The Sun (Lowell)

Comp

-

lion, state-level insurance system is one of the nation’s oldest forms of a social contract. In exchange for coverage, workers give up the right to sue their employers for job-related harms. Employers pay premiums to support the system.

Complex rules differ from state to state.

Dealing with job-related injuries is fairly straightfo­rward, but diseases have always been trickier for workers’ comp, and COVID-19 seems to be in a class of its own.

“You don’t know per se where you inhaled that breath whereby you became infected,” said Bill Smith, president of the Workers’ Injury Law & Advocacy Group, or WILG, a profession­al associatio­n of lawyers representi­ng workers.

You can still reach a logical conclusion, says University of Wyoming labor law professor Michael Duff.

“When you are talking about certain kinds of frontline workers, out in the trenches, day in and day out, that person starts to look like the coal miner who is routinely exposed to a hazardous health condition because of their work,” he explained.

Think hospital and nursing home clinical staff, first responders, and meat packing workers, among others.

Acknowledg­ing such realities, more than a dozen states have enacted policies known as “presumptio­ns” that relieve essential workers like Dori Harrington, the nurse from Connecticu­t, of having to prove how they actually got COVID-19 on the job.

The list includes liberal states like California and conservati­ve states like Kentucky, according to WILG, the lawyers’ group.

California’s policy stands out because it protects all workers, not just those in frontline roles.

At the federal level, there’s a push to protect workers at the Transporta­tion Security Administra­tion and the Postal Service.

Duff predicts most states will be reluctant to expand protection­s.

The issue involves significan­t costs and hard lobbying. It pits workers, labor groups, lawyers, and social welfare advocates against employers, insurers, and even local and state government­s that employ frontline workers.

In Colorado, a drive to enact a COVID-19 presumptio­n for essential workers stalled in the legislatur­e over cost concerns.

“At a time of community spread of a disease like this, it is not appropriat­e for a workers’ comp system to act as a public safety net,” said Edie Sonn, head of public affairs for Pinnacol Assurance, Colorado’s leading workers’ comp insurer, which opposed the effort.

Certain businesses would have seen premiums rise up to 27%, she added.

Industry expert Stefan Holzberger of the AM Best credit rating agency said there’s a risk of significan­t losses for workers’ comp insurers, but there are also potential mitigating factors. The bottom line isn’t clear yet.

“From what we see so far, the

average claims cost associated with a COVID-19 claim is less than the loss associated with a typical workers’ comp claim,” said Holzberger.

“Going to the hospital and getting a test is a lot less than getting neck or back surgery.”

Another mitigating factor: workplace injuries went down dramatical­ly in the economic shutdown.

For essential workers who got COVID-19 and suffered through fever, fatigue, shortness of breath, racking cough, and other symptoms, the denial or acceptance of a workers’ comp claim can have a profound impact.

Fire alarm inspector Kenneth Larkin of Montevallo, Ala., said he was rebuffed by his former employer when he requested workers’ comp for a coronaviru­s test.

He had gotten sick soon after inspecting systems in the COVID-19 wing of a hospital.

“I think a certain number of workers are being villainize­d because they want to take care of themselves,” said Larkin, who’s retained a lawyer.

“It’s hard for me as a human being to swallow that, when you place the value of a person’s health at less than the cost of a test.”

But nurse Debbie Koehler of Warren, Ohio, said she felt validated when her claim was accepted by the insurer for the rehab hospital where she works.

“It’s just knowing that my employer is actively admitting that this wrong happened and they are paying for my therapy,” she said.

 ?? JOHN MINCHILLO / AP ?? Medical personnel attend a daily 7 p.m. applause April 28 in their honor, during the coronaviru­s pandemic outside New York University Langone Medical Center in Manhattan.
JOHN MINCHILLO / AP Medical personnel attend a daily 7 p.m. applause April 28 in their honor, during the coronaviru­s pandemic outside New York University Langone Medical Center in Manhattan.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States