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    Cara Filsinger   
503-947-7582   

Focus on the 2007 legislature
The 2007 legislative session brought many changes that will affect the workers' compensation system in Oregon - from streamlining regulations to expanding treatment authority for some providers. Below is a summary.

HB 2218 Regulatory streamlining
HB 2244 Permanent partial disability sunset repeal

HB 2247 Nurse practitioner sunset repeal

HB 2250 Assigned risk plan
HB 2756 Expanded workers' compensation treatment authority
HB 2783 Insurance cancellation notice
HB 2943 Independent Medical Examination standards
HB 3362 Home Care Commission election of coverage
SB 253 ALJ approval of settlements
SB 404 Worker expense reimbursements and attorney liens
SB 504 Emergency room physicians
SB 559 Eliminate guaranty contracts
SB 563 Managed care organization treatment standards
SB 688 Taxicab owner-operator coverage
SB 762 Non-disabling claim medical deductible adjustment
SB 835 MLAC death benefit study
   
   
HB 2218 - Regulatory streamlining
HB 2218 is a regulatory streamlining bill, addressing a number of issues.
Current law requires the Department of Consumer and Business Services to adopt a temporary rule to determine a worker's permanent disability when it is not addressed by the disability rating standards. The temporary rule applies only to the specific claim, expires in 180 days, and sets no precedent for future claims. This bill eliminates the requirement to adopt a rule and instead allows the determination of impairment to be awarded in an order on reconsideration, which can be appealed to the Workers' Compensation Board.
Workers are entitled to three choices of attending physician during the life of their claim, and may request the department authorize additional changes. Current law requires the department seek, if requested, the advice of a physician when approving a change in attending physician. The department has not had any such requests in recent memory nor do these decisions require medical expertise. HB 2218 eliminates this outdated requirement to consult a physician if requested.
Insurers are required to pay a permanent partial disability award of $6,000 or less in a lump sum. If the award is more than $6,000, the worker may request a lump sum payment, but insurers may deny the worker's request. If the insurer denies the request for the lump sum payment, current law requires the department to review the insurer's decision, whether or not the parties want to appeal the matter. HB 2218 clarifies the statutes by consolidating into one section of the law the reasons for which an insurer can deny a lump sum award and removes the required review. If the worker disagrees with the insurer's decision, the worker can request a penalty for unreasonable delay in payment under ORS 656.262(11).
The statutes governing managed care organizations allow the department to revoke or suspend an organization's certification, but not to impose lesser sanctions to address less severe performance issues. This bill gives the department the authority to issue civil penalties against managed care organizations that fail to comply with laws or rules.

HB 2244 - Permanent partial disability sunset repeal
The Department of Consumer and Business Services studied the impact of the permanent partial disability benefit changes made by SB 757 in 2003 and HB 2408 in 2005, which were scheduled to sunset on Jan. 1, 2008. The study showed that the law changes have redistributed permanent partial disability benefits from workers who are able to return to work more quickly toward workers with more challenging injuries and work disability. The department's study also showed that the law changes were cost-neutral within the overall system. This is consistent with the policy goals intended by the Workers' Compensation Management-Labor Advisory Committee (MLAC) when it supported the statutory changes in 2003 and 2005. HB 2244 removes the sunset and makes the permanent partial disability laws permanent. The bill also requires MLAC to review permanent partial disability benefit amounts on a biennial basis and make recommendations to ensure the original policy goals continue to be met over time.

HB 2247 - Nurse practitioner sunset repeal
In 2003, HB 3669 expanded the role of nurse practitioners in the workers' compensation system by allowing them to provide compensable medical services to injured workers for up to 90 days, authorize time loss for up to 60 days, release the worker to work, and manage the worker's return to work in that time period. Workers were also allowed to "bring" their nurse practitioners into a managed care organization under specific circumstances. The law changes were scheduled to sunset on Jan. 2, 2008, to allow an opportunity for review. The department and MLAC conducted a study to determine the system impact of the law change, which illustrated some expansion in a worker's ability to continue treatment with a provider with whom they have an established relationship, without a significant cost impact to the system. HB 2247 repeals the sunset and makes nurse practitioners' expanded authority permanent.

HB 2250 - Assigned risk plan
The workers' compensation assigned risk plan provides workers' compensation coverage to employers who cannot obtain it in the voluntary market. The plan provides discounts to make workers' compensation insurance affordable for new and small employers, and also covers employers in high-risk fields or with poor loss experience. HB 2250 implements one of the recommendations arising out of a department study of the assigned risk plan, by allowing for a surcharge to plan members, if necessary, to help pay the costs of assigned risk pool losses when the losses exceed premiums. Otherwise, employers who buy insurance in the voluntary market must pay these costs.

HB 2756 - Expanded workers' compensation treatment authority
Following the veto of HB 2588 in 2003, which would have allowed chiropractors to serve as attending physicians for injured workers on a pilot basis, the Governor asked the department and MLAC to study the role of chiropractors and other care providers in the workers' compensation system. Based on the study and MLAC's recommendations, HB 2756 allows chiropractic physicians, podiatrists, naturopaths, and physician assistants to act as attending physicians for 60 days or 18 visits, whichever comes first. In addition, the four provider groups can authorize time loss for 30 days and manage the worker's return to work during that period. The bill does not give the four provider groups authority to determine a worker's permanent impairment at claim closure, and it requires all four-provider types to certify they have reviewed informational materials developed by the director of the department.

HB 2783 - Insurance cancellation notice
Under current law, insurers are required to give 30 days advance notice to employers when they terminate the employer's workers' compensation insurance coverage, to alert the employer that it may need to find new workers' compensation insurance coverage. HB 2783 extends the advance notice requirement to the employer from 30 days to 45 days. This time frame is consistent with the notice requirements for other types of commercial liability insurance and will allow the employer more time to obtain new coverage. HB 2783 also shortens the notice required to the employer to 10 days in the event of non-payment of premium, similar to the time frame used in at least 30 other states.

HB 2943 - Independent Medical Examination standards
SB 311 (2005) required workers' compensation independent medical examination providers to be authorized by the department. Under SB 311, the department may remove providers from the authorized list if they violate their regulatory board's code of conduct for independent medical examinations or, if a regulatory board does not have a code of conduct, if they violate guidelines published by the American Board of Independent Medical Examiners (ABIME). HB 2943 removes the statutory reference to the ABIME guidelines and requires instead that the department adopt rules that outline the standard of conduct for providers that do not have conduct guidelines from their regulatory board. The rules may be consistent with the code of conduct adopted by the Independent Medical Examination Association.

HB 3362 - Home Care Commission election of coverage
Home care workers are hired by elderly or disabled persons who receive funds from the Department of Human Services to pay the wages of the home care workers. Under current law, these home care workers are not considered subject workers. This bill requires the Home Care Commission to elect coverage on behalf of all Department of Human Services' clients who employ home care workers, making the home care workers "subject workers" if they are paid by the state on behalf of the client. Currently, insurers may stop paying temporary total disability benefits if a worker who has been released to modified work refuses an offer of modified employment with their employer at injury. HB 3362 allows termination of temporary total disability benefits when a home care worker refuses modified employment offered by any Department of Human Services client who employs home care workers, not just the original employer client, with some exceptions for work location and the worker's physical capacity. Because home care workers typically work for only one client, home care workers that are released to modified employment will have more return-to-work options with other Department of Human Services clients, not just with their original employer.

SB 253 - ALJ approval of settlements
Currently, the authority to review, approve, and disapprove a workers' compensation Claim Disposition Agreement (CDA) rests exclusively with the Workers' Compensation Board. Some CDAs arise from mediations conducted by an Administrative Law Judge (ALJ) involving the worker, the insurer/self-insured employer, and their attorneys. In addition to the board, SB 253 also allows the ALJ who mediates a workers' compensation CDA to approve the agreement.

SB 404 - Worker expense reimbursements and attorney liens
SB 404 allows for payment of reasonable costs for records, expert opinions, and witness fees associated with appealing a workers' compensation claim if the claimant prevails. The bill caps reimbursement for reasonable costs at $1,500 unless the claimant demonstrates extraordinary circumstances justifying payment of a greater amount. The bill also allows an attorney who represents an injured worker a lien for recovery of fees out of additional awarded compensation or the proceeds of a claim settlement if the worker signs an attorney fee agreement for representation and the attorney was instrumental in obtaining the outcome of the claim.

SB 504 - Emergency room physicians
Attending physicians in the workers' compensation system are primarily responsible for the treatment of a worker's compensable on-the-job injury. As part of this authority, an attending physician manages a worker's access to time-loss benefits, manages the worker's return to work, and determines the worker's permanent disability. When workers seek treatment through a hospital emergency room, the workers may only see the physician for that visit. Claims adjusters sometimes have difficulty later contacting the emergency room doctor to clarify return-to-work options, temporary disability authorization, and treatment issues, and to obtain a closing examination. SB 504 excludes an emergency room physician from the definition of an attending physician when the physician refers the worker to a primary care physician for follow-up care. If the worker needs time off work, the bill allows the emergency room physician to authorize time-loss benefits for a maximum of 14 days. Thereafter, the worker would need to see another qualified attending physician to manage his or her care and authorize time-loss benefits. In some instances, a physician may treat patients in an emergency room but also maintain an independent practice. If so, the emergency room physician could act as the worker's attending physician if the doctor otherwise qualifies to be an attending physician and provides the follow-up care to the injured worker.

SB 559 - Eliminate guaranty contracts
The Legislature created the guaranty contract in 1965 as the way employers and insurers provide proof of workers' compensation coverage to the department. When an employer obtains workers' compensation coverage by purchasing an insurance policy from an insurer, the insurer is required to file a duplicative guaranty contract with the department. The guaranty contract is an agreement between the insurer and the state, where the insurer assumes the employer's liability for payment of compensation to injured workers. SB 559 removes the requirement for a guaranty contract filing and instead requires the insurer to provide insurance policy information to the department as the proof of workers' compensation coverage. The bill makes the focus of coverage, reporting, and regulatory actions related to workers' compensation insurance similar to what occurs with the insurance policy in other lines of insurance and as reported in most other states. The bill will streamline reporting requirements for insurers and eliminate an unnecessary, duplicate filing with the department.

SB 563 - Managed care organization treatment standards
The bill removes the requirement for the department to review and approve all individual treatment standards adopted by managed care organizations. Under the rules that implemented SB 670 (2005), managed care organizations were required to submit all individual treatment standards for review. SB 563 requires the department to approve managed care organizations' processes for developing, reviewing, and adopting the treatment standards. The change will maintain regulatory oversight over managed care organizations, ensuring workers receive appropriate treatment for work-related injuries, while allowing managed care organizations the flexibility to more quickly update treatment standards.

SB 688 - Taxicab owner-operator coverage
Owner-operators of taxicabs are currently excluded from coverage under workers' compensation law. Some situations involving employment contracts and leasehold interests can create confusion as to whether the worker (driver) is subject, independent, or operating under the direction and control of another. This distinction determines whether the insurer should collect premium for a worker. Recent cases have established that some taxicab operators are subject because the shift-lease arrangements seldom require the lessee to handle the full maintenance of the vehicle. SB 688 clarifies the exemption applies to a person who operates and has an ownership or leasehold interest in a passenger motor vehicle that is operated as a taxicab. The bill also exempts workers who provide passenger vehicle transportation for non-emergency medical transportation.

SB 762 - Non-disabling claim medical deductible adjustment
Beginning in 1987, employers were allowed to pay a portion of medical costs on their non-disabling workers' compensation claims so that minor injuries would not adversely affect an employer's experience rating. The insurer first pays for the medical services and then the employer has the option of reimbursing the insurer up to the threshold amount. The limit was originally set at $500 for non-disabling claims. Because increases in medical costs had reduced the impact of the original limit, the 2005 Legislature increased the threshold amount to $1,500 per non-disabling claim. This bill will require the department to establish a threshold each year based on the change in the medical services consumer price index. The department will evaluate the change in the index and adjust the threshold amount, rounding to the nearest $100. The department will publish, by bulletin, the updated threshold amount prior to the Jan. 1 effective date so insurers have sufficient time to plan for the change and program their computer systems.

SB 835 - MLAC death benefit study
Workers' compensation law establishes specific benefit amounts for the survivors of workers who die as a result of an on-the-job injury. Monthly benefits are provided for the spouse of a deceased worker, dependent children, and other dependents. Fatal benefits are also provided to survivors of permanently and totally disabled workers upon their death, regardless of the cause of death. Statute provides a burial benefit up to 10 times the Oregon average weekly wage. SB 835 requires MLAC to conduct an interim study of the adequacy of death benefits in the workers' compensation system. The evaluation will include a review of the method of calculating benefits, burial amounts, categories of beneficiaries, and feasibility of providing lump sum benefit payments. A written report to the 75th Oregon Legislative Assembly is required by Jan. 31, 2009.


If you have questions about this webpage, please contact Cara Filsinger, 503-947-7582.