FINAL BILL REPORT
SHB 1310



C 145 L 05
Synopsis as Enacted

Brief Description: Requiring mandatory electronic data reporting under Title 51 RCW for workers' compensation self-insurers.

Sponsors: By House Committee on Commerce & Labor (originally sponsored by Representatives Hudgins, Conway, McCoy, Condotta, Wood and Chase; by request of Department of Labor & Industries).

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 must insure with the state fund administered by the Department of Labor and Industries (Department) or, if qualified, may self-insure.

Qualifying for Self-Insurance

To be certified as a self-insurer, the employer must meet certain criteria, including:

Group self-insurance is also permitted for school districts and educational service districts, and for hospitals (one group for public hospitals, one group for other hospitals).

Benefits and Claims Administration under Self-Insurance

Self-insurers must provide their injured workers with the same benefits that are provided to injured workers in state fund claims, including medical and partial wage replacement benefits, permanent partial and total disability benefits, and death benefits. Self-insurers manage most aspects of their injured worker claims, including:

   
Self-insurers are required to report various claims actions and other information to the Department.

Confidentiality of Records

Generally, information obtained by the Department from employer records is confidential and not open to public inspection. Similarly, information in injured workers' claim files is also confidential and not open to public inspection, although various interested parties may have access to certain records for purposes related to administering the Industrial Insurance Act.

Self-Insurance Assessments

Self-insurers pay assessments to the Department to cover the Department's administrative costs of regulating self-insurance and for an insolvency trust fund that covers the costs of self-insured employers who become unable to meet their workers' compensation obligations.

Self-Insurance Penalties

Self-insurers are subject to decertification or corrective action for failing to meet financial requirements and for specified prohibited actions against employees. They are also subject to various penalties for failure to make required reports to the Department or for violations of certain statutes or Department rules.

Summary:

The Department must establish an electronic reporting system for self-insured employers to use when submitting specified industrial insurance claims data to the Department.

The claims data reported to the Department by self-insured employers using the electronic reporting system are confidential under applicable Industrial Insurance Act provisions. However, the Department may publish aggregated claims data that do not contain personal identifiers.

Beginning July 1, 2008:

Votes on Final Passage:

House   94   1
Senate   47   0

Effective: July 24, 2005
         July 1, 2005 (Sections 2-3)