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A Guide to Your Rights Under
the North Carolina Workers Compensation Act
1. Are you protected?
The North Carolina Workers’ Compensation Act was created to protect
workers who have been injured on the job. However, only certain
employers are required to maintain workers’ compensation insurance. To
determine if you are covered, ask yourself the following questions:
- does your employer regularly
employ three or more employees in the same business or
establishment?
- b. If you are an agricultural
worker, does your employer regularly employ 10 or more full-time
nonseasonal workers?
If you answered yes to either of these questions,
your employer is required by law to carry workers’ compensation insurance. In
addition, the following groups are also covered: 1) individuals who work for the
State, City, or County; 2) an individual who works with or around radiation,
regardless of the number of employees; 3) individuals who are employees of a
construction subcontractor. In addition, employers who may not be required to
purchase insurance by law may still choose to do so and carry coverage on their
employees.Those who are not covered:
- Residential domestic workers
- Independent contractors
- Workers employed only on a casual basis to
do work unconnected with an employer’s business
- Railroad workers, maritime workers, and
Federal employees. All of these groups are covered by separate State or
Federal laws.
2. If I was hurt while at work, does that mean
I am automatically covered? Not necessarily. The Workers’ Compensation Act
covers the following types of injuries:
- injuries that occur due to accident;
- back injuries that occur as the result of
a specific traumatic incident
- occupational diseases. It does not cover
situations where you may be experiencing pain due to performing your job
duties for an extended period of time. For example, an insurance carrier may
deny a back claim if the problem was caused by prolonged heavy lifting over
an extended period of time.
3. What should I do if I have been injured on
the job? If you have been injured on the job, you should
immediately, if physically able, report the injury to your supervisor. You
should mention the time and date of the injury, the manner in which it occurred,
and the nature of the injury. In regard to occupational diseases, if you have
been informed by a doctor that you have a disease or condition which is related
to or caused by the job, you should report this information to the employer as
well.
After reporting the injury to the employer, you
should request a North Carolina Industrial Commission Form 18 from either the
employer or the Industrial Commission. Once completed, keep a copy for yourself,
then give one copy to your employer and return one to the Industrial Commission.
4. If I did not report the injury immediately,
how long do I have to report it? In this situation, you must give written notice
of a claim as soon as possible after the occurrence of the injury (preferably
within 30 days). The best way to do so is via the Form 18 previously mentioned.
This Form can be filed up to within two years past the date of the injury or
within two years of the time the employee is told by a physician that they may
have a job related condition or disease. If a Form 18 is not filed within the
specified time frame, you run the risk of having your claim time barred.
5. If the insurance company accepts my claim, what happens now? There are several benefits that are available
under the Workers’ Compensation Act. These include the following:
- Medical expenses during your healing
period. These services may include medical, surgical, hospital, and nursing
services; medical and surgical supplies; rehabilitation services; artifical
limbs and other prosthesis; some chiropractic services; prescription
medication; and travel of more than ten miles one way for medical
appointments.
- If you are injured seriously enough that
you are unable to work, you may be entitled to temporary total disability
benefits for time missed from work. You will not receive anything for the
first seven days out of work, but will begin receiving out-of-work benefits
on the eighth day. If your time out of work exceeds twenty-one days,
however, the insurance carrier must go back and pay you for these first
seven days. You should also remember that to be eligible for these benefits,
you must be written out of work by the doctor you were sent to by the
insurance carrier. If you are written out of work by some other doctor (such
as your family physician), the insurance carrier is not required to pay
benefits based on their opinion.
- Once healed, you may have work
restrictions that prohibit you from returning to your previous employment.
If so, the insurance carrier may elect to provide vocational rehabilitation
services which are designed to find new employment that pays reasonably
close to your prior wage and accommodates any permanent work restrictions
caused by your injury. During this job hunting period, the insurance carrier
continues to pay temporary total disability benefits.
- Future medical treatment. If your injury
occurred after July 5, 1994, your right to payment for future medical
treatment ends two years after the date of last payment of any compensation
including medical compensation. This time can be extended by filing an
Industrial Commission Form 18M before the end of the two year time period,
and the form is approved by the Commission.
- Permanent partial impairment rating. Once
the treating doctor feels your condition is not expected to improve or
worsen significantly in the future, then he or she has reached a point of
“maximum medical improvement” which is considered the end of the healing
period. At this point, the doctor may assign a percentage rating to the body
part that was injured. There is a statutory schedule of benefits which can
be used to calculate the dollar amount of that rating.
6. What happens if the insurance carrier denies
my claim? If the insurance carrier has denied your claim
(and you have filled a Form 18 within two years after your date of injury), you
may file a Request for Hearing through the use of an Industrial Commission Form
33. The parties are then ordered into a process known as mediation where the
parties attempt to work out a voluntary settlement. If the claim is not settled
though mediation, it is then referred to a Deputy Commissioner, a judge with the
Industrial Commission, for a hearing. Evidence is presented in open court
through live testimony of witnesses. Medical records are usually stipulated into
evidence and any medical testimony that needs to be taken from any doctor is
usually done through deposition after the hearing. After depositions have been
completed, the Deputy Commissioner makes a decision by issuing a written Opinion
and Award. Both sides have the right to appeal this decision to the Full
Commission (a panel of three Commissioners) if they are unhappy with the
outcome.
7. Can I sue my employer for negligence? Generally, an injured worker’s rights are
limited to his or her workers’ compensation rights and there is no right for the
injured worker to sue his or her employer. However, an injured worker may have
the right to sue an employer who acted intentionally and knew that the action
was substantially certain to cause serious injury or death, but this is a very
rare situation and has been extremely limited by the Appellate Courts.
8. Can I collect for pain and suffering caused
by my injury? Generally speaking, the pain and suffering you
have endured due to a work related injury is not compensable under the Workers’
Compensation Act.
9. Should I hire a lawyer? Whether or not you hire an attorney is a
personal decision that may be influenced by several factors. If your injury
causes you to miss a few days of work and results in no long lasting problems,
you may very well decide to handle your claim yourself. However, if your injury
is more serious or if you feel uncomfortable dealing with insurance companies,
you may be inclined to seek legal representation. Regardless, by understanding
the information provided in these materials, you are on your way to making sure
you receive everything to which you are entitled.
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