April 10, 2008

George Martin Elected to the Board of Directors of the French & Pickering Conservation Trust

Martin, Banks, Pond, Lehocky & Wilson managing attorney George E. Martin was recently elected to the Board of Directors of the French & Pickering Conservation Trust, the largest land convservation organization in Chester County. The Trust is focused on protecting rural and historic resources within the watersheds of the French & Pickering Creeks.

Mr. Martin serves on the Planning Commission of West Vincent Township in Chester County, Pennsylvania. He is also a member of the Board of Directors of EarthJustice, a non-profit, public interest law firm dedicated to protecting natural resources and wildlife of the earth and defending the right of all people to have a healthy environment.

March 4, 2008

Social Security Hires 144 Administrative Law Judges

Michael J. Astrue, Commissioner of Social Security, announced that the agency has begun making offers to 144 of the 175 new Administrative Law Judges (ALJs) it will hire this fiscal year. Due to litigation and budget cuts, the agency has about 10% fewer ALJs than it did a decade ago. During that same time, the number of cases waiting for a hearing decision has more than doubled.

The new ALJs will be brought on board in phases with the first hires reporting for duty in April, when they will begin an intensive orientation and training program. While initially handling a reduced docket, newly hired ALJs should be scheduling a full docket of cases by the end of the year.

Hiring of additional ALJs is only one component of the plan the agency has put in place to reduce the backlog of disability cases. The agency also continues to make progress in many other areas including opening the National Hearing Center, completing the nationwide roll-out of the Quick Disability Determination Process, implementing compassionate allowances and eliminating aged cases. More information about Social Security's plan is available at www.socialsecurity.gov/disability under the heading What's New.

January 24, 2008

Alfred J. Carlson Elected Co-Chair of Philadelphia Bar Association Workers' Compensation Section

Martin, Banks, Pond, Lehocky & Wilson partner Alfred J. Carlson has been elected Co-Chair of the Philadelphia Bar Association's Workers' Compensation Section. The Association's Workers' Compensation Section was established in 1995 to address the specialized needs of lawyers practicing workers' compensation law. Section members helped shape recently enacted workers' compensation law by reviewing and commenting on various legislative proposals that emerged prior to the final passage of the statute.

Mr. Carlson has been a litigator of Pennsylvania workers' compensation cases since 1992. For the first seven years of his practice, he worked at a leading defense firm representing major corporations, insurance companies, and state and local government agencies in Pennsylvania workers' compensation matters. In 2000, he joined Martin Banks to represent injured workers. In addition to an extensive caseload, Mr. Carlson is a frequent lecturer on workers' compensation matters and has authored numerous articles on the subject. Mr. Carlson has served as the legislative liaison for the Philadelphia Bar Association's Workers' Compensation Section prior to his election as Co-Chair. He is a member of the Pennsylvania and Philadelphia Bar Associations as well as the Pennsylvania Trial Lawyers Association. He received his law degree from Widener University School of Law in 1992 and is licensed to practice in Pennsylvania.

January 12, 2008

The Social Security Earning Statement - What You Need to Know

Every year, approximately three months before your birthday, the Social Security Administration will send workers over the age of 25 a Social Security Statement. This Earning Statement, as it is often referred to, is an easy-to-read, personal record of the earnings on which you have paid Social Security taxes during your working years. This form also gives you an estimate of benefit payments that you and your family may qualify for now and in the future. Unfortunately, most Americans pay little attention to this green and white piece of paper, often times discarding it. If you are interested in applying for Social Security Disability benefits, this statement can help determine whether you qualify for benefits. If you did throw your statement away, don't worry! We tell you how to get a new Statement later in this article.

Many wonder if they are eligible to qualify for Social Security Disability benefits. A good rule of thumb to determine eligibility is this: if you have worked and paid Social Security taxes for five out of the last ten years, you are more than likely eligible for benefits. However, it is possible that although you worked for the past five years, you did not earn enough credits to qualify. That is why the Social Security Earning Statement is so important. Within this statement, Social Security specifically indicated whether or not you have earned enough credits to qualify. If you have earned enough credits to qualify for disability, Social Security will indicate what your monthly benefit rate will be if you are found to be disabled. If you have not earned enough credits to qualify, Social Security will tell you exactly how many credits you are short.

Continue reading "The Social Security Earning Statement - What You Need to Know" »

January 3, 2008

David F. Stern Named Partner

Martin, Banks, Pond, Lehocky & Wilson is pleased to announce the appointment of David F. Stern as a partner of the firm. David has been with the firm since 2004 and focuses his practice solely on the representation of injured workers in workers' compensation matters. Prior to joining the firm, he worked on the defense side of workers' compensation at one of the leading defense firms in Philadelphia, representing insurance carriers and employers.

Mr. Stern has published several articles on workers' compensation in the Legal Intelligencer and is a frequent speaker at seminars in this area of law. He is a member of the Philadelphia and Pennsylvania Bar Associations and Trial Lawyers Associations. In 2006, Mr. Stern was recognized by the First Judicial District of Pennsylvania by being enrolled in their Pro Bono Roll of Honor. Mr. Stern was appointed to the Membership and Amicus Curiae Committees of the Pennsylvania Trial Lawyers Association. He is an active volunteer in the Philadelphia Volunteers for the Indigent Program (VIP), where he handles a variety of cases for underprivileged individuals on a pro bono basis.

Continue reading "David F. Stern Named Partner" »

December 15, 2007

Commonwealth Court Takes Broader View When Judge Can Expand Recognized Work Injuries

Despite the opinion issues in Sears Logistic Services v. WCAB (Preston), __ A.2d__ (Pa. Cmwlth., No 631 C.D. 2007, filed on December 5, 2007), nine days later, the Commonwealth Court issues Visteon System v. WCAB (Steglik), __ A.2d__ (Pa. Cmwlth., No 1179 C.D. 2007, filed on December 15, 2007), which seems to take a broader view of when a judge can expand recognized work injuries in the absence of a review petition. In this case, the claimant's compensable work injury was defined by a supplemental agreement and a judicial decision on a claim petition as a left shoulder sprain/strain, chronic cervical strain and sprain, cervical spondylosis with muscle spasm secondary to the strain and sprain and tendinopathy of the left shoulder. In a subsequent termination petition, a workers' compensation judge found that the claimant suffers from radial neuropathy and ulnar neuritis at both elbows, a long thoracic nerve injury, and involvment of her brachial plexus nerve. The Court reasoned that this expansion was appropriate by noting that "while these new problems [sic] areas may include Claimant's arms, elbows and hands, said problems stem from Claimant's original work injuries."

Clearly, in light of Sears Logistic Services and Visteon Systems, workers' compensation judges are allowed to expand recognized work injuries in the absence of a review petition. However, the limitations of when they are empowered to do so have still not been completely defined. Practically speaking when handling a case where the new injuries seem to be a different body part and/or were not in existence at the time the injury was recognized, it is best to file a review petition.

December 15, 2007

Commonwealth Court Holds That Stacking of Wages Not Permitted for Volunteer Firefighters

In Ballerino v. WCAB (Darby Borough), ___ A.2d ___ (Pa. Cmwlth., No. 1113 C.D. 2007, filed on December 13, 2007), the Commonwealth Court held that an injured volunteer firefighter's average weekly wage should not include the statewide average weekly wagecombined with his actual pre-injury wage. The Court concluded that the Act does not permit this kind of stacking.

The Claimant in this case sustained a disabiling injury in the course of his volunteer service as a firefighter. The Employer (Darby Borough) issued a Notice of Compensation Payable, allowing the injured firefighter to collect $477.85 per week, by using the statutory formula for firefighters injured in the line of duty. The injured firefighter filed a claim petition, seeking to increase his workers' compensation, stating that his earnings from his regular full-time employment of $580 per week should have been added to the presumed statutory average weekly wage, and thus allowing him to collect $716 per week. The workers' compensation judge found against the Claimant, stating that the "stacking" of wages was not permitted by the Pennsylvania Workers' Compensation Act. The WCAB affirmed this decision.

December 8, 2007

Commonwealth Court Holds that Compromise & Release Agreements Stress Finality in Fatal Claims

The Commonwealth Court in Ingram, et. al. v. WCAB (Ford Electronics & Refrigeration), ___A.2d ___ (Pa. Cmwlth., No. 491 C.D. 2007, filed on December 12, 2007) held that an approved compromise and release agreement extinguishes a dependent claimant's right to pursue a fatal claim where the decedent claimant eventually died from the occupational disease.

In Ingram the decedent was granted workers' compensation benefits in 1989 and again in 1995 for carpal tunnel syndrome. Four months after the decedent's last day of work in 1995, a claim petition was filed by the decedent for an asbestos-related occupational disease. In March of 1998, the workers' compensation judge circulated a decision approving a compromise and release agreementthat resolved liability of the employer for the accepted carpal tunnel injuries. The agreement also resolved liability for the occupational disease claim.

More than 300 weeks after the decedent's last day of work, the decedent died from lung cancer. Decedent's grandson filed a fatal claim petition to collect benefits. The Court held that an approved compromise and release agreement extinguishes a dependant claimant's right to pursue a fatal claim where the decedent claimant eventually died from the occupational disease. The Court explained its reasoning by noting that the legislature intended the compromise and release agreements to be on equal footing with civil settlements, which stress finality of the case.

December 8, 2007

Commonwealth Court Attempts Clarity of a Workers' Compensation Judge's Ability to Redefine Recognized Injuries

In Sears Logistic Services vs. WCAB (Preston), ___ a.2d___ (Pa. Cmwlth., No. 631 C.D. 2007, filed on December 5, 2007), the Commonwealth Court attempts to clarify when a workers' compensation judge is empowered to redefine a claimant's recognized injury in the absence of a review petition and in the context of a termination petition. The Court held that a workers' compensation judge may expand an injury on their own accord when the mistake in the Notice of Compensation Payable (NCP) relates to a "fact or condition that existed when the NCP was executed." It appears from this analysis that judges are not empowered to expand recognized injuries that flow from the work injury, i.e., occurred over time.

December 1, 2007

John P. Dogum Serves as Faculty for Pennsylvania Trial Lawyers Association Seminar

Martin, Banks, Pond, Lehocky & Wilson attorney John P. Dogum served as faculty for the Pennsylvania Trial Lawyers Association program entitled "Liens & Subrogation." The program, held on November 30, 2007, taught attendees how to resolve claims with federal benefits, private health insurance, public assistance, welfare, and workers' compensation liens.

A partner with the firm, Mr. Dogum has limited his practice to Pennsylvania Workers' Compensation since 1992. Originally a partner at a major Philadelphia defense firm representing Fortune 500 companies and major insurance carriers in workers' compensation litigation, Mr. Dogum joined Martin, Banks, Pond, Lehocky & Wilson in 2002 to protect the rights of injured workers.

Mr. Dogum earned his law degree from Widener University School of Law in 1992 and is licensed to practice in Pennsylvania.

November 10, 2007

Commonwealth Court Upholds Decision Granting a Petition to Review Utilization Review Determination

The Commonwealth Court, in Loc, Inc. v. WCAB (Graham), ruled in favor of a claimant, upholding a decision granting a Petition to Review Utilization Review Determinations. The employer had filed Utilization Review Request to challenge the reasonableness and necessity of medications prescribed by the claimant's treating physician. The Utilization Review Organization (URO) requested medical records from the claimant's doctor. The doctor provided records, but the URO found the doctor's treatment not medically reasonable or necessary because, while the dovtor had provided records, "there is not documentation of significant efficacy of the medication prescribed." The claimant filed a Petition to Review the Utilization Review Determination, and the workers' compensation judge found the prescriptions were, in fact, reasonable and necessary. The employer sought to have the judge's decision reversed, citing the Court's prior decision in Geisler. However, the Court distinguished this case from Geisler by noting that in Geisler, the provider failed to forward any medical records to the URO, and no UR Determination was issued, and the provider and claimant were barred from appealing the matter any further. In the instant case, the doctor did forward medical records -- just not records which the URO anticipated or sought.

November 7, 2007

Commonwealth Court Upholds Employer's Medical Expert Must Recognize Formal Description of Work Injury

In Denise Elberson v. WCAB (Elwyn, Inc.), the Commonwealth Court held that an employer's medical expert must recognize the formal description of the work injury and opine that the claimant has fully recovered in order for the employer to be successful in terminating a claimant's benefits.

In the case, the employer's medical expert testified that he thought the claimant's work injury was a strain or sprain of the back. However, a lumbar disc herniation had been recognized through a Notice of Compensation Payable. The Court held that the medical expert's testimony was insufficient to support the employer's contention that the claimant had fully recovered. The Court wrote that "(a)t a bare minimum, the expert must know what the accepted work-related injury was to be competent to testify that a claimant has fully recovered from a work-related injury."