by Joel Alpert and Richard Warsh[1]
In 2002, the Supreme Court created a new disability standard for workers’ compensation claims (this changed 90 years of clear precedent). Sington v Daimler Chrysler Corp, 467 Mich 144; 648 NW2d 624 (2002). The court required injured workers to prove they are unable to perform any of the jobs that pay the “maximum wage” given the specific employee’s qualifications and training. The term “maximum wage” did not appear in the Act at that time. Confusion ensued when literally hundreds of cases on appeal were remanded for a new hearing to consider this new interpretation. In 2008, the Supreme Court increased this new burden of proof by allowing discovery, instituting the need for expert vocational testimony, and consequently, increasing the cost and complexity of litigation. Stokes v Chrysler, LLC, 481 Mich 266; 750 NW2d 129 (2008). Since 2002 many cases have been remanded two, three, or more times without resolution, causing additional chaos.
In December 2011, the Michigan Legislature passed HB 5002 (2011 PA 266), to cement into the statute these new Supreme Court mandated requirements.
The results of all of these changes have been significant and have benefitted employers at the expense of employees. From January 1, 2013 through October 31, 2013, the Magistrates at the Workers’ Compensation Agency have tried a total of 87 cases. Fifty-four of those trials (62%) resulted in a complete denial of benefits. Because of the Supreme Court and legislative changes, only 15 (17%) of cases tried resulted in an award of continuing benefits to injured workers. The remaining 18 (21%) resulted in the payment of benefits for a finite period of time (closed period). See: http://mich.gov/documents/wca/wca_bom_2013_stats_412055_7.pdf
Even if an injured worker prevails, their weekly rate of compensation can be drastically reduced by theoretical wages, a legal fiction created by the Michigan Supreme Court and subsequently adopted by Michigan’s legislature by HB 5002. Under the theory, which reverses 90 years of precedent (Sington and Stokes, supra), an employer is allowed to reduce weekly disability benefits by the amount of wages an injured worker could, theoretically, earn taking into consideration the post-injury wage earning capacity. Former Justice Clifford Taylor testified before the legislative committee responsible for advancing HB 5002, that this “phantom wage deduction” would never occur, and that under these new requirements, injured workers would be entitled to their full wage loss benefits. The reality that we have all witnessed does not match Justice Taylor’s testimony.
People like Marko Allen, a 27-year-old husband and father of three who suffered a serious back injury at work. Allen v Belle Tire Distributors, Inc, 2013 Mich ACO 8. At the time of the accident, he was working as a laborer for a tire store, installing large semi-tractor, trailer, truck, and automobile tires. He made an average weekly wage of $431.19. His injury required surgery and created a permanent abnormal condition in his spine which prevented him from being able to engage in heavy physical labor. As a result of his work injury, he is now medically limited to lifting only up to 10 pounds.[b4] His award of $318.42 per week was reduced to $22.90 per week on the theory that he is able to perform sedentary, unskilled work that would pay $8 per hour. This presumes that an employer would not only hire a full-time worker with permanent medical and physical limitations, but would actually pay him or her $320 per week.
It is also worth noting that it isn’t just people like Marko Allen and their families who are harmed when the workers’ compensation system fails to provide appropriate benefits to the people who work for them. The rest of us end up footing the bill for costs that the employers are supposed to pay – in Mr. Allen’s case, Medicaid paid about $30,000 for treatment of his work injury and 6 years later, and in spite of a final Order from a magistrate finding that the costs of the injury should be paid, is still refusing to repay Medicaid. This is typical of what is now happening in the workers’ compensation community across the board, as we continue to see case after case, with these “phantom wage” deductions.
Or consider the case of Howard Kessler, a truck driver, who had inpatient surgery allegedly related to his work injury. The majority opinion of the Workers’ Compensation Appellate Commission stated, in part: “The record information raises the prospect that plaintiff may possess skills transferable to a sedentary situation which would permit occupational activity outside the cab of a truck, perhaps even while in [the] hospital or long term care.” Kessler v Dakota Leasing, Inc, 2011 Mich ACO 32, slip opinion, p. 16 (emphasis supplied). This was a hotly contested case with many issues regarding the nature and extent of the proofs. But the mere consideration of requiring injured workers to look for work while recovering from surgery while still in the hospital tells us much about how broken our worker’s compensation system is today.
This impact on the injured workers must also be considered in the context of the cost of workers’ compensation for Michigan business. The Workers Compensation Research Institute, an organization primarily funded by businesses, with only a handful of labor organizations as members, issued a recent study of workers’ compensation costs for 2009. The total costs for a workers’ compensation claim in Michigan were among the lowest of the states studied (Florida, Texas, Massachusetts, North Carolina, Minnesota, Virginia, Illinois, California, Iowa, New Jersey, Pennsylvania, Wisconsin, Arkansas, Indiana and Louisiana) before Michigan's “reform” legislation in 2011. The Compensation Advisory Organization of Michigan, a member of WCRI, estimated that the 2011 legislative changes would decrease the overall loss costs in the range of an additional 1-3 percent.
Our political leaders need to be aware that the Workers’ Compensation system was designed to make sure that seriously injured workers and their families would be provided for without having to sue the employer. The system is now in need of a fix.[2]
2Note that the authors acknowledge this article is a summary of a complex and expansive problem. There is insufficient time and space to specifically address every aspect of the problem. Criticism of the statistics, facts, and opinions expressed are welcome and will be addressed upon request.
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