ASSOCIATED INDUSTRIES OF
FLORIDA
DISAPPOINTED WITH SO-CALLED "WORKERS COMPENSATION REFORM"
APRIL 4, 2001
TALLAHASSEE Today, Associated Industries of Florida
(AIF) was disappointed with the uneven work of the House Insurance
Committee in its consideration of its workers compensation reform bill,
PCB 01-04. After dozens of hours of public testimony, hundreds of hours of
exhaustive hearings by the Workers Compensation Task Force, the results
of which were reported to the House Insurance Committee in great detail,
and countless personal briefings, the committee failed to produce a bill
that fundamentally reforms a sinking workers compensation system. Worse
yet, in attempting to compromise on every issue, the committee somehow
managed to produce a bill that will only further increase costs to Floridas employers and accelerate the systems collapse into
fiscal disarray.
"We are amazed," said Jon L. Shebel,"
AIFs president & CEO. "The committee came within a hairs
breadth of actually increasing attorneys fees, liberalized
permanent total disability even further and totally ducked the issue of
fraud."
"If the bill continues as it was written today by
the committee, it may be too expensive for the business community to
support it," said Mary Ann Stiles, AIF General Counsel and lead
advocate for AIF on the issue. "This is really tragic. Workers
compensation was designed for employers and employees and everyone else
involved simply makes money off this system. Right now, while this bill
increases benefits to injured workers, it does not create enough system
balances to counter a rate increase," continued Ms. Stiles.
The House Committee on Insurance, chaired by Rep.
Leslie Waters (R-Largo), actually adopted an amendment by a voice vote
scuttling language in the bill to reduce attorneys fees, which are an
enormous cost-driver to the system under current law. However, on a roll
call vote, the committee edged back and the amendment failed. The
committee also adopted an amendment further liberalizing the law, which
will permit more injured workers to achieve the "permanent total
disability" designation. Adopting this amendment was totally at
cross-purposes with the original intent of the draft bill and the report
of the Workers Compensation Task Force recommendations.
Florida is already second only to Colorado in the
percentage it pays in indemnity benefits for permanent total disability.
In addition, the committee cast aside a compromise AIF had offered on
closing the exemptions from required coverage currently enjoyed by the
construction industry. Instead, the committee opted for yet another study
of the issue. This much-studied "issue" is draining an estimated
$1 billion in premium dollars out of the workers compensation system
due to egregious and aggressive fraud. Finally, the committee lamely
agreed to a compromise that combines private and public mediation on
workers compensation cases, further increasing costs to Floridas
employers.
"We can only educate the legislators so
much," said Shebel. "At some time, they will have to make the
hard decisions. They can do it now and make good policy, or they can wait
until we have yet another full-blown workers compensation crisis."
"When major issues are addressed, decisions must
be made," said Shebel.
"Chairman Waters desire to compromise every
issue prior to its consideration by the committee only weakens the overall
efforts for reform. The rhetoric being tossed around by opponents of
reform should be recognized for what it is."
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516 North Adams Street ● Post Office Box 784 ● Tallahassee, Florida 32302-0784 ● Phone: (850) 224-7173 ● Fax: (850) 224-6532 ● www.aif.com