Work Comp Insurance Company Tricks

Beware when a Workers’ Compensation Insurance Company makes you a settlement offer.

Some adjusters will tell you that you are only entitled to a low amount because their doctor has valued your case at a certain percentage of the injured body part.

This is called an AMA impairment rating.

In Illinois an insurance company can send you to a doctor of their choice and ask for an impairment rating.

Remember, the insurance company is paying the doctor for their opinion and the doctor understands who is paying the bill.

An example, is that the doctor will examine you for less than 30 minutes and give an opinion that your arm injury that resulted in surgery is worth 5 percent of the arm. In Illinois, an arm is valued at 253 weeks. 5 percent of the arm equals approximately 12.5 weeks. 60 percent of your average weekly wage is multiplied by the 12.5 weeks to come up with the settlement value.

The problem is that AMA guidelines usually result in a low impairment value.

What the insurance company does not tell you is that AMA ratings are only one factor in determining settlement value in Illinois.

The real value of the injury with surgery may be closer to 20 percent of the arm.

This is four times the value the insurance company has offered you.

As you can see, relying on the insurance company alone may result in a very low settlement for you that is not close to true value.

Make sure that you talk with an experienced Illinois Work Comp lawyer before you settle your case.

It will not cost you anything upfront. All Illinois Workers’ Compensation lawyers are paid on a contingent fee basis, and they will be able to tell if you are being made a fair offer.

Questions about your work injury case? Feel free to contact Illinois Workers’ Comp Attorney Dirk May with Williams and Swee at 309-827-4371.

Illinois Workers’ Compensation and the Future

There is a new Governor in town and he has come out of the gate with one of his first proposals and it is to change the Illinois Worker’s Compensation law.

This is not really surprising because he campaigned as a business friendly guy and his supporters hate the current Work Comp system.

There are no bills introduced with specific language describing the proposal in detail.

However, the outline of the Governor’s proposal involves requiring the major cause of the injury to be work related instead of an aggravation of a pre-existing condition, and making value of the case depend on a doctor’s rating.

The practical impact of these ideas is that it will reduce the number of injury cases that will be accepted and it will dramatically reduce the value of settlements.

These proposals will not effect work injuries that have already happened.

And just because the Governor makes these proposals does not mean it will become law.

The House and Senate must vote on these proposals and pass them into law.

The real question is whether the majority of Democrats in the Illinois Legislature will trade away the interests of injured workers for something they want, such as a tax increase?

The next 6 months or so will reveal whether there will be any Work Comp changes and to what extent.

I will keep you updated.

Questions about your work injury case? Feel free to contact Illinois Workers’ Compensation Attorney Dirk May with Williams and Swee at 309-872-4371.

Woman, 50, fatally injured when struck by snowplow in Weymouth, Norfolk DA’s office says – Metro – The Boston Globe

Woman, 50, fatally injured when struck by snowplow in Weymouth, Norfolk DA’s office says – Metro – The Boston Globe.

Tragic accident.

Raises some questions about whether the driver who may suffer trauma from hitting the woman would be able to file a Workers’ Comp claim. The woman’s estate may be able to sue the snow removal company if it can prove negligence.