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If you get a work-related injury or industrial disease, you should file a claim as soon as possible for workers' compensation benefits. Depending on your situation, you may be eligible for lost wages, medical expenses and/or vocational rehabilitation. To find out more about your potential benefits, contact an experienced workers' compensation lawyer now.

Back injuries and repetitive motion injuries such as carpel tunnel syndrome are among the most common work-related injuries for which workers' compensation benefits are paid. Contact an attorney to determine whether you have a valid claim.

Did you know that by about 1920 almost all US states had some type of workers' compensation system? To learn more about your state's workers' compensation laws, contact an experienced attorney.

Workers' compensation was invented in Germany in the 1800's, spread to other European countries and took root in the US in the early 1900's. If you have an employment-related injury or occupational disease, preserve your legal rights by consulting with a skilled workers' compensation attorney.

The personal injury law offices of Bucci, Bailey & Javins, L.C. handles mining accidents, industrial accidents, dog bites, slip and fall accidents, and other common personal injury accidents that may result in a fatality in some cases. In an effort to educate our potential clients about personal injury law, we provide answers to frequently asked questions.

Workers' Compensation Resource Links

AFL-CIO
Federation of 54 labor unions provides information on workers' compensation and links to information on occupational health and workers' rights.

Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS)
Provides statistics and articles on injuries and illnesses in the workplace from the federal government's labor statistics agency.

Job Accommodation Network (JAN)
A free consulting service for workers with disabilities and their employers from the US Department of Labor that provides information about job accommodations, the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) and the employability of people with disabilities.

Legal Information Institute
Overview of workers' compensation law from Cornell Law School.

National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
Provides comprehensive information on workplace injuries from a division of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC).

Charleston, West Virginia, Mining Accident Lawyers

At the law offices of Bucci, Bailey & Javins, L.C., our attorneys work hard to provide clients with all the information needed to make an informed decision. In an effort to further that goal, we are providing you with the information below to better educate you about personal injury law. If you have any questions related to your car accident, mining accident or logging truck accident, we invite you to contact one of our West Virginia personal injury lawyers.

Workers' Compensation - An Overview

Whether a catastrophic injury results from a freak pedestrian-car accident or a major mining disaster that injures many people, the results for the victim may be the same: A head injury, a spinal cord injury, or a fractured leg or arm will translate to costly medical bills, therapy, adaptive equipment and perhaps vocational retraining.

Workers' compensation has become part of the fabric of the American workplace. Benefits are routinely paid for work-related injury, disease and death. This brings stability to the individual employee and his or her family even in the face of severe workplace injury or debilitating industrial disease. The experienced and skillful workers' compensation lawyers at Bucci, Bailey & Javins, L.C. in Charleston, West Virginia can answer your workers' compensation questions and assist you with your claim.

History and Origins

The need for and idea of workers' compensation has origins in Germany in the early 1800s. The industrial revolution brought dangerous new workplaces into existence such as railroads, factories and mines with accompanying increases in injuries, deaths and new work-related diseases. Social and political sympathy for the common worker grew and led to the enactment of early workers' compensation legislation.

The concept soon spread to other European nations, ultimately resulting in an 1897 British law that was the impetus for the first US workers' compensation laws. Almost all US states had some type of workers' compensation system by about 1920. The federal government followed suit for most federal employees and for certain industries.

Prior to the establishment of workers' compensation, English and American laws were inadequate to protect workers harmed in increasingly hazardous industrial jobs. Ordinary employees rarely had the means to bring negligence lawsuits against their employers; when they did, employers had a "trinity" of defenses, sometimes called the unholy trinity, to defeat the claims. An employer usually defended such a suit by asserting that a co-employee was instead responsible, that the injured worker had contributed negligently to the accident or that the worker had assumed the risk of injury by accepting the job.

Theory and Policy

Workers' compensation provides an exclusive remedy to the worker for work-related injury and sickness without regard to fault, when the harm arose out of and in the course of employment. The worker gives up the right to sue his or her employer for the harm in return for certain monetary recovery, usually for lost wages and medical expenses, but sometimes including other benefits like vocational rehabilitation or retraining. The employer no longer has to worry about defending lawsuits or about disproportionate awards.

States require that employers carry workers' compensation insurance, set aside sufficient resources to cover claims (self-insure) or contribute to state-run workers' compensation award funds. The allowable methods for employer payment vary by state.

The social and economic policy is that these employer "costs" are ultimately paid by society as a whole in the form of higher prices for goods and services. Some theorize that the cost of the program is actually paid for by lowering wages, but that the tradeoff to workers is well worth it. Workers' compensation is also seen as an incentive to employers to develop safer workplaces.

Exceptions

Most states have developed exceptions to the exclusiveness of the workers' compensation remedy in extreme situations. When employers act in bad faith or intentionally or criminally harm employees, many states allow workers to bring lawsuits outside the workers' compensation system. A lawsuit against a third party may also be possible, such as against a manufacturer of faulty or dangerous equipment that caused the injury. In such circumstances, the employer may be able to get reimbursement for workers' compensation benefits already paid.

Conclusion

If you have questions about a workers' compensation claim, the workers' compensation attorneys at Bucci, Bailey & Javins, L.C. in Charleston, West Virginia, can answer them and advise you of your legal rights.

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