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Workers' compensation
and injured workers |
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indicates that a link is only available in Adobe Portable Document
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Workers’ Compensation Reform
must begin with Justice for Workers
DID
YOU KNOW THAT families
of workers injured and killed on the job in New York State
receive less than half the weekly benefits as do similar families
in neighboring states, such as Massachusetts and Connecticut?
For more information about the urgent
need for real workers' compensation reform in New York State,
click
here.
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Workers' compensation and injured workers links |
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All 50 States' and
D.C.'s Home Pages and Workers' Compensation Agencies
Alliance Canadienne des Victimes d'Accidents
et de Maladies du Travail
The Americans
with Disabilities Act of 1990 and Injured Workers (Cornell
University School of Industrial & Labor Relations, 1997)
California
Commission on Health and Safety and Workers' Compensation
California
Industrial Medical Council (California Department of
Industrial Relations)
Canadian
Council for the Rights of Injured Workers
Canadian Injured Workers Alliance
The
Chain Never Stops American slaughterhouses are grinding
out meat faster than ever -- and the production line keeps
moving, even when the workers are maimed by the machinery.
(Mother Jones, July/August 2001)
Deadlines
Draw Near for Filing Ground Zero-Related Compensation Claims
(New York Committee for Occupational Safety and Health,
September 2003)
Energy
Employees Occupational Illness Compensation Act of 2000; List
of Covered Facilities (U.S. Department of Energy)
Federal
Employees' Compensation Act Questions and Answers (U.S.
Department of Labor, Employment Standards Administration)
Guide
to Common Workers' Compensation Terms (New York State
Insurance Fund)
Guide
to Workers' Compensation on the Web (Labor Research
Association)
How
Many Injured Workers do not File Claims for Workers' Compensation
Benefits? In this study, 40 percent (American Journal of Industrial Medicine,
November 2002)
The
Illusion of Efficiency in Workers' Compensation "Reform" Introduction to Martha T. McCluskey's
ground-breaking 1998 Rutgers Law Review article
Industrial
Disease: The Quest for Recognition --The Need for Adequate
Benefits (New Jersey Law Journal, 1990)
Injured
Workers 4 Change
Injured
Workers' Alliance A grassroots organization of
"injured workers, their families, and concerned Oregonians."
Injured
Workers of New York (Statewide, non-profit support
and advocacy group for injured workers)
Insult
to Injury: Benefits in doubt, Debilitating delays, Legal limits,
Restoring benefits (Santa Rosa, Calif., Press Democrat,
1997)
International
Association of Industrial Accident Boards and Commissions
Job
Accomodation Network (West Virginia University)
John
Burton's Workers' Compensation Resources
Maine
Injured Workers Association ("Chemically
Injured Workers Ignored, Disenfranchised and Thrown Away")
New
York City Department of Law Workers' Compensation Division:
Action Needed to Improve the Administration and Management
of the Workers' Compensation Program (New York State
Office of the State Comptroller, 1995)
New
York State Consolidated Workers' Compensation Laws Click
on "Laws of New York," then scroll down to "WKC"
(New York State Legislature)
New
York State Workers’ Compensation: How Big Is the Coverage
Shortfall? Employer non-compliance with the state’s
workers’ compensation program is a growing problem in
New York. Many companies fail to provide this coverage for
their workers. This deprives the workers of coverage and limits
the insurance pool of workers covered, in turn increasing
the premium costs for other employers and shifting the costs
of medical care for injured workers to the injured workers
themselves, taxpayers and other employers.(Fiscal Policy Institute,
January 2007)
New
York State Workers' Compensation Board
NIOSH
Office of Compensation Analysis and Support OCAS conducts
activities to assist claimants and support the role of the
Secretary of Health and Human Services under the Energy Employees
Occupational Illness Compensation Program Act of 2000.
NYCOSH
Workers Compensation Program - 2007
Occupational
and Environmental Diseases Association (United Kingdom)
Occupational
Disease and Workers’ Compensation: Coverage, Costs,
and Consequences (Milbank
Quarterly, 2004)
Occupational
Disease in Connecticut, 2001 (Connecticut
Workers' Compensation Commission)
Occupational
Disease in Connecticut, 2002 (Connecticut
Workers' Compensation Commission)
Occupational
Disease in Connecticut, 2003 (Connecticut
Workers' Compensation Commission)
Off
the Job Injury or Illness: A Guide to New York State Disability
Benefits (NYS Workers' Compensation Board)
Office
of Workers' Compensation Programs (U.S. Department
of Labor, Employment Services Administration)
On
the Job Injury: An Employee's Guide to New York State Workers'
Compensation Benefits (NYS Workers' Compensation Board)
RSI
Support/Injured Worker Groups (CTD Resource Network)
Texas
Research and Oversight Council on Workers' Compensation
U.S.
Workers' Compensation Law (Cornell University Law School)
Unjust
Treatment: Independent' Medical Examinations & Workers'
Compensation in New York State (NY State AFL-CIO and
NYCOSH)
Voters Injured at Work
(California)
Work-Related
Injuries and Fatalities: What You and Your Family Need to
Know About Your Benefits An official
summary of the types of payments that Federal employees who
are injured, or survivors of employees who die because of
job-related illness or injury, may be eligible to receive
because of the Federal employment. (United States Office of
Personnel Management, 1997)
Workers'
Comp (Martindale-Hubbell)
Workers'
Comp Insider
Workers'
Compensation Guidebook (Labor Occupational Health
Program, University of California at Berkeley, 2005)
Workers'
Compensation: An Overview (Cornell Law School Legal
Information Institute)
Workers'
Compensation: Benefits, Coverage, and Costs, 1999 New Estimates
and 1996-1998 Revisions This 68-page report analyzes
the steady 7-year drop in workers' compensation benefits relative
to covered wages, and the 6-year reduction of employer costs.
It presents national data for 1999, including benefit payments
by state, by type of insurer, and more medical care and cash
benefits separately. It also provides estimates of how many
people are covered by workers' compensation, including state-level
estimates of the number of covered workers and total covered
wages. (National Academy of Social Insurance, May 2001)
Workers'
Compensation: Collectively Bargained Approaches (Committee
to Protect Workers' Rights)
Workers'
Compensation Health Initiative (University of Massachusetts
Medical School)
Workers'
Compensation Law Library (Findlaw)
Workers'
Compensation Page (AFL-CIO)
Workers
Injury Law & Advocacy Group
Workers
Rights to Compensation (Office of New York State Attorney
General)
Workers
Injury Law and Advocacy Group
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Workers' compensation and injured workers news |
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Study
Says Many Firms Cheat New York Workers’ Comp System
A new study estimates that employers cheat New York
State’s workers’ compensation system by not paying
$500 million to $1 billion a year in required insurance premiums,
forcing other employers to pay higher premiums. The study
by the Fiscal Policy Institute, a liberal research group,
found that these illegal underpayments represent 15 percent
to 20 percent of all the workers’ comp premiums that
are supposed to be paid each year statewide.(New York Times,
January 25, 2007)
Plan
to Overhaul Workers' Compensation Puts Focus on Cap Issues
Lose a big toe on the job in New York, and you are
eligible for as much as $400 a week for 38 weeks. Lose a foot,
and you can collect up to $400 for 205 weeks. But a back injury?
That's priceless - or at least timeless, which is to say that
you can collect workers' compensation payments for the rest
of your life. New York's workers' compensation system has
enough peculiarities to ruffle everybody's feathers. Business
groups say the system's main flaw is that payments for certain
kinds of injuries, including head and back injuries, are not
limited in duration as they are in many states, so you can
collect lifetime payments. But unions say the system is not
generous enough, since it caps payments at $400 a week, rather
than at two-thirds of the state's average weekly wage as in
many other states, which would be about $630 in New York.
(New York Times, December 19, 2005)
Unions
Support Workers' Compensation System Reform by New York State
AFL-CIO President Denis Hughes A recent
proposal by Gov. George E. Pataki regarding the workers' compensation
crisis has garnered much attention. While details of the proposal
must be scrutinized for their short- and long-term impact on
injured workers, contrary to public belief, the New York State
AFL-CIO welcomes the opportunity to fully and openly discuss
this most urgent matter. (Buffalo News, November 22, 2005)
Governor
Pataki Proposes Comprehensive New York State Workers’
Compensation Reforms (Office of the Governor,
November 3, 2005)
New
York Workers' Compensation Payments Grew Less than the U.S.
Average in 2003 In New York, total
workers' compensation payments for injured workers' cash benefits
and medical care rose by 2.5 percent to $3,220 million in 2003,
according to a report released today by the National Academy
of Social Insurance (NASI). Nationally, workers' compensation
payments grew by 3.2 percent to $54.9 billion in 2003, the latest
year for which national data are available. (National Academy
of Social Insurance, July 21, 2005)
How Many Injured Workers do not File Claims for Workers'
Compensation Benefits? (In this study, 40 percent)
(American Journal of Industrial Medicine,
November 2002)
Feds Issue
Final Nuclear Worker Compensation Rules On April 30,
the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) issued
two final rules under which the department will provide scientific
expertise to assist decision-making under the Energy Employees
Occupational Illness Compensation Program Act of 2000. (Press release, April
30, 2002)
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For the Workers' compensation index page click here.
Click on any of the boxes in the left margin
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