Chapter 470 |
2016 -- H 8203 SUBSTITUTE A Enacted 07/13/2016 |
A N A C T |
RELATING TO LABOR AND LABOR RELATIONS -- WORKERS' COMPENSATION COURT |
Introduced By: Representatives Shekarchi, Serpa, McEntee, Marshall, and McKiernan |
Date Introduced: May 12, 2016 |
It is enacted by the General Assembly as follows: |
SECTION 1. Section 28-30-22 of the General Laws in Chapter 28-30 entitled "Workers' |
Compensation Court" is hereby amended to read as follows: |
28-30-22. Medical advisory board. -- (a) The chief judge of the workers' compensation |
court, in consultation with the appropriate medical or professional association, shall appoint a |
medical advisory board that shall serve at the chief judge's pleasure and consist of eleven (11) |
members in the following specialties: one orthopedic surgeon; one neurologist; one physiatrist; |
one chiropractor; one physical therapist; one internist; one psychiatrist or psychologist; and four |
(4) ad hoc physician members appointed at the discretion of the chief judge. Members of the |
board shall be reimbursed three hundred dollars ($300) five hundred dollars ($500) per day |
served in the discharge of the board's duties, not to exceed six thousand dollars ($6,000) per |
member in any year. The chief judge shall designate the chairperson of the board. |
(b) The chief judge is authorized, with the advice of the medical advisory board, to do |
the following: |
(1) (i) Adopt and review protocols and standards of treatment for compensable injury, |
which shall address types, frequency, modality, duration, and termination of treatment, and types |
and frequency of diagnostic procedures. |
(ii) Within thirty (30) days of its establishment, the medical advisory board shall prepare |
a recommended standard for the consideration and weighing by the court of medical evidence, |
including, but not limited to, medical test results, objective clinical findings, subjective |
complaints supported by tests for inconsistency, and purely subjective complaints, with the |
purposes of assuring treatment and compensation for legitimate, compensable injuries; reducing |
litigation, inefficiency, and delay in court proceedings; and deterring false or exaggerated claims |
of injury. The standards shall be applicable to proceedings before the workers' compensation |
court, including specifically those to determine the nature and extent of injury and the |
achievement of maximum medical improvement, and shall be effective in all proceedings when |
adopted by the court. |
(2) Approve and promulgate rules, regulations, and procedures concerning the |
appointment and qualifications of comprehensive, independent health-care-review teams that |
would be composed of any combination of one or more health-care provider(s), rehabilitation |
expert(s), physical therapist(s), occupational therapist(s), psychologist(s), and vocational |
rehabilitation counselor(s). |
(3) Approve and administer procedures to disqualify or disapprove medical service |
providers and maintain the approved provider list. |
(4) Appoint an administrator of the medical advisory board. |
(5) Approve and promulgate rules, regulations, and procedures concerning the |
appointment and qualifications of impartial medical examiners. |
(6) Annually review the performance of each comprehensive, independent health-care- |
review team and impartial medical examiner. |
(c) The administrator of the medical advisory board is authorized and directed to |
establish terms and conditions for comprehensive, independent health-care-review teams and |
impartial medical examiners to apply for approval by the medical advisory board and to perform |
any other duties as directed by the board. |
(d) Any reference to an impartial medical examiner in chapters 29 -- 38 of this title shall |
be deemed to include the impartial medical examiners and comprehensive, independent health- |
care-review teams referred to in subsection (b) of this section. |
(e) (1) Disqualification of medical-care providers. - Every health-care provider licensed |
in the state of Rhode Island shall be presumed to be qualified to provide health care services for |
injuries compensable under this title and may recover costs of treatment consistent with |
established fee and cost schedules. The administrator of the medical advisory board is thereafter |
authorized to disqualify and/or suspend any qualified provider based upon one or more of the |
following: |
(i) The violation of the protocols and standards of care established by the medical |
advisory board; |
(ii) The filing of affidavits that are untimely, inadequate, incomplete, or untruthful; |
(iii) The provision of unnecessary and/or inappropriate treatment; |
(iv) A pattern of violation and/or evasion of an approved fee schedule; |
(v) The censure or discipline of the provider by the licensing body of the provider's |
profession; |
(vi) The billing of, or pursuing collection efforts against, the employee for treatment or |
diagnostic tests causally related to an injury not deemed non-compensable by the workers' |
compensation court. |
(2) Upon disqualification or during suspension, the provider shall not be permitted to |
recover any costs or fees for treatment provided under this title. The appropriate body with |
professional disciplinary authority over the provider shall be notified of any such action. Appeal |
of disqualification or suspension shall be to the medical advisory board, with final review by the |
workers' compensation court. |
(3) If unnecessary or inappropriate treatment is provided by an entity affiliated with the |
treating physician, the administrator of the medical advisory board may increase the penalty for a |
violation. |
(4) This section shall not prevent the recovery of reasonable costs for immediate |
emergency care rendered by a provider. |
(f) As a guide to the interpretation and application of this section, the policy and intent of |
this legislature is declared to be that every person who suffers a compensable injury with |
resulting disability should be provided with high-quality medical care and the opportunity to |
return to gainful employment as soon as possible with minimal dependence on compensation |
awards. |
SECTION 2. Sections 28-33-18.3, 28-33-39 and 28-33-41 of the General Laws in |
Chapter 28-33 entitled "Workers' Compensation - Benefits" are hereby amended to read as |
follows: |
28-33-18.3. Continuation of benefits -- Partial incapacity. -- (a) (1) For all injuries |
occurring on or after September 1, 1990, in those cases where the employee has received a notice |
of intention to terminate partial-incapacity benefits pursuant to § 28-33-18, the employee, or his |
or her duly authorized representative, may file with the workers' compensation court a petition for |
continuation of benefits on forms prescribed by the workers' compensation court. In any |
proceeding before the workers' compensation court on a petition for continuation of partial- |
incapacity benefits, where the employee demonstrates by a fair preponderance of the evidence |
that his or her partial incapacity poses a material hindrance to obtaining employment suitable to |
his or her limitation, partial-incapacity benefits shall continue. For injuries on and after July 1, |
2021 2023, "material hindrance" is defined to include only compensable injuries causing a greater |
than sixty-five percent (65%) degree of functional impairment and/or disability. Any period of |
time for which the employee has received benefits for total incapacity shall not be included in the |
calculation of the three hundred and twelve-week (312) period. |
(2) The provisions of this subsection apply to all injuries from Sept. 1, 1990, to July 1, |
2021 2023. |
(b) (1) Where any employee's incapacity is partial and has extended for more than three |
hundred and twelve (312) weeks and the employee has proved an entitlement to continued |
benefits under subsection (a) of this section, payments made to these incapacitated employees |
shall be increased annually on the tenth (10th) day of May thereafter so long as the employee |
remains incapacitated. The increase shall be by an amount equal to the total percentage increase |
in the annual Consumer Price Index, United States City Average for Urban Wage Earners and |
Clerical Workers, as formulated and computed by the Bureau of Labor Statistics of the United |
States Department of Labor for the period of March 1 to February 28 each year. |
(2) "Index", as used in this section, refers to the Consumer Price Index, United States |
City Average for Urban Wage Earners and Clerical Workers, as that index was formulated and |
computed by the Bureau of Labor Statistics of the United States Department of Labor. |
(3) The annual increase shall be based upon the percentage increase, if any, in the |
Consumer Price Index for the month of a given year, over the index for February, the previous |
year. Thereafter, increases shall be made on May 10 annually, based upon the percentage |
increase, if any, in the Consumer Price Index for the period of March 1 to February 28. |
(4) The computations in this section shall be made by the director of labor and training |
and promulgated to insurers and employers making payments required by this section. Increases |
shall be paid by insurers and employers without further order of the court. If payment payable |
under this section is not mailed within fourteen (14) days after the employer or insurer has been |
notified by publication in a newspaper of general circulation in the state it becomes due, there |
shall be added to the unpaid payment an amount equal to twenty percent (20%) of it, to be paid at |
the same time as, but in addition to, the payment. |
(5) This section applies only to payment of weekly indemnity benefits to employees as |
described in subdivision (b)(1) of this subsection and does not apply to specific compensation |
payments for loss of use or disfigurement or payment of dependency benefits or any other |
benefits payable under the workers' compensation act. |
(c) No petitions for commutation shall be allowed or entertained in those cases where an |
employee is receiving benefits pursuant to this section. |
28-33-39. Transportation costs for medical examination. -- The reasonable costs of |
transportation to and from the office of any examiner requested by the employer or of any |
impartial examiner appointed as provided in § 28-33-35 shall be charged to the employer and, if |
paid for by the employee, he or she shall be reimbursed in full for this expenditure by his or her |
employer, upon presentation of a receipt or other evidence of expenditure. The reasonable cost of |
transportation that occurs on or after July 1, 2016, is the rate equal to the per-mile rate allowed by |
the Internal Revenue Service for use of a privately owned automobile for business miles driven, |
as from time to time amended, for a private motor vehicle or the reasonable cost incurred for |
transportation, from the employee's point of departure, whether from the employee's home or |
place of employment, and return. |
28-33-41. Rehabilitation of injured persons. -- (a) (1) The department and the workers' |
compensation court shall expedite the rehabilitation of and the return to remunerative |
employment of all employees who are disabled and injured and who are subject to chapters 29 -- |
38 of this title. |
(2) Rehabilitation means the prompt provision of appropriate services necessary to |
restore an employee who is occupationally injured or diseased to his or her optimum physical, |
mental, vocational, and economic usefulness. This may require medical, vocational, and/or |
reemployment services to restore an employee who is occupationally disabled as nearly as |
possible to his or her pre-injury status. As a procedure, rehabilitation may include three (3) |
overlapping and interrelated components: |
(i) (A) Medical restorative services. - Medical treatment and related services needed to |
restore the employee who is occupationally disabled to a state of health as near as possible to that |
which existed prior to the occupational injury or disease. These services may include, but are not |
limited to, the following: medical, surgical, hospital, nursing services, attendant care, chiropractic |
care, physical therapy, occupational therapy, medicines, prostheses, orthoses, other physical |
rehabilitation services, including psychosocial services, and reasonable travel expenses incurred |
in procuring the services. |
(B) (I) Treatment by spiritual means. - Nothing in this chapter shall be construed to |
require an employee who, in good faith relies on or is treated by prayer or spiritual means by a |
duly accredited practitioner of a well-recognized church, to undergo any medical or surgical |
treatment, and weekly compensation benefits may not be suspended or terminated on the grounds |
that the employee refuses to accept recommended medical or surgical benefits. The employee |
shall submit to all physical examinations as required by chapters 29 -- 38 of this title. |
(II) However, a private employer, insurer, self-insurer, or group self-insurer may pay or |
reimburse an employee for any costs associated with treatment by prayer or spiritual means. |
(ii) Vocational restorative services. - Vocational services needed to return the employee |
with a disability to his or her pre-injury employment or, if that is not possible, to a state of |
employability in suitable alternative employment. These services may include, but are not limited |
to, the following: psychological and vocational evaluations, counseling, and training. |
(iii) Reemployment services. - Services used to return the employee who is |
occupationally disabled to suitable, remunerative employment as adjudged by his or her |
functional and vocational ability at that time. |
(b) (1) Any employer or any injured employee with total disability or permanent, partial |
disability to whom the insurance carrier or certificated employer has paid compensation for a |
period of three (3) months or more, and to whom compensation is still being paid, or his or her |
employer or insurer may file a petition with the workers' compensation court requesting approval |
of a rehabilitation program or may mutually agree to a rehabilitation program. Determinations |
shall be rendered by the workers' compensation court in accordance with this section and as |
provided in chapters 29 -- 38 of this title and the rules of practice of the Rhode Island workers' |
compensation court. |
(2) Action shall be taken as in the judgment of the workers' compensation court shall |
seem practicable and likely to speed the recovery and rehabilitation of injured workers. However, |
rehabilitative services shall be appropriate to the needs and capabilities of injured workers. |
(c) Compensation payments shall not be diminished or terminated while the employee is |
participating in a rehabilitation program approved by the workers' compensation court or agreed |
to by the parties. Provided, that compensation payments shall be suspended while an injured |
employee willfully refuses to participate in a rehabilitation program approved by the workers' |
compensation court or agreed to by the parties. When the employee has completed an approved |
rehabilitation program, the rehabilitation provider shall recommend, in the instance of vocational |
rehabilitation, an earnings capacity, or in the instance of physical rehabilitation provided or |
prescribed by a physician, a degree of functional impairment, and the employee shall be referred |
to the court for an earnings capacity adjustment to benefits, unless the employee has returned to |
gainful employment. |
(d) The employer shall bear the expense of rehabilitative services agreed to or ordered |
pursuant to this section. If those rehabilitative services require residence at or near or travel to a |
rehabilitative facility, the employer shall pay the employee's reasonable expense for board, |
lodging, and/or travel. The reasonable cost of transportation on or after July 1, 2016, is the rate |
equal to the per-mile rate allowed by the Internal Revenue Service for use of a privately owned |
automobile for business miles driven, as from time to time amended, for a private motor vehicle |
or the reasonable cost incurred for transportation, from the employee's point of departure, whether |
from the employee's home or place of employment, and return. |
(e) Except for the provisions of this section, the provisions of § 28-33-8 shall remain in |
full force and effect. |
(f) For the purposes of this section, the director shall promulgate rules and regulations |
pursuant to chapter 35 of title 42 for certifying rehabilitation providers, evaluators, and |
counselors, and the director shall maintain a registry of those persons so certified. No plan of |
rehabilitation requiring the services of a rehabilitation counselor shall be approved by the |
workers' compensation court or agreed to by the parties unless the counselor is certified by the |
director. Any requests for approval of a rehabilitation plan pending before the director prior to |
September 1, 2000, will remain at the department for determination. All requests after this date |
will be heard by the workers' compensation court. |
SECTION 3. Section 28-53-7 of the General Laws in Chapter 28-53 entitled "Rhode |
Island Uninsured Employers Fund" is hereby amended to read as follows: |
28-53-7. Payments to employees of uninsured employers. -- (a) Where it is determined |
that the employee was injured in the course of employment while working for an employer who |
fails to maintain a policy of workers' compensation insurance as required by § 28-36-1 et seq., the |
uninsured employers fund shall pay the benefits to which the injured employee would be entitled |
pursuant to chapters 29 to 38 of this title subject to the limitations set forth herein. |
(b) The workers' compensation court shall hear all petitions for payment from the fund |
pursuant to § 28-30-1 et seq.,; provided, however, that the uninsured employers fund and the |
employer shall be named as parties to any petition seeking payment of benefits from the fund. |
(c) Where an employee is deemed to be entitled to benefits from the uninsured |
employers fund, the fund shall pay benefits for disability and medical expenses as provided |
pursuant to chapters 29 to 38 of this title except that the employee shall not be entitled to receive |
benefits for loss of function and disfigurement pursuant to the provisions of § 28-33-19. |
(d) The fund shall pay cost, counsel, and witness fees, as provided in § 28-35-32, to any |
employee who successfully prosecutes any petitions for compensation; petitions for medical |
expenses; petitions to amend a pretrial order or memorandum of agreement; and all other |
employee petitions; and to employees who successfully defend, in whole or in part, proceedings |
seeking to reduce or terminate any and all workers' compensation benefits; provided, however, |
that the attorney's fees awarded to counsel who represent the employee in petitions for lump-sum |
commutation filed pursuant to § 28-33-25, or in the settlement of disputed cases pursuant to § 28- |
33-25.1, shall be limited to the maximum amount paid to counsel who serve as court-appointed |
attorneys in workers' compensation proceedings as established by rule or order of the Rhode |
Island supreme court. |
(e) In the event that the uninsured employer makes payment of any monies to the |
employee to compensate the employee for lost wages or medical expenses, the fund shall be |
entitled to a credit for all such monies received by, or on behalf of, the employee against any |
future benefits payable directly to the employee. |
(f) This section shall apply to injuries that occur on or after January July 1, 2017. |
SECTION 4. Chapter 42-16.1 of the General Laws entitled "Department of Labor and |
Training" is hereby amended by adding thereto the following section: |
42-16.1-19. Cost of legal and audit fees. – The director is hereby authorized, and may in |
his or her discretion, recover the reasonable cost of legal services and audit fees for services |
provided by in-house attorneys and/or other personnel of the department of labor and training or |
outside auditors and incurred by the department in matters pertaining to fraud investigations and |
examinations. Nothing in this section shall limit the power of the director to retain legal counsel |
to recover the costs of such legal counsel and auditors pursuant to other provisions of the general |
laws. |
SECTION 5. This act shall take effect upon passage. |
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LC005894/SUB A/2 |
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