H-3596 _______________________________________________
HOUSE BILL NO. 2695
_______________________________________________
State of Washington 51st Legislature 1990 Regular Session
By Representatives Vekich, R. King, Leonard, Cole, Prentice, Jones, Rector and Basich
Read first time 1/19/90 and referred to Committee on Commerce & Labor.
AN ACT Relating to industrial insurance vocational rehabilitation services; and amending RCW 51.32.095.
BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON:
Sec. 1. Section 10, chapter 14, Laws of 1980 as last amended by section 9, chapter 161, Laws of 1988 and RCW 51.32.095 are each amended to read as follows:
(1) One of
the primary purposes of this title is to enable the injured worker to become
employable at gainful employment. To this end, the department or self-insurers
shall utilize the services of individuals and organizations, public or private,
whose experience, training, and interests in vocational rehabilitation and
retraining qualify them to lend expert assistance to the supervisor of
industrial insurance in such programs of vocational rehabilitation as may be
reasonable to make the worker employable consistent with his or her physical
and mental status. Where, after evaluation and recommendation by such
individuals or organizations and prior to final evaluation of the worker's
permanent disability ((and in the sole opinion of the supervisor or supervisor's
designee)), whether or not medical treatment has been concluded, vocational
rehabilitation is both necessary and likely to enable the injured worker to
become employable at gainful employment, the supervisor or supervisor's
designee ((may, in his or her sole discretion,)) shall pay or, if
the employer is a self-insurer, direct the self-insurer to pay the cost as
provided in subsection (3) of this section.
(2) When ((in
the sole discretion of the supervisor or the supervisor's designee))
vocational rehabilitation is both necessary and likely to make the worker
employable at gainful employment, then the following order of priorities shall
be used:
(a) Return to the previous job with the same employer;
(b) Modification of the previous job with the same employer including transitional return to work;
(c) A new job with the same employer in keeping with any limitations or restrictions;
(d) Modification of a new job with the same employer including transitional return to work;
(e) Modification of the previous job with a new employer;
(f) A new job with a new employer or self-employment based upon transferable skills;
(g) Modification of a new job with a new employer;
(h) A new job with a new employer or self-employment involving on-the-job training;
(i) Short-term retraining and job placement.
(3) (a)
Costs for vocational rehabilitation benefits allowed by the supervisor or
supervisor's designee under subsection (1) of this section may include the cost
of books, tuition, fees, supplies, equipment, transportation, child or
dependent care, and other necessary expenses for any such worker ((in an
amount not to exceed three thousand dollars in any fifty-two week period)),
and the cost of continuing the temporary total disability compensation under
RCW 51.32.090 while the worker is actively and successfully undergoing a formal
program of vocational rehabilitation. Such expenses may include the cost of
job placement services, training fees for on-the-job training, and
the cost of furnishing tools and other equipment necessary for self-employment
or reemployment((: PROVIDED, That such)).
(b) The
compensation or payment of retraining with job placement expenses authorized
under this section may not be authorized for a period of more than
fifty-two weeks((: PROVIDED FURTHER, That such period may, in the sole
discretion of the supervisor after his or her review, be extended for an
additional fifty-two weeks or portion thereof by written order of the
supervisor)), except that if the injured worker's vocational
rehabilitation plan includes education or training at a vocational institution,
community college, or institution of higher education, the period may be
extended for a maximum additional one hundred fifty-six weeks by written order
of the supervisor.
(c)
In cases where the worker is required to reside away from his or her customary
residence, the reasonable cost of board and lodging shall also be paid. ((Said))
These costs shall be chargeable to the employer's cost experience or
shall be paid by the self-insurer, as the case may be.
(4) The department shall establish criteria to monitor the quality and effectiveness of rehabilitation services provided by the individuals and organizations used under subsection (1) of this section. The state fund shall make referrals for vocational rehabilitation services based on these performance criteria.
(5) Injured workers who, at the time of a finding of employability under this section, have not returned to work with the employer of injury or have not otherwise returned to gainful employment shall be provided job placement services. The department shall engage in, where feasible and cost-effective, a cooperative program with the state employment security department to provide job placement services under this section.
(6) The benefits in this section shall be provided for the injured workers of self-insured employers. Self-insurers shall report both benefits provided and benefits denied under this section in the manner prescribed by the department by rule adopted under chapter 34.05 RCW. The director may, in his or her sole discretion and upon his or her own initiative or at any time that a dispute arises under this section, promptly make such inquiries as circumstances require and take such other action as he or she considers will properly determine the matter and protect the rights of the parties.
(7) The benefits provided for in this section are available to any otherwise eligible worker regardless of the date of industrial injury. However, claims shall not be reopened solely for vocational rehabilitation purposes.
(8) For the purposes of this section:
(a) "Gainful employment" means employment or self-employment in which the worker earns monthly wages, including benefits provided by the employer, equal to or greater than ninety percent of the monthly wages earned by the worker at the time of injury.
(b) "Employable" means having the skills and training commonly and currently necessary in the labor market to be gainfully employed on a reasonably continuous basis considering the worker's age, education, experience, and physical and mental capabilities resulting from the industrial injury. For a worker to be considered "employable," a determination must be made that the worker is able to compete successfully in the labor market.