4 Pa. Code § 89.2 - Eligibility
(a)
General. Upon the death of a public safety officer who meets
the requirements of the act, surviving beneficiaries are eligible for payment
of a benefit if the public safety officer dies as a result of the public safety
officer's performance of duties.
(b)
Performance of duties.
Performance of duties includes:
(1) Actions
which the public safety officer is obligated or authorized by rule, regulation,
condition of employment or service, or law to perform.
(2) Participation in a physical training
exercise that is a formal part of an official training program whose purpose is
to train, prepare or improve the public safety officer in particular activity
or actions encompassed within the public safety officer's duties.
(3) Ceremonial functions.
(4) Actions which the act deems to be within
the public safety officer's duties.
(c)
Requirements of the act.
At the time of performance of duties:
(1) A
member of the National Guard shall be in an official state duty status
authorized under
51 Pa.C.S. §
508
(relating to active State duty for emergency).
(2) A certified hazmat response team member
shall be dispatched by a public safety answering point to perform services or
take actions within the group's primary purpose and may not be any of the
following:
(i) Certified and organized by a
transporter, a manufacturer, supplier or user of hazardous materials or a
private contractor.
(ii) A
for-profit team acting as an agent on behalf of the spiller or responsible
party.
(iii) A for-profit team
responsible for postemergency or nonemergency response.
(d)
Statutory
presumption.
(1) A public safety
officer is presumed to have died as a result of the performance of duties, if
the individual suffers one of the following:
(i) A fatal heart attack or stroke while on
duty.
(ii) A fatal heart attack or
stroke suffered not later than 24 hours after participating in a physical
training exercise.
(iii) A fatal
heart attack or stroke suffered not later than 24 hours after responding to an
emergency.
(2) The
statutory presumption is overcome when evidence proves to a reasonable degree
of medical certainty that circumstances other than the performance of duties
were a substantial factor in causing the fatal heart attack or
stroke.
Notes
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