Ordinarily, when an employee is commuting to, or from, work in Pennsylvania, he or she is not in the course of employment. This is known in the PA workers’ comp community as “The Going and Coming Rule.” Thus, if the employee is injured while commuting, usually the injured worker is…
Articles Posted in Case Law Update
Employers’ Ability to Change Modified-Duty Job Tasks Permissible in PA Workers’ Comp
When an injured worker in Pennsylvania is physically unable to perform his or her time-of-injury job, due to a work injury, the burden falls to the employer to prove the existence of a job that is “available” to the injured worker. For a job to be “available,” it must be…
Philadelphia Housing Authority Patrol Officer Denied Workers’ Compensation Benefits When Shot, Because He Failed to Follow Proper Police Procedure
In PA, an injured employee is entitled to workers’ compensation benefits only when the injury takes place while the employee is in the scope and course of his or her employment. Often, this is something obvious, as when the employee is actually injured while on the employer’s premises, performing the…
Modification of Workers’ Compensation Benefits in PA, Based on IRE, May Require Job Availability to be Shown
In a case that has been working its way through the Pennsylvania Workers’ Compensation system for some time now, the Supreme Court has accepted appeal in the matter of Diehl v. Workers’ Compensation Appeal Board (WCAB). As was discussed in a previous blog entry, the Commonwealth Court of Pennsylvania concluded…
Labor Market Surveys and Earning Power Assessments When The Injured Worker Lives Outside Pennsylvania
In year’s past, before 1996, when a workers’ compensation insurance carrier wanted to reduce an injured worker’s benefits in PA, the insurance carrier had to refer the injured worker to jobs, which then had to be open and available to the injured worker. This process was set forth not by…
Injured Worker Terminated For Misconduct Prior to Work Injury Can Lose Workers’ Comp Rights in PA as a Result
When a worker is injured in Pennsylvania, he or she is generally entitled to workers’ compensation benefits when wages are lost due to the injury. Whether this loss in wages is actually due to the injury is a point often litigated. The issue can be particularly difficult when the injured…
Second Work-Related Injury in PA Does Not Add Second Period of Partial Disability
While there is no limit to the period of time an injured worker in Pennsylvania can receive workers’ compensation benefits for total disability, the same is not true for partial disability. In PA, an injured worker can receive a maximum of 500 weeks of partial disability. After that time, even…
IRE in PA Workers’ Comp Cannot Be Challenged on Validity After Appeal Period of Notice of Change Expires
In PA workers’ compensation, there is no limit to how long an injured worker can receive total disability benefits. Once an injured worker receives total disability benefits for a period of 104 weeks, however, the workers’ comp insurance company can request the injured worker attend an Impairment Rating Evaluation (IRE).…
Injured Worker Testimony of Back Pain Not Enough for Workers’ Compensation Case in PA
Who better than the injured worker to know the pain that person is feeling? At this point in medical science, we do not have a “pain meter.” Doctors can examine a person, and obtain diagnostic testing, such as x-ray, MRI and CT scan, but, ultimately, doctors can only tell us…
PA Workers’ Comp Insurer Required to Pay for Additional Modifications to Home of Worker Paralyzed in Work Injury
Injured workers in Pennsylvania are entitled to payment of wage loss benefits, as well as payment for medical treatment related to the work injury. The term “medical treatment” in PA is defined broadly. It includes obvious items, such as an MRI or x-ray, medications, doctor visits and surgery, but it…