Chattanooga Times Free Press

Tennessee reforms cut workers’ comp claims, costs

- BY DAVE FLESSNER STAFF WRITER

Workers’ compensati­on rates will drop again next year for most Tennessee businesses as safer work sites and non-judicial settlement­s of workers’ comp claims continue to cut the costs of the insurance in Tennessee.

The National Council on Compensati­on Insurance (NCCI) said Tuesday it is seeking a loss cost reduction of 12.6 percent for workers’ compensati­on that will have the impact of bringing down insurance rates, effective March 1, 2018.

The new filing represents the seventh consecutiv­e reduction and reflects a continuing trend of reduced workers’ compensati­on insurance premium prices since the Tennessee General Assembly changed the state’s workers ‘comp rules and moved to an administra­tive, rather than a judicial, process of paying claims for workers who are injured on the job.

Tennessee Gov. Bill Haslam led the effort to reform Tennessee’s workers’ compensati­on system in 2014 when businesses complained that Tennessee had some of the most expensive workers’ comp insurance rates in the country.

“We used to be ranked among some of the worst states in the country (for costs to employers), but now we’re generally in the middle of the pack, ” said Bradley Jackson, president of the Tennessee Chamber of Commerce and Industry. “We had a lot of businesses complainin­g about the costs of our former workers’ comp program and threatenin­g to move to other states. We have a safer environmen­t and a better system today.”

By moving from a judicial to a non-judicial settlement process, Jackson said cost increases have been held in check.

NCCI filings have totaled loss cost reductions of over 36 percent since 2014.

“The 2014 workers’ compensati­on reforms fueled these lower costs,” said Julie Mix McPeak, the state’s insurance commission­er. “These benefits extend to Tennessee’s workforce as well because the loss cost reductions are a result of decreases in losttime claim frequency and stabilizin­g claim costs.”

Contact Dave Flessner at dflessner@ timesfreep­ress.com or at 423-757-6340.

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