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Jun 04, 2012

Employers Must Obtain And Maintain Workers’ Compensation Insurance Coverage

By |June 4th, 2012|fighting fraud, Uncategorized, Workers' Comp' Basics, Workers' Compensation|0 Comments

Today we have a guest post from our colleague Todd Bennett of Nebraska. Every employer not in agriculture, farm or ranch operations is required to obtain and maintain workers’’ compensation coverage for all employees. Those employers who voluntarily and willfully fail to obtain and maintain coverage violate the law and subject themselves to significant [...]

May 31, 2012

Nannies, baby-sitters, and comp coverage: Yes, we still have “domestic servants”

By |May 31st, 2012|service industry, Uncategorized, Workers' Compensation|0 Comments

Today we have a guest blog from our colleagues Nathan Hammons and Charlie Domer of Wisconsin. While this post contains many references to Wisconsin law, we think it is a valuable examination of the topic of domestic servants as employees who are protected by workers’ compensation. Most families in Wisconsin have hired a baby-sitter or [...]

May 24, 2012

What Happens If My Spouse Dies From A Work Accident Or Occupational Disease?

By |May 24th, 2012|Uncategorized, Workers' Comp Q & A, Workers' Comp' Basics, Workers' Compensation|0 Comments

Today we have a guest post from our colleague Brody Ockander of Nebraska. If a worker dies from a work accident or occupational disease, his surviving family members are entitled to death benefits under Nebraska workers'’ compensation. However, proving the death was work-related is sometimes complicated in situations where there is not a clear accident. [...]

May 21, 2012

Read This Before You Go To An Insurance Medical Examination

By |May 21st, 2012|Doctors, Uncategorized, Workers' Comp' Basics|0 Comments

Today’s guest post comes to us from our colleague Matt Funk of New York. Many times insurance medical examinations are considered by injured employees to be the same as Independent Medical Examinations (IMEs). There is nothing farther from the truth. These examinations are bought and paid for by the insurance company and for their benefit. [...]

May 17, 2012

More Surgeries = More Benefits

By |May 17th, 2012|Uncategorized, Workers' Compensation|0 Comments

Today's post is from our colleague Charlie Domer of Wisconsin. Surgeries are commonplace after a work injury.  When an injured worker in Wisconsin has a post-injury surgery, that worker is ordinarily entitled to a minimum percentage of permanent disability. Permanent partial disability (PPD) generally represents a physician’s assessment of a worker’s functional loss. [...]

May 15, 2012

NFL Concussion Suits Barred by “Exclusive Remedy”? Why can’t I sue my employer?

By |May 15th, 2012|Safety Gear, Safety Rules, Sports, Uncategorized, Workers' Comp Q & A, Workers' Comp' Basics, Workers' Compensation|1 Comment

Today we have a guest post from our colleague Tom Domer or Wisconsin. We get calls every day from angry injured workers’ who want to sue their employer for negligence. It could be an employer removing a guard on a machine, a foreman ignoring a safety rule, or an injury caused by an employer’s failure [...]

May 03, 2012

The Job: Insufficient Sleep Is A Compensable Condition

By |May 3rd, 2012|Uncategorized, Workers' Compensation|0 Comments

Today's post comes to us from our colleague Jon Gelman of New Jersey. The National Sleep Foundation recommends that U.S. adults receive, on average, 7–9 hours of sleep per night; however, 37.1% of adults report regularly sleeping <7 hours per night. Persons reporting sleeping <7 hours on average during a 24-hour interval are more likely to [...]

Apr 30, 2012

Beware Part Time Employment

By |April 30th, 2012|Uncategorized, Workers' Comp Q & A, Workers' Comp' Basics, Workers' Compensation|0 Comments

Today we have a guest post from our colleague Tom Domer of Wisconsin. Wisconsin pays worker’s compensation benefits based only on the job on which an employee works, even if the employee’s injury makes it impossible for him to work in his regular job. In these difficult economic times, many workers’ are forced to take [...]

Apr 26, 2012

Professionalism: A Choice Between The Art of War and Aikido Principles

By |April 26th, 2012|History, Philosophy, Uncategorized|0 Comments

Lawyers are often engaged to resolve conflicts. Sometimes the conflicts are resolved peacefully and harmoniously in a win/win environment and other times the resolution comes out acrimoniously and bitterly in a win/lose scenario. The former outcome is always preferred, yet many of us unwittingly choose a method of professional behavior that drives us toward a [...]

Apr 23, 2012

Returning to Work Shouldn’t Be This Hard

By |April 23rd, 2012|Uncategorized, Workers' Comp Q & A, Workers' Comp' Basics, Workers' Compensation|0 Comments

Today’s post comes to us from our colleague Roger Moore of Nebraska. In virtually all workers’’ compensation cases an injured worker has to return to work in some capacity. Often these are very stressful situations and it is not uncommon for issues to arrise including conflict with an employer over what a safe [...]

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