Tuesday, January 31, 2017

TIME LIMITS

There are five important time limits in New York Workers’ Comp:

1. Reporting an injury to your employer: thirty days (waiting longer can be excused by a judge in many cases)

2. Filing a C-3: two years from date of injury or disablement

3. Appealing or objecting to a judge or Board decision that you don’t like: thirty days

4. Reopening a case that has not been previously established in a decision by the Board: seven years to claim money

5. Reopening a case that has been previously established in a decision by the Board: eighteen years to claim money The bad news is bad things may happen if you miss the above time limits. Really bad things. The good news is there is no time limit to reopen an established case for treatment. (But remember, cases previously closed on a full and final Section 32 may never be reopened.)

Monday, January 30, 2017

E S TA B L I S H I N G Y O U R CASE


 If you hire a lawyer, he or she will first and foremost try to make sure that your case is properly “established.” This means that the Board has issued an official, written decision finding that your injury was sustained at work and deciding what parts of the body were injured. If your case was accepted and even paid by the carrier but there was never a Workers’ Compensation Board (WCB) decision officially deciding it, your case is not established.

WCB NUMBER

Probably the most important thing you can do if you are injured at work is to make sure you receive a WCB number for your case. A WCB number is not the case number given by the carrier. It is a separate number assigned by the WCB. For volunteer firefighters, it starts with F. For volunteer ambulance workers, it starts with the letter A. For everyone else, a WCB number starts with the letter G.

“ The most important thing you can do if you are injured at work is to make sure you receive a WCB number for your case.”


Once you have a WCB number for your case, you will no longer be at the complete mercy of the carrier. Without a WCB number, the Board cannot help you. To obtain a WCB number, you need to file a C-3 Claim Form with the WCB (see Filing a Claim).

Monday, January 9, 2017

ATTORNEY REPRESENTATION

  Having an attorney represent you at your hearing is crucial. The number one reason being that the employer is always represented. Except for the State Insurance Fund, which uses non-attorneys most of the time, all self-insured employers and carriers will have an attorney at your hearing whose job is to protect the employer and carrier and who may use every trick in the book to try to keep money out of your pocket. Handling comp hearings is an art. In my opinion, it takes years to get good at it. Comp attorneys who go to the Board handle multiple hearings each day. When I am “on calendar,” each of my files will be fully prepared and organized and I will be ready to present, and discuss, each case in the space of ten minutes:

• What needs to be decided moving forward
• Pay stubs and proof of earnings
• Up-to-date medical reports showing disability
• Past medical reports showing disability
• Medical reports that prove new sites of injury that haven’t
yet been officially recognized in the case
• All of the diagnostic test results
• Hospital records
• Objections to bills
• Requests for treatment
• Legal documents about the attached personal injury settlement And at the same time, I need to know the law.
The typical Workers’ Compensation hearing lasts only a few minutes.


The best attorneys can wade through the unimportant issues and get to the heart of the matter quickly and forcefully, because the typical Workers’ Comp hearing only lasts a few minutes. If the attorney gets distracted or doesn’t hone in on the important issues quickly, the case may go in the wrong direction. There may be “missiles” flying at the attorneys in all directions during a hearing, being hurled by the judge and the carrier attorney. The s--- may really hit the fan in a confusing and rapid-fire manner. It is up to the hearing attorney to stay calm, focus on the target, defend the client from this barrage, and fight when necessary (which is most of the time). Come to think of it, a hearing is a battle. And you should go into battle fully armed.

Monday, January 2, 2017

CHOOSING LAWYERS

 Let me start by saying I have been proud to call myself a
Workers’ Compensation lawyer for over thirty years. It may
not be glamorous work, but I do truly feel that I help people
in need. A colleague of mine recently remarked, if personal
injury lawyers who get the “big hit” million-dollar settlements
can be compared to star quarterbacks, we of the Claimants’
Compensation Bar are the offensive linemen. We do the tough
work in the trenches at the Board every day. We make sure that
injured workers get their fair share against companies that have
lots of money to burn and try to deny those benefits.

A WC lawyer in New York will never ask you directly for a fee.
WC lawyers work purely on a contingency basis. This means
that, generally, they will only accept a case if they think that
they can make significant amounts of money for the injured
worker.

A Workers’ Comp lawyer’s main goal, then, is to “find the
money” in every case, which is not so easy to do sometimes.
How can a case be maximized to its full dollar potential while
covering all needed treatment for the injured worker? After all,
the more money we win for our clients, the more we make.

Daily, my law firm works extremely hard to obtain proper
medical treatment (e.g., tests such as MRIs, surgery, physical
therapy, etc.) for our clients. However, the Board does not allow
us to charge directly for this work. (Treatment is not considered
the same as money awards when we ask for a fee. Hence, most
attorneys in New York will not accept a Workers’ Comp case if it
involves only treatment and no potential money awards.)
For any attorney’s fee over $450, attorneys must submit a fee
petition that details the overall work we did on the case and the
time spent. It is then up to the judge to decide our fee, which
is not calculated as a strict percentage but is a flexible amount
based on how much work was done and the amount of money
“moving” to our client.

The majority of New York Workers’ Comp attorneys that I
deal with on a daily basis, both on the claimants’ side and the
carriers’ side, are nice, smart, sensible people. Some are even
funny as hell. Many are my friends. We are a small clique: we all
know each other. Still, this does not prevent us from doing our
jobs in a professional manner.

Workers’ Comp attorneys who have practiced daily at the Board
for a while have seen it all and done it all. We always have funny
“war stories” to tell and zany characters to talk about.
If an “outside” attorney who does not know the inner workings
of the WCB tries to handle a case there, that lawyer will be a fish
out of water. I don’t care if he or she is a Harvard-educated, Wall
Street partner who normally charges $800 per hour. That lawyer
will be completely lost if he or she tries to handle a WC case. We
even have a term for such a lawyer: a “tourist.”

When choosing a Workers’ Compensation lawyer, choose one
who concentrates his or her practice on compensation—that is,
one who goes to the Board every day. Also, choose a lawyer who
will do the three things necessary to keep their clients happy:
• Listen to you
• Communicate with you
• Fight for you
Clients automatically sense when a lawyer is not fighting for
them. I have always enjoyed the “good fight,” and always will.

When choosing a Workers’ Compensation lawyer,
choose one who concentrates his or her practice on
compensation—that is, one who goes to the Board every
day.

If you would like more information or are looking to retain legal
advice or an attorney for your Workers’ Compensation case,
contact my law office, the Law Office of Daniel M. Morrin, at
(516) 307-8000 or by e-mail at dmorrin@mydisabilityatty.com.
You can also visit our website at www.mydisabilityatty.com to
find more information about New York Workers’ Compensation
as well as our other areas of practice.