8-8-2016; Can This Be The Biggest Mistake in IL WC History?; NCCI Proposes Another Decrease for IL WC Advisory Rates; OSHA Contradiction and More

Synopsis: Can This Be the Biggest Mistake in the History of Illinois Work Comp?

Editor's comment: With all the respect we can offer to the members of the Appellate Court, WC Division, we have to say we consider their new and unprecedented legal theory to be a major WC mistake. What they are now doing is to develop is the philosophy that post-traumatic stress disorder or PTSD of any sort is now an “accidental injury” in this state. What just hit is their ruling in Moran v. IWCC where they ruled a firefighter lieutenant can receive potentially lifelong benefits for PTSD due to the passing of another firefighter under his command during a live fire. Claimant Moran was not inside the house when the fire overtook his subordinate, and Moran did not participate in the rescue or resuscitation efforts.

Why is that a major league problem for our state? Well, please tell us how to accurately and unquestionably confirm the presence of actual (and not faked) PTSD. You cannot give someone claiming PTSD a lie detector test. There is no effective medical care for PTSD with a start, middle and end. In our view, anyone claiming PTSD can live a normal life, eat, drink, sleep and whine, whine, whine about their situation. Once you stamp someone with the PTSD label, the feigned condition almost never gets better and if it does, it is entirely up to them. If you allow one person in this state to go on temporary total disability for PTSD for a day, you are laying the path for hundreds/thousands of other workers to follow that model to become totally and permanently “disabled” without the need for an actual injury to their person. We promise you every Claimant lawyer from Waukegan to Carbondale is going to teach their claimants and potential claimants how to add PTSD to their IL WC claims to maximize lost time and supposed permanency. We think this is a massive issue for Illinois jobs and government.

Do We Truly Want to Encourage and Reward Cowardice?

We have never seen a PTSD claim where there isn’t a factor of the person suffering from it being afraid of something. In every claim we have dealt with, the man or woman had something happen to them or around them and they are now afraid it will happen again. If the event that occurred was truly unexpected and shocking but only involves mental stress, you can empathize for a time but after a reasonable period of time, it is time to put on the big-boy and big-girl pants and get back into the mix.

You always have to remember, the problem with giving someone lifetime benefits when they are afraid of something that occurred at work is now they don’t ever want to work ever again. If you give lifetime benefits to one person for a non-injurious event, lots of other folks are going to want to sign up as cowards and whiners to get the same money. Please also remember when someone in Illinois making $100 a week in a part-time job is adjudicated totally and permanently disabled in this state, the minimum T&P weekly rate is $535.79 so they will jump to annual tax-free take-home pay of $27,861.08! They will also be entitled to RAF COLA bumps that will eventually double or triple that money. We vote we only give that out to people with actual injuries.

And we aren’t saying workers with PTSD don’t need any medical/psych care at all—let them get the care they need but don’t encourage cowardice, malingering and possibly scamming by paying them to remain off work indefinitely or for the rest of their lives.

Do We Truly Want to Also Encourage Freeloadin’? Will PTSD become the IL WC Equivalent of Another Fake IL Gov’t Pension?

Illinois and the City of Chicago are the epicenter of freeloading gov't workers. We know of no other place in the United States where there are more former government workers who enjoy the greatest government benefit of all--they don't have to work but they still get full salaries, giant annual raises and lifetime Cadillac-coverage group healthcare paid for by you and me. We feel our State and the second largest city in the country have more former gov't workers living on the dole than anywhere in the world.

How do they do it? What in tarnation happened? Well, our leaders in Springfield and reviewing courts figured out if you give create lots of paths to phony retirement plans, the former government workers become your best pals and will vote for you and work for you in elections. Because Illinois and Chicago don't have term limits, several politicians and jurists have stayed in office for decades to reap the benefits of using our tax dollars to line their pockets and the pockets of their government supporters. No one is talking about freeloadin’, all they can say is taxes have to go up and up more to pay for it.

The Biggest Freeloaders of All--Illinois Legislators

Don't believe us? Want a solid example? Well, the phoniest of phony retirement scams in this State is the Illinois General Assembly fake retirement plan. To take advantage of this kooky deal, you need to get elected to the IL House or Senate. You will get paid at least $68K a year for part-time work--they only work 50 days a calendar year. You don't actually have to show up. The scam starts when a married legislator contributes about 10% of that salary or $6,800 a year into the scam, oops, we mean phony retirement plan. They have to serve just two terms or four years to be "vested" in the scam. If you do the quick math, you will "contribute" $27,200 into the pot for your fake retirement plan in that four year period. Let's say the State matches that money during your two terms, putting a combined $54,400 away for your phony retirement needs. You can retire at 55 and collect 85% of your highest salary when you start taking the "retirement." Any school child will note if you remain at $68,000 a year as a legislator, your starting retirement is $57,800 in the first year of collecting this fake pension benefit--yes, in the very first year of retirement, you will collect more than double what you put into the plan and simultaneously use up the entire "matching" amount contributed by the State.

After about 11 months of collecting this fake pension benefit, you win!! After 200 days or the equivalent of one year of actual work, you are now a lifetime freeloader and taxpayers will owe you the $57,800 plus 3% annual not-actually-COLA benefit increases. If you don't know the math on 3% compounded annual raises, the indisputable math means a former legislator will enjoy increases that will double their retirement benefit in about 21 years and will eventually quadruple the starting amount well into middle six figures. All of that money and your taxpayer-paid Cadillac healthcare coverage comes from current tax dollars--remember, you blew through the fake pension contributions in the first year of participation!

What Does This Mean to IL Workers' Comp?

Well, our Appellate Court, WC Division just expanded the availability of similar lifetime fake benefits for Illinois police and firefighters (and probably lots of other workers). In Moran v. IWCC, a lieutenant on the Village of Homewood Fire Department was managing a live house/building fire. He was outside the property and making the best possible radio calls on where and what his team was doing in battling the blaze. Sadly, while doing so, two of his team members were hit by what is called a 'flashover' and they were seriously injured. Both of them were taken by other firefighters to emergency medical care and one survived while the other passed. Our best thoughts and wishes go out to the brave survivor and the family and friends of these heroes who gave their all to the community.

So what happened? Well, the fire lieutenant quarterbacking the fire claimed he suffers from post-traumatic stress disorder or PTSD. In our view, he is now scared to do the job. From our review of the record, we don't see what would be the basis for a work comp stress claim other than the fact he was on the site of the event and did everything he possibly could do to protect his team from afar. Claimant did not go into the live fire or see/experience what happened to the injured men or otherwise deal with anything other than what we all feel firefighters and their managers sometimes have to do—bravely fight fires at moderate to high risk to life and property.

So this became a workers' comp claim? Yep--remember, we are in the People's Republic of Illinois! Despite the lack of any immediate threat to his life or what we felt was a sudden, shocking or unexpected occurrence, Claimant maintained he was and remains disabled from all work. In fact, it appears he has already been off work for half-a-decade or more. The Arbitrator carefully considered these facts and denied the claim. The IL Work Comp Commission panel also denied the claim. The Circuit Court judge assigned confirmed their decision based on the fact above.

Last week, in a ruling that we can only describe as unprecedented, a unanimous Appellate Court, WC Division reversed the denial to award this firefighting manager potentially lifetime benefits with Rate Adjustment Fund increases. If you read their ruling, we truly feel the entire Homewood Fire Department and all the members of the other local fire departments that pitched in to help could sign up for the same benefits when they learned any other firefighter passed in the line of duty. Similarly, if one police officer at a stakeout or bank robbery were to be killed, we feel all the members of that city's police department and the neighboring departments could follow the path to lifetime retirement benefits as laid out by this ruling and the entire police department could start claiming PTSD due to the passing of their comrade-in-arms.

Please understand we do not mean to be insensitive to the dangers these public servants face each day. We salute our police and firefighters because we see them as brave tough men and women who put their lives on the line for us at a moment's notice. We are absolutely sure the Village of Homewood rightfully paid for the widow of the fallen firefighter as is appropriate when a catastrophic accident occurs. The taxpayers in Homewood have and should also pay for the medical bills and whatever the other injured firefighter needed. If you write to say we are insensitive to Claimant Moran, we will write you back to confirm you are insensitive to the taxpayers of Homewood and the entire State of Illinois!

As to this claim for PTSD for someone who admittedly wasn't touched, burned or injured in any way, we don't feel it is insensitive for the Commission to have denied this claim and for the firefighter to go back to his job or a different, less-challenging job. There is no shame to former Officer Moran to learn he can’t handle this demanding job—if he wasn’t cut out to do it, he should find other less-demanding work. But to pay him for his mistake in thinking he could handle that challenging firefighting work, there is no way you or I or anyone can tell if he is telling the truth or making it all up to get very expensive WC benefits from unsuspecting local taxpayers. The Commission weighed the evidence and ruled accordingly. In our view, the Appellate Court simply re-tried the case and weighed evidence themselves rather than abide by our view of the manifest weight standard.

We have no true idea how any Illinois municipality will ever defend such impossible-to-document PTSD claims. In our view, there is no true way to confirm or deny the presence of PTSD. You don't have to take a lie detector test to establish or document the condition. All this former firefighter has to do is keep occasionally going to a psychiatrist and claim he has issues and he can stay on the freeloadin' dole for the rest of his life.

Is this going to be expensive? The only thing all Illinois taxpayers can be sure of is skyrocketing taxes in the years to come due to similar fake government pensions created by the legislature and our radical reviewing courts. The City of Chicago has already hiked taxes $833M over the next four years with almost all of that money earmarked to their freeloadin' and completely unfunded pension programs. In the Village your editor lives in, the benefits for firefighters already surpass the annual payroll set aside for them. Try to imagine how expensive it will be to have all the firefighters or police officers in your local fire/police department walk off the job to start freeloadin' if and when one of their fellow officers in the department pass away for any reason on the job. Could firefighter/police benefit costs double/triple? It boggles the mind. It is also mind-boggling to think any time someone dies in a factory from a heart attack or in an office from a fall-down, everyone in and around the building might be able to claim PTSD.

Can This Ruling Be Appealed? Can Our IL State Chamber Change the Law to Stop PTSD Claims?

This ruling is another example of this very liberal Appellate panel randomly and sporadically changing IL WC law by flipping denials on the “manifest weight of the evidence” standard. When they reverse the IWCC on the facts, there is supposed to be literally no basis for the Commission’s ruling. This comes from the last two IL Supreme Court rulings on the topic in Sisbro and Twice Over Clean. We find it impossible to contemplate there was no basis for this current IWCC ruling and we feel numerous facts demand/support summary affirmance.

In our view, there was also strong support in the record for the decision of the Arbitrator, the three-member Commission panel and the Circuit Court judge to deny this claim. In our view, their combined denials should have been quickly and quietly affirmed by the Appellate panel with the message to former Officer Moran to get whatever psych care he needed on his own dime but get back to the job. If he truly couldn’t go back to the job, he should be advised to seek other government work without being rewarded with hefty WC benefits from taxpayers for his personal and non-work-related issues.

Legislatively “controlling” or reigning in what we feel will be a flood of new PTSD work comp claims is going to have to be considered by the gurus at the IL State Chamber, like the eminent Jay Dee Shattuck. He is among our readership and we strongly hope both he and State Chamber President Todd Maisch work to stem the PTSD tide that we are sure is coming.

If you need help defending these new PTSD claims that are certain to come at you and your claims, contact John Campbell at jcampbell@keefe-law.com or Shawn Biery at sbiery@keefe-law.com or any KCB&A defense lawyer for our top psych experts and defense strategies. Trust us, you will need all of it!

 

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

 

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Synopsis: NCCI Proposes Decrease for Workers Compensation Advisory Loss Costs and Rates in Illinois for 2017—Yawn!! It is Advisory???

 

Editor’s comment: On July 26, 2016, the National Council on Compensation Insurance delivered a workers compensation advisory rate and loss cost filing, and an assigned risk rate filing to the Illinois Department of Insurance. Based upon its review of the most recent available policy year data (2013 and 2014), NCCI has proposed an overall average workers compensation advisory voluntary loss cost level change of -13.4%, advisory voluntary rate level change of -12.9% and an assigned risk rate level change of -6.7% to become effective January 1, 2017.

 

Here are some of their key observations:

 

·         The financial data experience period evaluated as of December 31, 2015 shows significant improvement when compared with the data evaluated as of December 31, 2014, that showed no change was warranted.

·         Lost-time claim frequency decreased 6.5% in policy year 2014.

·         The average indemnity and medical cost per case for lost time claims decreased in policy year 2014.

 

Since the enactment of the 2011 Amendments to the IL WC Act in HB 1698, effective September 1, 2011, the cumulative voluntary loss cost level change is -30.1% and the cumulative voluntary rate level change is -28.7%. These cumulative changes include the proposed loss cost and rate level changes described above.

 

In our view, this is generally good news for the IL WC industry. However, it doesn’t mean a great deal. From our review of their data over the last decade or two, the NCCI has recommended enough “advisory rate reductions” to make WC premiums free in IL. We ask the rhetorical question--can advisory rates go negative where the insurance carriers owe money to their insureds???

 

We have always felt the NCCI IL WC advisory rate filing is mildly misleading. In our experience the advisory rates have almost always dropped, dropped and dropped some more. The problem with NCCI advisory WC rates is just that—they are ‘advisory’ and you can’t purchase IL WC insurance at those rates.

 

We assure our readers the NCCI statistical analysis is more significant. The metrics clearly point in the right direction for IL business and local governments. Overall, the latest WC experience in Illinois is a mixed bag with different components applying offsetting pressure on system costs. An increase in indemnity severity, higher benefit payments because of inflation and a slow-down in claim closures at early reports are putting upward pressure on costs.

 

At the same time, indemnity claim frequency declined slightly in 2012 and 2013 and medical severity increased at the same rate as inflation, helping to mitigate any cost increases. The two big questions for Illinois involve the lagging economy and pending legislation A standoff between Gov. Bruce Rauner, a Republican, and Democrats in the House and Senate prevented the Illinois General Assembly from passing anything other than a “stopgap” half-year state budget. The Governor and Democratic lawmakers are deadlocked over “turnaround” workers' compensation reforms.

 

In our view, the much preferred metric is the every-other-year analysis from the State of Oregon that will rank actual WC premiums in a state-by-state fashion. In their 2014 survey, IL WC rated 7th.

 

http://www.cbs.state.or.us/external/dir/wc_cost/files/report_summary.pdf Their next survey should be out in October 2016. We will report the minute we see it.

 

In the interim, we are hoping the brave and hard-working IL WC Arbitrators and Commissioners will continue to carefully limit costs and deny questionable IL WC claims to bring us into line with the surrounding states and thereby encourage jobs and development of new business in this state.

 

To contact the NCCI person on their report, call or email Terri Robinson via phone: 501-753-5180; fax: 561-893-5655 or email Terri_Robinson@ncci.com

 

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

 

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Synopsis: OSHA Postpones Enforcement of Anti-Retaliation Measures While They Try to Figure Out What The Heck They Are Doing.

Editor’s comment: The federal Occupational Safety and Health Administration is delaying enforcement of anti-retaliation measures contained in a new injury-reporting rule, following the filing of a recent lawsuit challenging their new provisions. Enforcement of the new provisions is now scheduled to begin Nov. 1 rather than Aug. 10 as previously scheduled, OSHA announced.

A day earlier, a group of Plaintiffs filed an emergency motion for a preliminary injunction seeking to delay implementation of the new provisions. The provisions would prohibit safety-incentive programs that could potentially discourage a worker from reporting an injury — for example, programs that give workers a bonus for remaining accident free for a particular period. Post-accident drug testing in some cases also would be prohibited by the new rule, while in contradiction to that rule, post-accident drug testing performed to comply with state or federal laws would not.

On July 8, 2016, a workers’ compensation insurer, several trade organizations and three employers filed a lawsuit against OSHA, saying the anti-retaliation measures would eliminate programs that have improved workplace safety. The lawsuit, filed in U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Texas, alleges that OSHA exceeded its statutory authority in enacting the rule and didn’t follow legally required procedures.

In a news release, OSHA said the enforcement delay is to “conduct additional outreach, and provide educational materials and guidance for employers.”

From the perspective of the defense team at KC&BA, if a U.S. employer is aware of a fatality or amputation or other serious injuries in their workplace, they have 24 hours to report the accident to OSHA’s hot line or the employer could be charged by OSHA with a crime and prosecuted. In short, OSHA demands/commands “same day” accident reporting from U.S. businesses.

 

At the same time, OSHA was fighting (sort of) to not have injured workers have to report claims to their employer on a same day basis, as OSHA assert that policy will somehow inhibit accident reporting.

 

Are we the only ones who see those two positions as inherently contradictory?

 

We can foresee a situation in which two workers are on the same job and both are injured. Worker A is killed and the Worker B injured but Worker B hides the death of the other worker and his/her own injury from the employer to avoid drug testing. When the employer finds out about late reporting, they fire Worker B for it.

 

Couldn’t OSHA bring criminal charges against the employer for not rapidly reporting the fatality and then also sue the employer for firing Worker B in retaliation for late reporting?

 

On a related issue, we recently reported where a federal court ruled in response to an OSHA lawsuit against a South Beloit, IL employer for “restitution” and the federal judge awarded the widow $350K on top of the state WC death benefit. OSHA’s litigation and this judge basically doubled the death benefit payable to the widow, asserting there were safety violations. In our view, that is what state WC death benefits are for. We are concerned OSHA appears intent upon creating a “super-WC” benefit structure in the federal courts at their whim on the claims they select.

 

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

8-1-2016; Arik Hetue on Federal Lawsuit Challenging OccAcc Coverage; Shawn Biery's New IL WC Rate Sheets Available For the Asking!!; Brad Smith on Important Discrimination Ruling

Synopsis: Don’t Panic! While Not Precedent, Thanks to New Ruling, OccAcc or Occupational Accident Insurance May No Longer Insulate Companies From WC Exposure. Analysis by Arik Hetue, J.D. Commentary/editing by your gracious editor.  

Editor’s comment: We published several articles in the past discussing the concept of “jobbing-out” some tasks or whole corporate departments and moving them to independent contractors, however we have always cautioned this was a risky thing to do. The primary focus of past articles was to ensure you weighed the “multi-factor control test” such that a reasonable hearing officer would find the contractor to be just that – a contractor – as opposed to an employee. In the past we have advised the primary concern was to have such individuals or groups obtain their own WC insurance coverage. With this new ruling by the Southern District Federal Court, this may no longer be a green light option. This may signal the “Independent Contractor” status being relegated to only those classic examples of hiring a professional to perform a specific one-time task.

The Independent Contractor is a work classification status long used in the American workforce. Individual contractors are retained to perform specific one-time tasks, or a series of similar tasks which are outside the normal business operations of a hiring company. This is the most well-known variant. Over the past 20 years, there has been a rise of a different kind of “independent” contractor both in Illinois and also in other high-dollar WC venues. We have previously opted to use the term of “dependent” contractor, somewhat tongue-in-cheek, as the IL courts have hammered and chiseled away at the concept since its inception. The entire concept is most easily understood by considering a trucking company as opposed to a logistics company.

Numerous U.S. trucking companies have selected OccAcc or Occupational Accident insurance for all or part of their workforce. Such WC-like coverage doesn’t match statutory requirements and comes with challenges and risks for any company using it. To better understand the concept, take a look at this website:

http://www.occacc.biz/what-is-occupational-accident-insurance.html

The new federal court lawsuit is going to be required reading for this industry and anyone in a different industry considering similar concepts for “independent contractors.”

To better understand it, we will use a fictional company for an example: DEF Transportation, Inc. – this fictional company has a warehouse with an attached office and the following employees: 6 office workers, 8 warehouse personnel, and 15 drivers. The drivers show up at the warehouse, take the trucks that are pre-loaded by the warehouse staff and deliver the goods pursuant to a route designed by the office staff. Easy peasy – everyone is an employee and DEF Transportation will need to provide WC coverage for all such workers who may come with varied risk for injury.

Presume DEF Transportation wants to get away from the high cost of insuring their truck drivers from WC. As the drivers are the ones assuming the most risk in this set of employees (driving on highways, removing the goods from the truck without the assistance of a forklift or material other than a dolly, entering onto private property to deliver said goods), DEF Transportation could likely see a significant cost reduction in work comp insurance if they can remove these folks as “employees” from their books. How this is done is to change from a trucking company into a “logistics” company – they don’t deliver the goods themselves anymore, they just facilitate the delivery. The company would still employ the office staff and warehouse personnel, but the drivers would now be “Independent Contractors” and would need the following in place in order to continue to contract with the company:

·         A vehicle which in some cases could be leased from the company, or the company could facilitate a financed purchase of the truck,

·         Their own WC insurance which again is often obtained through the company, or via their required company insurer,

·         Potentially a requirement the individual driver incorporate or create a personal LLC for his new venture, and

·         All the attendant expenses for the gear – vehicle insurance, maintenance of the vehicle, gas, etc, and the drivers are now paid via 1099, and as such responsible for their own taxes and deductions.

When these factors are present, DEF Transportation “contracts” with the driver to deliver the goods they previously “employed” a similar driver to deliver.

Where you can fall into pitfalls is the ever-present “multi-factor control test” which governs classification of an employee v. independent contractor. In Illinois, there are many issues to look at including:

•         The right to control the manner in which the work is done (who sets routes);

•         The nature of the work performed as it relates to Respondent’s business;

•         The method of payment (1099 for tasks/hourly wages);

•         The right to discharge (can they be “fired”);

•         The skill required in the work to be done;

•         Who provides tools, materials, or equipment;

•         The label given to the contractor by the parties in a written agreement;

But the caveat we have always stated was the primary concern in such cases is whether Claimant provided their own workers' compensation insurance. We have often touted this as the number one concern for employers looking to maneuver their “logistics” company into this system – if the contractor has their own WC insurance, if injured they will likely file a claim against said personal insurance and proceed as one would expect, leaving what used to be the “employer” in the clear. While it seems arcane, and as though it is an end-around the simple issue of having to provide coverage, there is a long history of this being allowed as long as the facts line up properly.

In the recent order from the U.S. District Court for the Southern Illinois in the matter of Thomas Frederking v. Zurich American Insurance Company and Triple Crown Services Company, Federal Judge Staci M. Yandle allowed a portion of a lawsuit to go on beyond the Motion to Dismiss stage, and while it is certainly too early to tell, this may signal the death knell of the concept in Illinois and possibly the Federal Seventh Circuit.

It should be noted at the outset, in the interests of full disclosure, Plaintiff Frederking’s counsel is Lee Barron, who is a veteran and solid litigator in Southern Illinois. Your author had the pleasure of trying a case against Attorney Barron in the Southern District some 5 years ago. With utmost respect to Mr. Barron, who is an excellent attorney, we couldn’t disagree more with the mental gymnastics necessary to get to the legal conclusions alleged in the complaint. That said, his arguments have survived dismissal, and this case will move forward.

Plaintiff  Frederking was a Missouri citizen and driver for Defendant Triple Crown, a company which had a terminal based out of Madison County, Illinois. Frederking alleged Triple Crown misclassified him and other "owner-operators" as independent contractors and committed a fraudulent act by requiring them to purchase workers' compensation insurance coverage via an insurance contrivance titled as an "occupational injury" plan through Zurich, or an equivalent policy from another carrier. It should be noted Triple Crown took deductions from the drivers' paychecks to pay for the coverage, and as such it can be argued the insurance was not obtained independently of Triple Crown, but through them. The complaint goes through the facts to demonstrate the multi-factor control test was weighted in favor of finding Mr. Frederking as an employee.

Frederking’s second amended complaint contained 7 counts – two counts for a violation of the Illinois Deceptive Business Practices Act against Triple Crown and Zurich individually, two counts of unjust enrichment against each individually, a count of a count of civil conspiracy against both defendants, a Federal RICO count against both defendants, and a count for a preliminary injunction to cease the practice pending the resolution of the matter at bar. We note the complaint is not the proper vehicle for an injunction and it was summarily dismissed with an instruction to assert this issue via motion.

The primary allegations Frederking made, which are the bases for all counts, presuppose he and his fellow drivers were actually employees of Triple Crown at all times, and as such they should have already been covered by the Illinois Workers' Compensation Act. In this scenario, they did not require the coverage Triple Crown required and Zurich offered to sell them. There were numerous other allegations in the complaint, but this appears to be the crux of the argument – Triple Crown and Zurich conspired to force the drivers into purchasing their own “occupational accident insurance” which was overpriced and did not absolve Triple Crown of its liability under the IWCA.

Zurich filed a motion to dismiss all counts against it, and the order entered was in relation to this motion. Zurich argued Frederking did not allege any fraud with enough specificity to maintain a cause of action, there were not sufficient acts plead to maintain a count under the RICO statute or for conspiracy, and that the unjust enrichment count should be dismissed as there was no underlying improper conduct. For the purposes of this analysis, we ask our readers to remember – when dealing with a motion to dismiss, as in the matter at bar, all facts need to be looked at in the light most favorable to the non-moving party – in this case, Mr. Frederking.

The order of Judge Yandle is disheartening to the defense bar, as she disagreed with Zurich and found the complaint alleged sufficient facts to allow the claim to proceed under the Illinois Consumer Fraud Act count and the unjust enrichment count. Part of her reasoning included a letter from a Zurich claims professional attached to the complaint stating that the occupational accident coverage is not a workers' compensation policy. We caution our readers – you will want to take note of this specific issue, as it may result in a simple change of requiring an actual WC policy.

While Judge Yandle agreed with Zurich the conspiracy and RICO counts were insufficiently plead and therefor dismissed. They were dismissed without prejudice, and the Judge outlined in her order the reasons the claims failed – effectively that Plaintiff had not plead sufficient facts to confirm who discussed the alleged fraudulent acts between Zurich and Triple Crown, when those discussions took place, where and when they occurred, etc. She further outlined for the RICO count there was no pattern of racketeering alleged. There was a final concern on the RICO count with respect to a possible statute of limitations issue dependent upon when Frederking became aware of the alleged misdeeds.

We note this is only a motion to dismiss, and not a dispositive ruling. We also note the claims Judge Yandle dismissed can easily be resurrected upon inclusion of relevant facts consistent with her outlined reasoning. As a matter of law, there is nothing (outside a possible time bar on the RICO action) preventing Plaintiff from asserting these claims. We will be watching this case closely (along with the rest of the insurance and trucking industries) to see what further information comes out of the Southern District, as it has significant bearing on any company using this style of workforce, inside and outside of Illinois. We are the heartland, many trucks cross our borders en route to another state and a legal attack on OccAcc coverage may be sweeping.

We would appreciate your thoughts and comments, feel free to reply to Arik Hetue, J.D. at ahetue@keefe-law.com or post them on our award winning blog.

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Synopsis:  HERE WE GO AGAIN--NEW IL WC RATE SHEETS ARE HERE AND ILLINOIS RATES INCREASE AGAIN!!! 

 

Editor’s comment: Illinois WC Rates Jump Again So Please Be Aware Of The New Rates or Your Claims Handling Will Suffer and Penalties May Ensue.

 

Email Shawn at sbiery@keefe-law.com and Marissa at mpatel@keefe-law.com to Get a Free and Complimentary Hard Copy of Shawn R. Biery’s Updated IL WC Rate-Sheet!

 

Maybe it’s a sign of a growing economy—even though rates continued to increase almost every cycle as we 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—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 $755.22. This rate is only through June 30, 2016 and the new max PPD will be published in January 2017. When it will be published in January 2017, this rate will change retroactively from July 1, 2016 forward. If you don’t make the change, your reserves will be incorrect--if this isn’t clear, send a reply.

 

The current TTD weekly maximum has risen to $1,428.74. A worker has to make over $2,143.11 per week or $111,441.72 per year to hit the new IL WC maximum TTD rate. Does any state in the United States have a TTD maximum that sky-high?

 

The new IL WC minimum death benefit is 25 years of compensation or $535.79 per week x 52 weeks in a year x 25 years or $696,527.00! The new maximum IL WC death benefit is $1,428.74 times 52 weeks times 25 years or a lofty $1,857,362.00 plus burial benefits of $8K. IL WC death benefits also come with annual COLA increases that we feel potentially makes our state the highest in the U.S. for WC death claims.

 

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 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: The Seventh Circuit Denies Employee Sexual Orientation in Title VII Action, Cautioning of Things to Come. Analysis by Bradley J. Smith, J.D.

Editor's Comment: In An Opinion Imploring Changing Title VII Sexual Orientation Laws, the Federal Seventh Circuit Remains with Applicable Stare Decisis. On July 28, 2016, the Seventh Circuit issued an opinion in Hively v. Ivy Tech. Justice Rovner authored the ruling affirming the Federal District Court’s dismissal of Plaintiff Hively’s Title VII discrimination claims. In doing so, the Seventh Circuit cited its precedents of Hamner v. St. Vincent Hosp. & Health Care Ctr., Inc., 224 F.3d 701, 704 (7th Cir. 2000) and Spearman v. Ford Motor Co., 231 F.3d 1080, 1085 (7th Cir. 2000). Both of those cases held sexual orientation is not a protected class pursuant to Title VII’s protections.

The Seventh Circuit embarked on an extensive assessment of the current state of all the Federal Courts’ precedence on sexual orientation discrimination. It also analyzes the EEOC’s recent opinion in Baldwin v. Foxx, EEOC Appeal No. 0120133080, 2015 WL 4397641 (July 16, 2015), which identifies sexual orientation as a protected category under Title VII. Justice Rovner explicitly invites SCOTUS or the federal legislature to change the history of sexual orientation’s applicability to Federal Title VII employment laws.

In embarking on that endeavor, the Seventh Circuit identifies a myriad of precedential opinions from other jurisdictions in an effort to invite SCOTUS to say “yes” or “no” to sexual orientation discrimination. Justice Rovner also identifies multiple opportunities when the legislature has passed on amending Title VII to reflect a protected category for sexual orientation. Notably, the Seventh Circuit identifies the various state court jurisdictions that provide or do not provide sexual orientation workplace protections. Indeed, states with laws that prohibit this are: California: Ca. Gov't. Code §§ 12920, 12940, 12926 & 12949; Colorado: Colo Rev. Stat. § 24–34–401, et seq.; Connecticut: Conn. Gen. Stat. sec. 46a–81c(1); Delaware: 19 Del. C. § 711; Hawaii: Haw. Rev. Stat. Ann. §§ 368–1, 378-2; Illinois: 775 ILCS 5/1–103 & 775 ILCS 5/1–102; Iowa: Iowa Code Ann. 216.2(14), 216.6; Maine: Me. Rev. Stat. Tit. 5 § 4571, § 4572, § 4553 9-C; Maryland: Md. Code Ann., State Gov't § 20–606; Massachusetts: Mass. Gen. Laws Ch. 151B, § 3(6), § 4; Minnesota: Minn. Stat. Ann. § 363A.02, § 363A.08; Nevada: Nev. Rev. Stat. Ann. §§ 613.330, 610.185, 613.340, 613.405, & 338.125; New Hampshire: N.H. Rev. Stat. Ann. §§ 354–A:6, 354–A:7; New Jersey: N.J. Stat. §§ 10:5–3, 10:5–4, 10:5–12; New Mexico: N.M. Stat. § 28–1–7; New York: N.Y. Exec. Law § 296; Oregon: Or. Rev. Stat. Ann. § 659A.030; Rhode Island: 28 R.I. Gen. Laws §§ 28–5–5, 28–5–7; Utah: Utah Code Ann. § 34A–5–106; Vermont: Vt. Stat. Ann. tit. 21, § 495; Washington: Wash. Rev. Code Ann. §§ 49.60.030 49.60.010, 49.60.040; Wisconsin: Wis. Stat. Ann. §§ 111.31, 111.36, 111.325. Some states even have this type of protection for government employees: Alaska: Alaska Admin. Order 195; Arizona: Executive Order 2003-22; Indiana: Indiana Governor Mitch Daniel's Policy statement of 4-26-05; Kentucky: Kentucky Executive Order 2003-533; Louisiana: Executive Order No. JBE 2016–11, Governor of Louisiana, 13 April 2016; Michigan: Michigan Executive Directive, No. 2003-24; Missouri: Executive Order 10-24; Montana: Montana Executive Order No. 41-2008; North Carolina: Executive Order 93 (2016); Ohio: Executive Order 2011-05K; Pennsylvania: Executive Order No. 2003-10; Virginia: Executive Order 1 (2014). The jurisdiction that Hively lived in (Indiana) does not provide a state law protecting employees from sexual orientation workplace discrimination.

Importantly, Illinois does have a state law protecting workers from sexual orientation discrimination, so employers within this state should be well aware and have a cultural history of guarding against sexual orientation discrimination in the workplace. Employers in this state are also cognizant of this protected class when making all employment decisions.

One of the interesting evaluations in the opinion is the discussion as to how differing Federal Circuits and District Courts have reasoned out their respective opinions related to sexual orientation. Some of the courts have completely thrown out any case where there is an entanglement of sexual identity and sexual orientation allegations. However, the Seventh Circuit Court cautioned against this reasoning, identifying the risk of “throwing out the baby with the bath water.” Inapposite, other courts have taken on the difficult task of drawing distinctions between sexual identity discrimination and sexual orientation discrimination. The Seventh Circuit cautioned on this reasoning too, because it often includes a distinction without a difference. As you may know, sexual identity discrimination falls under Title VII’s protections falling under the category of discrimination based on sex. Whereas sexual orientation discrimination is based on whom the individual shares an intimate relationship with. In other words, sexual orientation discrimination is based on discriminating against the individual by whom the employee selected as a partner, etc.

Justice Rovner also discusses the difficult task of drawing a distinction due to its effect on the flamboyancy of a gay man or the masculinity of a lesbian. In his assessment, if the distinction were more drawn between the two, then the more extreme the individual’s flamboyancy or masculinity, the more likely the discrimination will fall under sexual identification analysis, and thus, would be protected under Title VII. Justice Rovner predicts this analysis as leaving the more gender conforming homosexuals unprotected.

Based on the Seventh Circuit’s discussion, they expect—and indeed, are advocating for—a change in the law. However, despite this, the Seventh Circuit comes to the ultimate conclusion that due to the principles of stare decisis, they must afford due respect to their prior opinions and affirm the dismissal of Hively’s case.

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

7-25-2016; IL Appellate Court "Pops" OccDisease Claim for COPD; David DePaolo of WorkCompCentral RIP; State Work Comp Payout May Not Be The Measure of Employer Liability Under This Administration

Synopsis: IL Appellate Court, WC Division Affirms IWCC Denial of Claim for Lung Issues Allegedly Caused by “Popcorn-Worker’s-Lung.”

 

Editor’s comment: When it comes to Frye and IL Rule of Evidence 702, all IL WC attorneys on both sides and risk managers/adjusters/brokers should read this precise and well-reasoned but complex Appellate Occupational Disease decision.

 

In Durbin v. IWCC, issued July 17, 2016, a unanimous Illinois Appellate Court, WC Division ruled an Archer Daniels Midland factory worker failed to establish the compensability of obstructive lung disease because he did not adequately or scientifically link his condition to the workplace exposure to a buttery-smelling chemical compound named Diacetyl.

 

The majority ruling by Justice Harris accurately pointed out such claims aren’t actually “workers’ comp” rulings—this is an occupational disease claim where the worker has to demonstrate an “exposure” to an arguably deleterious chemical or other substance due to work.

 

There was no dispute Claimant Durbin worked for Archer Daniels Midland for approximately 30 years. During most of that tenure, Petitioner Durbin claims he was exposed to Diacetyl, a chemical used as butter flavoring that has been occasionally linked to lung problems in workers. Claimant also admitted to being a cigarette smoker.

 

NIOSH or the National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health has suggested Diacetyl, when used in artificial butter flavoring (as used in many consumer foods), may be hazardous when heated and inhaled repeatedly over a long period. Workers in several factories that manufacture artificial butter flavoring have been diagnosed with bronchiolitis obliterans, a rare and serious disease of the lungs. The cases found have been mainly in young, healthy, nonsmoking males. As with other end-stage lung diseases, lung transplantation is currently the most viable treatment option. However, lung transplant rejection is very common and happens to be another setting in which bronchiolitis obliterans is  expected to occur.

 

The disease has been called "popcorn worker's lung" because it was first seen in former workers of a microwave popcorn factory in Missouri but NIOSH refers to it by the more general term "flavorings-related lung disease.” People who work with flavorings that include Diacetyl are at risk for flavorings-related lung disease, including those who work in popcorn factories, restaurants, other snack food factories, bakeries, candy factories, margarine and cooking spread factories, and coffee processing facilities.

 

Either way, Claimant Durbin testified he first began having breathing or lung problems around year 2000 or 2001, and after he retired from ADM in 2003, his problems worsened. Things in the occupational disease litigation sat around for a long time. By the time of the WC arbitration in 2013, Durbin said he was unable to engage in activities that required exertion because he would lose his breath.

 

Former Arbitrator Zanotti found Claimant Durbin failed to prove an occupational disease caused by a workplace exposure. The Illinois Workers' Compensation Commission panel upheld the Arbitrator’s decision, as did the Circuit Court judge.

 

The IL Appellate Court, WC Division found the causation opinion of Claimant Durbin's medical expert was not clearly admitted or rejected from evidence under the ruling in Frye and IL Rule of Evidence 702. The majority decision took up the issue to provide clarity and they ruled the opinions were properly excluded from evidence. The Court carefully and thoroughly explained the admissibility of any expert's opinion depends on whether the underlying method used to generate the opinion by the expert is one reasonably relied upon by the experts in the field.

 

In this case, the Court noted the opinion of Claimant's expert was based on two publications regarding Diacetyl exposure at microwave popcorn plants. The majority opinion ruled the New England Journal of Medicine article upon which the expert relied was peer-reviewed, the Court’s decision further noted that article involved workers with a specific condition known as bronchiolitis obliterans, whereas Claimant Durbin had been diagnosed with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease or COPD.

 

"While there may be evidence that exposure to Diacetyl can cause bronchiolitis obliterans," the Court said the expert's "leap to finding a causal connection between Diacetyl exposure and COPD is arguably supported only by an editorial." The Court’s ruling said "an editorial in a medical journal is not the equivalent of a peer-reviewed article based upon medical studies" and as such, it is insufficient to [legally] serve as a basis for an expert's opinion on causation.

 

The Appellate Court’s members further found the medical expert's theory Claimant Durbin suffered a harmful exposure by simply “smelling” a buttery scent was "speculative and lacked support in the relevant scientific literature."

 

As the only evidence Claimant presented to support a causal link between his work and his COPD was the opinion of this expert, and the opinion was inadmissible, the Court ruled the IL WC Commission's denial of his claim was supported by the evidence in the record.

 

As defense attorneys, we have numerous claims brought by Petitioner’s attorneys for occupational disease claims. Our common response follows this great decision’s review of such claims—what is the exposure? How long or how much is the exposure? What is the scientific literature supporting a medical condition related to such an exposure? For most OD claims, if the other side doesn’t have a solid expert, the claim is usually going nowhere fast.

 

We caution our readers and law students and others, the IWCC and courts don’t necessarily need an expert opinion if the relationship is clear and well-settled. That said, they are typically skeptical to leap to contusions, we mean conclusions over causal connection when such claims are presented.

 

If you are a risk manager or claims adjuster with questions or concerns about OD claims, please send them along and the defense team at KCB&A can provide strong guidance on testing, experts and strategies to best defend such claims.

 

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Synopsis: God Bless and Keep the Memory of Great U.S. WC guru David DePaolo.

 

Editor’s comment: David DePaolo, founder, president and chief executive officer of WorkCompCentral, died too early this month. He was 56.

 

DePaolo was riding his motorcycle—a Honda 250 that he had nicknamed "The Sewing Machine"—in the Santa Monica Mountains near Malibu Hills, California on Sunday afternoon. He veered right into shoulder of Yerba Buena Road, hitting a dirt embankment shortly after 4 p.m., according to a report in the Ventura County Star.

 

The cause of the accident and DePaolo's death was still under investigation as we go to press.

 

We remember David calling KCB&A about 5 years ago and asking to be able to use our articles and assistance for the WorkCompCentral wonderful publication. We have always treasured our working relationship with David and this wonderful national industry resource and encourage all WC industry folks to consider subscribing to it.

 

DePaolo obtained a Juris Doctor from Pepperdine University School of Law in 1984, a Master’s in Business Administration from California Lutheran University in 1997 and a Bachelor of Arts in English from San Diego State University in 1981. He practiced as a workers' compensation defense attorney and as a sole practitioner, before founding WorkCompCentral in 1999. DePaolo is survived by his wife Anne, daughter Nichole and son Anthony.

 

A public memorial service for David DePaolo will be held Saturday, Aug. 6 at the Camarillo Airport in Southern California. The memorial service is scheduled for 1-5 p.m. at Channel Islands Aviation Hanger 265 on Durley Avenue. From U.S. Highway 101, exit Los Posas Road southbound, turn right on Pleasant Valley Road and right on Airport Way to Durley Avenue.

 

DePaolo was a pilot who often blogged about his adventures in "41 Mike," a 1979 Beechcraft Bonanza. He also volunteered for Angel Flight, a charity that provides transportation for families with medical emergencies. In lieu of flowers, the family would appreciate donations to Kids Chance of California or Angel Flight.

 

For planning purposes, persons wishing to attend the services are asked to email or call Valeria Garcia at vgarcia@workcompcentral.com or 805-484-0333, ext 127. Your editor may be there—let us know if you plan on attending.

 

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Synopsis: State Work Comp Payout May Not Be The Measure of Employer Liability Under This Administration.

 

Editor’s comment: We were mildly amazed to see a Federal Judge ordered an IL employer to make a payment of $350,000 in “restitution” to decedent’s family following a worker's death. We are uncertain how the federal judge measured the proper amount in restitution that appears to us to be “additional damages” over and above the statutorily required state workers’ comp payout. We have no true idea if court-ordered “restitution” would be a benefit covered under a typical workers’ comp insurance policy—the insurance brokers among our readers might want to reply with their thoughts. Some of our readers assume the extent of state WC benefits is your only concern when a worker suffers an untimely death in your workplace—this assumption may not be accurate in light of rulings like this one.

 

News from South Beloit, IL confirms a federal judge has ordered a scrap-processing company based in Rockford to pay $350,000 in “restitution” to the family of a man killed in year 2014 at one of its plants. Behr Iron & Steel Inc. also was placed on five years of probation under the sentence handed down in U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Illinois, based in Chicago.

 

Federal prosecutors charged the company with violations of OSHA or Occupational Safety and Health Administration requirements in connection with the untimely death of decedent Reynaldo Hernandez-Ortega, following a March 2014 accident at Behr’s plant in South Beloit. Decedent Hernandez-Ortega, 39, was cleaning a discharge pit for a metal-shredding machine when his arm was caught and he was pulled into machinery, the Rockville Register Star reported. Behr's plant recycles items such as refrigerators and cars. Behr Iron & Steel Inc. was cited for one serious and seven willful safety violations by the U.S. Department of Labor’s Occupational Safety and Health Administration following the death in March of a worker at the company’s scrap metal shredding and sorting facility in South Beloit.

 

A willful violation is committed with intentional disregard for the law’s requirement or “plain indifference to employee safety and health.” A serious violation is determined if death or serious physical harm could result from a hazard an employer knew or should have known exists. According to OSHA, Behr Iron & Steel knowingly exposed Hernandez-Ortega and at least three other workers to highly dangerous equipment with no safeguards during cleaning operations. Hernandez-Ortega and other workers were responsible for shoveling metal scrap material accumulated in a shredder discharge pit onto a conveyer system as part of their cleaning duties. OSHA found when workers entered the pit, the conveyor was running and the OSHA requirement to “lock out” the shredder, or ensure that no energy flowed to the machine, was not being followed.

 

"This isn't the turn of the century. This should never happen in 2014 in this country," U.S. Magistrate Judge Iain D. Johnston claimed during the sentencing. The company already paid Decedent’s family $268,000 through a workers' compensation settlement and $19,369 in workers' compensation expenses, according to court documents. We cannot find that settlement listed on the IWCC’s website but not it appears very low based on normal exposures/benefits due in an IL WC death claim.

 

In addition, the company paid $520,000 in fines to the federal Occupational Safety and Health Administration, and agreed to correct 36 safety violations.

 

If you need assistance defending OSHA claims, Brad Smith of KCB&A is our top defense team member and knows the ropes. You can reach Brad at bsmith@keefe-law.com.

 

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Synopsis: Short but Sweet Update on Indiana Worker’s Comp from Kevin Boyle, J.D.

 

Editor’s comment: We were somewhat surprised to hear the IN WC Board has provided notice effective Monday, August 1, 2016, the mileage reimbursement rate is increasing from $0.36 per mile to $0.38 per mile.

 

If you have questions or concerns on any IN WC claim, please direct them to our IN Defense Team Leader Kevin Boyle, Esq. at kboyle@keefe-law.com.