Utah Admin. Code R612-200-7 - Permanent Total Disability
A.
This rule applies to claims for permanent total disability compensation under
the Utah Workers' Compensation Act.
1.
Subsection B applies to permanent total disability claims arising from accident
or disease prior to May 1, 1995.
2.
Subsection C applies to permanent total disability claims arising from accident
or disease on or after May 1, 1995.
B. For claims arising from accident or
disease on or after July 1, 1988 and prior to May 1, 1995, the Commission is
required under Section
34A-2-413,
to make a finding of total disability as measured by the substance of the
sequential decision-making process of the Social Security Administration under
Title 20 of the Code of Federal Regulations, amended April 1, 1993. The use of
the term "substance of the sequential decision-making process" is deemed to
confer some latitude on the Commission in exercising a degree of discretion in
making its findings relative to permanent total disability. The Commission does
not interpret the code section to eliminate the requirement that a finding by
the Commission in permanent and total disability shall in all cases be
tentative and not final until rehabilitation training and/or evaluation has
been accomplished.
1. In the event that the
Social Security Administration or its designee has made, or is in the process
of making, a determination of disability under the foregoing process, the
Commission may use this information in lieu of instituting the process on its
own behalf.
2. In evaluating
industrial claims in which the injured worker has qualified for Social Security
disability benefits, the Commission will determine if a significant cause of
the disability is the claimant's industrial accident or some other unrelated
cause or causes.
3. To make a
tentative finding of permanent total disability the Commission incorporates the
rules of disability determination in
20 CFR
404.1520, amended April 1, 1993. The
sequential decision making process referred to requires a series of questions
and evaluations to be made in sequence. In short, these are:
a. Is the claimant engaged in a substantial
gainful activity?
b. Does the
claimant have a medically severe impairment?
c. Does the severe impairment meet or equal
the duration requirement in
20 CFR
404.1509, amended April 1, 1993, and the
listed impairments in 20 CFR Subpart P Appendix 1, amended April 1,
1993?
d. Does the impairment
prevent the claimant from doing past relevant work?
e. Does the impairment prevent the claimant
from doing any other work?
4. After the Commission has made a tentative
finding of permanent total disability:
a. In
those cases arising after July 1,1994, the Commission shall order initiation of
payment of permanent total disability compensation;
b. the Commission shall review a summary of
reemployment activities undertaken pursuant to the Utah Injured Worker
Reemployment Act, as well as any qualified reemployment plan submitted by the
employer or its insurance carrier; and
c. unless otherwise stipulated, the
Commission shall hold a hearing to consider the possibility of rehabilitation
and reemployment of the claimant pending final adjudication of the
claim.
5. After a
hearing, or waiver of the hearing by the parties, the Commission shall issue an
order finding or denying permanent total disability based upon the
preponderance of the evidence and with due consideration of the vocational
factors in combination with the residual functional capacity which the
commission incorporates as published in 20 CFR 404 Subpart P Appendix 2,
amended April 1, 1993.
C. For permanent total disability claims
arising on or after May 1, 1995, Section
34A-2-413
requires a two-step adjudicative process. First, the Commission must make a
preliminary determination whether the applicant is permanently and totally
disabled. If so, the Commission will proceed to the second step, in which the
Commission will determine whether the applicant can be reemployed or
rehabilitated.
1. First Step - Preliminary
Determination of Permanent Total Disability: On receipt of an application for
permanent total disability compensation, the Adjudication Division will assign
an Administrative Law Judge to conduct evidentiary proceedings to determine
whether the applicant's circumstances meet each of the elements set forth in
Subsections
34A-2-413(1)(b)
and (c).
(a)
If the ALJ finds the applicant meets each of the elements set forth in
Subsections
34A-2-413(1)(b)
and (c), the ALJ will issue a preliminary
determination of permanent total disability and shall order the employer or
insurance carrier to pay permanent total disability compensation to the
applicant pending completion of the second step of the adjudication process.
The payment of permanent total disability compensation pursuant to a
preliminary determination shall commence as of the date established by the
preliminary determination and shall continue until otherwise ordered.
(b) A party dissatisfied with the ALJ's
preliminary determination may obtain additional agency review by either the
Labor Commissioner or Appeals Board pursuant to Subsection
34A-2-801(3).
If a timely motion for review of the ALJ's preliminary determination is filed
with either the Labor Commissioner or Appeals Board, no further adjudicative or
enforcement proceedings shall take place pending the decision of the
Commissioner or Board.
(c) A
preliminary determination of permanent total disability by the Labor
Commissioner or Appeals Board is a final agency action for purposes of
appellate judicial review.
(d)
Unless otherwise stayed by the Labor Commissioner, the Appeals Board or an
appellate court, an appeal of the Labor Commissioner or Appeals Board's
preliminary determination of permanent total disability shall not delay the
commencement of "second step" proceedings discussed below or payment of
permanent total disability compensation as ordered by the preliminary
determination.
(e) The Commissioner
or Appeals Board shall grant a request for stay if the requesting party has
filed a petition for judicial review and the Commissioner or Appeals Board
determine that:
(i) the requesting party has a
substantial possibility of prevailing on the merits;
(ii) the requesting party will suffer
irreparable injury unless a stay is granted; and
(iii) the stay will not result in irreparable
injury to other parties to the proceeding.
2. Second Step - Reemployment and
Rehabilitation: Pursuant to Subsection
34A-2-413(6),
if the first step of the adjudicatory process results in a preliminary finding
of permanent total disability, an additional inquiry must be made into the
applicant's ability to be reemployed or rehabilitated, unless the parties waive
such additional proceedings.
(a) The ALJ will
hold a hearing to consider whether the applicant can be reemployed or
rehabilitated.
(i) As part of the hearing, the
ALJ will review a summary of reemployment activities undertaken pursuant to the
Utah Injured Worker Reemployment Act;
(ii) The employer or insurance carrier may
submit a reemployment plan meeting the requirements set forth in Subsection
34A-2-413(6)(a)(ii)
and Subsections
34A-2-413(6)(d)(i)
through (iii).
(b) Pursuant to Subsection
34A-2-413(4)(b)
the employer or insurance carrier may not be required to pay disability
compensation for any combination of disabilities of any kind in excess of the
amount of compensation payable over the initial 312 weeks at the applicable
permanent total disability compensation rate.
(i) Any overpayment of disability
compensation may be recouped by the employer or insurance carrier by reasonably
offsetting the overpayment against future liability paid before or after the
initial 312 weeks.
(ii) An advance
of disability compensation to provide for the employee's subsistence during the
rehabilitation process is subject to the provisions of Subsection
34A-2-413(4)(b),
described in subsection 2.(b) above, but can be funded by reasonably offsetting
the advance of disability compensation against future liability normally paid
after the initial 312 weeks.
(iii)
To fund an advance of disability compensation to provide for an employee's
subsistence during the rehabilitation process, a portion of the stream of
future weekly disability compensation payments may be discounted from the
future to the present to accommodate payment. Should this be necessary, the
employer or insurance carrier shall be allowed to reasonably offset the amounts
paid against future liability payable after the initial 312 weeks. In this
process, care should be exercised to reasonably minimize adverse financial
impact on the employee.
(iv) In the
event the parties cannot agree as to the reasonableness of any proposed offset,
the matter may be submitted to an ALJ for determination.
(c) Subsections
34A-2-413(7)
and (9) require the applicant to fully
cooperate in any evaluation or reemployment plan. Failure to do so shall result
in dismissal of the applicant's claim or reduction or elimination of benefit
payments including disability compensation and subsistence allowance amounts,
consistent with the provisions of Section
34A-2-413(7)
and (9).
(d) Subsection
34A-2-413(6)
requires the employer or its insurance carrier to diligently pursue any
proffered reemployment plan. Failure to do so shall result in a final award of
permanent total disability compensation to the applicant.
(e) If, after the conclusion of the foregoing
"second step" proceeding, the ALJ concludes that successful rehabilitation is
not possible, the ALJ shall enter a final order for continuing payment of
permanent total disability compensation. The period for payment of such
compensation shall be commence on the date the employee became permanently and
totally disabled, as determined by the ALJ.
(f) Alternatively, if after the conclusion of
the "second step" proceeding, the ALJ concludes that successful rehabilitation
and/or reemployment is possible, the ALJ shall enter a final order to that
effect, which order shall contain such direction to the parties as the ALJ
shall deem appropriate for successful implementation and continuation of
rehabilitation and/or reemployment. As necessary under the particular
circumstances of each case, the ALJ's final order shall provide for reasonable
offset of payments of any disability compensation that constitute an
overpayment under Subsection
34A-2-413(4)(b).
(g) The ALJ's decision is subject to all
administrative and judicial review provided by law.
D. For purposes of this rule, the
following standards and definitions apply:
1.
Other work reasonably available: Subject to medical restrictions and other
provisions of the Act and rules, other work is reasonably available to a
claimant if such work meets the following criteria:
a. The work is either within the distance
that a resident of the claimant's community would consider to be a typical or
acceptable commuting distance, or is within the distance the claimant was
traveling to work prior to his or her accident;
b. The work is regular, steady, and readily
available; and
c. The work provides
a gross income at least equivalent to:
(1) The
current state average weekly wage, if at the time of the accident the claimant
was earning more than the state average weekly wage then in effect;
or
(2) The wage the claimant was
earning at the time of the accident, if the employee was earning less than the
state average weekly wage then in effect.
2. Cooperation: As determined by an
administrative law judge, an employee is not entitled to permanent total
disability compensation or subsistence benefits unless the employee fully
cooperates with any evaluation or reemployment plan. The ALJ will evaluate the
cooperation of the employee using, but not limited to, the following factors:
attendance, active participation, effort, communication with the plan
coordinator, and compliance with the requirements of the vocational plan. In
determining if these factors were met, the ALJ shall consider relevant changes
in the employee's documented medical condition.
3. Diligent Pursuit: The employer or its
insurance carrier shall diligently pursue the reemployment plan. The ALJ will
evaluate the employer or insurance carrier's diligent pursuit of the plan
using, but not limited to, the following factors: timely payment of expenses
and benefits outline in the vocational plan, and as required by the educational
institution providing the vocational training, communication with the employee,
compliance with the requirements of the vocational plan, and timely
modification of the plan as required by documented changes in the employee's
medical condition.
4. Resolution of
disputes regarding "cooperation" and "diligent pursuit": If a party believes
another party is not cooperating with or diligently pursing either the
evaluations necessary to establish a plan, or the requirements of an approved
reemployment or rehabilitation plan, the aggrieved party shall submit to the
workers' compensation mediation unit an outline of the specific instances of
non-cooperation or lack of diligence. Other parties may submit a reply. The
Mediation Unit will promptly schedule mediation to reestablish cooperation
among the parties necessary to evaluate or comply with the plan. If mediation
is unsuccessful, a party may request the Adjudication Division resolve the
dispute. The Adjudication Division will conduct a hearing on the matter within
30 days and shall issue a written decision within 10 days thereafter.
Notes
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