FINAL BILL REPORT
SHB 1918
C 108 L 05
Synopsis as Enacted
Brief Description: Implementing a recommendation of the joint legislative audit and review committee with regard to industrial insurance.
Sponsors: By House Committee on Commerce & Labor (originally sponsored by Representatives Conway, Wood and Chase).
House Committee on Commerce & Labor
Senate Committee on Labor, Commerce, Research & Development
Background:
Industrial insurance is a no-fault state workers' compensation program that provides medical
and partial wage replacement benefits to covered workers who are injured on the job or who
develop an occupational disease. Employers who are not self-insured must insure with the
state fund operated by the Department of Labor and Industries (Department).
When an accident occurs to a worker, the worker has a duty under the Industrial Insurance
Act to report the accident "forthwith" to the employer or supervisor in charge of the work.
The employer, in turn, has a duty to report the accident and resulting injury "at once" to the
Department if the worker has received medical treatment, has been hospitalized or disabled
from work, or has died as the apparent result of the injury.
Workers must also file a claim application with the Department or self-insured employer,
together with a certificate of the attending health services provider. The attending provider
must inform the worker of his or her rights under the Industrial Insurance Act and assist the
worker in filing the claim application.
In its 1998 Workers' Compensation System Performance Audit, the Joint Legislative Audit
and Review Committee (JLARC) made a number of recommendations concerning the
workers' compensation system, including Recommendation 2:
The Department should adopt an alternative system for the reporting of injuries under which
the worker would report to the employer and the employer would report to the Department.
An educational effort should be launched to promote this method of reporting.
In June 2002, the Department implemented an Occupational Health Services Project (Project)
developed in partnership with the Workers' Compensation Advisory Committee and the
University of Washington. Under the program, two Centers of Occupational Health and
Education have been established, one in Renton, Washington, and one in Spokane,
Washington. These centers have several objectives, including providing interdisciplinary
occupational health training and mentoring, working directly with community providers, and
facilitating communication among providers, workers, employers, and the industrial
insurance system. The University of Washington provides process improvement services to
the Project and will undertake a formal evaluation of the Project.
Summary:
The Legislature finds that the JLARC Workers' Compensation System Performance Audit
reported that:
The Department is required to develop an initiative to encourage workers to report industrial
insurance injuries to the employer and the employer, in turn, to report the injuries to the
Department, including taking steps to educate workers and employers about the benefits of
prompt reporting.
By December 1, 2006, the Department must:
If an attending health services provider files a claim application on behalf of an injured worker, the provider may fax the application to the Department. When the Department has received an application, the Department must promptly notify the employer and, if the employer is a state fund employer, must instruct the employer to submit a report of accident and provide the employer with a telephone number for assistance with the report. The Department must also send a copy of the application to the employer if the employer has not received a copy.
Votes on Final Passage:
House 97 0
Senate 45 0
Effective: July 24, 2005
June 30, 2007 (Sections 3-6)