Center for Justice and Democracy
90 Broad Street, Suite 401
New York, New York 10004
www.centerjd.org | centerjd@centerjd.org
212.267.2801

MYTHBUSTER

THE FAILURE OF WORKERS’ COMPENSATION

 (A BAD MODEL FOR OTHER PROGRAMS)

 

When a worker is hurt, workers’ compensation is the exclusive remedy against an employer.  Lawsuits against employers are not allowed, so the worker has no access to the court or right to jury trial.1 

 

The workers’ compensation program has been rife with problems almost since its inception. It is a bureaucratic, adversarial system that shortchanges injured workers, even while employers sometimes struggle with rising workers’ compensation insurance rates.

 

For more information, see Center for Justice & Democracy, Workers Compensation - A Cautionary Tale (September 20, 2006)  http://centerjd.org/Workers'Comp(National).pdf

 

January 2007

 

NOTES

1 A court can only review the workers’ compensation board’s decision on questions of law, not on factual grounds about determination of type of injury or duration of benefits.

2 Examples of specific ways the “no-fault” standard has been diluted in some states are: requirement that work be more than 50 percent of the cause of injury or illness; requirement that work be a “substantial contributing cause” or “major contributing cause” of injury; requirement that occupational injury or disease is “clearly work-related” and “a substantial factor in the cause of” the resulting disability; and raising the standard of causation where there are pre-existing conditions.