On many occasions, we have explored the evolution of the Pennsylvania Workers’ Compensation Act as it pertains to whether an injured worker has “voluntarily left the labor market.” Typically, we see this situation when the injured worker has filed for a retirement pension, or given some other indicia of “retirement.”…
Articles Posted in Case Law Update
Loss of Earnings Must be Related to Work Injury for Reinstatement in PA Workers’ Comp
Generally speaking, the goal is to return an injured worker in Pennsylvania to gainful employment. Along those lines, under the Pennsylvania Workers’ Compensation Act, when an injured worker in PA is not able to keep working, due to the effects of the work injury, workers’ comp benefits should be reinstated.…
Social Security Retirement Offset in PA Workers’ Comp Act is Not Unconstitutional
Many changes to the Pennsylvania Workers’ Compensation Act, much to the detriment of the injured worker, took place in the sweeping 1996 amendments to the Act. One of the more substantial changes was the amendment to Section 204(a), allowing PA workers’ comp insurance carriers to enjoy an offset, or credit,…
Reinstatement of PA Workers’ Comp Benefits Proper With Change in Condition
Under PA workers’ comp, wage loss benefits are stopped (suspended) when an injured worker returns to work at no loss in wages (medical treatment continues, regardless of wage loss, however). What if the injured worker (“claimant”) voluntarily quits a job? Can he or she get reinstated to workers’ compensation benefits…
Acknowledged PA Work Injury – Claim Still Denied
Before recent changes in PA Workers’ Compensation law, an insurance carrier could “accept” a claim using a Notice of Denial (NCD). This left the status of the work injury in doubt, so, in 2011, the PA Bureau of Workers’ Compensation redesigned the NCD form to no longer allow such an…
PA Workers’ Comp Settlement May Preclude Unemployment Compensation
When we settled a workers’ comp case in Pennsylvania (usually done by what is called a “Compromise & Release Agreement”), there was often a question from our client about whether he or she could then file for unemployment compensation benefits. Usually, as part of a workers’ compensation settlement, the employer/insurance…
PA Workers’ Comp Evidence to be Read as a Whole
When a work injury in Pennsylvania is not obvious, the injured worker must present expert medical testimony to explain how the work duties caused the work injury. This gets even more complicated when the condition at issue is caused by a combination of the work duties and pre-existing pathology, such…
Workers’ Compensation Specialty Coming to Pennsylvania
As attorneys who limit their practice to representing the injured worker in PA workers’ comp cases, we are thrilled by the recent announcement that the Supreme Court of Pennsylvania has approved the process of creating a “certified workers’ compensation attorney” in Pennsylvania (or, in other words, a workers’ compensation specialist).…
Chronic Pre-Existing Condition Compensable Under PA Workers’ Comp Where Condition Worsened by Working Conditions
It is well-settled law in PA that an aggravation of a pre-existing condition is compensable under the Pennsylvania Workers’ Compensation Act. However, depending on the condition at issue, the work injury may be seen to end when the worker returns to his or her baseline condition (or, in other words,…
PA Workers’ Comp Claim Dismissed “With Prejudice” Cannot be Refiled
Under the Pennsylvania Workers’ Compensation Act, and throughout legal process generally, once a matter has been decided, the parties cannot try the matter again. This is called the concept of Res Judicata. Often, for any of a number of reasons, an attorney representing an injured worker asks a Workers’ Compensation…