Work Comp News 031726

A painter's fraud, Amputations on the rise, Change in contractor regulations, How to assist injured workers, and Commercial lines cooling. 

Painter Admits He Fraudulently Collected $10K in Workers' Comp After Returning From Injury
"claimed he could not work because of an ankle injury sustained in his work as a painter collected more than $10,000 in workers’ compensation wage replacement benefits while concealing he was back on the job."

Workplace amputations are on the rise | TPR - Texas Public Radio
"More than 26,000 workers — an average of seven per day — suffered workplace amputations from 2015 through 2024"

Agencies drop Biden-era rules on gig workers, joint-employers - HR Brew
"The decisions could have implications for HR teams at organizations that employ large shares of independent contractors"

What Should Employers do to Help Workers Beat Challenges? WCRI Panel Weighs In
"broke down what employers can do to make a workers’ journey from injury to return to work as best as possible,"

Commercial lines rate momentum cools but pressure remains, Ivans Index shows
"February figures point to a market that is moderating, not softening"


Comments

Popular posts from this blog

02.20.26

News 03.02.26

01.19.26