
Bipartisan Bill Aims to Reform Federal Workers’ Comp for Toxic Burn Pit Exposure
- A new bipartisan bill seeks to ease the burden on civilian federal employees seeking workers’ compensation for toxic burn pit exposure.
- Currently, injured civilians must prove a direct link between their illnesses and operational toxic exposure to receive benefits.
- The proposed law creates a legal presumption that specific diseases, like cancer, are inherently work-related.
- This change grants civilian workers the same streamlined compensation framework currently utilized for military veterans.
Court Upholds Dismissal Despite Later Workers’ Comp Claim
- A federal court ruled that an employer legally dismissed a probationary worker despite a subsequent workers’ compensation claim.
- The decision hinges on the company’s clear, documented history of the employee’s performance issues before the workplace injury occurred.
- This case highlights a critical risk-management lesson for insurance and legal professionals.
- It proves that robust documentation protects businesses against claims of illegal workers’ comp retaliation.
Oklahoma Resolution Proposes Medical Fee Increases to Support Workers’ Comp Reforms
- House Joint Resolution 1023 bolsters Oklahoma’s 2013 workers’ compensation reforms by adjusting medical provider reimbursement levels.
- The measure aims to balance fair treatment for injured employees with the system’s ongoing cost-saving benefits for businesses.
- By approving a revised fee schedule, the resolution seeks to protect the state’s administrative approach from returning to costly litigation.
- The measure ensures injured workers receive care while curbing insurance premiums.
