When
you get hurt on the job, you become the most unpopular person in the
company. Why does this happen? You got hurt at work doing your job,
and thus when you got hurt you were making the company money. Shouldn’t
they be bending over backwards to help you get the medical care you need,
weekly compensation if you are unable to work, and a settlement at the end of
the case? While this would seem the just and logical way your company
should look at an on the job injury, the reality is that most companies are all
too concerned with the bottom line. You may have been making them money
when you were a healthy employee, but the moment you got hurt on the job, you
went from a money-maker to a money-taker!
In
today’s world, competition in all areas of commerce is fierce, and literally
every penny is pinched in companies across North Carolina and South
Carolina. When you got hurt on the job, you set in motion a whole set of
costs and expenses that have made you that most unpopular person. If your
company is self-insured, meaning they pay all of their workers’ compensation
expenses themselves, then your injury just added to, or changed what they had
budgeted for workers’ compensation injuries. That money has got to come
from somewhere, and often that money is reflected in safety bonuses, or manager
bonuses that are now not going to be paid all because of you. So, if your
manager is trying to discourage you from filing workers’ compensation, he or
she, may have a very real world financial reason for doing so! And, if
your fellow employees don’t seem like they want to be a witness for you, those
safety bonuses are a powerful motivator for not documenting an on the job
injury. Any witness statement that they do for you is actually not for
you, because they are going to feel the pressure from management and other
co-workers to make what they write down to be as favorable to the company as
possible.
Just
how far will a workers’ compensation insurance company go to avoid paying on a
claim? The answer may surprise you. A recent North Carolina case
featured a workers’ compensation insurance company that lost a decision in
front of a hearing commissioner and all appeal. Instead of just paying
for the injured worker’s medical treatment, and weekly indemnity benefits,
instead they hired a private investigator to edit surveillance video in such a
fashion that made it look like the employee that was hurt on the job was
committing fraud. The workers’ compensation insurance company then
directed its investigator to convince the local police department to bring
charges against the injured worker for fraud. The poor injured worker was
arrested, jailed, and indicted on charges of obtaining property by false
pretenses, and insurance fraud. The charges were dismissed after another
medical exam showed that the worker’s injury and condition was
consistent. Obviously, not every workers’ compensation company, or
workers’ compensation adjuster would go, or does go to this
extreme. But, we have seen numerous instances where the workers’
compensation insurance company, their adjuster, and/or the self-insured company
makes things all too personal.
If
you have a workers’ compensation case, and have been hurt on the job, your
company has the legal obligation in an accepted workers’ compensation case to
pay your medical bills in full, pay you compensation at 2/3 of your average
weekly wage if you are written out of work, and compensate you for a permanent
injury. Workers’ compensation cases can be confusing, especially when
your company is just doing what is in its best interest! You need someone
to look out for you, so call Tippens & Zurosky, so we can be your voice,
answer all of your questions, and file your claim! Tippens & Zurosky
has knowledgeable, experienced attorneys certified in North Carolina and South
Carolina, who can fight for your rights during this often long and difficult workers'
compensation process. Call us toll-free at 877-872-3580, or at
704-343-0018, for a free consultation. Let us help you!