Curated Content Articles of Interest from Around the Web

    These New Bills Can Spike Your Workers’ Comp Premiums

    Major Contractor Rule Shifts Advance in Illinois and New Jersey

    • Illinois and New Jersey are advancing legislation that significantly alters how worker classification is determined for contractors, particularly impacting workers’ compensation requirements. 
    • These proposals aim to curb employee misclassification by enforcing stricter tests, likely forcing businesses to classify more workers as employees rather than independent contractors. 
    • If enacted, companies will face higher labor costs, including mandatory workers’ compensation insurance premiums and payroll taxes. 
    • These legislative shifts reflect a growing, multi-state effort to tighten labor standards and increase protections for gig and contract workers.

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    West Virginia Court Upholds Increased Disability Award

    • The West Virginia Supreme Court upheld an increased permanent partial disability award for a worker’s leg injury, affirming a three percent additional impairment rating. 
    • The employer challenged the Board of Review’s decision based on conflicting medical evidence presented in the case. 
    • However, the court ruled that equally weighted, conflicting medical evaluations must be resolved in the claimant’s favor. 
    • This decision reinforces the state’s statutory requirement for resolving evidentiary conflicts in workers’ compensation claims.

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    Tennessee Denies Neck Claim Due to Unproven Causation 

    • The Tennessee Workers’ Compensation Appeals Board denied an employee’s request to add a neck evaluation to an existing shoulder claim due to unproven causation. 
    • The employee sought to include the neck injury ten months after the initial incident. 
    • The court ruled that adding a new body part requires a physician to affirmatively link the condition to the workplace accident. 
    • A conditional recommendation lacked the necessary medical evidence to establish legal causation. 

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