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Tag: 2013 News

Federal Judge Consolidates NFL Comp Claims

Three lawsuits from former National Football League players who are seeking California workers compensation benefits have been consolidated in U.S. District Court in San Francisco after a request from the NFL and several teams.

According to the story on the Business Insurance website, the cases involve 67 former NFL players who want to vacate a December 2012 arbitration award that requires them to withdraw workers comp claims in California, according to court records. The players played for the Buffalo Bills, Denver Broncos, New York Giants and Philadelphia Eagles.

California law allows NFL players to make a claim in California if they have played at least one game in the state. The plaintiffs argue that the arbitration award violates California and federal law and public policy by waiving their ability to seek workers comp in California, records show.

U.S. District Court Judge William H. Alsup ordered the three cases to be consolidated on March 13. The NFL Management Council and the four NFL teams filed a countersuit on March 8 asking the court to require the players to file any workers comp claims in the state specified by their respective player contracts.

The California comp lawsuits are part of several claims being made against the NFL by former players seeking compensation for injuries suffered on the field. At least 2,400 former players have sued the league over neurological and cognitive problems that they allege were caused by football-related head injuries. Most of the concussion-related cases have been consolidated into multidistrict litigation in the U.S. District Court in Philadelphia. The NFL is expected to use an exclusive remedy defense in those lawsuits.

DWC Implements Lien Filing Fee Process

The Division of Workers’ Compensation’s lien filing fee payment system has been updated as of March 2, 2013 so that JET Filers can pay the required filing fee and file their liens in one integrated process.

JET Filers who filed liens requiring payment of the filing fee between Jan. 1 and March 2, 2013 but did not pay the fee are reminded that Labor Code Section 4903.05(c)(2) provides that liens that are filed or lodged prior to payment of the required fee are deemed invalid.

DWC had previously advised JET Filers to file their liens and then use the public search tool to pay the filing fees. JET Filers who have filed liens between Jan. 1 and March 2, 2013 but failed to pay the fee are advised that the public search payment option for those liens will not be available after April 5, 2013 at 5 p.m. All lien claimants using JET File are now able to use the new integrated process.

JET Filers who have questions about the payment of lien filing fees should consult the DWC website.

Oxnard Cop Pleads Guilty in Fraud Case

A former Oxnard police officer pleaded guilty Monday to two counts of workers’ compensation fraud and was ordered to pay $70,000 in restitution to the state. According to the report in the Ventura County Star, 28 year old Edward Idukas handed over a check during the court proceedings to cover the full amount, prosecutor Ernesto Acosta said.

Ventura County Superior Court Judge Kevin McGee set sentencing for June 13. Idukas faces up to four years behind bars but will not likely get a harsh sentence, Acosta said. “Other than committing workers’ compensation fraud, he doesn’t have anything else on his record,” Acosta said. “The guy is a former cop.”

Outside the courtroom, Idukas’ lawyer, David S. Kestenbaum, said his client was remorseful. “He’s lost his whole career and had to move his family out of state and picked up a new career. This is all he wanted to be: a police officer,” Kestenbaum said. “I hope in the interest of justice the judge reduces it to a misdemeanor and doesn’t impose jail. He’s suffered a lot as a result of his mistake. But before that he had done a lot of good for the community and received a lot of commendations … from the Oxnard PD.”

Idukas was placed on temporary total disabled status after he told a supervisor on Dec. 29, 2009, that he hurt his back while bending over at his locker and had pain and limited mobility, according to court records. He received disability pay for several months.

Investigators discovered Idukas was playing baseball weekly in a local adult league while receiving disability benefits from the city of Oxnard, according to court records. While these activities were taking place, Idukas told doctors and physical therapists that he was too disabled to return to his duties as a police officer, prosecutors said.

Kestenbaum said he thinks Idukas, who was arrested in June 2011, is innocent. But he was offered a good plea bargain, so he took it, Kestenbaum said. “He was not hiding what he was doing and felt he had received bad advice – that he could resume playing baseball to strengthen his back,” Kestenbaum said. “From our standpoint, there is a big difference in playing baseball, where you can say timeout if your back hurts, than being in a squad car in El Rio and there is no timeout in the field. Psychologically, he didn’t feel he could be a police officer (with a back injury). That was one of the problems.”

Liberty Mutual Nations Largest Comp Carrier

Liberty Mutual Holding Co. Inc. was the largest workers compensation insurer nationwide in 2012 with about $4.2 billion in direct written premiums, according to the latest market share report by the National Association of Insurance Commissioners.

Boston-based Liberty Mutual held 8.73% of the workers comp market for 2012, according to data published Monday by Washington-based NAIC.

Travelers Cos. Inc. was the second-largest comp insurer with 7.94% of the market, or $3.8 billion in direct written premiums, while The Hartford Financial Services Group Inc. held the third-largest share with 6.86% of the market, or nearly $3.3 billion in written premiums.

American International Group Inc. held 6.16% of last year’s comp market with nearly $3 billion in written premiums, and Zurich Insurance Co. Ltd. captured 5.79% of the market with $2.8 billion in premiums.

The list of top 25 workers comp insurers, as well as other property/casualty insurance lines is available on the NAIC’s website. The tentative data is scheduled to be finalized by the end of this month.

2013 Annual Report of Inventory Due on April 1

Claims administrators are reminded that the 2013 annual report of inventory (ARI) for claims reported in calendar year 2012 is due to be submitted to the Division of Workers’ Compensation (DWC) Audit Unit no later than April 1, 2013.

The California Code of Regulations,title 8, section 10104 requires claims administrators to file an annual report of inventory (ARI) with the number of claims reported at each adjusting location for the preceding calendar year. Even if there were no claims reported in 2013, the report must be completed and submitted to the DWC Audit Unit. Each adjusting location is required to submit an ARI, whether or not they receive a form for reporting claims from the Audit Unit, unless their ARI requirement has been waived by the AD.

In 2011, the Audit Unit began requesting the federal employer identification number (FEIN) for each adjusting location and for all underwriting companies and/or clients for which claims are administered at the given location. A claims administrator’s obligation to submit an ARI can be waived if the AD determines that they are in compliance with electronic data reporting requirements of the Workers’ Compensation Information System (WCIS). FEIN information will be used by the DWC Research Unit to match claims information submitted electronically to the WCIS with that reported to the Audit Unit on the ARI. This will allow the AD to waive ARI requirements for claims administrators, as appropriate.

When ARI requirements are waived, claims administrators must file an annual report of adjusting locations. This report is to be filed annually on April 1 of each calendar year for the adjusting location operations as of Dec. 31 of the prior year. DWC has provided a form which can be used for this purpose.

Claims administrators are also required to report any change in the information reported in the ARI or annual report of adjusting location within 45 days of the effective date of the change.

The forms for the required 2013 ARI and annual report of adjusting locations, along with advice for claims administrators, are posted on the website.

Questions about submission of the ARI or the annual report of adjusting locations may be directed to the DWC Audit Unit by email, phone or U.S. mail: to the State of California Department of Industrial Relations, Division of Workers’ Compensation – Audit Unit, 160 Promenade Circle, Suite #340, Sacramento, CA 95834-2962. E-mail: DWCAuditUnit@dir.ca.gov., Facsimile: 916.928.3183. Telephone inquiry: 916.928.3180.

US Supreme Court Hears Drug Company “Pay for Delay” Arguments

The U.S. Supreme Court will hear arguments today over whether big drug companies can settle patent litigation with generic rivals by making deals to keep cheaper products off the market. U.S. and state regulators say the practice costs consumers, insurers and government billions of dollars annually.

The story in Reuters Health says that the Federal Trade Commission, which has dubbed the arrangements “pay for delay,” has fought them in court for more than a decade with mixed success, culminating in the case now before the U.S. Supreme Court. “The continuing stream of monopoly profits is large enough to pay the generic competitors more than they could hope to earn if they entered the market at competitive prices,” the FTC said in a brief. At the same time, the brand-name manufacturer receives greater profits than it could earn in the face of generic competition, the regulatory agency argued.

The Justice Department, the European Union and more than two dozen U.S. state attorneys general view the deals as illegal, but drug companies defend them as a way to avoid potentially lengthy patent litigation. “In every case that we’ve been involved in that resulted in a settlement, it has resulted in years being taken off the patent life,” said Paul Bisaro, chief executive of generic drug maker Actavis, Inc. Actavis was formerly Watson Pharmaceuticals. “It’s very unsophisticated to say ‘Oh, they get paid a bunch of money to stay off the market,'” said Bisaro.

In the case before the court, Solvay Pharmaceuticals Inc, now owned by AbbVie, sued generic drug makers Watson, Paddock Laboratories Inc and Par Pharmaceutical Cos in 2003 to stop them from making cheaper versions of AndroGel, which is used to treat men with low testosterone. The firms settled in 2006, reaching a deal that generic AndroGel would not be marketed until 2015. The patent expires in 2020. In exchange, the FTC alleges, the generic manufacturers were each paid as much as $30 million annually. AbbVie’s 2012 sales of AndroGel totaled $1.2 billion.

Solvay internal documents dating from April 2006 which were released at the Supreme Court on Friday, show that months before the companies struck their deal, Solvay concluded that it would make about $1.4 billion from AndroGel if it won the court fight and $359 million if it did not. The documents also show what appear to be a list of ideas of what to offer the generic firms to make it attractive to them to settle and delay entry. One was to allow Watson to promote the drug to urologists, while Solvay would not.

AbbVie spokeswoman Adelle Infante described the papers as “a single document among hundreds of thousands of pages of documents that were provided to the FTC.” “This internal analysis is insignificant because the negotiated patent settlement led to generic entry years in advance of the expiration of the patent, she said. The company also said that it expected to prevail. “The federal district and appellate courts have both previously ruled that the plaintiff’s allegations lacked merit. We are confident that these decisions will be upheld,” Adelle Infante, an AbbVie spokeswoman, said in a statement.

AbbVie’s arrangement with the generic manufacturers is similar to the 40 deals made in the 2012 fiscal year, which ended on September 30. That was up from 28 the previous year, despite FTC efforts to stop them. The FTC said the agreements involved 31 different brand-name drugs with total U.S. sales of more than $8.3 billion annually. The FTC sued to stop the AndroGel arrangement, arguing that it was illegal under antitrust law because the companies divided up the market. The FTC lost at the district court level and lost an appeal as well. But another appellate court has said the deals were illegal, prompting the Supreme Court to step in.

The Supreme Court is expected to issue a decision by the end of June.

S.B. 863 Triggers Sharp Rise in Lien Filings

The California Workers’ Compensation Insurance Rating Bureau says that California experienced a significant increase in lien filings from workers compensation service providers after the state adopted S.B. 863 in September.

BusinessInsurance.com reports that San Francisco-based WCIRB discussed the impact of S.B. 863 on California’s workers comp loss development during an actuarial committee meeting on Wednesday. The bill included several workers comp reform provisions, including a lien filing fee of $150 and a three-year statute of limitations for new lien filings – both of which took effect Jan. 1. Another statute of limitations of 1.5 years for new lien filings will go into effect July 1.

During the fourth quarter of 2012, there were 513,129 lien filings from copy services, interpreters, medical providers and other workers comp services, according to a presentation posted on WCIRB’s website. That’s compared with 323,294 liens filed in the third quarter of 2012 and 463,856 liens filed in all of 2011.

WCIRB expects that 640,000 liens will be filed in 2013, according to the rating bureau’s presentation. The lien filing fee is expected to reduce the projected number of workers comp liens by 30% and reduce California’s comp system costs by $480 million.

Cal/OSHA Investigates Death Caused by Trench Collapse

One of two people who were trapped in a 15-foot trench in Pacific Palisades has died. The second worker in the construction project incident was rescued after an effort that lasted more than an hour after firefighters arrived on the scene.

The Los Angeles Times reports that the victims were working for a subcontractor on a storm-water treatment project at 200 Temescal Canyon Road and were excavating the trench, according to the Los Angeles Fire Department.

The worker who was pulled alive from the trench was rushed by ambulance to the nearby beach, where he was met by a helicopter and airlifted to UCLA Medical Center. The Los Angeles County coroner’s office identified the dead man as 50 year old Gilbert Vargas. Emergency workers recovered his body after about nine hours of digging in the 200 block of North Temescal Canyon Road, just north of Pacific Coast Highway. Vargas and the unidentified injured man had been excavating with back hoes on a city storm water project.

Peter Melton, a spokesman for Cal-OSHA, said the agency has ordered work stopped at the site until any hazards have been resolved.

The state Division of Occupational Safety and Health has six months to complete its investigation, but Melton said Los Angeles Engineering Inc., the men’s employer, “is going to want to get this taken care of as soon as possible to get back to work, if they can get back to work.”

Santa Rosa Orthopedist/QME Suspended Pending Criminal Charges

An orthopedic surgeon accused of meeting a girl for sex in Novato surrendered his medical license pending the outcome of the criminal case. As a result of the medical license suspension, the Division of Workers’ Compensation has also suspended his QME certificate. According to the report in the Marin Independent Journal, 53 year old Raymond Severt M.D. made his initial appearance in Marin Superior Court, where he is charged with four felony sex charges. Deputy District Attorney Aicha Mievis he delayed entering a plea until his next hearing on April 10.

Severt, in stipulating to the suspension of his medical practice, is also barred from prescribing or dispensing drugs, and he must surrender his wall certificates and prescription pads, according to a filing by Deputy Attorney General Brenda Reyes. At the time of his arrest last month Severt worked for Santa Rosa Orthopeadics. He is on leave.

Severt, a Santa Rosa resident, was arrested by Novato police on Feb. 11. The investigation began when police received information that a man was sending sexually explicit messages to the girl and had arranged to meet her in Novato. Investigators intercepted Severt in the area of South Novato Boulevard and Gateway Court. Police said he initially met the girl through an online chat room.

Severt’s lawyer, Stephen Turer, said that the girl initially told Severt she was 21 years old. Police allege she later told Severt that she was under 18, but Severt agreed to meet anyway because he did not know which age she was telling the truth about, Turer said. Severt never actually had the chance to meet her and see that she was underage, because police arrested him first, Turer said. “It becomes one of those not-so-unique situations where people get involved online under, at least, ambiguous or confusing circumstances,” he said. “It doesn’t appear that initially his interest was in young girls,” he added. “There’s no indication he has any history in any way of soliciting minors. It’s unfortunate what he did even if she was 21, given his age, but it’s not a crime.”

Severt is charged with attempted lewd acts with a child under 14, communicating with a minor for the purpose of lewd behavior, arranging a meeting with a minor for purposes of lewd behavior, and distribution of lewd material to a minor. The latter charge is for the sexually explicit messages he allegedly sent the girl. Severt could face up to four years in prison on charges of attempted lewd acts with a child under 14, communicating with a minor for the purpose of lewd behavior, arranging a meeting with a minor for purposes of lewd behavior, and distribution of lewd material to a minor. The latter charge is for the sexually explicit messages he allegedly sent the girl.

DWC, WCAB Revise Policy and Procedural Manual

The Division of Workers’ Compensation and Workers’ Compensation Appeals Board have revised their Policy and Procedural Manual (PPM) and posted it on the WCAB website.

The PPM is an internal employee guide, prepared under the authority of the administrative director of DWC and the chair of the WCAB. The manual is designed to promote uniformity and provide direction to judges and other employees in the day-to-day operation of DWC’s district offices and the Appeals Board. It is also a resource for attorneys, claims administrators and other parties wanting information on the rules of court. Because it an internal document, the PPM is not subject to regulations, which require formal rulemaking procedures and public hearings.

The PPM became operative in 2003, with some revisions made in the following years. The 2012-13 revisions, which are effective on March 8, were drafted by a committee consisting of Appeals Board Secretary and Deputy Commissioner Rick Dietrich, DWC Chief Judge Richard Newman, Associate Chief Judges Thomas Clarke, Mark Fudem and Ellen Flynn, and Marina del Rey Presiding Judge Paige Levy, who was the project manager.

DWC monitors the administration of workers’ compensation claims, and provides administrative and judicial services to assist in resolving disputes that arise in connection with claims for workers’ compensation benefits. The WCAB, a seven-member, judicial body appointed by the Governor and confirmed by the Senate, exercises all judicial powers vested in it by the Labor Code. Its major functions include review of petitions for reconsideration of decisions by workers’ compensation administrative law judges of the DWC and regulation of the adjudication process by adopting rules of practice and procedure.