Curated Content Articles of Interest from Around the Web

    Construction Firm Owner Nabbed for Failing to Cover Workers

    worker in safety protective equipment

     

    Construction Company Owner Accused of Not Providing Workers’ Compensation Insurance Coverage

    • Carlos Gutama, 28, an owner of Meriden, Conn.-based C&D Gutama Construction, was arrested July 7 and charged with one count of noncompliance with insurance requirements for allegedly failing to provide workers’ compensation coverage for his employees.
    • The Connecticut Division of Criminal Justice said a joint site visit by the state Department of Labor and investigators from the Workers’ Compensation Fraud Control Unit found the company lacked required coverage during a Feb. 22, 2024 inspection at a Newington apartment roofing project.
    • State law requires businesses to either prove their financial solvency to the Workers’ Compensation Commission or carry insurance covering their full liability for injured employees.
    • The charge carries a maximum penalty of five years in prison and a $5,000 fine.

    READ MORE

     

    Insurance Commissioner Partially Approves Rate Hike

    • California Insurance Commissioner Ricardo Lara has approved an average workers’ compensation pure premium rate hike of 6.6% for policies incepting on or after Sept. 1.
    • The increase in the benchmark rate is less than the 10.4% the Workers’ Compensation Insurance Rating Bureau had recommended, and slightly higher than the 4.8% employers and organized labor had suggested.
    • The decision follows an 8.7% increase approved last year.

    READ MORE

     

    Mail Handler Nabbed for Workers’ Compensation Fraud

    • A former Florida mail handler was sentenced to six years of supervised release after committing workers’ compensation fraud while receiving $2,500 in monthly tax-free disability payments for a 2024 shoulder injury his doctor said left him unable to work.
    • The Postal Service Office of Inspector General received a fraud allegation and investigated with the Department of Homeland Security and the Orange County Sheriff’s Office Fugitive Task Force.
    • Investigators used the employee’s own social media posts, showing him working out, swimming in the ocean, and cycling 100 miles in a day, as evidence he was not disabled as claimed.
    • He pleaded guilty and received two days of time served, six years of supervised release, 150 hours of community service, and an order to repay $45,000.

    READ MORE