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Injured workers underpaid?

A state-sponsored study says insurance payments fell shy by $40 million per year.

January 19, 2004

By Andy Furillo -- Bee Staff Writer

California workers injured on the job have been underpaid by hundreds of millions of dollars over the past decade by insurance adjusters who miscalculate their disability benefits, researchers have found.


A state-commissioned study on California's workers' compensation market has conservatively estimated the underpayments at $40 million a year. Citing testimony at a 1998 state Senate hearing, a Los Angeles-area attorney who is seeking restitution for the injured workers has pegged the losses at more than twice the $40 million figure -- amounting to more than $1 billion over the past 13 years.


"The insurance companies are retaining these monies and are not tendering them to the injured workers, nor are they passing those savings back to their policyholders, small-business owners who over the last few years have really felt the pinch of increasing premiums," said Nick Kazandjieff, the Sherman Oaks workers' comp applicants lawyer who has filed a class-action case to recoup the underpaid funds.


According to Department of Industrial Relations audits for 2002, the underpayments affect about 15 percent of the examined cases and total a little less than $1,500 per injured worker. The underpayments mostly occur as a result of erroneous computations and other miscalculations by insurance adjusters in an increasingly complex system, according to researchers, and they represent a microscopic percentage of payments in a system that is projected by the Workers' Compensation Insurance Rating Bureau to pay out $21 billion in indemnity and medical benefits this year.

Copyright © The Sacramento Bee

Read more at:http://www.sacbee.com/content/business/story/
8127841p-9059866c.html


Contact our West Virginia Employment Lawyer Now.

 
Did You Know?    
 
 
Laws prohibit the termination of an employee in retaliation for filing a workers compensation claim
The Workers’ Compensation statute in one state, NJSA 34:15-39.1 only prohibits the termination of an employee in retaliation for filing a workers compensation claim or for testifying at a workers’ compensation hearing. If you feel you were terminated for these reasons, one alternative is the filing of a discrimination complaint against your employer with the Division of Workers’ Compensation. Then contact our lawyers.

 


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Employment Lawyers.com Terms

 


Today's Terms

Accessible

Definition:
Easy to approach, enter, operate, participate in, or use safely, independently and with dignity by a person with a disability (i.e., site, facility, work environment, service or program).

Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA)

Definition:
A comprehensive civil rights law which makes it unlawful to discriminate in private sector employment against a qualified individual with a disability.

Alternate Dispute Resolution (ADR)

Definition:
A variety of procedures for the resolution of disputes. Each ADR procedure is a fair and efficient alternative to court adjudication that must be entered into voluntarily by all parties.

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Topics Related to Employment:

  • Collective Bargaining
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West Virginia Employment Attorney

 
If you live in the following cities and need an Employment attorney you should contact our Employment Attorney as soon as possible:

  • Barboursville
  • Beckley
  • Bluefield
  • Bridgeport
  • Buckhannon
  • Charles Town
  • Charleston
  • Clarksburg
  • Elkins
  • Elkview
  • Fairmont
  • Grafton
  • Harpers Ferry
  • Huntington
  • Hurricane
  • Keyser
  • Logan
  • Martinsburg
  • Morgantown
  • Moundsville
  • Oak Hill
  • Parkersburg
  • Princeton
  • Saint Albans
  • Vienna
  • Weirton
  • Wellsburg
  • Wheeling
 


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