Los Angeles Times

State limits sports injury claims

Gov. Brown signs law sought by the NFL to close the door on out-of-state athletes’ workers’ comp filings.

- By Ken Bensinger and Marc Lifsher

After more than a year of intense lobbying by profession­al sports leagues, California has slammed the door on most athletes looking to file injury claims in the state, including those with serious brain injuries.

Gov. Jerry Brown on Tuesday signed legislatio­n that significan­tly limits workers’ compensati­on claims by pro players. It’s a significan­t victory for the National Football League, which has been trying to reduce its financial exposure to concussion­s and other brain injuries that former players allege are the result of repeated blows to the head.

In August, the league agreed to a $765-million settlement with more than 4,500 former players. They had sued the NFL in federal court over the lasting effects of concussion­s, which have been linked to dementia and other debilitati­ng illnesses. That landmark deal was viewed as a bargain for the league, considerin­g the gravity of the injuries and the bad publicity the lawsuit generated for the sport.

The NFL’s legislativ­e win in Sacramento could be far more valuable over the long term. It allows the league to sidestep exposure to thousands of serious head and brain trauma claims by outof-state players who are no longer eligible to file in California.

The bill, signed without comment by the governor, was the subject of nearly 18 months of lobbying by the NFL, Major League Baseball and other major sports leagues and workers’ compensati­on insurers. It ultimately found the backing of nearly every member of the Legislatur­e; just five voted against it.

Supporters said the system was being abused by greedy athletes looking for a big payday. The bill’s sponsor, Assemblyma­n Henry T. Perea (D-Fresno), said that the athletes’ claims place a

heavy burden on California and its employers and should be lodged elsewhere.

“Our workers’ compensati­on system will no longer be unfairly targeted by out-ofstate profession­al athletes,” he said.

But critics said it allowed wealthy teams and their insurers to duck responsibi­lity for employees injured on the job.

“It’s a sellout to the billionair­e owners” of profession­al teams, said Melissa Brown, a workers’ compensati­on attorney in Sacramento. “Players are suffering these terrible injuries, especially the older ones. They are going to be without a remedy.”

Since 2006, more than 3,400 former NFL players have filed for workers’ compensati­on in California alleging head or brain injuries, with many claiming dementia and other incurable neurologic­al conditions. Some of the game’s greatest players — including Earl Campbell, Deion Sanders and Tony Dorsett — are among those who have made head injury claims.

Under terms of the new law, such filings will no longer be permitted from athletes who did not play on a California team for at least two complete seasons. In addition, those who spent seven or more seasons playing outside the state will also be unable to file, even if they meet the two-season California requiremen­t.

The bill is retroactiv­e to Sept. 15, meaning that any claims filed by affected athletes from that date are invalid.

Workers’ compensati­on is an employer-paid insurance system administer­ed by states. It pays benefits to workers injured on the job, who in turn are precluded from suing their employers.

Critics contend that the new law benefits a very profitable special interest and will have little tangible benefit for the state as a whole.

Modesto Diaz, a Santa Ana workers’ compensati­on attorney specializi­ng in athletes, said the leagues capitalize­d on the widespread — and mistaken — belief that taxpayers bear the costs of successful claims.

The lobbying campaign took advantage of “an unsuspecti­ng Legislatur­e and an uninformed general public,” Diaz said. He said the irony is that hundreds if not thousands of seriously injured former players may now have to turn to Social Security Disability Insurance, Medicaid and other forms of government aid.

“Taxpayers are going to wind up footing the bill for the treatment these people are going to need down the road,” Diaz said.

At the center of the debate is California’s unusual workers’ compensati­on system, which has become a refuge to many injured athletes.

California is one of only a handful of states to recognize cumulative trauma, a category of injuries that are incurred over time. Those include arthritis, back injuries and terminal brain disease such as chronic traumatic encephalop­athy, which has been linked to contact sports.

In addition, California’s statute of limitation­s for workers’ compensati­on filings includes a provision allowing some workers to file long after retirement. Most states have stricter time limits for filing.

That has made California a magnet for claims from players who develop serious brain injuries years or even decades after their careers have ended.

Since 2006, more than two-thirds of all cumulative trauma filings by athletes in California have come from those who played for out-ofstate teams, state data show.

Successful workers’ compensati­on claims are paid by either the employer or its insurer. In addition to cash, awards often include lifetime medical coverage for injuries, which can run into the hundreds of thousands of dollars for serious debilitati­ng injuries.

In most major sports, insurance premiums are included in the salary cap, meaning the players in effect absorb the costs of their own coverage. But because the NFL does not offer lifetime healthcare to its players, those who cannot file workers’ compensati­on claims despite having legitimate injuries may be forced to pay for their own medical costs.

And only a small portion of former players made enough money during their careers to be able to afford private insurance. The average career of a football player is fewer than four years, and many of those making claims in California played in the 1970s and 1980s, when salaries were far lower.

The new law, AB 1309, applies only to profession­al football, baseball, basketball, ice hockey and soccer. In addition to major league athletes, it also covers minor league players whose compensati­on can be as low as a few hundred dollars a week.

Organized labor opposed the bill on concerns that it could embolden employers and insurers to propose legislatio­n barring claims from other out-of-state workers, including f light attendants, truckers and salespeopl­e whose jobs bring them to California.

“This is a terrible precedent for players and a more dangerous precedent for all workers,” said Angie Wei, legislativ­e director of the California Labor Federation.

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