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An Act Increasing Injured Workers’ Access to Medical Care and Workers’ Compensation Benefits (HB1684)

Lead sponsors:  Rep. Garrett Bradley, Senator James Eldridge

What the bill will do:
 “An Act Increasing Injured Workers’ Access to Medical Care and Workers’ Compensation Benefits: seeks to improve the workers compensation law in several ways:

In order to help workers obtain their benefits more quickly and with fewer barriers, the bill proposes:

Requiring the state’s Trust Fund to pay up front for medical and wage replacement benefits when multiple employers and insurance companies disagreeing about who is responsible. 

Requiring insurers, including the Trust Fund, to pay for interpretation, provided by qualified interpreters for conciliations, hearings and other essential meetings, and for transportation for medical care upon the request of the employee or health care provider.

Requires employers to provide printed notice of key workers compensation information and information on illegal employer retaliation and fraud.  It also adds a requirement that multilingual information be included in this Notice.

In order to ensure that low wage workers have adequate wage benefits to prevent grave financial hardship, the bill proposes:

Summary of Proposed Regulations:
When calculating the average weekly wages, if it is determined that the injured employee has been paid less than the wages required by law, then the computation of average weekly wages may be considered to be impracticable due to the nature or terms of that employment, as provided under M.G.L. c. 152, § 1(1), and the injured employee’s past earnings may be considered to be the wages required to be paid by law, taking into account the applicable minimum wage, overtime, and other wage-related statutes and regulations.
 
Deletes from the regulations from making the person who files the DIA claim be responsible for paying for interpretation:
Puts the responsibility on the insurance company to pay for interpretation, transportation, and other services necessary to allow the claimant to obtain effective and timely health care services.  The insurer, except in cases where the insurer is the Trust Fund or the Commonwealth, shall arrange and pay directly for such services upon the request of the claimant, claimant’s attorney, treating health care professional, or other similarly interested party.  Transportation services provided under this section shall include door-to-door regulated taxi services where a claimant is not readily able to provide his or her own transportation or does not have reasonably convenient and feasible public transportation alternatives.

In making an initial determination of whether to approve or deny a claim, the insurer shall consider all information available from both the employer and the claimant.  An insurer shall not fail to commence payment on grounds that the insured employer has not responded or provided information; in such circumstances, the insurer must make its determination based on the information provided by the claimant, provided, however, the insurer does not waive any defenses if it thereafter commences such payment.

Drafted by the MA Coalition for Occupational Safety and Health (MassCOSH).  For more info, call 617-825-7233 x15, 12 or 16.