NWCDN Members regularly post articles and summary judgements in workers’ compensations law in your state.
Select a state from the dropdown menu below to scroll through the state specific archives for updates and opinions on various workers’ compensation laws in your state.
Contact information for NWCDN members is also located on the state specific links in the event you have additional questions or your company is seeking a workers’ compensation lawyer in your state.
Starting on December 31, 2017, the North Carolina Industrial Commission will have a permanent Employee Classification Section charged with investigating and punishing employers who misclassify employees as independent contractors. The Employee Classification Section was initially created through an executive order signed by former Governor Pat McCrory on December 18, 2015, Executive Order No. 83. The North Carolina legislature recently codified many provisions of Executive Order No. 83 through the Employee Fair Classification Act, which was passed in August of 2017.
The Employee Classification Section is tasked with receiving complaints from the public regarding employers who are misclassifying employees and investigating those complaints. When a complaint is received, the Director of the Section will provide the information to the North Carolina Department of Labor, the Fraud Investigation Division of the North Carolina Industrial Commission, the Division of Employment Security in the North Carolina Department of Commerce, and the North Carolina Department of Revenue. Each agency will then conduct an investigation to assess whether the employer has violated any of their operating statutes. If any of the agencies find a violation of an applicable statute, they will assess appropriate penalties and fines. Each respective agency will then report its findings back to the Director of the Employee Classification Section. Additionally, if any of the aforementioned agencies receive a direct complaint from the public regarding employee misclassification, the agency will report that complaint to the Director of the Employee Classification Section, who will pass the complaint along to all of the other agencies for investigation.
While the Employee Classification Section of the NCIC has been around since 2015, it was made a permanent fixture of the NCIC by the recently passed Employee Fair Classification Act (“EFCA”). The EFCA also formally codified that the Employee Classification Section must takes the steps outlined in paragraph 2 above whenever it receives a complaint regarding employee misclassification.
Practice Tips: Prior to the creation of the Employee Classification Section of the NCIC, a complaint of employee misclassification often would not result in significant consequences for the guilty employer. North Carolina is making a significant effort to reduce instances of employee misclassification going forward. The potential penalties that could be assessed against an employer include fines for not properly carrying workers’ compensation insurance and paying back taxes on each misclassified employee for up to 5 years before the misclassification occurred. Additionally, misclassified employees will have the ability to file private lawsuits against their employers to recover overtime wages and minimum wage amounts that should have been paid under state and federal wage and hour laws (e.g the Fair Labor Standards Act, etc.). In some instances, the employees can also receive treble damages against the employers depending on the nature of the conduct.
Because the consequences associated with employee misclassification are greater than they have ever been in the state of North Carolina, it is imperative for employers utilizing independent contractors to consult with counsel to ensure they are not mistakenly violating any laws. Teague Campbell’s employment law team is focused on this ever emerging issue and is ready to help employers navigate this complex area of the law.
We are please to announce that Cousineau, Waldhauser & Kieselbach has been selected as a Tier 1 law firm by “Best Law Firms”. Six of the attorneys at CWK have been selected to be listed in “Best Lawyers in America”.
Jim Waldhauser, Tom Kieselbach, Mark Kleinschmidt, Richard Schmidt, Jennifer Fitzgerald, and Tom Coleman have been selected for inclusion in the 2018 Guide to Best Lawyers in America.
Best Lawyers and Best Law Firms have collaborated with U.S. News and World Report to evaluate attorneys and law firms throughout the world. The attorneys and law firms are selected for inclusion by peers for their responsiveness, integrity, and expertise.
Major legislative changes occurred in Iowa effective for all injuries that occur on or after July 1, 2017. Under prior law injured workers were awarded permanency benefits based on loss of earning capacity for non-extremity type injuries including the neck, shoulders, back and hips (“body as a whole” injuries). Under the new law shoulders are no longer injuries to the body as a whole, but are rather considered scheduled member-type injuries. Workers with shoulder injuries are now entitled to receive permanency benefits only to the extent of his/her functional impairment, and are not entitled to receive benefits for loss of earning capacity.
Further, after July 1, 2017, if the injured worker sustains an injury to his/her body as a whole and returns to work or is offered work for which he/she receives or would receive the same or greater salary, wages, or earnings, than the injured worker received at the time of the injury, the injured worker is compensated based only upon his/her functional impairment resulting from the injury.
Legislative changes also stiffened the employer’s intoxication defense adding a presumption that an employee was intoxicated at the time of his or her injury if the employee had a positive test result reflecting the presence of alcohol, narcotic, depressant, stimulant, hallucinogenic or hypnotic drug not prescribed by a medical practitioner or not used in accordance with prescribed use. The new law made changes with respect to independent medical evaluations, pre-existing conditions, vocational rehabilitation, and commencement date for the payment of permanency benefits.
Legislative changes will most certainly result in a very significant decrease in the value of claims.
Call Lee Hook with any questions @ 515-243-2100. We’d be happy to help, whether it be a quick or a complex issue!.
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Whitney Teel prepared a chapter in “Workers’ Compensation Emerging Issues Analysis”, 2017 edition. Whitney analyzed the 2017 trends and developments in Minnesota Workers’ Compensation law.
The Co-editors-in-chief are Thomas A Robinson of LexisNexis and the National Workers’ Compensation Defense Network (NWCDN). CWK is the Minnesota representative for NWCDN.
This is an excellent book which is an essential tool for attorneys, risk managers, and insurance professionals. The book is a reference guide to issues and cases as well as a 50 state survey of trends and developments.
You can purchase this tool here http://www.lexisnexis.com/wcrisk or by calling 1-800-223-1940 (mention WCRisk to receive a discount).
The California Insurance Commissioner has approved the admission of Golden Bear Insurance Company to sell “cannabis business insurance” in the state. The insurance is intended to provide coverage to the cannabis industry, including coverage for workers in the industry. The filing, the first of its kind nationwide, raises a number of questions including: will “cannabis business insurance” cover the “gaps” provided by workers’ who are intoxicated on marijuana? Will it cover slow-downs in productivity from using the product? Will it cover vending machine abuse by workers with the munchies? Inquiring minds want answers to these questions and we look forward to California providing them. HT:Insurance Journal.
The work day begins once the employee arrives at the office and thereafter any travel home which furthers the affairs of the employer is within the “course and scope” of employment. Recently, the Appeals Panel addressed this situation where an employee arrived at work, but left shortly after to return home to retrieve a work laptop he had forgotten. While on the way home, the employee was killed in a motor vehicle accident. The Appeals Panel determined the work day started when the employee arrived at his office and that his travel to and from his residence to retrieve the work laptop (which was necessary for the performance of his duties) was within the course and scope of employment. Unlike in a “coming and going” situation, the travel in this case was not simply transportation to and from the workplace, but rather was travel that both furthered the employer’s business andoriginated in the business. – Appeal No. 171936, decided October 5, 2017.
The general rule in Texas is that a Carrier is not liable for workers’ compensation benefits when a worker is injured while traveling to or from work. The “coming and going” rule, as it is known, was recently applied by the San Antonio Court of Appeal to uphold the Division’s denial of death benefits to the widow of Robert Estrada, a worker who was killed while traveling from his home to work to drop off his weekly timesheets while on his way to a jobsite.
In its decision, the appellate court explained that an activity is in the “course and scope” of employment, if itoriginates in the employer’s business and furthers the employer’s affairs. The court focused on the “origination component” and found that Mr. Estrada’s travel to his office did not originate in the employer’s business. The employer did not require its employees to start or end their day at the office, but rather, their work day began at the jobsite. Additionally, the employer exerted no influence on Mr. Estrada’s route to work, and Mr. Estrada could have delivered his timesheets in some other manner, including using a fax machine at the job site or sending them with another employee. Moreover, Mr. Estrada was not on a “special mission” in delivering the timesheet. Finally, the employer did not furnish Mr. Estrada with transportation or reimburse him for his travel. While it did provide a stipend for gas, the stipend was an “accommodation,” not a “necessity,” and there was no evidence that Mr. Estrada was required to use the stipend for gas or for any other specific purpose.
Ultimately the appeals court upheld the Division and trial court’s ruling that Mr. Estrada’s travel was not in the course and scope of his employment, stating that the risks to which he was exposed while traveling to and from work were shared by society as a whole and did not arise as a result of the work of his employer. – Fuentes v. Texas Mutual Ins. Co., No.04-16-00662-CV, 2017 WL 4942859 (Tex. App.—San Antonio Nov. 1, 2017).
The American public is aware of the rapidly escalating opioid crisis sweeping the country. According to the Center for Disease Control, fifty-three thousand Americans died from opioid overdoses in 2016, which is more than people who died in car crashes or from gun violence in 2015. Bringing attention to the issue, New Jersey Governor Chris Christie reports that opioids kill roughly 142 Americans every day, which he describes as “September 11th every three weeks.” In late October, President Trump declared the opioid crisis a Public Health Emergency and vowed to alleviate the scourge of drug addiction that has affected every demographic. But what does this actually mean?
By acting through the Public Health Services Act, President Trump directed the Acting-Secretary of Health and Human Services to declare a nationwide health emergency, a designation that will not automatically be followed by additional federal funding. Instead, the order will expand access to tele-medicine in rural areas, instruct agencies to curb bureaucratic delays in dispensing grant money, and shift some federal grants toward combating the opioid crisis.
The order allows Congress to fund the Public Health Emergency Fund and to increase federal funding in year-end budget deals currently being negotiated on Capitol Hill. The biggest concerns remain whether President Trump will follow through on a nationwide health emergency declaration and how many toes he is willing to step on to do it.
“Copy and paste” reports are not just for college kids on tight deadlines anymore. Recently, we have noticed that some medical providers are copying and pasting, word-for-word, their causation opinions from unreliable web sources. One such instance was identified by our own attorneys, Robert Greenlaw and Amanda Schwertner, while preparing for a hearing in Weslaco. The “Letter of Causation” provided by an Edinburg chiropractor lifted several large blocks of text—verbatim—from several webpages, two of which were written by two different personal injury attorneys in California. (Both of the lawyers’ websites urge the reader to call their offices for a free consult regarding their claim – Call Now!) This particular chiropractor also lifted several text blocks—verbatim—from the websites www.shimspine.com and www.patient.info. These latter websites warn that the information provided is not medical advice and should not be used for diagnosis or treatment of medical conditions. Moreover, the information fromwww.patient.info is based on UK and European Guidelines, not the US or accepted worker’s compensation guidelines.
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