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Firefighters and Workers’ Compensation
COVID-19 Firefighters and Workers’ Compensation
For more than two months, most of the nation has stayed at home under some form of national guideline or order by a Bill Smith state governor. At the same time, healthcare workers, first responders and other essential workers have put their health and lives as well as that of their families on the line. Most of you have probably gone to work each day thinking, “if I get sick, at least I’m covered by workers’ comp.” Is that thought correct? The answer may be much more complicated than you would have ever imagined.
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Most firefighters are employed by a city or county government. As such, any workers’ compensation claim would be filed under the jurisdiction of the workers’ compensation law of the state in which they work. In virtually every state, workers’ compensation benefits are the exclusive remedy for a worker who is injured on the job. That means that the only claim that can be filed against the employer for the injury, or in this case sickness, is a workers’ compensation claim.
As it relates to COVID-19, states fall into three categories. The categories are states where COVID-19 is likely compensable; states where COVID-19 claims are likely not compensable; and states where we simply don’t know which way these cases will be decided
Accident or Occupational Disease
Without getting too technical, most states recognize job-related conditions as either an accident or an occupational disease. Examples in their simplest form would be that of someone falling from a ladder as an accident and someone developing brown lung disease from years of working in a textile plant as an occupational disease. Each state may have a somewhat different definition of an accident and of an occupational disease.
From the examples cited above, even without knowing each state’s definition you might realize that coronavirus infections may not fit squarely under either definition. The moment of infection of COVID-19 is likely related to a single one-time exposure as opposed to months or years of inhalation of particles so this
looks more like an accident. However, there is no outward trauma and the disease process itself is more akin to an occupational disease. Further, some states exclude “ordinary diseases of life” as being compensable as an occupational disease.
So, which is it and how do you proceed in your state? The answer once again depends on the law in your state. As a South Carolina workers compensation lawyer, I would file it both ways. However, I think that it fits the definition of accident better in South Carolina. In speaking with my colleagues in North Carolina, many of them seem to believe it better fits the definition of an occupational disease in North Carolina.
Burden of Proof
The burden of proving that COVID-19 was contracted by a worker on the job is on the worker. Think about that for a moment. You’re a first responder running to multiple scenes per day, transporting sick and potential COVID-19 patients to emergency rooms daily. Not only that, but you live with your co-workers at the fire station who have been doing the same thing on other calls exponentially increasing your exposure risks. However, at the same time we are seeing community spread of coronavirus. How do you prove that the exposure you had two weeks ago transporting a patient from a nursing home to a hospital is the event that caused your positive test? The defense will be trying to cast doubt to show that you could have acquired the infection pumping gas, stopping at a restaurant to pick up takeout food, or from your neighbor. Clearly, the most likely source of infection is at work but how do you prove that definitively? In almost every case, you have to have a medical opinion stated to a reasonable degree of medical certainty that the infection was most probably caused by your exposure at work. Can this be done? The answer is yes but the more exposure you can show, the more likely you are to prevail
Presumptions
Many firefighters are familiar with heart attack, cancer and post-traumatic stress disorder presumptions that have been passed in some states around the country over the last few years. These presumptions are designed to make it easier for first responders to obtain workers’ compensation benefits should they suffer from these disorders or diseases that happen all too frequently because of exposure on their jobs. As of this writing, 13 states have passed some form of presumption for healthcare workers and first responders who test positive for COVID-19. I am privileged to serve as President of WILG (WORK INJURY LAW and Advocacy Group). WILG’s mission is to protect the rights and benefits of injured workers across the country. In early April we issued Carolina Fire Rescue EMS Journal
a letter to all governors and state legislatures demanding presumptions of compensability for essential workers. That letter follows:
The good news is that many states have passed presumption legislation and many others are still considering presumptions. Bills are pending in both the North Carolina House of Representatives (H1057) and in the South Carolina House of Representatives (H5482) that would establish presumptions of compensability for first responders. Presumptions have come about in three ways: legislative action; executive order by a governor; or under the rulemaking authority of a state workers’ compensation commission. The bad news is that pushback from employer and insurance industry groups have knocked down a couple of presumptions under the second and third methods. The most foolproof way to get a safe presumption is through a state legislature but this is often the way that takes the longest amount of time while people are suffering at this moment.
Benefits
If a worker contracts COVID-19 on the job and is successful in his claim, benefits are available. While benefits vary from state to state, in general the worker would recover two-thirds of his average weekly pay while out of work, payment of all causally related medical expenses, and an award for any permanent disability. If the worker died from the exposure, his or her dependents would receive 500 weeks of compensation.
Conclusion
First responders, healthcare workers, and other essential workers have acted as heroes during this pandemic. COVID-19 infections often do not fit cleanly within definitions of state workers’ compensation acts. It is likely that in both North Carolina and South Carolina these types of cases can be won but, as always, proving a discrete injury can be troublesome. However, it would be unconscionable for these heroes to not be covered for the hazardous work they have done for the rest of society.
William L. “Bill” Smith II is a founding partner of Chappell, Smith and Arden. He has concentrated his practice on representing injured workers for 35 years. Smith graduated from the University of South Carolina School of Law in 1984. He currently serves as President of the Workers’ Injury Law and Advocacy Group (WILG) and is a Fellow of the College of Workers’ Compensation Lawyers. He has also served as President of Injured Workers’ Advocates in South Carolina. He has chaired the Workers’ Compensation Section of the South Carolina Bar as well as serving as an officer of the South Carolina Workers’ Compensation Educational Association and Kids Chance of South Carolina. He serves on the Commission for Lawyer Conduct as appointed by the South Carolina Supreme Court.