Here in New Jersey we
have seen a significant number of claim petitions filed in the Division of
Workers’ Compensation seeking benefits arising from alleged exposure to
COVID-19 in the workplace.
The Essential Employee Law
The landscape for the
COVID claims drastically changed when the New Jersey Legislature signed The
Essential Employees bill into law on September 14, 2020. The law is retroactive to March 9, 2020 and
creates a presumption of compensability for certain categories of employees. These categories include:
A. Public safety workers or first responders,
including fire, police, or other emergency providers;
B. Those involved in providing medical and other
healthcare services, emergency transportation, social services, and other care
services, including services provided in health care facilities, residential
facilities or homes.
C. Those who perform functions which involve
physical proximity to members of the public and are essential to the public’s
health, safety, and welfare, including but not limited to transportation
services, hotel and other residential services, financial services, and the
production, preparation, storage, sale and distribution of essential goods such
as food, beverages, medicine, fuel and supplies for conducting essential
business and work at home, or;
D. Anyone deemed an essential employee by the
public authority declaring the state of emergency.
The effect of this
presumption is that the burden of proof does not rest on the Essential Employee
to prove that he or she contracted COVID from work. It is now presumed to
be work related. The burden instead shifts to the employer to disprove
the case. The law provides that the presumption is “rebuttable.” An
employer could rebut the presumption, for example, if the Judge of Compensation
were to find that the employee more likely contracted the virus from another
job or prior to the effective date of the law (March 9, 2020).
The petitioner still
has the Burden to Prove Permanent Partial Disability
The petitioner always
has the burden of proof with respect to permanent partial disability. The
Essential Employee Law did not change that. One does not
automatically get an award of permanent partial disability for having
work-related COVID. There must also be proof of an impairment which
substantially limits one’s activities of daily living or materially impacts
one’s working ability.
The End of the Presumption
One important question now facing practitioner is when this
presumption will end. My
position is that this presumption was terminated when Governor Murphy declared
the end of the public health emergency on July 3, 2021 as the basis for the
Essential Employee Law rested on the public health emergency and refers to it
in the law itself. While the Governor never specifically said on
July 3, 2021 that the COVID presumption in workers’ compensation was
terminated, many workers’ compensation professionals contend that the
presumption must have ended because the law was in response to the existence of
a public health emergency.
Currently, the end of
the presumption does not mean all that much because many claim COVID petitions
are still being filed. Without a presumption, the petitioner must prove
more likely than not that he or she contracted the virus at work. That is
just like any other occupational disease claims in New Jersey where the burden
rests on the petitioner to prove his or her case on compensability.
Defending COVID Claims
Rebutting the
presumption of compensability requires an investigation into the petitioner’s
relevant medical history and the circumstances that led to his or her exposure.
In all occupational claims, including COVID claim petitions, both parties can
propound interrogatories on the other side to answer. Unfortunately, the
standard occupational interrogatories used in New Jersey are mostly outdated with
no questions about family exposure, travel exposure, mask use or community
exposure in the approved form interrogatories. Counsel for the respondent
should prepare relevant interrogatories customized to address each individual COVID
claim petition.
These interrogatories
must address exposure potential at home with relatives or friends, dates and
locations of travel, holiday gatherings, dates of positive testing, quarantine
periods, secondary employment, and volunteer work, the timing of the diagnosis and
current symptoms and treatment.
No one really knows
what the long term effects of COVID are. The COVID virus seems to
frequently attack preexisting medical conditions. For this reason it is
important to obtain family doctor records to assess the prior medical
diagnosis. Family doctor records may have very important information
about prior conditions and also about initial conversations regarding the possible
sources of the COVID exposure.
Depending on the
allegations in the particular case, it may be necessary to obtain prior treatment
records from other specialists as their findings may be directly relevant to
causation.