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.
Bill 1084 went into effect on July 1, 2016. This legislation abrogates the holding inWheeler, and sets forth the applicable law as it relates to aggregate wages for an employee when calculating an employee’s average weekly wage. While we suggest reading the entirety of Bill 1084 and, of course, calling us for any questions you may have, keep the following in mind:
Claims Arising Before May 6, 2015: Wages calculated exclusively on wages earned at the place of employment where the injury occurred.Claims Arising After May 5, 2015: Wages include all wages for those jobs where an employee was concurrently employed at the time of the injury, only if the employee was actively working in the concurrent employment and was prevented from doing so due to the injury.To be prudent, you should ask an injured employee if they are employed in any other position and ask that they provide wage information to support the same and note your file accordingly.
If you have any questions relating to calculating the comp rate, what needs to be included, or general questions on South Dakota law, please contact Charlie Larson atcalarson@boycelaw.com or 605-336-2424.
The maximum rate changed on July 1, 2016 to $762 a week. The minimum work comp rate has increased to $381 a week.
If you have any questions on work comp rates or general questions, please feel free to contact Charlie Larson atcalarson@boycelaw.com or 605-336-2424.
Beginning July 1, 2016, the maximum worker’s compensation payable was raised to $832 per week and the minimum was raised to $229 per week. This change was based on the Commissioner of Labor’s determination that the State’s average weekly wage was $831.88 in the calendar year 2015, and the change is effective for any injury occurring on or after July 1, 2016.
------------------------------------------
About the Author
This blog submission was prepared by Mike Fish, an attorney with Fish Nelson & Holden, LLC, a law firm dedicated to representing self-insured employers, insurance carriers, and third party administrators in all matters related to workers’ compensation. Fish Nelson & Holden is a member of the National Workers’ Compensation Defense Network. If you have any questions about this submission or Alabama workers’ compensation in general, please contact Fish by e-mailing him at mfish@fishnelson.com or by calling him directly at 205-332-1448.
As you know, Kids’ Chance is a scholarship program for children whose parents have been killed
or seriously injured at work. Donations are tax deductible and we welcome contributions. More
important is that we are looking for eligible scholarship recipients. If you know of an eligible child,
please contact Kids’ Chance in care of Jane Stone, who is on the founding board, at
jstone@slsaustin.com, or call her at 512-343-1300. A big kick-off event is planned for the Fall, too,
and if you or your company are interested in being a sponsor (with appropriate attribution), please
let us know. The deadline for sponsorships is fast approaching.
The US National Toxicology Program, a federal interagency group under the NIH, is said to have
linked radiation from cell phone exposure to cancer in rats in a new study. The researchers exposed
rodents for two years (apparently, a rodents’s life span) to radiation levels designed to roughly match
what a human with heavy cell phone use or exposure might experience. The study results are a long
way from determining if the results of the experiments would be the same if the subjects were
humans. We wonder if the danger to humans will be more or less than the dangers of using a cell
phone while driving (or walking). In any event, if cell phone usage is a work requirement for a
particular injured worker who develops cancer, or gets hit by a bus while distracted by his phone,
there may be some workers’ compensation claims filed.
As many of you know, a broad-based conference was recently held in Dallas by invitation only to
discuss common national issues in workers’ compensation in light of a perceived trend to “opt-out”
plans and the specter of nationalization or doing away with a workers’ compensation system altogether. SLS partner Jane Stone was invited to the Summit as a representative of the National
Workers’ Compensation Defense Network. You may have been following the progress of the
Summit on Bob Wilson’s website. The purpose was to open a dialogue as to what is right in
worker’s compensation programs, and what can be improved. The discussions were lively to say
the least, given that the attendees were so diverse in their views and experiences. The conversations
lasted for 2 days among regulators, judges, insurance professionals, physicians, academics, union
representatives, lawyers (from all sides), and injured workers (both satisfied with the system and
unhappy with it). After the initial conference, the attendees responded to a survey to determine the
priority of topics that were most important. The results of the survey will be published sometime
after July 4th.
Treatment for opioid dependence has long been an issue in workers’ compensation. Now that the
FDA has approved implants which will provide a constant, low dose of the drug buprenorphine to
a patient who is already stable on other forms of the drug, such as pills or sublingual films, requests
for the implant should begin to show up in preauthorization requests, given that buprenorphine is
an “N” drug.
The State Office of Administrative Hearings recently decided to deny payment for compounded
medications which are usually various topical creams which are touted as relieving pain or healing
scars. Texas insurance carriers have been seeing bills of more than $12,000 for a one month
prescription. It was thought by some that so long as the compound didn’t contain an “N” drug from
the DWC’s closed formulary, preauthorization under DWC Rule 134.600 was not required. But the
insurance carrier in this case decided to deny payment based on the defense that Rule 134.600
requires that investigational or experimental drugs be preauthorized. SOAH determined, based on
expert testimony from Dr. Suzanne Novak and her expertise in the application of the ODG treatment
guidelines, that compounded drugs are by their very nature investigational and experimental. That
being the case, the creams would require preauthorization. Many in the pharmacy and treatment
industries disagree, but for now, at least we know which way the wind is blowing.
The Texas Supreme Court issued a decision blowing apart an attempt at settlement of a partial SIBs
quarter. Bonnie Jones and the workers’ comp carrier had taken a dispute over the 14th quarter of
SIBs through the agency and into district court. The DWC had determined that Ms. Jones was not entitled to benefits for that quarter and Ms. Jones took the case up. In the district court proceedings,
Ms. Jones agreed to a partial payment for the quarter and the proposed judgment incorporating the
settlement was sent to the DWC. The Labor Code requires that all proposed judgments be submitted
to the DWC so the agency can decide if there is a reason to intervene in the case. After reviewing
the proposed judgment, the DWC exercised its right to intervene and oppose the judgment on the
basis that the agency had already found that Jones had not fulfilled the mandatory work search
requirements for the 14th quarter, and that a partial SIBs award, even if both parties agreed, “flouts
the statutory formula’s edict to calculate the monetary entitlement in a precise way.” The trial court
went ahead and granted the judgment anyway, and the court of appeals affirmed, citing the longstanding
general policy of encouraging settlement. But, as stated in the Supreme Court’s opinion,
the trial court and court of appeals“ignor[ed] the particularities that the revamped workers’ comp
scheme provides.” Bottom line: SIBs entitlement is all or nothing for each quarter – no partial
settlements allowed. One wonders whether the parties attempted the same settlement at the agency
level. It seems an odd case for the agency to spend resources to pursue what seems to be an issue
of minor significance. Texas Dept. of Ins., Division of Workers’ Compensation v. Bonnie Jones and
American Home Assurance Company, (Tex. 2016) No. 15-0025, opinion issued June 24, 2016.
So far, all we know is that the scam involved Federal workers’ compensation claims, but it is hard
to believe that Texas workers’ comp was not hit as well. More to come on that, but in the meantime,
spread the word. Attorney Tshombe Anderson was arrested last Friday, and his wife Brenda
Anderson and sister Lydia Bankhead are in federal custody. The fronts they are alleged to have used
were Best First Administration Durable Medical Equipment of Austin, Union Medical Supplies &
Equipment LLC, Sky-Care Medical Supplies & Equipment LLC, and American Federal Union
Claims Advocates LLC. This story ran in the Dallas Morning News, and here’s the link:
http://crimeblog.dallasnews.com/2015/08/dallas-attorney-and-family-members-charged-with-defraudingworkers-
comp-out-of-22-million.html/ .