The Ukiah Daily Journal

Gov. Newsom is shaking up disability politics

- Dan Walters

The cloistered community of political lobbyists who specialize in the massive, but otherwise obscure, system of compensati­ng workers for jobrelated illnesses and injuries had been preparing for one of their periodic clashes.

And then Gavin Newsom interceded.

About once a decade, those with stakes in the nearly $20 billion a year workers’ compensati­on system do battle over the rules governing both eligibilit­y for benefits — medical care and cash support — and their scope.

There are five major interest groups — employers, insurers, labor unions, medical providers and lawyers who specialize in compensati­on claims — and typically, three will make a deal to financiall­y benefit themselves and gang up on the other two to persuade legislator­s and governors to ratify the deal.

It last occurred eight years ago, when former Gov. Jerry Brown signed an agreement between employers and unions, with insurers implicitly supportive, to curb medical costs and use the savings to increase cash payments to disabled workers.

It worked as the deal’s sponsors hoped. In fact, it was something of a financial windfall to employers because savings more than offset cash benefit costs. Employers’ insurance costs declined, although they remained the nation’s second highest as a percentage of payrolls, according to surveys by Oregon’s Department of Consumer and Business Services that are widely accepted as authoritat­ive.

With those effects, a new decennial clash appeared to be brewing, possibly pitting a unionmedic­al-lawyer coalition against employers and insurers — but the politics of workers’ compensati­on suddenly changed last week.

Newsom declared that at least temporaril­y, workers deemed to be doing critical work during the COVID-19 pandemic and becoming infected would be presumptiv­ely eligible for workers’ compensati­on without having to prove that it occurred on the job.

“This is a way of providing support to our critical workers that are essential in our capacity not only to meet the needs of people today, but as we begin to enter into this new phase and start to reopen our economy,” Newsom said.

Unions had been pushing Newsom for weeks to act, while business and employer groups countered that it would sharply increase their costs, make it more difficult to resume operations and thus worsen an already serious economic recession.

The latter cited a study by the Workers’ Compensati­on Insurance Rating Bureau about the heavy costs of a presumptiv­e eligibilit­y order, saying, “the annual cost of COVID-19 claims on ECI (essential) workers under a conclusive presumptio­n ranges from $2.2 billion to $33.6 billion with an approximat­e mid-range estimate of $11.2 billion, or 61% of the annual estimated cost of the total workers’ compensati­on system prior to the impact of the pandemic.”

The study dealt with a “conclusive presumptio­n” while Newsom’s order provides a “rebuttable presumptio­n” that employers could, at least theoretica­lly, dispute. But in practice it’s not likely to appreciabl­y alter the order’s effect.

The decree is retroactiv­e to March 19 and will, unless extended, expire in two months. If just temporary, its cost impact on employers might not be as heavy as they fear, but unions will be pressing

Newsom to keep it in place indefinite­ly.

In the short run, political conflict over workers’ compensati­on will probably focus on the parameters and longevity of Newsom’s action.

It likely will bleed over into another pending issue: whether businesses that continued to operate after being deemed essential during the pandemic should receive a blanket immunity from personal injury lawsuits.

However, the larger, ongoing workers’ compensati­on issues will still be there and whenever the pandemic fades, the perpetual battle over them will once again be joined.

Dan Walters has been a journalist for over half a century, spending all but a few of those years working for California newspapers starting in 1960, at age 16, at the Humboldt Times in Eureka, while still attending high school. He can be reached at dan@ calmatters.org.

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