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Showing posts sorted by relevance for query second injury fund. Sort by date Show all posts
Showing posts sorted by relevance for query second injury fund. Sort by date Show all posts

Saturday, February 21, 2015

NJ To Consolidate Workers' Compensation Hearing Offices

The State of NJ is planning to close local hearing offices according to a letter published in a local periodical. Consolidation from local to regional hearing offices for economic reasons is a trend that has occurred throughout the US and was previously initiated in NJ during the 1970s.

Like other industrial states, NJ has suffered terribly from the economic consequences of the loss of its manufacturing base. Additionally, NJ population has shifted and the service industries are generating more claims in the southern tier of the state.

Even though the NJ Division of Workers' Compensation is funded from insurance premiums through charges directly to employers (Second Injury Fund costs), the increased operational expenses remain a burden upon all who work in the state. Consolidation represents a balancing of interests to meet present realistic demands..

For the most part, statistical transparency in NJ is lacking as to docket loads and disposition rates. Some states, like Florida, publicly disseminate that data, making comparison and analysis open for review. NJ does not publicly publish regional, or hearing officer statistical disposition data.

Ironically, NJ Workers Compensation Director & Chief Judge Peter Calderone announced that he will retire March 1, 2015. It was also announced that NJ Labor Commissioner Wirths will appoint Judge Russell Wojtenko as the new Director & Chief Judge of the NJ Division of Workers' Compensation.

While lawsuits have been filed in the past by claimants attorneys, and by local county bar associations, regarding locations of hearing offices in the State of NJ, the outcomes have not been successful.


Sunday, June 6, 2021

Saturday, June 13, 2009

NJ Budgetary Chaos Opens Court Without Cases

NJ is the mist of budgetary chaos and it continues to escalate. NJ decided at the last moment to cancel yet another furlough for state employees at the last moment resulting in the inability to list cases for hearing before the NJ Division of Workers' Compensation. Courtrooms were empty on Friday since no cases had been listed.

Originally, the administration called for yet another paid state vacation for employees because of budget shortfalls. Similar economic issues have frozen new hires, limited the use of durable resources and caused the elimination of printed court calendars. The NJ Division of Workers' compensation is funded substantially from the NJ Second Injury Fund as a line item on premium invoices.

In the recently brokered deal, Governor Corzine has negotiated 10 additional furlough days beginning on July 1st. and gather seven paid leave days for use after June 10th, 2010.

Tuesday, June 24, 2014

Stay Safe During Lightning

Protect yourself and your loved ones from lightning during a thunderstorm.

The weather forecast calls for a slight chance of thunderstorms, but you can only see a few fluffy white clouds overhead. So you and your tennis partner grab your racquets and balls and head for the tennis court. You spend a few minutes warming up and then—wait! Is that thunder you hear? Was that a lightning flash?

What do you do? Keep playing until the thunder and lightning get closer? Go sit on the metal bench under the trees to see what happens? Or get in your car and drive home?

Correct answer: If no substantial, non-concrete shelter is nearby, get in your car and wait out the storm.

Why? Because being outside when lightning is present is not something to take lightly—ever.
Risks of lightning strikes

Although the odds of being struck by lightning in a given year are only around 1 in 500,000, some factors can put you at greater risk. Lightning most often strikes people who work outside or engage in outdoor recreational activities. Regional and seasonal differences can also affect your risk of being injured by lightning.

Alabama, Colorado, Florida, Georgia, Missouri, New Jersey, North Carolina, Ohio, Pennsylvania, and Texas have the most lightning deaths and injuries [634 KB]. Florida is considered the "lightning capital" of the country, with more than 2,000 lightning injuries over the past 50 years.

The consequences of lightning strikes are serious....
[Click here to see the rest of this post]

Saturday, July 10, 2010

Court Permits Rehearing to Established Employer Liability

A NJ Appellate Court has affirmed the workers' compensation trial level opinion for total disability assessed entirely against an employer. The trial court had granted a motion for rehearing following a dismissal of the case when the employee alleged that he had been "sandbagged" by his employer at the original trial. 


The trial court allowed the hearing to be "reopened" against and her medical testimony and learned of the employer admittedly furnishing medical care o the injured worker. At the rehearing the the trial Judge assessed total disability against the employer and permitted no contribution from the Second Injury Fund. The Appellate Division affirmed the ruling. 


Brown v. Central Regional Board of Education, et al., Docket No. A-0025-08T3, NJ App Div 2010, 2010 WWL 269341, Decided July 9, 2010.


Click here for more information on how Jon L Gelman can assist you in a claim for workers' Compensation claim benefits. You may e-mail Jon  Gelman or call 1-973-696-7900.

Friday, January 24, 2020

Medical Providers Prohibited From Reporting to Credit Agencies

NJ Governor Murphy has signed legislation (S.3036) that prohibits a provider to an injured worker of medical, surgical, other treatment, or hospital service pursuant to the workers' compensation law, R.S.34:15-1 et seq., from reporting any portion of their charges which are alleged to be unpaid, to any collection or credit reporting agency, bureau, or data collection facility.

Sunday, June 23, 2013

NJ Uninsured Fund Cracks Down on Uninsured Employers

It has been reported tat the NJ Uninsured Fund is vigorously seeking reimbursement for assessments and penalties from employers who do not have workers' compensation insurance. 

In a recent case, a former employer was required to reach a deal with the NJ Attorney
General's Office to repay $111,813.00. It was reported that the former employer had to mortgage his house for repayment in order to avoid a potential 18 month prison term and a $10,000 fine in addition to the assessment.

Click here to read: Franklin Lakes business owner must mortgage home to avoid jail in workers compensation case

Sunday, May 30, 2021

CMS Webinar on the PAID Act

To implement the  Provide Accurate Information Directly (PAID) Act*, enacted December. 11, 2020 the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services has scheduled a webinar. The program will stream on Wednesday, June 21, 2021.

Saturday, June 5, 2021

Neurological symptoms like fatigue common in mild COVID

Neurological and psychiatric symptoms such as fatigue and depression are common among people with Covid-19 and maybe just as likely in people with mild cases, according to a new review study led by a UCL researcher.

Tuesday, June 9, 2020

Health Care Experts Discuss a COVID Second Wave

How do we know when the second wave is starting? What should we expect? These are only two of the questions Dr. Chad Kessler, National Program Director for VHA Emergency Medicine, asked during a recent COVID in 20 interview with VA Infectious Disease and Epidemiology wizards, Michael A. Gelman, M.D., Ph.D., and Gio Baracco, M.D., from James J. Peters VA Medical Center in the Bronx, New York and Miami VA Healthcare System in Miami, Florida respectively.

Wednesday, June 29, 2011

Pulmonary Embolism Due to Sedentary Work Held Compensable

Workers' Compensation benefits were awarded for a pulmonary embolism causally related to sedentary work activity. A NJ Appellate Court awarded benefits for the development of a pulmonary embolism precipitated by the inactivity of sitting long hours at a desk job.

This is the second time that the Appellate Division review this matter. Previously it denied benefits for an "occupational exposure" type heart condition. This time the Court declared thst the pulmonary embolism as an ordinary cardiovascular incident triggered by a significant event, that being inactivity.

The reasoned, "The workers' compensation judge followed our instructions on remand and applied Section 7.2 which states that:

"In any claim for compensation for injury or death from a cardiovascular or cerebral vascular causes, the claimant shall prove by a preponderance of the credible evidence that the injury or death was produced by the work effort or strain involving a substantial condition, event or happening in excess of the wear and tear of the claimant's daily living and in reasonable medical probability caused in a material degree the cardiovascular or cerebral vascular injury or death resulting therefrom.
Material degree means an appreciable degree or a degree substantially greater than de minimus.
Thus, the question is whether Cathleen's lack of movement at work was more severe than her lack of movement in her daily living, and whether the inactivity at work caused her pulmonary embolism in a material way."


Renner v AT&T, A-2393-10T3, 2011 WL 2518781 (N.J.Super.A.D.) Decided June 28, 2011

For over 3 decades the Law Offices of Jon L. Gelman 1.973.696.7900 jon@gelmans.com have been representing injured workers and their families who have suffered occupational accidents and illnesses.

Saturday, November 30, 2013

Hip Replacement Lawsuit: ASR Settlement ($2.5 Billion) Benefits Announced

The settlement terms of the ASR HIp Implant lawsuit have been announced:

The ASR Settlement provides for three basic areas of compensation. 

The first is a Base Payment to all ASR Claimants (XL and resurfacing) who have undergone a revision surgery, removing the 
acetabular cup, prior to August 31, 2013. 

The second is for Claimants who have undergone a revision surgery in both their left and right hips (Bilateral Claimants). 

The third addresses patients who have suffered a variety of medical complications following a revision surgery (Extraordinary Injury Fund).

 In addition, the Settlement provides for the resolution of healthcare insurance liens for 
medical costs that are directly associated with the revision surgery, at no additional cost to the 
claimant. 

Click here to read the complete press release issued by the Settlement Oversight Committee

Click here to read about the lawsuit.

Thursday, June 14, 2012

National Experts Call Workers Compensation System Irrational and Unjust

National workers' compensation experts, Law school Dean Emily A. Spieler and Professor John F. Burton, in a recently published article in the American Journal of Industrial Medicine conclude that the present that the present  workers' compensation systems is "irrational" and "unjust." 

Characterizing the program as "....dizzying and frustrating in its complexity, and apparent irrationality,"   they conclude that "a substantial proportion of persons with work-related disabilities do not receive workers' compensation benefits." They review such alternatives as universal medical care, "providing healthcare to workers regardless of the source of injuries or disease."


Related Articles on Alternative Compensation Programs
Dec 23, 2010
Yesterday the US Congress passed and sent to the President, The World Trade Center Health Program, marking yet another advance on the path to federalize the nation's workers' compensation program. The Federally ...
Feb 15, 2011
In December 2010 US Congress passed and President Obama signed, The World Trade Center Health Program, marking yet another advance on the path to federalize the nation's workers' compensation program.
Jul 05, 2010
The trend toward Federalization of workers' compensation benefits took a giant step forward by recent Presidential action creating the British Petroleum Oil Compensation Fund. While the details remain vague, the broad and ...
Jul 13, 2010
As The Path To Federalization expands, this debate will expand. A recent study by the Center for American Progress addresses these concerns. "Health threats from the oil spill may linger unseen, perhaps for more than a ...

Mar 16, 2011
Historically The Federal government's role has been to rise to the occasion and walk further down a path to federalization. On a smaller scale than the potential consequences of the Japanesse debacle, the US was first in line ...
Mar 05, 2011
Nationally, advocates to improve the delivery of medical benefits to injured workers have urged federalization of the medical delivery system into a single payer approach through universal health care. ... Compensation Claim Draws Major Public Attention (workers-compensation.blogspot.com); Vermont Governor Sets Out to Lead U.S. to True Universal Coverage (huffingtonpost.com); The World Trade Center Health Program Expands The Path to Federalization ...

Wednesday, September 6, 2017

Technology - Efficiency - Uniform Procedure

For decades the NJ Workers' Compensation administrative law system has had to adapt to meet the social, political, economic and technological changes of a changing world. The well thought-out proposals by the NJ State Bar Association (NJSBA) are a starting point to the beginning of a new wave of discussion and change.

Thursday, November 12, 2015

NY Corporate Workers' Compensation Fraud Leads to Criminal Charges

New York State Inspector General Catherine Leahy Scott announced today the arrests of four Central New York and Southern Tier business owners on fraud and theft charges as part of an ongoing series of investigations into employers and employees who defraud the State Workers’ Compensation system. Under State law, employers are required to maintain Workers’ Compensation coverage for their employees, and employees are expected to provide truthful information regarding their work activity to insurance carriers and the Workers’ Compensation Board during the time they are receiving benefits.

Today’s arrests are part of an ongoing coordinated effort by Inspector General Leahy Scott with local and State law enforcement partners involving multiple investigations across New York. Additional arrests are expected imminently. It also coincides with enhanced outreach efforts, including stakeholder trainings by the Inspector General, to increase public awareness of Workers’ Compensation fraud in the State.

“The Workers’ Compensation system is meant to assist and protect employees who are unable to work due to an illness or injury, and those who abuse the system should fully expect they will be caught,” said Inspector General Leahy Scott. “In these arrests today, the defendants are accused of using fraud and deceit to undermine their legal and moral responsibilities, and I will use the resources of my office to relentlessly pursue anybody who abuses the system at the expense of honest, hard-working New Yorkers.” Workers’ Compensation fraud impacts all New Yorkers, from increased insurance premiums to increased workloads for coworkers and an overall reduction in workforce productivity.

Arrested today were:

Douglas S. Griffen, 53, of 330 Halseyville Road, Ithaca, owner of Fingerlakes Excavating LLC, was charged with Grand Larceny in the Third Degree and Falsifying Business Records in the First Degree, felonies, as well as the Workers’ Compensation crimes of Fraudulent Practices, a felony, and Failure to Secure Compensation, a misdemeanor. Inspector General Leahy Scott’s investigation found that Griffen, last summer, provided a Tompkins County home building company false documents that purported to show that his own company had valid Workers’ Compensation coverage in order to qualify for two construction contracts with the home builder worth $72,000. Griffin had no Workers’ Compensation coverage and would not have been awarded the contracts if he had not provided the false documents to the home builder. Griffen was arraigned in Ithaca City Court and sent to Tompkins County Jail in lieu of $5,000 cash or $10,000 bond bail and is due back in court Tuesday, Nov. 17.

 Roger Camby, 60, of 1119 Teall Avenue, Syracuse, owner of an online retail candle business, was charged with the Workers’ Compensation crime of Fraudulent Practices, Insurance Fraud in the Second Degree and Grand Larceny in the Second Degree, all felonies. Inspector General Leahy Scott’s investigation found that Camby, a former truck driver out from work on a Workers’ Compensation claim since 2010, was operating several businesses while certifying to the Workers’ Compensation Board that he was not working in any capacity. Between early 2011 and the summer of 2013 he received more than $56,000 in Workers’ Compensation benefits while also running a candle business, Lovesoy Candles and Gifts, as well as working as a consultant for three multi-level marketing businesses.

Camby was arraigned in Town of Tully Court and is due to appear in Syracuse City Court tomorrow, Nov. 13. John A. Francher, 73, of 20 Vista Street, Auburn, owner of the Greenbriar Home for Adults in Homer, was charged with the Workers’ Compensation crime of Effect of Failure to Secure Compensation, a felony.

Inspector General Leahy Scott’s investigation found that Francher operated a business with more than five employees without obtaining required Workers’ Compensation coverage. He employed approximately 10 people at the Greenbrier Home. Francher was previously convicted in February 2014 of a misdemeanor charge of failure to secure compensation at Briarcliff Manor in Bath. Francher was arraigned in Town of Homer Court and is due back in court next Tuesday, November 17.

Steven M. Spratley, 58, of 179 Prospect Ave, Walton, owner of Spratley and Sons Tree Surgeons, was charged with Fraudulent Practices, a felony under the Workers’ Compensation Law. Inspector General Leahy Scott’s investigation found that Spratley falsely denied at a 2013 Workers’ Compensation Board hearing that a man who was severely injured while working for him in 2011 was actually an employee.

The investigation found that Spratley made the false statements to avoid liability for the employee’s claim for Workers’ Compensation due to the injury, which made him unable to work. Spratley is due to appear in the Town of North Norwich Court at a future date. Inspector General Leahy Scott thanked the Workers’ Compensation Board, the State Insurance Fund, Liberty Mutual Insurance and the Ithaca Police Department for their assistance during the investigations; the Ithaca Police Department and the New York State Police for their assistance with making the arrests; and Onondaga County District Attorney William J. Fitzpatrick, Tompkins County District Attorney Gwen Wilkinson, Cortland County District Attorney Mark D. Suben and Chenango County District Attorney Joseph A. McBride and their offices for prosecuting these cases.

The defendants are presumed innocent until and unless proven guilty in a court of law.

For an audio file of Inspector General Leahy Scott’s remarks, click HERE

Sunday, June 14, 2020

The Case for a Federal Response to Compensate Workers

Several recent studies highlight the inability of workers’ compensation based programs on a state level to provide a consistent and coherent response to a viral national pandemic such as COVID-19.

Tuesday, December 16, 2008

US Supreme Court to Review Manville Asbestos Bankruptcy Order

The US Supreme Court has decided to review a decision interpreting a 1986 Bankruptcy confirmation plan order. The order formed the basis of a settlement by Travelers Insurance Company to resolve claims against it for conspiracy in concealing information about the dangers of asbestos.

In 1986, the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the Southern District of New York (Lifland,J.) confirmed a landmark plan of reorganization for Johns¬-Manville Corporation that channeled hundreds of thousands of asbestos-related personal injury claims into a special trust fund for the benefit of injured workers and their families. The linchpin of this reorganization was the contribution of tens of millions of dollars Petitioners and other insurers into a trust for payment of asbestos claims in exchange for protection from future claims against the insurers, all of which was intended to provide Petitioners with full and final protection from suits relating to, arising from or in connection with the Petitioners' insurance relationship with Johns¬Manville. The Manville confirmation order was affirmed in a final judgment rendered by the Second Circuit in 1988.

The confirmation order in Manville was subsequently ratified by the U.S. Congress (see 11 U.S.C. 524(h)) and used as a model for Section 524(g) of the Bankruptcy Code. In the decades following the entry of the final judgment affirming the Manville plan of reorganization, and in reliance on the protections enacted by Congress, of billions of dollars have been paid into "524(g) trusts" for the benefit of hundreds of thousands of asbestos claimants. In 2002, Petitioners sought to enforce the court's orders when certain asbestos claimants tried to evade the confirmation order by suing Travelers directly in so-called "direct actions." The suits were enjoined by the bankruptcy court that fashioned the Manville plan of reorganization, which held that they were proscribed by the 1986 confirmation order. The bankruptcy court's decision was affirmed by the District Court, but in February over two decades after the original orders became final, a different panel of the Second Circuit held that the bankruptcy court lacked authority in 1986 to enter confirmation order that extended beyond the "res" of the debtor's estate, i.e., insurance policy proceeds.

The question presented, therefore, is: Whether the court of appeals erred in categorically holding that bankruptcy courts do not have jurisdiction to enter confirmation orders that extend beyond the "res" of a debtor's estate, despite this Court's recent ruling that "[t]he Framers would have understood that laws 'on the subject of Bankruptcies' included laws providing, in certain respects, for more than simple adjudications of rights in the res," Central Virginia Community College v. Katz, 546 U.S. 356, 370 (2006), and whether the court of appeals compounded error by:

(a) failing to apply as written a federal statute (11 USC §§ 524(g) and (h)), by limiting the scope of relief in a manner that is contrary to the express terms andpurposes of that statute;

(b) failing to give effect to the Supremacy Clause and holdings of this Court that federal bankruptcy relief cannot be overridden by rights alleged to have beencreated under state law; and

(c) failing to respect important principles of finality and repose, and the express provisions of § 524(g), by failing to approve a federal court's enforcement of a confirmation order that was affirmed over two decades ago on direct appeal.

08-295 TRAVELERS INDEMNITY CO. V. BAILEY, DECISION BELOW:517 F.3d 52

Tuesday, February 18, 2014

Just Published: 2014 Update - Gelman on Workers' Compensation Law

Jon Gelman’s newly revised and updated treatise on Workers’ Compensation Law has just been published by West Group of Egan, MN. The treatise is the most complete work available on NJ Workers’ Compensation law.

The work offers an in-depth and insightful analysis that provides a  quick and accurate guidance to those who practice workplace injury law. Time-saving comments and instructions shorten the claims process and expedite handling of issues.

New areas of the law reviewed:

The newly enacted SMART Act (The Strengthening Medicare and Repaying Taxpayers Act of 2012), and the proposed Regulations, are discussed at length in this supplement. The newly enacted statutory provision concerning balance billing and expanded jurisdiction of the Workers’ Compensation Court is reviewed. The launch of COURTS 4, the expanded workers’ compensation electronic filing system, implementing e-filing of Notice of Motions, is explained along with accompanying sample forms, codes, and instructions for filing/service. The statutory extension of lifetime benefits embodied in recent legislation for surviving spouses of police and fire department employees, who are fatally injured in-the-line of duty, is discussed. The recent case law concerning the second-prong of the “context test” involving the “Exclusivity Doctrine” is reviewed 

New 2014 Section Sections include:

--Dependency—Surviving spouse of police or fire department killed in the line of duty [12.14.50] 
--Case organization utilization reporting tracking system (COURTS)—Court proceeding type codes [25.22.30] 
--Case organization utilization reporting tracking system (COURTS)—E-filing of motions—General motion [25.22.40] 

Gelman on Workers’Compensation Law is exclusively integrated into the entire world-wide leading legal research network of West Group-Reuters-Thomson publications.

It is now available, in print, on CD-Rom and online via Westlaw™ and WestlawNext™. [Westlaw Database Identifier NJPRAC]



Jon L. Gelman is nationally recognized as an author, lecturer and skilled trial attorney in the field of workers’ compensation law and occupational/environmental disease litigation. Over a career spanning more than three decades he has been involved in complex litigation involving thousands of clients challenging the mega-industries of: asbestos, tobacco and lead paint. Gelman is the author NJ Workers’ Compensation Law (West-Thompson) and co-author of the national treatise, Modern Workers’ Compensation Law (West-Thompson). He is the former Vice-President of  The Workers Injury Law & Advocacy Group (WILG) and a charter member of The College of Workers' Compensation Lawyers. Jon is a founder of the Nancy R. Gelman Foundation Inc., which seeks to fund innovative research to cure breast cancer. He is also an avid photographer. jon@gelmans.com -www.gelmans.com

Thursday, June 11, 2020

Listen to the COVID-19 Claims and Workers’ Compensation Law Webinar

Click here to listen to the recording of the COVID-19 Claims and Workers’ Compensation Law Webinar. The program was originally broadcast on June 11, 2020.

The discussion addressed global issues impacting the workers’ compensation claim process including claim identification and processing, pre-trial activity and trial preparation.

Wednesday, November 17, 2010

Congresswoman Woolsey Calls For A GAO Study of Workers Compensation-Cites Insurance Company Cost Shifting

Below are the prepared remarks of U.S. Rep. Lynn Woolsey (D-CA), chairwoman of the Workforce Protections Subcommittee, for a subcommittee hearing on “Developments in State Workers’ Compensation Systems” 11.17.2010
-
Thank you all for attending this hearing on “Developments in State Workers’ Compensation Systems.” Here in Congress, we don’t examine these state compensation programs very often because they are generally under the purview of state legislatures.

However, there have been some disturbing national trends that may compel a comprehensive reexamination of these state programs and their impact on injured workers.

As most of you are aware, workers’ compensation statutes were passed beginning in the early  20th century to establish a no fault system for providing efficient redress for injured workers.

Workers’ compensation was called the ‘grand bargain.’

Workers waived their rights to bring individual suits against their employers and in return receive compensation for work-related injuries regardless of fault.

Every state and the District of Columbia have workers’ compensation programs in place.

Most employers purchase private workers compensation policies, but others self-insure or purchase insurance from a state managed compensation fund.

Beginning in the 1990s, changes in state workers’ compensation laws--brought about by the lobbying efforts of employers and insurance companies---have resulted in stricter eligibility requirements and the reduction in both the amount and duration of benefits—particularly for those workers with permanent partial disabilities.

Unfortunately this ‘grand bargain’ of the 20th century is not so ‘grand’ any more, especially for injured workers.

In addition, there are two other recent developments that merit our attention

The first has to do with the American Medical Association’s (AMA) Guides to Permanent

Impairment.

And the second concerns a cost-shifting trend away from state workers compensation programs, where the employer is responsible for an employee’s injury, to the federal government’s medical and disability programs.

The AMA Guides have been in effect since 1971 and are now in widespread use.

Some states even require workers’ compensation programs to use the latest edition of the Guides.

These Guides were originally designed to be used by physicians in making a scientific assessment of a worker’s level of impairment---or loss of function---due to a work-related injury.

The determination of whether a worker is permanently disabled and entitled to workers compensation is based upon his or her impairment rating, which is then applied to the specific case of a given worker.

For example, a worker who loses a hand may not suffer permanent disability if he or she is a teacher, but that same worker would be permanently disabled if he or she works in construction.

In 2007, the AMA published the 6th edition of the Guides, and witnesses today will describe how this new edition has dramatically reduced impairment ratings for many types of conditions, without apparent medical evidence, and transparency.

The 6th edition has become so controversial that many states, including Iowa, Kentucky and Vermont have decided not to adopt them.

It also appears that the 6th edition was developed in near secrecy, without the transparency and consensus which should necessarily accompany the development of standards that will have widespread use by state governments.

In addition, it appears that the physicians who developed this latest edition may have ties to insurance companies, and are making a profit training doctors on the use of the 6th edition, which is complicated and very difficult to apply.

The National Technology Transfer Advancement Act of 1996 sets forth minimum criteria for the development of voluntary consensus standards: openness; balance of interests; due process protections; and consensus.

The process used for developing the 6th edition appears to significantly deviate from these standards and is a focus of testimony before us today.

Workers who are wholly dependent on this ‘grand bargain’ when they are injured on the job, are the ones paying the price.

The subcommittee invited the AMA to testify today, but unfortunately, it declined.

Another troubling policy issue is that as eligibility for workers’ compensation benefits have become more restrictive, there has been a cost shift to Medicare and Social Security Disability (SSDI), placing an additional burden on the taxpayer.

In addition, costs are being shifted to private health insurance that should be borne by workers’ compensation policies and employers.

This is particularly worrisome, especially during a time of record deficits.

Chairman Miller and I believe that this cost-shifting trend warrants further study.

Therefore, we will be asking the Government Accountability Office (GAO) to do a study and issue recommendations.

The testimony today will illuminate these problems facing injured workers and taxpayers, and I look forward to hearing from our witnesses.