Source: https://hillevans.com/triad-legal-services/defense-of-business-owners/insurance-carriers-self-insured-employers/
Timestamp: 2019-04-26 00:34:29+00:00

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Hill Evans Jordan & Beatty’s Board Certified Workers’ Compensation Attorneys have years of experience successfully advising and representing employers, insurance carriers and third party administrators in North Carolina Workers’ Compensation cases. We provide responsive, cost effective representation that is tailored to your specific needs and circumstances. Whether you are looking for advice on whether a claim should be accepted or denied, developing a modified duty work program to mitigate lost time claims, engaged in a medical dispute, seeking to end ongoing TTD or TPD payments, trying to negotiate a settlement, or looking to litigate a matter to a final determination, Hill Evans Jordan & Beatty’s experienced Workers’ Compensation attorneys can help.
In complying with the multitude of sometimes complex requirements for managing Workers’ Compensation claims, there are several key factors to consider.
Form 19 must be filed with the NCIC and a copy must be sent to the employee along with a blank Form 18.
The Form 19 does not give the Industrial Commission jurisdiction over the claim and you are not bound to the terms of the accident description or the Average Weekly Wage you put on the Form 19. The document is required form informational and statistical purposes.
Failure to file a Form 19 is subject to an administrative fine.
When a Form 18 is filed, the Industrial Commission gains jurisdiction over the claim.
If you have not already admitted or denied liability for the claim, within 14 days after receiving a Form 18, you should admit the claim [Form 60], deny the claim [Form 61] or pay the claim without prejudice for up to 90 days [30-day extension available] before admitting or denying the claim [Form 63].
N.C. Gen. Stat. § 97-28 No indemnity compensation is payable during the first 7 days of disability related to a compensable injury. If the period of disability lasts more than 21 days, then the employee is paid for the first seven days.
If the permanent disability period, when added to the temporary disability period, exceeds 21 days, there is no waiting period.
Employee must give written notice to the employer as soon as practicable. If no notice within 30 days, no compensation is payable unless (1) NCIC is satisfied with employee’s excuse for not doing so and (2) NCIC is satisfied that employer was not prejudiced.
REALITY: It is hard to escape liability based on an employee’s failure to file written notice within 30 days. If the employer has no way of knowing of the claim, is unable due to lack of notice to provide early medical intervention and investigate the facts of the claim, then your odds of prevailing are increased on a defense under N.C. Gen. State. § 97-22. Actual knowledge of the injury by accident claim by the employer will defeat the late notice defense under N.C. Gen. Stat. § 97-22.
Promptly investigate each reported or known injury.
Admit, deny or pay without prejudice as soon as practicable.
CAUTION: After an employee files a claim with the Commission, the Commission may impose sanctions if within 30 days the employer or carrier does not admit, deny or pay without prejudice.
The failure to meet the requirement to file a claim within 2-years of an alleged accident/knowledge of occupational disease under N.C. Gen. Stat. § 97-24 may bar an employee’s claim for benefits.
N.C. Gen. Stat. § 97-18(b) Admission of compensability.
The first payment of compensation is due on the 14th day after you have notice of the accident/injury. Payments are due weekly thereafter during the period of disability.
Any payment that is not paid within 14 days of becoming due is subject to an automatic 10% penalty. Unless due to a cause over which you had no control, you are supposed to add the 10% to the check due to the employee.
If the terms of the Form 60 are changed at any point, you must file an amended Form 60 or a Form 62, depending on the nature of the change. You cannot terminate compensation unilaterally by modifying a Form 60 or filing a Form 62.
Failing to file a Form 60 even though you start paying benefits can result in sanctions.
N.C. Gen. Stat. § 97-2(5) provides a hierarchy of formulas for calculating AWW.
Primary method: This method must be used unless shown to be inappropriate under the circumstances of the case. When you have 52-weeks of wage data immediately preceding the date of injury, divide the gross wages for that period by 52. But, if the employee missed more than 7 consecutive days at any one time during the 52-week period, the earnings for the remainder of the 52-week period are divided by the number of weeks remaining after the time so lost is deducted. Note-This is why Form 22 requires that the employer mark an “x” for each day during the 52-week period that the employee was paid in full. This enables the Commission and the parties to count blank spaces to determine if periods of greater than 7 consecutive days have been missed.
Second method: If employed less than 52-weeks, but it would still be fair, divide the gross wages by the number of weeks worked, with an adjustment for any periods where more than 7 consecutive days were missed.
Third method: if the primary method and secondary methods would be unfair due to shortness of time of employment before the injury or the nature of the employment relationship, regard is to be had to the AWW of other employees of the same grade and character in the same class of employment in the same community for the 52-week period.
Fourth method: Where none of the above would be fair for exceptional reasons, any other method that would most nearly approximate what the employee would be earning if not for the injury. This applies in cases of intermittent or seasonal employment where the employee would not work throughout a full year even if uninjured.
The right to medical compensation continues for two years after the last payment of indemnity or medical compensation. However, an employee with a condition that carries a substantial risk of requiring future medical compensation, like a knee replacement, can file a Form 18M seeking to keep the medicals open indefinitely with regard to the condition. See N.C. Gen. Stat. § 97-25.1. We can oppose the Form 18M, but if a competent doctor certifies that the employee is substantially likely to have future problems, the Commission will likely approve it.
If there is a PPI rating in a case, you cannot close out the claim without resolving the PPI liability. This is most efficiently done in a clincher agreement that ties up all liabilities under the Act upon approval by the Commission. However, there will be cases where an employee has successfully returned to work ending his or her right to Temporary Total or Temporary Partial Disability benefits (N.C. Gen. Stat. § 97-29 and § 97-30), but has been assigned a PPI rating. The employee is entitled to payment for the PPI rating under N.C. Gen. Stat. § 97-31. The statute of limitations for the employee to renew his or her claim for indemnity benefits will not start running until the PPI rating is resolved. PPI ratings are resolved by Form 26A agreements if they are not addressed in a broader clincher agreement. Once you agree on a rating amount and value with the employee, the agreement must be written up on a Form 26A Agreement and submitted to the Commission for approval along with all material medical records connected with the case..
Note: If the employee has returned to work at a lesser wage and is entitled to Temporary Partial Disability compensation (N.C. Gen. Stat. § 97-30), he or she may choose to elect between a maximum of 500 weeks (300 weeks if claim arose before June 23, 2011) of TPD or his or her PPI rating.
Under N.C. Gen. Stat. § 97-47, following an award, a claim may be reopened for a substantial change of condition within two years of the last payment of compensation. “Compensation” under the Act means indemnity as opposed to medical payments, which are labeled as “Medical Compensation.” In cases where only medicals have been paid, a claim of change of condition must be made within 12 months of the last payment of a medical expense.

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