2-15-2016; To Dream the Impossible IL WC Dream; Need WC Training?-Learn from the KCB&A Experts; FCEs in Hand Surgery from Dr. Vender + Colleagues and much more

Synopsis: To Dream the Impossible Dream—IL WC Appellate Court Turns Away Unattainable Filing by Plaintiff/Petitioner.

 

Editor’s comment: To reverse and reinstate this claim based on an unachievable reinstatement effort would have required basically rewriting over 100 years of the IL WC Act and Rules—one has to wonder if sanctions should lie? In Farrar v. Illinois Workers' Compensation Comm'n, issued February 11, 2016, a unanimous Appellate Court, WC Division was faced with the oddest of IL WC claims—Petitioner was a pilot for a major international airline. She alleged an injury occurring in April 2003. She underwent a cervical fusion alleged to be part of the claim. While we don’t know more of the facts, we assure our readers this is a serious claim that might have had some merit, if it had been properly handled by her counsel.

 

The initial IL WC claim was filed almost five years later in February 2008. Please remember it is possible for the statute of limitations in IL WC to “toll” or expand if any medical/TTD or permanency is paid. Payment of a related medical bill under group health might also toll the SOL, under Section 6.

 

For reasons known only to her attorneys and Captain Farrar, the claim was allowed to badly age and then get dismissed for want of prosecution. A dismissal order was issued in 2011 and became final when 60 days passed following entry of the order.

 

From our perspective, the matter was done, finito, finished, kaput. If you read the applicable Rule and case law interpreting it, the IWCC lost all jurisdiction over this claim. Despite that irresistible fact, another law firm filed their appearance for Petitioner and then filed a new Application for Adjustment of Claim in April 2012 for the same accident that occurred in 2003! The Arbitrator assigned dismissed the second claim in July 2013, the Commission affirmed in February 2014 and an appeal to the Circuit Court was taken. Almost four years later, the second claim is now actually over with this Appellate Court ruling.

 

Claimant cited Section 13- 217 of the IL Code of Civil Procedure (735 ILCS 5/13-217 (West 1994)) as supposed authority for “refiling” the Illinois WC claim within one year after it was dismissed for want of prosecution, regardless of the language of Commission Rule 9020.90 or whether the statute of limitations had long expired. The IL Appellate Court, Workers’ Comp Division unanimously ruled Section 13-217 of Code of Civil Procedure, which allows a Plaintiff with a claim pending in the Circuit Court to refile within 1 year after dismissal for want of prosecution (regardless of whether statute of limitations expired during pendency of original action) does not apply to IL workers' compensation claims. The Appellate Court ruled dismissal of a workers' compensation claim for want of prosecution requires claimant to file for reinstatement within 60 days of receipt of dismissal order to allow the Arbitrator to reinstate within the Rule.

 

Should Supreme Court Rule 137 Sanctions Be Considered?

 

As court observers and longtime proponents of the defense side of the WC industry, we feel this protracted litigation, following dismissal of the initial claim and the passing of the sixty day period for reinstatement, rendered any further action an unhappy and complete waste of the time and money for this employer. We further assert if a defense firm has spent four years clowning around at the IWCC and then the Circuit and Appellate Court with pleadings that had zero chance of success, the Appellate Court may have appropriately considered sanctions against a defense firm on their own motion. There is case law where the Appellate Court, Workers’ Compensation Division ruled IL Supreme Court Rule 137 Sanctions may lie in workers’ comp claims that reach the reviewing courts for frivolous actions.

 

The Rule says:

 

The signature of an attorney or party constitutes a certificate by him that he has read the pleading, motion or other document; that to the best of his knowledge, information, and belief formed after reasonable inquiry it is well grounded in fact and is warranted by existing law or a good-faith argument for the extension, modification, or reversal of existing law, and that it is not interposed for any improper purpose, such as to harass or to cause unnecessary delay or needless increase in the cost of litigation.

 

In our respectful and academic view, there is no chance, none, that this pleading was “warranted by existing law.” The monies spent to win final dismissal at arbitration, IWCC appeal and in two reviewing courts could have been put to much better use by this major U.S. employer. In short, this second Application should never have been filed and it was a colossal waste to have our hearing officers take time from other important duties to get rid of it. Please also note there is also the potential for a legal malpractice claim that might have been considered by Captain Farrar. This interim five-year circus that followed might possibly have misled her and delayed such a claim.


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

 

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Synopsis: Need WC Training? Learn from the KCB&A Experts about New WC Rules and Decisions from 2015 and Beyond                                    .

Editor’s comment: In our view, training and expertise in new work comp developments is critically important for you to keep ahead of your competition in claims and risk management. We have culled out the important decisions and changes to law for the last year to add to our 2016-17 IL WC Law Textbook. We can present the most important of them for you and your adjusting/risk management staff in a complimentary onsite lunch and learn at your office. We can also “webinar” your remote workers who want to keep pace with the office staff. Let us know if you are interested in a lunch hour presentation that we assure you will be informative and entertaining.

Here is the outline created by John P. Campbell, J.D. and Nathan Bernard, J.D. for your consideration:

When is a Physical Problem Repetitive Trauma versus Repetitive Working?

Question: How Exactly Do You Tackle an IL WC Fraud Claim? IL Courts Play the Laurel and Hardy Game of “Who’s on First?”

IL WC Wage Differential Exposure Expanding based on Recent Appellate Court Ruling.

Defense/Respondent Contact with Treating Doctors Met with Shocking Penalty and Sanction from Circuit Court Judge.

Traveling Employee Expansion When Handling Work Equipment While at Home.

Medicare Set-Aside Process as SMART Act is Implemented.

Comparing How Impairment Ratings are Considered at the IWCC.

We can also do a half-day or whole day seminar to teach all the nuances of IL WC. Let us know is you have interest—all you have to do is send a reply.

 

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Synopsis: Functional Capacity Evaluation in Hand Surgery, a scholarly article from three great hand specialists Michael V. Birman, MD, Gary S. Solomon, MBA, OTR/L and Michael I. Vender, MD

 

Editor’s comment: Dr. Michael Vender forwarded this important article for your consideration. We did not modify it in any way—references at the end are available on request. Dr. Vender is one of the top hand surgeons in the central United States and is a great caregiver and scientist. Dr. Vender has been quoted in numerous IL WC Commission decisions and he and his colleagues can be reached for help with your toughest hand/upper extremity injury claims at 847 956 0099 or for more information go to www.handtoshoulders.com.

 

A functional capacity evaluation (FCE) utilizes a combination of performance measurements to assess an injured patient's functional ability. The aim of these evaluations is to determine whether the patient has met the physical and functional criteria demanded for their job tasks or category in order to determine timing and capacity for return to work. A number of methods have been described to assess a patient's abilities, and various subsets of these make up some of the described FCE regimens, including those described by Matheson, Isernhagen, Hart, and others.1

 

In the Journal of Hand Surgery in 1987, two therapists individually addressed evaluation of work capacity for occupational hand injuries.2,3 A typical FCE includes patient interview, musculoskeletal screening, and functional testing. The entire upper extremity is generally assessed. FCE protocols vary among providers, as there is no universally endorsed method.  Physical evaluation includes range of motion, muscle/strength testing, sensation, and dexterity.  The functional testing component of the evaluation includes, but is not limited to, positional tolerances, job analysis and simulation, standardized assessments, and lifting capacity.

 

The FCE report typically includes a summary of test results as well as categorization of work based on the U.S. Department of Labor Dictionary of Occupational Titles. The report will include job-specific tolerances as demonstrated during the exam, as well as measures of consistency and validity. These measures may include correlation of heart rate with perceived exertion, correlation of performance with standardized assessments, as well as any observed inconsistencies between performances during functional testing compared to measurements during musculoskeletal screening.

 

There are a variety of reasons hand surgeons may choose to or be requested (such as by an insurance entity) to order an FCE. Often, the aim is to assess the patient's abilities and capacity to return to their prior employment, and comparison may be made to a detailed profile of the physical requirements of their job in interpreting the outcome of the FCE. Therefore, the purpose is to determine if the patient can safely return to their prior employment.

 

Studies have looked at the reliability and validity of these tests, as well as their predictability, to determine a patient's abilities and safety to return to work and stay at work (i.e., sustained recovery). However, little evidence is available to validate these studies specifically for upper extremity complaints. The limited studies assessing validity of FCEs in orthopaedics largely pertain to generalized musculoskeletal complaints and, specifically, chronic back pain. A systematic review considered four evaluation regimens; among these regimens, only the Isernhagen Work System showed good inter-rater and predictive reliability.4 Even for this system, the intra-rater reliability studies were found to not be rigorous enough for conclusion. Other authors examined patients with chronic low back pain, and they concluded most variables in the Isernhagen FCE were reliable based on FCEs repeated two weeks apart for each patient.5

 

A two-part study examined the ability of an FCE to predict return to work and sustained recovery following chronic low back pain. The authors of the study concluded better FCE performance was mildly associated with indicators of faster return to work. Despite this association, there was no relationship to recurrent back problems.6,7 A Cochrane review specifically tried to address the effectiveness of FCE-based return to work recommendations.8 Based on a lack of randomized controlled trials on this topic, it concluded there is no evidence for or against the effectiveness of FCEs in predicting re-injuries following return to work.

 

Gross and Battié used the Isernhagen FCE to look at predicting timely and sustained recovery in workers’ compensation claimants with upper extremity disorders.9 The study included 336 patients. The authors concluded better FCE performance was a weak predictor of faster benefit suspension. Specifically, higher weight lifted during the FCE was “consistently, yet modestly” associated with faster time to benefit suspension and claim closure. There was no relationship between functional performance that met or exceeded physical job demands and future recovery. The authors further concluded FCE performance was unrelated to sustained recovery. Specifically, no factors were associated with future recurrence; in fact, there was a 39% one-year recurrence rate, when the claim was reopened or a new upper extremity claim was filed. Furthermore, the FCE proved no more helpful in claimants with specific pathology/injury versus those with more ambiguous, pain-mediated conditions.9

 

FCEs have inherent limitations that affect their utility. FCEs have not been standardized and validated for upper extremity diagnoses. An additional complicating factor is that individual providers determine testing protocols and method of administration. Also, these studies have limited ability to disengage the patients’ motivation from their effort during the tasks of the evaluation, particularly when secondary gain is a factor. It requires cooperation and effort by the patient to generate an accurate assessment. A patient who provides an extreme effort can lead to an overstated assessment of their capabilities on a long-term basis, while a person who gives suboptimal effort can lead to an understated estimate of his capabilities. At best, they are essentially a snapshot of the patient’s performance at a particular time and place. 

 

Hand surgeons are asked to interpret the results of FCEs, and it is not sufficient to simply skip to the summary page of the evaluation. The details of the evaluation and the specific functions being evaluated must be considered. For example, if a task during the FCE was stopped, possible limiting factors include patient fatigue or pain, breakdown of mechanics, or exceeding performance. Deciding when a specific task is stopped involves a subjective determination, and the physician is relying on the therapist’s judgement rather than his or her own as to when the evaluation should be stopped. Also, consider differences between the injured and uninjured sides; a worker may have always been able to perform their job even though their baseline lifting abilities on their uninjured side do not satisfy the documented job requirements. Finally, because FCEs attempt to measure capabilities, these should not be misused as a rationale to impose restrictions, which are used to protect the patient during recovery from injury or surgery so as not to compromise outcome. 

 

The FCE should not replace the surgeon's determination of a patient's abilities based on their objective physical examination and radiographic findings. An FCE may be more useful when assessing specific activities in someone who has objective impairment (i.e., wrist fusion, loss of digits, etc.). It is least beneficial when assessing a patient who has subjective complaints only. The results of an FCE should be used as one factor in determining work capabilities. It should not be utilized as a rigid guideline or rule. When considering the limitations of current FCE protocols, the best form of assessing ability to return to work is still based on a competent physician’s understanding of residual impairments combined with knowledge of the patient’s work requirements.

 

If you have questions or concerns, please simply reply and we will relay the inquiry to Dr. Vender.

2-8-2016: Get Shawn Biery's New/Corrected 2016 IL WC Rate Sheet; Consider Sharpline and KCB&A for All Your MSA - Settlement Needs; Lilia Picazo, JD Analyzes New ADA Safe Harbor Ruling and more

Synopsis: In What is Becoming a New and Mildly Irritating Administrative Trend, One Day after We Announced SHAWN BIERY’S NEW IL WC RATE SHEETS WERE HERE, the IWCC Posts a Change/Correction!

 

Editor’s comment: We now have the even newer 2016 IL WC Rate Sheet. You still need to check your PPD Reserves which need retroactive updating when the new rates landed. If you already requested the earlier version—you will get the most newly updated form to match the IWCC’s corrected benefits information. To get a complimentary copy, simply email Shawn at sbiery@keefe-law.com and/or Marissa at mpatel@keefe-law.com for Shawn R. Biery’s Updated IL WC Rate-Sheet!

 

Editor’s comment: The IL WC statutory maximum PPD rate was lowered to $755.25. When it was published, this rate changed retroactively from July 1, 2015 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 2015 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.

 

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. AGAIN—If you want just one or a dozen or more, simply reply to Shawn at sbiery@keefe-law.com and/or Marissa at mpatel@keefe-law.com  They will get a copy routed to you before they raise the rates again! Please confirm your mailing address if you would like laminated copies sent to your home or office!

 

Let’s all hope the hard-working folks at the IL WC Commission can double, triple and quadruple-check the changes next year before posting to avoid this unnecessary confusion and not highlight the fact all these rates change/increase constantly!

 

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Synopsis: If Medicare Issues are Bogging Down Your WC settlements, Save Pressure Time by contacting KCBA or the experts at our MSA partner Sharpline Allocations To End/Resolve Litigation and Protect Medicare’s Interests.

 

Editor’s comment: The most basic strategies are sometimes the best. As most readers are aware, Shawn Biery and Matt Ignoffo are the resident MSA certification holders at KCBA. Many of you are also aware the great folks at Sharpline Allocations has become a valuable partner in our efforts. From providing rapid analysis and prompt conditional payment checks to preparing calculations and utilizing the electronic submission route, Sharpline over the past several years has augmented our already strong MSA offering to clients.

 

From the litigation standpoint, we review every case which ripens for settlement to confirm and protect Medicare’s interests. Sometimes it is as simple as verification of the final MMI and end of care with confirmation from the treating MD—or the fully disputed language which confirms the issues are not likely WC and should not impact Medicare.

 

And then there are those cases where future medical care and billing may be a concern. For those, KCBA utilizes the assistance of Sharpline Allocations to identify potential values and analyze the risk. We also:

 

  • Identify unnecessary or inappropriate care recommendations;

 

  • Identify changes in implementation which drive cost savings without impacting care;

 

  • Identify meds which can be reduced via programs which specialize in weaning certain meds which can save hundreds of thousands over the life of a future projection;

 

  • Identifying Rx changes which do not impact care, such as simply changing an Rx from one 80 mg tab to two 40 mg tabs which can sometimes save thousands per year;

 

  • Identify meds being prescribed off-label for purposes not covered by Medicare—thus excluding them from payment criteria for a Medicare-coverage.

 

All of these tools can be used to minimize the impact on your settlement and can be done in rapid fashion.

 

And Sharpline does more!!! While KCBA focuses on the endgame MSA issues with litigated files moving toward closure, Sharpline Allocations also performs a variety of tasks, including but not limited to:

 

  • File reviews and Pre-MSAs to identify cost-drivers for MSAs and to implement plans of action to limit MSA costs

 

  • MSAs, Zero MSAs and Zero Opinion Letters

 

  • Submittals to CMS for approval through the online portal (WCMSAP)

 

  • Medicare Conditional Payment research, dispute and lien resolution

 

  • Social Security Disability Eligibility checks and requests for SSD applications and file materials to obtain additional ammunition for your claims

 

  • Medical Cost Projections to set reserves and assist in settlement discussions

 

As always, for any questions regarding Medicare Set-Asides, CMS review thresholds or other Medicare related issues with regard to your settlements, you can reach Shawn R Biery, J.D. MSCC via email at sbiery@keefe-law.com  or via phone at 312-756-3701 or you can also contact our other MSA certified attorney Matt Ignoffo, J.D. MSCC via email at mignoffo@keefe-law.com  or via phone at 312-756-3729.

 

You can also reach Courtney Whistler at Sharpline Allocations via email at cwhistler@sharplineallocations.com or phone at 214.929.2350 or Wendy Schreck at Sharpline Allocations via email at wschreck@sharplineallocations.com.

 

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Synopsis: Big Victory for U.S. Employers! Federal District Court Judge Issued a Ruling Halting the EEOC’s Attempts to Overreach the ADA’s “Safe Harbor”. Analysis by Lilia Picazo, J.D.

Editor’s Comment: In the recent EEOC v. Flambeau, Inc. decision, the United States District Court for the Western District of Wisconsin issued a ruling reasoning the ADA “safe harbor” provision, which provides an exemption for activities related to the administration of a bona fide health benefit plan, allowed Defendant Flambeau to require employees to complete a health risk assessment (HRA) and undergo biometric screening as a condition of enrollment in Flambeau’s self-funded group health plan.

According to the undisputed facts laid out in the decision, Defendant Flambeau offered their employees various employee benefits, including participation in its self-funded and self-insured health insurance plan. Employee participation in the health insurance plan was neither required nor a condition of employment. In 2011, Flambeau established a wellness program. Each participating employee was required to complete a HRA questionnaire and biometric screening test (similar to a routine physical examination) as a prerequisite to participation in Flambeau's health insurance plan. Flambeau used the aggregated data to design a group health plan, set participants’ premium levels, adjust co-pays for preventative exams and certain prescription drugs and to create programs intended to promote health and fitness. In its first year of inception, Flambeau gave a $600 credit to employees who participated in the wellness program and completed both the HRA and biometric screening test. By the 2012 and 2013 benefit years, Flambeau eliminated the $600 credit and implemented a policy offering health insurance only to employees who completed the wellness program components.

In 2012, an employee of Flambeau failed to complete the required wellness program components by the established deadline resulting in the discontinuance of his coverage for the 2012 benefit plan year. Flambeau offered the employee COBRA coverage for that year. In a separate grievance and complaint filed with the Department of Labor, the employee’s coverage was reinstated retroactive to the first day of the 2012 plan year upon agreement of completion of the required HRA and screening test. Subsequently, the EEOC in its infinite ability to issue lawsuits against employers, filed suit in September 2014 alleging Flambeau’s health insurance plan’s testing requirement violated the American with Disabilities Act (ADA), which they argue prohibits medical examinations that are not job-related and consistent with business necessity. The EEOC further argued Flambeau violated the ADA by requiring employees to complete the wellness program components prior to enrolling in its health insurance program. In response, Flambeau argued the wellness program requirement prior to enrollment in its health insurance plan was protected by the ADA’s “safe harbor” exception under the Act, which provides that wellness requirements are considered terms in an employer health plan and used to help the employer underwrite, classify and administer health insurance risks.

It’s important to note the EEOC did not issue proposed guidelines that indicated what it considered a compliant wellness program under the ADA and GINA until April 2015 and October 2015, respectively.

On December 31, 2015, Federal District Court Judge Barbara B. Crabb rejected the EEOC’s motion, granted Flambeau’s motion and entered judgment in favor of the company reasoning the company’s wellness program components fell within the ADA’s “safe harbor” exception as set forth in Section 12201 (c)(2). Three key components from Judge Crabb’s ruling:

1.    Section 12201(c)(2) applies so long as the wellness program provisions are terms in an employer’s health benefit plan. The Court held Flambeau’s wellness program was undoubtedly a “term” of its health insurance benefit plan because it required employees to complete the wellness program components before they could enroll in the health plan. The court noted the company distributed handouts to its employees informing them of the wellness program requirement and went as far as scheduling the HRA and biometric screening tests to ensure they would coincide with the health plan’s enrollment period.

2.    The wellness program requirement must be based on underwriting risks, classifying risks, or administration of such risks: The court held the wellness program requirement was clearly intended to assist Flambeau with underwriting, classifying or administering risks associated with its health insurance plan because its consultants used the aggregated data gathered through the HRA and biometric screening test to classify participants’ health risks and set premium plans, calculate its projected insurance costs for the benefit year, and adjust co-pays for preventative care and medications.

3.    The wellness program component requirement cannot be used as a subterfuge to evade the purposes of the ADA: The Court held there was no subterfuge in this case because all employees who opted to participate in the company’s health insurance plan were required to complete the wellness program requirements prior to enrollment, regardless of their disability status. The Court noted there was no evidence the company used the aggregated data to make disability-related distinctions with respect to employees’ benefits.

While it is likely the EEOC will appeal the District Court’s decision, we note the ruling is a victory for U.S. employers who are already faced with the challenging task of designing wellness programs that fit within the EEOC’s guidelines of compliant wellness programs under the ADA.

Moving forward, we strongly recommend our business clients, readers and other employers continue to monitor the developments in this case. We also encourage employers to assess their established wellness programs to ensure compliance under the EEOC’s current proposed regulations. While the proposed regulations are currently non-binding, we doubt the EEOC will sue you for complying with their proposed regulations.

This article was researched and written by Lilia Picazo, J.D. You can reach Lilia 24/7/365 for questions at lpicazo@keefe-law.com

 

2-1-2016; Look At ITLA's Spin on Current IL WC Reform; Shawn Biery's New IL WC Rate Sheet is Out--Want A Bunch?; Why Every U.S. Taxpayer Should Consider 'Firing' Your Fire Dep't to Save Millions and..

Synopsis: Breaking News—Here is the IL Trial Lawyers Association’s Most Recent Spin on Governor Rauner’s WC Proposals.

 

Editor’s comment: See below; we note the phenomenally wealthy Plaintiff bar appears to be making fun of the phenomenally wealthy supporters of the Governor. For our readers, we feel this ongoing IL WC reform debate remains important to claims handlers and risk managers. We want to add our thoughts that

 

·         IL WC medical reimbursements are already significantlylower than Indiana and many other states;

·         We are certain IL Work Comp coverage, TTD and PPD awards will be lower under our new, professional and proficient Arbitrators and Commissioners so Governor Rauner’s WC reform concepts aren’t worth fighting over in the larger context of our state’s many crises;

·         When the Oregon WC Premium Ratings come out later this year, we fully expect to see additional improvement in IL WC premium costs relative to our sister states;

·         There is literally no reason to follow ITLA’s whiny “regulation of insurance company profits,” just like there is no discernable reason to regulate the profits of ITLA members;

·         We hope Governor Rauner re-focuses on reining in fake government pensions and combining/consolidating state departments and automating hundreds of clunky and duplicative state government functions, like our toll roads.

 

This came from the ITLA president and is being republished without editing.

 

It’s Past Time for Gov. Rauner to Govern: Cutting Benefits for Workers Injured on the Job and Compensation for People Harmed by Corporate Wrongdoing Won’t Bring Business or Revenue to Illinois

Statement from Illinois Trial Lawyer Ass’n President Perry Browder - Dateline: January 27, 2016

 

A legal system fair to the interests of individuals and businesses not only ensures a level playing field for both parties – it also protects the taxpayer. But if Gov. Bruce Rauner has his way, the burden of caring for injured persons would shift from the companies that caused the harm to the taxpayers.

 

In his State of the State address today, Gov. Rauner renewed his attack on our courts and his demand that lawmakers roll back the financial safeguards that our state’s workers’ compensation and tort systems afford to the vast majority of Illinoisans.

 

Across Illinois, seniors, individuals with disabilities and other vulnerable citizens are going without vital services because Gov. Rauner is holding the budget hostage until he succeeds in upending our legal system – among other items in his agenda. Yet his proposals relating to workers’ compensation and tort cases would do nothing to improve the state’s financial standing or fund the state services necessary to support individuals in need of critical assistance.

 

The governor and his big business and insurance supporters continue their push to undercut the rights of injured workers in order to maximize insurance industry profits. They ignore the fact that the 2011 rewrite of the workers’ compensation system – those changes sought by the business community, and which were largely to the detriment of men and women injured on the job – is producing the desired result: lower costs for insurance companies and employers.

 

As the Illinois Workers’ Compensation Commission stated in its FY 2014 report, Illinois employers experienced the largest decrease in workers’ comp premiums among all 50 states. And the commission anticipates further savings once the full effects of the 2011 workers’ comp overhaul are felt.

 

No matter how many benefits are cut, medical reimbursements are lowered, and claims are denied, the state’s businesses won’t see additional savings without our leaders addressing the promises previously broken by the insurance industry. Strictly regulating insurance premiums, not further curtailing injured workers’ rights, is the key to managing employers’ workers’ compensation costs.

 

The governor also seeks to squelch the civil justice system’s authority to hold wrongdoers accountable in an effort to shield the profits of his big business allies – at the expense of those who suffer due to their malfeasance and the taxpayers who would be left holding the bill.

 

More than 70 percent of court actions in Illinois are initiated by businesses suing other businesses or individuals for money, but the governor has not proposed limiting the access of corporations, banks and investment companies to the court system. The fact is that very few injured Americans ever file lawsuits. In Illinois, the number of civil cases filed has dropped 33 percent from 2010 to 2014.

 

Eroding the constitutional rights of citizens to access the courts that their tax dollars fund would send the message that our civil justice system is mainly for the use of corporate actors and the wealthy, rather than something that belongs to everyone, regardless of their means.

 

Gov. Rauner should abandon his campaign to enlist our legal system into the exclusive service of his phenomenally wealthy supporters, and instead focus on real, meaningful solutions to fix our state’s problems. The state budget cannot be balanced on the backs of those injured due to no fault of their own.

 

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

 

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Synopsis: With apologies to “The Jerk”…..THE NEW IL WC RATE SHEETS ARE HERE!!!, THE NEW IL WC RATE SHEETS ARE HERE!!! Illinois WC Rates Jump Again and Your PPD Reserves Need Retroactive Updating. Email Shawn at sbiery@keefe-law.com and/or Marissa at mpatel@keefe-law.com to Get a Free and Complimentary Hard Copy of Shawn R. Biery’s Updated IL WC Rate-Sheet!

 

Editor’s comment: We remain disappointed to continue to watch the growth 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 continue to climb and climb some more.

 

We caution our readers to pay attention to the fact the IL WC statutory maximum PPD rate is now a whopping $769.28. When it was published, this rate changed retroactively from July 1, 2015 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 2015 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.

 

The current TTD weekly maximum has risen to $1,398.23. A worker has to make over $2,097.35 per week or $109,062.20 per year to hit the new IL WC maximum TTD rate. 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 $524.34 per week x 52 weeks in a year x 25 years or $681,642.00! The new maximum IL WC death benefit is $1,398.23 times 52 weeks times 25 years or a lofty $1,817,699.00 plus burial benefits of $8K. IL WC death benefits also come with annual 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. AGAIN—If you want just one or a dozen or more, simply reply to Shawn at sbiery@keefe-law.com and/or Marissa at mpatel@keefe-law.com  They will get a copy routed to you before they raise the rates again! Please confirm your mailing address if you would like laminated copies sent to your home or office!

 

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Synopsis: Smoke and Mirrors--Why Every U.S. Taxpayer Should Consider ‘Firing’ Your Local Fire Department.

 

Editor’s comment: We have basically seen enough with the antiquated concept of your Village/City/Municipality needing a separate police department and a fire department and emergency medical technicians. The cost of doing for innocent U.S. taxpayers so has gotten outrageous, as you may see below. We suggest our entire country try to see the light on ending the concept of having separate police and fire departments at an enormous and spiraling cost.

 

Do We Hate Firefighters?

 

Heck, no. Firefighters save lives every day of every year. They are men and women that are part of your local government who protect you every day and in every way. Our problem isn’t with their brave services, sweat and disdain for danger they bring to the job every day. Our problem is with keeping your local government effective and efficient. Consider consolidating your public safety officers into one department to avoid having firefighters sitting around and doing nothing and they taking fake pensions at gigantic cost to you.

 

So, Why Do You Feel We Need to Consider ‘Firing” Firefighters?

 

Well, in IL and lots of states, firefighter and their unions have fostered enough benefit fantasies upon taxpayers to fill a Mickey Mouse© cartoon. Keep reading. In short, you and I and our houses and commercial buildings are all built, inspected and expected to comply with about 500+ parameters of uniform fire/building codes. We are telling our readers and anyone who will listen, the codes and code enforcement are working! If your local properties don’t comply with the codes, they are written up, fined and forced to comply. In short, the number of ‘real’ or major fires in your entire metro area are about once or twice a year at a reasonable cost. Stuff just isn’t burning down the way it did when your grandparents were kids. One urban legend we don’t know or understand is local firefighters simply don’t have to work and endanger their lives in the fashion they did when your parents and grandparents were young. Tell us/write us to let us know the last time you heard of a major building fire in the area around your business or home. We are telling you that your local firefighters are preying on your grandparent’s experiences and hoping you and I are stupid enough not to investigate further.

 

Who Will Fight The Occasional Fire in Your Village?

 

We have told our readers in the past, the Village of Glencoe, IL has a model for the entire U.S. They merged their police, fire and EMTs into a single “Public Safety” Department way back in 1954. They don’t have firefighters sitting around a fire station doing nothing. When the need arises, Public Safety officers act as firefighters to get the equipment they need and put out fires or rapidly respond to medical emergencies. The Glencoe Public Safety Department is a full-service, combined public safety agency. Public Safety officers are fully cross-trained to be police officers, firefighters and emergency medical technicians who provide police, fire and emergency medical services when needed. Glencoe was listed as one of the top 50 Safest Cities in IL.

 

Well, I Looked and It Does Appear Our Local Firefighters Are Going Out on Lots of Calls, Right?

 

Well, the going-out-on-calls-thing is one of the most irritating and silly things we see firefighters do. If an older civilian guy or gal in a restaurant has a cardiac event/heart attack and the restaurant manager calls the fire department, they may send an ambulance, a separate pumper truck and sometimes they will also send a hook and ladder truck. Why are they wasting the fuel to send three vehicles? In our view, they are hoping you are stupid. They will send three vehicles, two to them non-medical on a medical-only call to make you think the firefighters have stuff to do when they don’t.

 

Do the math, people. The last reported year for our local municipality, Winnetka, IL had a record of three major fires in a single year. A major fire means they aren’t dealing with a kitchen fire or a barbeque grill that got knocked over and your grannie couldn’t extinguish it. The math for a “major fire” means there are actual flames and smoke and damage for our local firefighters to deal with. The total cost for that year for Winnetka, IL for all fires was $1.4M. The total cost for just benefits paid to our Winnetka firefighters was $1.6M. The overall costs for our Winnetka Fire Department, including salaries, benefits, equipment and uniforms was well over $5M!!! Yes, the total cost for our separate and in our view, goofy local Fire Department was more than triple the amount of money they saved or damage they prevented.

 

Expand and explore the math for your municipality, people. We have looked across our area and almost all Chicago-area suburbs have the same metrics. Our taxpayers are paying more in just firefighter benefits than the actual damage from fires our local Fire Departments are putting out. The overall costs of having separate police and fire departments are skyrocketing. Consider consolidation for gov’t efficiency and effectiveness with no drop in public safety.

 

So What The Heck Just Happened to Raise These Flags?

 

To KCB&A, some of us feel fake gov’t pensions should have the same stigma attached to welfare. We also consider them misleading. In making these statements, we have to remember it isn’t the line government workers who created this system. It is hard to put all the blame on them for taking advantage of a completely botched retirement or disability concept. But at some point, someone has to be responsible for it. We truly feel our IL judiciary should conduct an investigation and hearings into all IL gov’t retirement systems to insure everyone understands expanded coverages and how shockingly expensive these fake pensions are for IL taxpayers—we guesstimate we are actually “paying” firefighters something like $200-300K a year if you were to actually evaluate the true cost of their compensation and pension/healthcare benefits over their lives.

 

IL Firefighters have fake gov’t pensions of an unusual nature. They are called “line-of-duty” disability pensions. Firefighters are eligible for some of these benefits the first day they are employed. The firefighter doesn’t actually have to be injured or get sick in the actual line of duty to get lifetime and expensive benefits. And if their cards are played correctly, they can get free family healthcare coverage for present or future spouses and children they didn’t have while working for taxpayers.

 

In Bremer v. City of Rockford, Claimant was a Rockford, IL firefighter. IL firefighters and their unions fought and fought to get a magical benefit—if they become randomly unhealthy for a variety of expected and sometimes arcane reasons, they are entitled to what we call a ‘fake’ occupational line-of-duty disability pension. Please note

 

1.    They don’t necessarily have to be actually “disabled” from all work—they only have to be disabled from being a firefighter.

2.    The condition doesn’t truly have to be “related” to any exposure at work—it just has to be a personal problem in the right medical category per our misguided legislature.

 

These concerns echo several problem we have with all IL police and fire fake disability pensions—the former officers keep getting paid as if disabled but can still work second and third jobs and make a lot of money while getting largesse from taxpayers for their lifetime fake pension benefit. As we indicate above, the medical condition doesn’t actually have to have anything to do with their work as a firefighter. They may have cardiac/pulmonary or other medical issues due to being overweight, smoking cigarettes, participating in sports or non-work-related activities. In our view, if a disabled firefighter can work, they can and should be placed in the next available light work position within the municipality to save taxpayers money.

 

We can’t tell from the published decision whether this former firefighter continues to work a second or third job—it actually isn’t important relative to the ruling and wasn’t mentioned at all. That said, we are sure from the decision this former firefighter developed a heart condition called cardiomyopathy. In cardiomyopathy, the heart muscle becomes enlarged, thick, or rigid. In rare cases, the muscle tissue in the heart is replaced with scar tissue. In street or simple terms, cardiomyopathy is called “hardening of the heart.” For someone with his cardiac condition, as cardiomyopathy worsens, the heart becomes weaker. It's less able to pump blood through the body and maintain a normal electrical rhythm. This can lead to all sort of bad stuff. Please further note cardiomyopathy can be acquired or inherited. "Acquired" means you aren't born with the disease, but you develop it due to another disease, condition, or factor. "Inherited" means your parents or grandparents passed the gene for the disease on to you. Many times, the cause of cardiomyopathy isn't known. But in the case of IL firefighters, it doesn’t matter—if you get a cardiac problem like this, you can retire on the taxpayer’s dime.

 

Why do the people of the City of Rockford care about this former firefighter developing this unfortunate condition? Well, there is a presumption any heart or pulmonary condition is related to work because firefighters are mystically and magically supposed to come in contact with smoke and icky chemicals in smoke. We don’t agree at all that firefighters live their work lives surrounded by smoke—this is another urban legend. While some firefighters almost certainly come into contact with smoke on a rare, random and occasional basis, in many municipalities, that might happen once or three times in a given calendar year and for minutes at a time.

 

So why is this former firefighter in court?—well, on top of the fake disability pension, this former officer is seeking lifetime family health care benefits at taxpayer’s cost. It seems a trial judge in the Winnebago County Circuit Court gave him that expensive benefit via summary judgment. Please note that cost is over $13K a year for the taxpayers of the City of Rockford—it will continue to rise every year as all healthcare costs do. After careful review, the IL Appellate Court sent the whole thing back to the Circuit Court for a trial.

 

Please understand the rising cost of salaries, WC and disability benefits for disparate police and firefighter departments is a cost taxpayers won’t be able to afford in the not-too-distant future. We feel you could consolidate departments and cut the number of “doubled” police and fire public safety workers dramatically. We recommend you follow the lead of the Village of Glencoe and start to merge your public safety departments into a single unit to save literally millions.

 

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