New York Times Article on Workers' Comp System Disappoints

Today's New York Times article on the NY Workers' Compensation system is a major disappointment  given that the paper spent 18 months preparing what is essentially an extended "human interest" story.  The article is filled with anecdotal reports of claimant suffering and unsubstantiated editorials masquerading as fact.  However, it is woefully short on actual statistics regarding the actual efficiency of the system, and gives only cursory reporting on the systemic ongoing reform efforts that will eventually correct some of the perceived inefficiencies.

Reading the article, one would incorrectly assume that all 140,000 workers injured statewide every year must navigate the  "subbasement of the legal world", as the authors unfortunately characterize the New York Workers' Compensation BoardNothing could be further from the truth!  The vast majority of injured workers receive both appropriate medical care and any lost wage replacement before ever having to step foot into a hearing office. 

Hearing offices today are left to resolve only the thorniest cases involving legal disputes over proper wage loss payments and medical careHad the authors cared to check, they would have discovered that actual hearings statewide have decreased dramatically in the past few years. A comparison of the number of workers compensation claims processed through the Queens District office in 2008 to the number of these same claimants who had hearings in the Queens hearing office would have been instructive.  However, this information is nowhere found in this article which places a priority on "sensationalism" rather than concrete facts.

One of my colleagues from the insurance defense side states in the article: "Comparing Supreme Court, say, to this is like comparing a hospital to a MASH unit".   He is absolutely correct!   MASH (Mobile Army Surgical Hospitals) units  have been a great success throughout  history and statistics show that over 97% of injured service men  and women who made it to MASH facilities survived their injuries.  And yes, doctors like "Hawkeye Pierce" cracked a few "bawdy" jokes while saving thousands of lives.  I'll take Hawkeye Pierce and a MASH unit (the New York Workers' Compensation Board ) any day over  a faceless hospital ( the Supreme Court) where your "cure "can kill you as you wait five years to get in front of a jury to address your injuries.  By comparison, the NY Workers' Compensation Board is enormously efficient compared to New York State Supreme Court.

The Workers' Compensation Board is much like an Emergency Room where "triage" is used to treat the sickest patients first.  You can improve waiting times in emergency rooms by adding more doctors.  You can improve waiting times at Workers' Compensation Board hearing points by adding more judges

Certainly, as in any large bureaucracy, there is always room for improvement.  However, even in the current imperfect system,  there are injured workers whose medical and economic lives are saved each and every day in that "subbasement" known as the New York Workers' Compensation Board.  Nowhere in the Times article is there a quote from an injured worker who was "grateful" or "pleased"  because she could now pay the mortgage as a result a positive hearing experience.  Attorneys for both claimants and insurance companies see such positive experiences every day.  As a regular reader of the NY Times, I have come to expect more analysis and less sensationalism from an 18 month investigation.   

 

Rosasco to Lecture on Workers' Compensation Claims at St. John's Law School

I'll be giving my annual New York Workers' Compensation Law lecture to the St. John's Law School Labor Relations and Employment Law Society this Wednesday, April 1, 2009 at 6:30 PM.  My friend David L. Gregory, the Dorothy Day Professor of Law, has asked me to speak on "real world" workers' comp issues to his students for over ten years now.  Just a few weeks ago,  NY AFL-CIO President Denis Hughes spoke to the same students on the "Future of Labor".  I am in good company.

Given the ongoing implementation of the 2007 New York Workers' Compensation Reform laws, which included an increase in benefits for injured workers, we will have a lot to discuss.  The program is open to the entire community but seating is limited. Hope to see you there!

Rosasco to Receive Clara Lemlich Public Service Award at Triangle Shirtwaist Factory Fire Memorial Dinner

I am humbled to have been selected a 2009 recipient of the Clara Lemlich Public Service Award from the Triangle Shirtwaist Factory Fire Memorial Foundation for my work as Co-Chairman of the New York State Workers' Compensation Alliance.  My fellow recipients include  Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton, American Federation of Teachers President Randi Weingarten, Injured Workers' Bar Association President Barbara Levine and the Hon. Edward I.Pitts, Co-Author of the New York Workers' Compensation Handbook published by LexisNexis

We will all be honored at a gala dinner on March 25, 2009, the 98th Anniversary of the Triangle Shirtwaist Factory Fire in which 146 workers lost their lives.  The dinner will be held at the New York City Fire Museum in lower Manhattan.  The Triangle Shirtwaist Factory Fire Memorial, with the extraordinary volunteer efforts of it's President James McCarthyraises money to fund college scholarships for the children of permanently disabled workers. In the seven year history of the foundation, the Triangle Memorial has awarded over $180,000 in college scholarships. Click here for more information on attending the Triangle Fire Memorial Dinner and taking out a journal ad to help fund the scholarship program.  As a practicing New York workers' compensation and disability attorney, I can think of no higher honor than receiving the Clara Lemlich Public Service Award.