court found Dr. Zollman’s credentials with respect to brain injuries were more “substantial” than those of Dr. Forys. The Appellate Court further found several other doctors agreed with Dr. Zollman’s assessment. Nevertheless, the Appellate Court stated Petitioner was following the advice of his own qualified physician, and held his choices were not unreasonable in this situation. The Appellate Court affirmed the Commission’s decision.

 

In our opinion this ruling puts a great deal more emphasis upon the opinions of a physician selected by Petitioner’s attorney over a nationally renowned specialist. In doing so, the Appellate Court agreed Dr. Zollman had better credentials and multiple doctors agreed with her extensive diagnosis and opinions. Nonetheless, the Appellate Court still found Petitioner’s actions were “reasonable” because he aligned with his selected physician’s advice. The Appellate Court indicated it was not a question of which treatment plan was superior; it was whether Petitioner’s behavior was reasonable under the circumstances. With respect to the Arbitrator, IWCC, Circuit Court and the members of the Appellate Court, WC Division, we see no reason why Petitioner could not have been pressed to at least attempt to participate in the treatment plan laid out by this great surgeon and teacher of surgeons.

 

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

 

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Synopsis: The World of IL Workers’ Compensation mourns the passing of one of our most colorful administrators, Ray J. Rybacki.

 

Editor’s comment: Ray J. Rybacki, age 83, passed away last week. Ray was a former IL WC Arbitrator and Commission Chairman. He is still known for the ruling in Berrios v. Rybacki where Ray tried to get IL WC claims to hearing or dismissed.

 

One example of Ray Rybacki at his toughest was handling attorneys and clerks at status calls. If you talked loudly enough to be heard by Ray or drank coffee or read a newspaper at his status calls, Ray would take the newspaper and fold it into a dunce cap and you had to sit on stage with the dunce cap on until the end of the call. Sometimes, if there were newbie lawyers at the call, he would have three-five lawyers/clerks on stage wearing dunce caps during the call. You can’t imagine how quiet the calls got when that happened—you could hear a mouse burp in the large Wheaton auditorium.

 

Kidding aside, Ray quit/resigned from the IWCC on Y2K. Your editor will always miss his toughness and humor. We consider him one of the best and fairest hearing officers of the last century.

 

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Synopsis: Engage Directly with Experts in the Workers' Comp Arena at this Year's Illinois Workers' Comp Forum.

 

Editor’s comment: Do you administer workers’ compensation claims? Are you involved in strategic planning? Concerned with medical costs and utilization? Looking for a better understanding of workers' compensation?

 

Then you won't want to miss the Illinois Workers' Comp Forum, now in its 5th year. Moved to downtown Chicago at Loyola's Quinlan School of Business on May 4-5, 2015, the event provides attendees the opportunity to hear perspectives from and engage directly with experts in the workers' comp arena including:

 

  • Joan Vincenz, Managing Director – Workers’ Compensation and Managed Care, United Airlines
  • Gene Keefe, Esq., Partner, Keefe, Campbell, Biery & Associates, LLC
  • Don Phillips, Safety Coordinator, City of Naperville
  • Devin Stoll, Human Resources Manager, Cintas Corporation

 

Download the brochure and view their complete list of speakers. Visit their website or call: (646) 807-8555 to reserve your seat today. We look forward to seeing you this May in Chicago. 

 

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Synopsis: KCB&A is looking for:

 

·         A nursing home defense lawyer and

·         A veteran WC claims handler for both IL and IN claims—the position is located in downtown Chicago.

 

If you or someone you know is qualified and interested, please send resumes in confidence via reply to this Update.