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R&R Insurance Blog

Update on Workers Compensation: Labor and Management Proposals

Posted by Scott Shaver

Business-OwnerThe workers compensation act in Wisconsin changes every two years through an “advisory council” process. The Worker’s Compensation Advisory Council, made up of five management representatives and five labor representatives, is charged with exchanging proposals and negotiating an agreed bill that goes off to the legislature for consideration. Typically, this agreed bill makes it through the legislature without much friction. But that's not always the case.

 

As we are nearing the end of this biennial cycle, it’s important that you understand the proposals that are being considered by the Worker’s Compensation Advisory Council as many could have a direct impact on what you pay for worker’s compensation insurance in the future. Here’s a brief summary of the key proposals:

 

LABOR PROPOSALS

  • Rate Increases and Indexing: Labor is looking for sizable increases in payments made for injuries that involve permanent partial and permanent total disability.
  • Continuation of Healthcare Contributions: For those employers who offer health insurance, labor is looking to require that you continue to make those employer contributions to the health plan for as long as the injured worker is in that disability state. That would be for an unlimited time and it would be regardless of whether you had terminated the employee for cause or they quit for any reason.
  • Vocational Rehabilitation Exceptional: This would allow employees who are being retrained as a result of a workplace injury to collect full indemnity benefits while in school AND collect wages at another employer for up to 20 hours without an offset of indemnity benefits.

MANAGEMENT PROPOSALS

  • Statute of Limitations Reduction: Currently, an employee has 12 years to pursue a worker’s compensation claim against their employer. Management is looking to reduce that to 3 years.
  • Eliminate Statutory Permanent Partial Disability Ratings: Currently, there are certain surgical procedures that result in permanency ratings that automatically start at a minimum level, regardless of the outcome of the procedure. With advancements in medical procedures and technology, the management representatives would like to see these minimums removed.
  • Controls on RX’s Dispensed at a Doctor’s Office: Some doctors are dispensing prescriptions to injured workers at their offices and charging insurance carriers 3-4 times the cost of the drugs. Management is asking to implement some controls on the cost and length of time a physician can dispense meds from their office.
  • Medical Cost Containment: Most states in the U.S. have instituted aggressive cost containment measures to better control the cost of treatment for work related injuries. Wisconsin lacks that type of control and the cost of medical treatment is sometimes 2-3 times more expensive for work related procedures as compared to those covered under a health plan. Management is also asking for the ability to direct where an injured worker can get treated.

 

No doubt that many of these proposals, if they become part of a bill that gets passed by the legislature, will have an impact on the cost of your insurance going forward.

 

For additional insight on how any of these might impact the cost of your worker’s compensation insurance, please contact me.

Topics: Workers Compensation, Work Comp, Business Insurance