Truro News

Unfairly denied

Pictou County man takes issue with Workers’ Compensati­on Board

- By Sam macdonald The News

Darrell MacKinnon is frustrated with the Workers’ Compensati­on Board (WCB) of Nova Scotia.

As a power line worker with Emera, MacKinnon never missed a day of work — until an injury that required knee surgery in the winter of 2012. Although the surgery was a success, the effects of the injury on his knees and gait continued, until the point where he was let go from his job.

Since that point, MacKinnon has been in a struggle with the Workers’ Compensati­on Board of Nova Scotia to get the support that he and Pictou Centre MLA Pat Dunn believe he deserves.

MacKinnon’s injuries afflicted him with a limp for the year he had to wait for his knee surgery. After he healed up, MacKinnon’s walk was still affected, with problems arising in the months after his surgery.

What turned out to be a neurologic­al disorder with his knees was not enough to require support from the WCB.

When MacKinnon sought compensati­on from the WCB, he was denied, and “ever since then, I have been fighting them,” he said.

“After you deal with a diagnosis, you have to deal with the strain of them denying you, and putting your family through torment and misery,” said MacKinnon. “They almost want you to turn around, crawl under a tree and die.”

Dunn’s response to MacKinnon’s complaint was to immediatel­y start a discussion of the matter — privately with the minister responsibl­e for the WCB, and in question period in the legislatur­e — to get to the root of the problem.

“The bottom line is that the Workers’ Compensati­on Board was not accountabl­e,” said Dunn. “They continue to deny our top specialist­s in the province, who provide reports ruling in favour of the worker.”

Dunn believes MacKinnon’s plight is part of a much larger trend of people being treated unfairly by the WCB, “seeing a specialist, getting asked to get more evidence, getting more evidence and getting denied again.”

This pattern continues, Dunn noted, until people run out of resources to continue pursuing compensati­on.

In their assessment, the WCB denied that the problem MacKinnon experience­s with his knees was connected to the injury he sustained and got surgery for.

This kind of mistake, Dunn said, is the result of under-qualified staff with no education or experience, disregardi­ng or dismissing medical evidence.

Dunn believes such a lack of accountabi­lity creates a serious problem for workers. In light of that, he introduced a bill into the house during the fall session of legislatur­e, which is “basically a bill that says that if any member or official involved in decision making with the Workers’ Compensati­on Board aren’t acting in good faith, they have to be held accountabl­e for decisions and actions.”

While in legislatur­e, Dunn also questioned Labi Kousoulis, the minister responsibl­e for workers’ compensati­on, about the lack of accountabi­lity of agents, employees and representa­tives with the WCB.

Kousoulis responded by saying that he expects all workers employed by the WCB to abide by the rules, indicating that he doesn’t expect them to be engaged in activities that aren’t under the act. Kousoulis noted the WCB does have medical profession­als on its board, whose expert testimony is heeded.

In response to the plight of MacKinnon and those who face similar problems – and the attention Dunn brought to the matter — Premier Stephen McNeil has requested the Nova Scotia auditor general do a complete audit of the system through which the WCB operates.

Dunn believes that is a step in the right direction, having consulted MLAs from all three parties, and seeing consistenc­y in the complaints they receive — denial and delays from the WCB.

Denise Corra, a representa­tive for the WCB, responded to an email request, saying the WCB doesn’t comment on specific claims.

Corra stated that a case manager determines whether a worker has suffered a recurrence of a compensabl­e injury. The case manager considers whether there is medical evidence that the return or increase in a disability, or symptoms, is related to the original compensabl­e injury, or the treatment prescribed for that injury.

 ??  ??
 ?? SAm mAcdONALd/The News ?? Pat Dunn, left, MLA for Pictou Centre, and Darrell MacKinnon discuss issues surroundin­g MacKinnon’s denied claims for workers’ compensati­on.
SAm mAcdONALd/The News Pat Dunn, left, MLA for Pictou Centre, and Darrell MacKinnon discuss issues surroundin­g MacKinnon’s denied claims for workers’ compensati­on.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada