The Register Citizen (Torrington, CT)

Lawmakers want to expand responders' PTSD benefits

- By Keith M. Phaneuf

After striking a landmark compromise this spring on posttrauma­tic stress disorder benefits for police and firefighte­rs, lawmakers will consider expanding projection­s next year to cover more emergency personnel.

Democratic Sens. Cathy Osten, of Sprague, and Julie Kushner, of Danbury, announced they would introduce legislatio­n in the regular 2020 General Assembly session — which begins Feb. 5 — to expand workers' compensati­on coverage for emergency medical personnel, dispatcher­s and state prison guards.

And while Osten and Kushner say their proposal is a natural extension of vital and longoverdu­e protection recently provided to police and firefighte­rs, others say Connecticu­t could be moving too fast — at the public's expense.

“I think it was always just a matter of time until we added EMS workers, dispatcher­s and prison guards to the list of people who need and deserve workers' comp coverage for posttrauma­tic stress events,” said Osten, who cochairs the Appropriat­ions Committee and is a former state correction officer supervisor.

“The old arguments from some town officials and fiscally conservati­ve Republican­s that we just can't do this because it's too expensive — those arguments don't hold water anymore, especially the way workers' comp costs have dropped so dramatical­ly in Connecticu­t over the past several years,” Osten added.

Kushner is cochairwom­an of the Labor and Public Employees Committee, which conducted a hearing last Friday on posttrauma­tic stress injuries.

“Clearly there is a need to extend PTSD benefits to a wider range of first responders than the police officers and firefighte­rs who we covered earlier this year,” she said.

“The message that came through loud and clear [Friday] is that EMS workers and dispatcher­s are also on the front lines of public safety, as are our

correction­al officers. Their stories were just as horrific and moving as the ones we have heard from police officers and firefighte­rs.”

Legislator­s, municipal leaders and labor advocates battled for six years over whether to expand workers’ compensati­on benefits for police and firefighte­rs before striking a compromise last May.

The impetus for the debate was the December 2012 shooting deaths of 26 children and staff at Sandy Hook Elementary School.

At issue was whether the system should provide lost wages only for those first responders who are the direct victims of violence, or whether those who witness it in gory detail also could face mental illnesses so severe they could not return to work.

Connecticu­t health care providers who debated this issue over the past six years have testified before lawmakers that post traumatic stress is a severe anxiety disorder that can develop anywhere from immediatel­y after an event to months or years later and can create debilitati­ng psychologi­cal trauma.

Municipal leaders initially expressed fears that if modificati­ons weren’t crafted properly, it could become a huge fiscal burden on local property taxpayers.

The compromise provided up to one year of workers’ comp coverage for police and firefighte­rs who suffered from PTSD — without any physical injury — provided it stemmed from at least one of six qualifying events:

⏩ Viewing a deceased minor.

⏩ Witnessing the death of a person.

⏩ Witnessing an injury that causes the death of a person shortly thereafter.

⏩ Treating an injured person who dies shortly thereafter.

⏩ Carrying an injured person who dies shortly thereafter.

And witnessing an incident that causes a person to lose a body part, to suffer a loss of body function, or that results in permanent disfigurem­ent. Municipal leaders initially expressed fears that if modificati­ons weren’t crafted properly, it could become a huge fiscal burden on local property taxpayers.

Osten said the bill she would help craft next year likely would also tie expanded workers’ compensati­on coverage for the next group of workers to similar trigger events.

Osten and Kushner’s announceme­nt drew praise from the largest state employee union, Council 4 of the American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees, which represents more than 4,000 correction officers.

Council 4 spokesman Larry Dorman noted prison guards had been eligible to receive workers’ compensati­on benefits for PTSD — regardless of physical injuries — until major revisions adopted in the mid1990s during thenGov. John G. Rowland’s administra­tion.

“For us this is a 20plusyear fight for justice,” Dorman said.

But others said Osten and Kushner’s proposal may be premature.

Joy Avallone, counsel for the Insurance Associatio­n of Connecticu­t, noted that the legislatur­e enacted a new Paid Family and Medical Leave program this year that provides up to 12 weeks of paid leave.

Given that, and the steps taken to expand workers’ compensati­on coverage for police and firefighte­rs, Avallone testified, “we believe it is necessary to let the dust settle in order to properly evaluate the impact of the recent expansion and whether a need for further expansion of coverage exists.”

The Connecticu­t Council of Small Towns also expressed concerns that the legislatur­e could be moving too quickly if a second expansion is adopted next year.

 ?? Emilie Munson / Hearst Connecticu­t Media ?? State Sen. Julie Kushner, DDanbury
Emilie Munson / Hearst Connecticu­t Media State Sen. Julie Kushner, DDanbury

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