Hawaii 2025 Regular Session

Hawaii House Bill HB423 Compare Versions

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1-HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES H.B. NO. 423 THIRTY-THIRD LEGISLATURE, 2025 H.D. 2 STATE OF HAWAII S.D. 1 A BILL FOR AN ACT RELATING TO WORKERS' COMPENSATION. BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF HAWAII:
1+HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES H.B. NO. 423 THIRTY-THIRD LEGISLATURE, 2025 H.D. 2 STATE OF HAWAII A BILL FOR AN ACT RELATING TO WORKERS' COMPENSATION. BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF HAWAII:
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33 HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES H.B. NO. 423
44 THIRTY-THIRD LEGISLATURE, 2025 H.D. 2
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5+STATE OF HAWAII
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1717 STATE OF HAWAII
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3131 A BILL FOR AN ACT
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3737 RELATING TO WORKERS' COMPENSATION.
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4343 BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF HAWAII:
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47- SECTION 1. The legislature finds that early intervention is vital to ensure the efficient and effective rehabilitation of employees who suffer a work-related injury. This often begins with the referral of an injured employee for vocational rehabilitation services. Vocational rehabilitation services are intended to help the employee return to work as quickly as possible with pay as close as possible to pre-injury wages. Urgency is needed when initiating the vocational rehabilitation process to avoid prolonged adverse effects on injured employees and minimize costs for employers and insurers. The legislature further finds that it is crucial for injured employees to have access to appropriate vocational rehabilitation services in the State. Many vocational rehabilitation providers have expressed concern regarding the future availability of services as several providers retire or leave the practice. It is important for current and future providers to be properly trained on the vocational rehabilitation process. Accordingly, the purpose of this Act is to: (1) Clarify the process for selecting a certified provider of rehabilitation services; and (2) Require a provider to automatically approve an injured employee for vocational rehabilitation services if the provider determines that the injured employee will likely require vocational rehabilitation services to return to suitable gainful employment. SECTION 2. Section 386-25, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is amended to read as follows: "§386-25 Vocational rehabilitation. (a) The purposes of vocational rehabilitation are to restore an injured worker's earnings capacity as nearly as possible to that level that the worker was earning at the time of injury and to return the injured worker to suitable gainful employment in the active labor force as quickly as possible in a cost-effective manner. Vocational rehabilitation shall not be available for public employees who have retired from a public employer, as defined in section 76-11, with whom they sustained their work injury. Employees of public employers, as defined in section 76-11, who are eligible for their respective public employer's return to work program, shall participate in and complete the return to work program, including temporary light duty placement efforts, as a prerequisite to vocational rehabilitation benefits under this section. (b) The director may refer employees who may have or have suffered permanent disability as a result of work injuries and who, in the director's opinion, can be vocationally rehabilitated to the department of human services or to private providers of rehabilitation services for vocational rehabilitation services that are feasible. A referral shall be made upon recommendation of the rehabilitation unit established under section 386-71.5 and after the employee has been deemed physically able to participate in rehabilitation by the employee's attending physician. The unit shall include appropriate professional staff and shall have the following duties and responsibilities: (1) To review and approve rehabilitation plans developed by certified providers of rehabilitation services, whether they be private or public; (2) To adopt rules consistent with this section that shall expedite and facilitate the identification, notification, and referral of industrially injured employees to rehabilitation services, and establish minimum standards for providers providing rehabilitation services under this section; (3) To certify private and public providers of rehabilitation services meeting the minimum standards established under paragraph (2); and (4) To enforce the implementation of rehabilitation plans. (c) Enrollment in a rehabilitation plan or program shall not be mandatory and the approval of a proposed rehabilitation plan or program by the injured employee shall be required. [The] If the injured employee elects to enroll in a rehabilitation plan or program, the injured employee [may] shall select a certified provider of rehabilitation services[.] no later than thirty days after the referral is made by the director. Both the certified provider and the injured employee, within a reasonable time after initiating rehabilitation services, shall give proper notice of selection to the employer. If the injured employee fails to select a certified provider within thirty days, the employer shall select the certified provider of rehabilitation services and give proper notice of selection to the employee. The injured employee shall have thirty days after the notice of selection is received to select a different certified provider of rehabilitation services. (d) A provider shall submit an initial evaluation report of the employee to the employer and the director within fortyfive days of the date of referral or selection. The evaluation shall determine whether the employee requires vocational rehabilitation services to return to suitable gainful employment, identify the necessary services, and state whether the provider can provide these services. The initial evaluation report shall contain: (1) An assessment of the employee's: (A) Current medical status; (B) Primary disability; (C) Secondary disability; (D) Disabilities that are not related to the work injury; and (E) Physical or psychological limitations, or both. If this information is not provided by the treating physician within a reasonable amount of time, information from another physician shall be accepted; (2) A job analysis addressing the demands of the employee's employment; (3) A statement from the provider identifying the employee's vocational handicaps in relation to the employee's ability to: (A) Return to usual and customary employment; and (B) Participate in and benefit from a vocational rehabilitation program; (4) A statement from the provider determining the feasibility of vocational rehabilitation services, including: (A) The provider's ability to assist the employee in the employee's efforts to return to suitable gainful employment; (B) An outline of specific vocational rehabilitation services to be provided, justification for the necessity of services, and how the effectiveness of these services is measured; and (C) How the vocational rehabilitation services directly relate to the employee obtaining suitable gainful employment; and (5) The enrollment form and the statement of worker's rights and responsibilities form obtained from the department. (e) A provider shall automatically approve vocational rehabilitation services for an injured employee; provided that the provider determines that the injured employee will likely require vocational rehabilitation services to return to suitable gainful employment. [(e)] (f) A provider shall file the employee's plan with the approval of the employee[.] no later than ninety days after the provider submits an initial evaluation report, unless the employer, provider, and injured employee agree to an extension of that deadline to a specific date by which the plan shall be completed. Upon receipt of the plan from the provider, an employee shall have ten days to review and sign the plan. The plan shall be submitted to the employer and the employee and be filed with the director within two days from the date of the employee's signature. A plan shall include a statement of the feasibility of the vocational goal, using the process of: (1) First determining if the employee's usual and customary employment represents suitable gainful employment, and, should it not; (2) Next determining if modified work or other work with the same employer represents suitable gainful employment, and, should it not; (3) Next determining if modified or other employment with a different employer represents suitable gainful employment, [and finally,] and, should it not; (4) Then providing training to obtain employment in another occupational field. When training to obtain employment in another occupational field is required, the first appropriate option among the following options shall be selected for the employee: (A) On-the-job training; (B) Short-term retraining program (less than fiftytwo weeks); or (C) Long-term retraining program (more than fifty-two weeks); and (5) Lastly, if training under paragraph (4) is not feasible, then self-employment may be considered. [(f)] (g) A plan may be approved by the director; provided that the plan includes: (1) A physician's assessment of the employee's physical limitations, psychological limitations, and ability to return to work. If this information is not provided by the treating physician within a reasonable amount of time, information from another physician shall be accepted; (2) A labor market survey indicating there are reasonable assurances that the proposed occupation for which the employee is to be placed or trained is readily available in the community when placement begins, or there are assurances of reemployment by the employer; (3) A job analysis of the proposed occupation, setting forth its duties, responsibilities, physical demands, environmental working conditions, specific qualifications needed for entry-level employment, reasonable accommodations, expected estimated earnings, and other relevant information; (4) The nature and extent of the vocational rehabilitation services to be provided, including: (A) Specific services to be provided; (B) Justification for the necessity of the services; (C) Estimated time frames for delivery of services; (D) The manner in which the effectiveness of these services is to be measured; (E) Criteria for determining successful completion of the vocational rehabilitation plan; and (F) The employee's responsibilities; (5) A report of tests and copies thereof that have been administered to the employee, including a statement regarding the need for and use of the tests to identify a vocational goal; (6) If retraining, including on-the-job training, is found to be necessary, the estimated cost of retraining, a description of specific skills to be learned or knowledge acquired with specific time periods and clearly defined measurements of success, and the nature, amount, and duration of living expenses; (7) The total cost of the plan; and (8) The employee's approval of the plan. [(g)] (h) The employer shall have ten calendar days from the postmark date on which the plan was mailed to submit in writing to the director any objections to the plan. [(h)] (i) The director may approve a plan that does not include all of the requirements outlined in subsection [(f);] (g); provided that the director finds the plan: (1) Is in the best interest of the employee; (2) Contains reasonable assurances that the employee will be placed in suitable gainful employment; and (3) Has been approved by the employee. [(i)] (j) If the plan requires the purchase of any tools, supplies, or equipment, the purchase deadline shall be included in the plan. Tools, supplies, and equipment shall be considered to be the property of the employer until the plan is determined by the director to be successfully completed, after which it shall become the property of the employee. If the plan requires the purchase, etc., the employer shall purchase the items [prior to] before the purchase deadline in the plan. [(j)] (k) An employee with an approved plan who is determined as able to return to usual and customary employment may choose to complete the plan or request a new plan of which the goal may be the employee's usual and customary employment. [(k)] (l) An injured employee's enrollment in a rehabilitation plan or program shall not affect the employee's entitlement to temporary total disability compensation if the employee earns no wages during the period of enrollment. If the employee receives wages for work performed under the plan or program, the employee shall be entitled to temporary total disability compensation in an amount equal to the difference between the employee's average weekly wages at the time of injury and the wages received under the plan or program, subject to the limitations on weekly benefit rates prescribed in section 386-31(a). The employee shall not be entitled to temporary total disability compensation for any week during this period where the wages equal or exceed the average weekly wages at the time of injury. [(l)] (m) The director shall adopt rules for additional living expenses necessitated by the rehabilitation program, together with all reasonable and necessary vocational training. [(m)] (n) If the rehabilitation unit determines that vocational rehabilitation is not possible or feasible, it shall certify the determination to the director. [(n)] (o) Except as otherwise provided, determinations of the rehabilitation unit shall be final unless a written request for reconsideration is filed with the rehabilitation unit within ten calendar days of the date of the determination. The rehabilitation unit shall issue a reconsideration determination to affirm, reverse, or modify the determination or refer the request for reconsideration for hearing. [(o)] (p) A reconsideration determination shall be final unless a written request for hearing is filed within ten calendar days from the date of the reconsideration determination. All hearings shall be held before a hearings officer designated by the director. A written decision shall be issued in the name of the director. [(p)] (q) The eligibility of any injured employee to receive other benefits under this chapter shall in no way be affected by the employee's entrance upon a course of vocational rehabilitation as [herein] provided[.] in this section. [(q)] (r) Vocational rehabilitation services for the purpose of developing a vocational rehabilitation plan may be approved by the director and the director may periodically review progress in each case." SECTION 3. Statutory material to be repealed is bracketed and stricken. New statutory material is underscored. SECTION 4. This Act shall take effect on July 1, 2050.
47+ SECTION 1. The legislature finds that early intervention is vital to ensure the efficient and effective rehabilitation of employees who suffer a work-related injury. This often begins with the referral of an injured employee for vocational rehabilitation services. Vocational rehabilitation services are intended to help the employee return to work as quickly as possible with pay as close as possible to pre-injury wages. Urgency is needed when initiating the vocational rehabilitation process to avoid prolonged adverse effects on injured employees and minimize costs for employers and insurers. The legislature further finds that it is crucial for injured employees to have access to appropriate vocational rehabilitation services in the State. Many vocational rehabilitation providers have expressed concern regarding the future availability of services as several providers retire or leave the practice. It is important for current and future providers to be properly trained on the vocational rehabilitation process. The purpose of this Act is to: (1) Clarify the process for selecting a certified provider of rehabilitation services; and (2) Require a provider to automatically approve an injured employee for vocational rehabilitation services if the provider determines that the injured employee will likely require vocational rehabilitation services to return to suitable gainful employment. SECTION 2. Section 386-25, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is amended to read as follows: "§386-25 Vocational rehabilitation. (a) The purposes of vocational rehabilitation are to restore an injured worker's earnings capacity as nearly as possible to that level that the worker was earning at the time of injury and to return the injured worker to suitable gainful employment in the active labor force as quickly as possible in a cost-effective manner. Vocational rehabilitation shall not be available for public employees who have retired from a public employer, as defined in section 76-11, with whom they sustained their work injury. Employees of public employers, as defined in section 76-11, who are eligible for their respective public employer's return to work program, shall participate in and complete the return to work program, including temporary light duty placement efforts, as a prerequisite to vocational rehabilitation benefits under this section. (b) The director may refer employees who may have or have suffered permanent disability as a result of work injuries and who, in the director's opinion, can be vocationally rehabilitated to the department of human services or to private providers of rehabilitation services for vocational rehabilitation services that are feasible. A referral shall be made upon recommendation of the rehabilitation unit established under section 386-71.5 and after the employee has been deemed physically able to participate in rehabilitation by the employee's attending physician. The unit shall include appropriate professional staff and shall have the following duties and responsibilities: (1) To review and approve rehabilitation plans developed by certified providers of rehabilitation services, whether they be private or public; (2) To adopt rules consistent with this section that shall expedite and facilitate the identification, notification, and referral of industrially injured employees to rehabilitation services, and establish minimum standards for providers providing rehabilitation services under this section; (3) To certify private and public providers of rehabilitation services meeting the minimum standards established under paragraph (2); and (4) To enforce the implementation of rehabilitation plans. (c) Enrollment in a rehabilitation plan or program shall not be mandatory and the approval of a proposed rehabilitation plan or program by the injured employee shall be required. [The] If the injured employee elects to enroll in a rehabilitation plan or program, the injured employee [may] shall select a certified provider of rehabilitation services[.] within thirty days after the referral is made by the director. Both the certified provider and the injured employee, within a reasonable time after initiating rehabilitation services, shall give proper notice of selection to the employer. If the injured employee fails to select a certified provider within thirty days, the employer shall select the certified provider of rehabilitation services and give proper notice of selection to the employee. The injured employee shall have thirty days after the notice of selection is received to select a different certified provider of rehabilitation services. (d) A provider shall submit an initial evaluation report of the employee to the employer and the director within forty-five days of the date of referral or selection. The evaluation shall determine whether the employee requires vocational rehabilitation services to return to suitable gainful employment, identify the necessary services, and state whether the provider can provide these services. The initial evaluation report shall contain: (1) An assessment of the employee's: (A) Current medical status; (B) Primary disability; (C) Secondary disability; (D) Disabilities that are not related to the work injury; and (E) Physical or psychological limitations, or both. If this information is not provided by the treating physician within a reasonable amount of time, information from another physician shall be accepted; (2) A job analysis addressing the demands of the employee's employment; (3) A statement from the provider identifying the employee's vocational handicaps in relation to the employee's ability to: (A) Return to usual and customary employment; and (B) Participate in and benefit from a vocational rehabilitation program; (4) A statement from the provider determining the feasibility of vocational rehabilitation services, including: (A) The provider's ability to assist the employee in the employee's efforts to return to suitable gainful employment; (B) An outline of specific vocational rehabilitation services to be provided, justification for the necessity of services, and how the effectiveness of these services is measured; and (C) How the vocational rehabilitation services directly relate to the employee obtaining suitable gainful employment; and (5) The enrollment form and the statement of worker's rights and responsibilities form obtained from the department. (e) A provider shall automatically approve vocational rehabilitation services for an injured employee if the provider determines that the injured employee will likely require vocational rehabilitation services to return to suitable gainful employment. [(e)] (f) A provider shall file the employee's plan with the approval of the employee. Upon receipt of the plan from the provider, an employee shall have ten days to review and sign the plan. The plan shall be submitted to the employer and the employee and be filed with the director within two days from the date of the employee's signature. A plan shall include a statement of the feasibility of the vocational goal, using the process of: (1) First determining if the employee's usual and customary employment represents suitable gainful employment, and, should it not; (2) Next determining if modified work or other work with the same employer represents suitable gainful employment, and, should it not; (3) Next determining if modified or other employment with a different employer represents suitable gainful employment, and finally, should it not; (4) Then providing training to obtain employment in another occupational field. When training to obtain employment in another occupational field is required, the first appropriate option among the following options shall be selected for the employee: (A) On-the-job training; (B) Short-term retraining program (less than fifty-two weeks); or (C) Long-term retraining program (more than fifty-two weeks); and (5) Lastly, if training under paragraph (4) is not feasible, then self-employment may be considered. [(f)] (g) A plan may be approved by the director; provided that the plan includes: (1) A physician's assessment of the employee's physical limitations, psychological limitations, and ability to return to work. If this information is not provided by the treating physician within a reasonable amount of time, information from another physician shall be accepted; (2) A labor market survey indicating there are reasonable assurances that the proposed occupation for which the employee is to be placed or trained is readily available in the community when placement begins, or there are assurances of reemployment by the employer; (3) A job analysis of the proposed occupation, setting forth its duties, responsibilities, physical demands, environmental working conditions, specific qualifications needed for entry-level employment, reasonable accommodations, expected estimated earnings, and other relevant information; (4) The nature and extent of the vocational rehabilitation services to be provided, including: (A) Specific services to be provided; (B) Justification for the necessity of the services; (C) Estimated time frames for delivery of services; (D) The manner in which the effectiveness of these services is to be measured; (E) Criteria for determining successful completion of the vocational rehabilitation plan; and (F) The employee's responsibilities; (5) A report of tests and copies thereof that have been administered to the employee, including a statement regarding the need for and use of the tests to identify a vocational goal; (6) If retraining, including on-the-job training, is found to be necessary, the estimated cost of retraining, a description of specific skills to be learned or knowledge acquired with specific time periods and clearly defined measurements of success, and the nature, amount, and duration of living expenses; (7) The total cost of the plan; and (8) The employee's approval of the plan. [(g)] (h) The employer shall have ten calendar days from the postmark date on which the plan was mailed to submit in writing to the director any objections to the plan. [(h)] (i) The director may approve a plan that does not include all of the requirements outlined in subsection [(f);] (g); provided that the director finds the plan: (1) Is in the best interest of the employee; (2) Contains reasonable assurances that the employee will be placed in suitable gainful employment; and (3) Has been approved by the employee. [(i)] (j) If the plan requires the purchase of any tools, supplies, or equipment, the purchase deadline shall be included in the plan. Tools, supplies, and equipment shall be considered to be the property of the employer until the plan is determined by the director to be successfully completed, after which it shall become the property of the employee. If the plan requires the purchase, etc., the employer shall purchase the items [prior to] before the purchase deadline in the plan. [(j)] (k) An employee with an approved plan who is determined as able to return to usual and customary employment may choose to complete the plan or request a new plan of which the goal may be the employee's usual and customary employment. [(k)] (l) An injured employee's enrollment in a rehabilitation plan or program shall not affect the employee's entitlement to temporary total disability compensation if the employee earns no wages during the period of enrollment. If the employee receives wages for work performed under the plan or program, the employee shall be entitled to temporary total disability compensation in an amount equal to the difference between the employee's average weekly wages at the time of injury and the wages received under the plan or program, subject to the limitations on weekly benefit rates prescribed in section 386-31(a). The employee shall not be entitled to temporary total disability compensation for any week during this period where the wages equal or exceed the average weekly wages at the time of injury. [(l)] (m) The director shall adopt rules for additional living expenses necessitated by the rehabilitation program, together with all reasonable and necessary vocational training. [(m)] (n) If the rehabilitation unit determines that vocational rehabilitation is not possible or feasible, it shall certify the determination to the director. [(n)] (o) Except as otherwise provided, determinations of the rehabilitation unit shall be final unless a written request for reconsideration is filed with the rehabilitation unit within ten calendar days of the date of the determination. The rehabilitation unit shall issue a reconsideration determination to affirm, reverse, or modify the determination or refer the request for reconsideration for hearing. [(o)] (p) A reconsideration determination shall be final unless a written request for hearing is filed within ten calendar days from the date of the reconsideration determination. All hearings shall be held before a hearings officer designated by the director. A written decision shall be issued in the name of the director. [(p)] (q) The eligibility of any injured employee to receive other benefits under this chapter shall in no way be affected by the employee's entrance upon a course of vocational rehabilitation as [herein] provided[.] in this section. [(q)] (r) Vocational rehabilitation services for the purpose of developing a vocational rehabilitation plan may be approved by the director and the director may periodically review progress in each case." SECTION 3. Statutory material to be repealed is bracketed and stricken. New statutory material is underscored. SECTION 4. This Act shall take effect on July 1, 3000.
4848
4949 SECTION 1. The legislature finds that early intervention is vital to ensure the efficient and effective rehabilitation of employees who suffer a work-related injury. This often begins with the referral of an injured employee for vocational rehabilitation services. Vocational rehabilitation services are intended to help the employee return to work as quickly as possible with pay as close as possible to pre-injury wages. Urgency is needed when initiating the vocational rehabilitation process to avoid prolonged adverse effects on injured employees and minimize costs for employers and insurers.
5050
5151 The legislature further finds that it is crucial for injured employees to have access to appropriate vocational rehabilitation services in the State. Many vocational rehabilitation providers have expressed concern regarding the future availability of services as several providers retire or leave the practice. It is important for current and future providers to be properly trained on the vocational rehabilitation process.
5252
53- Accordingly, the purpose of this Act is to:
53+ The purpose of this Act is to:
5454
5555 (1) Clarify the process for selecting a certified provider of rehabilitation services; and
5656
5757 (2) Require a provider to automatically approve an injured employee for vocational rehabilitation services if the provider determines that the injured employee will likely require vocational rehabilitation services to return to suitable gainful employment.
5858
5959 SECTION 2. Section 386-25, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is amended to read as follows:
6060
6161 "§386-25 Vocational rehabilitation. (a) The purposes of vocational rehabilitation are to restore an injured worker's earnings capacity as nearly as possible to that level that the worker was earning at the time of injury and to return the injured worker to suitable gainful employment in the active labor force as quickly as possible in a cost-effective manner. Vocational rehabilitation shall not be available for public employees who have retired from a public employer, as defined in section 76-11, with whom they sustained their work injury.
6262
6363 Employees of public employers, as defined in section 76-11, who are eligible for their respective public employer's return to work program, shall participate in and complete the return to work program, including temporary light duty placement efforts, as a prerequisite to vocational rehabilitation benefits under this section.
6464
6565 (b) The director may refer employees who may have or have suffered permanent disability as a result of work injuries and who, in the director's opinion, can be vocationally rehabilitated to the department of human services or to private providers of rehabilitation services for vocational rehabilitation services that are feasible. A referral shall be made upon recommendation of the rehabilitation unit established under section 386-71.5 and after the employee has been deemed physically able to participate in rehabilitation by the employee's attending physician. The unit shall include appropriate professional staff and shall have the following duties and responsibilities:
6666
6767 (1) To review and approve rehabilitation plans developed by certified providers of rehabilitation services, whether they be private or public;
6868
6969 (2) To adopt rules consistent with this section that shall expedite and facilitate the identification, notification, and referral of industrially injured employees to rehabilitation services, and establish minimum standards for providers providing rehabilitation services under this section;
7070
7171 (3) To certify private and public providers of rehabilitation services meeting the minimum standards established under paragraph (2); and
7272
7373 (4) To enforce the implementation of rehabilitation plans.
7474
75- (c) Enrollment in a rehabilitation plan or program shall not be mandatory and the approval of a proposed rehabilitation plan or program by the injured employee shall be required. [The] If the injured employee elects to enroll in a rehabilitation plan or program, the injured employee [may] shall select a certified provider of rehabilitation services[.] no later than thirty days after the referral is made by the director. Both the certified provider and the injured employee, within a reasonable time after initiating rehabilitation services, shall give proper notice of selection to the employer. If the injured employee fails to select a certified provider within thirty days, the employer shall select the certified provider of rehabilitation services and give proper notice of selection to the employee. The injured employee shall have thirty days after the notice of selection is received to select a different certified provider of rehabilitation services.
75+ (c) Enrollment in a rehabilitation plan or program shall not be mandatory and the approval of a proposed rehabilitation plan or program by the injured employee shall be required. [The] If the injured employee elects to enroll in a rehabilitation plan or program, the injured employee [may] shall select a certified provider of rehabilitation services[.] within thirty days after the referral is made by the director. Both the certified provider and the injured employee, within a reasonable time after initiating rehabilitation services, shall give proper notice of selection to the employer. If the injured employee fails to select a certified provider within thirty days, the employer shall select the certified provider of rehabilitation services and give proper notice of selection to the employee. The injured employee shall have thirty days after the notice of selection is received to select a different certified provider of rehabilitation services.
7676
77- (d) A provider shall submit an initial evaluation report of the employee to the employer and the director within fortyfive days of the date of referral or selection. The evaluation shall determine whether the employee requires vocational rehabilitation services to return to suitable gainful employment, identify the necessary services, and state whether the provider can provide these services. The initial evaluation report shall contain:
77+ (d) A provider shall submit an initial evaluation report of the employee to the employer and the director within forty-five days of the date of referral or selection. The evaluation shall determine whether the employee requires vocational rehabilitation services to return to suitable gainful employment, identify the necessary services, and state whether the provider can provide these services. The initial evaluation report shall contain:
7878
7979 (1) An assessment of the employee's:
8080
8181 (A) Current medical status;
8282
8383 (B) Primary disability;
8484
8585 (C) Secondary disability;
8686
8787 (D) Disabilities that are not related to the work injury; and
8888
8989 (E) Physical or psychological limitations, or both.
9090
9191 If this information is not provided by the treating physician within a reasonable amount of time, information from another physician shall be accepted;
9292
9393 (2) A job analysis addressing the demands of the employee's employment;
9494
9595 (3) A statement from the provider identifying the employee's vocational handicaps in relation to the employee's ability to:
9696
9797 (A) Return to usual and customary employment; and
9898
9999 (B) Participate in and benefit from a vocational rehabilitation program;
100100
101101 (4) A statement from the provider determining the feasibility of vocational rehabilitation services, including:
102102
103103 (A) The provider's ability to assist the employee in the employee's efforts to return to suitable gainful employment;
104104
105105 (B) An outline of specific vocational rehabilitation services to be provided, justification for the necessity of services, and how the effectiveness of these services is measured; and
106106
107107 (C) How the vocational rehabilitation services directly relate to the employee obtaining suitable gainful employment; and
108108
109109 (5) The enrollment form and the statement of worker's rights and responsibilities form obtained from the department.
110110
111- (e) A provider shall automatically approve vocational rehabilitation services for an injured employee; provided that the provider determines that the injured employee will likely require vocational rehabilitation services to return to suitable gainful employment.
111+ (e) A provider shall automatically approve vocational rehabilitation services for an injured employee if the provider determines that the injured employee will likely require vocational rehabilitation services to return to suitable gainful employment.
112112
113- [(e)] (f) A provider shall file the employee's plan with the approval of the employee[.] no later than ninety days after the provider submits an initial evaluation report, unless the employer, provider, and injured employee agree to an extension of that deadline to a specific date by which the plan shall be completed. Upon receipt of the plan from the provider, an employee shall have ten days to review and sign the plan. The plan shall be submitted to the employer and the employee and be filed with the director within two days from the date of the employee's signature. A plan shall include a statement of the feasibility of the vocational goal, using the process of:
113+ [(e)] (f) A provider shall file the employee's plan with the approval of the employee. Upon receipt of the plan from the provider, an employee shall have ten days to review and sign the plan. The plan shall be submitted to the employer and the employee and be filed with the director within two days from the date of the employee's signature. A plan shall include a statement of the feasibility of the vocational goal, using the process of:
114114
115115 (1) First determining if the employee's usual and customary employment represents suitable gainful employment, and, should it not;
116116
117117 (2) Next determining if modified work or other work with the same employer represents suitable gainful employment, and, should it not;
118118
119- (3) Next determining if modified or other employment with a different employer represents suitable gainful employment, [and finally,] and, should it not;
119+ (3) Next determining if modified or other employment with a different employer represents suitable gainful employment, and finally, should it not;
120120
121121 (4) Then providing training to obtain employment in another occupational field. When training to obtain employment in another occupational field is required, the first appropriate option among the following options shall be selected for the employee:
122122
123123 (A) On-the-job training;
124124
125- (B) Short-term retraining program (less than fiftytwo weeks); or
125+ (B) Short-term retraining program (less than fifty-two weeks); or
126126
127127 (C) Long-term retraining program (more than fifty-two weeks); and
128128
129129 (5) Lastly, if training under paragraph (4) is not feasible, then self-employment may be considered.
130130
131131 [(f)] (g) A plan may be approved by the director; provided that the plan includes:
132132
133133 (1) A physician's assessment of the employee's physical limitations, psychological limitations, and ability to return to work. If this information is not provided by the treating physician within a reasonable amount of time, information from another physician shall be accepted;
134134
135135 (2) A labor market survey indicating there are reasonable assurances that the proposed occupation for which the employee is to be placed or trained is readily available in the community when placement begins, or there are assurances of reemployment by the employer;
136136
137137 (3) A job analysis of the proposed occupation, setting forth its duties, responsibilities, physical demands, environmental working conditions, specific qualifications needed for entry-level employment, reasonable accommodations, expected estimated earnings, and other relevant information;
138138
139139 (4) The nature and extent of the vocational rehabilitation services to be provided, including:
140140
141141 (A) Specific services to be provided;
142142
143143 (B) Justification for the necessity of the services;
144144
145145 (C) Estimated time frames for delivery of services;
146146
147147 (D) The manner in which the effectiveness of these services is to be measured;
148148
149149 (E) Criteria for determining successful completion of the vocational rehabilitation plan; and
150150
151151 (F) The employee's responsibilities;
152152
153153 (5) A report of tests and copies thereof that have been administered to the employee, including a statement regarding the need for and use of the tests to identify a vocational goal;
154154
155155 (6) If retraining, including on-the-job training, is found to be necessary, the estimated cost of retraining, a description of specific skills to be learned or knowledge acquired with specific time periods and clearly defined measurements of success, and the nature, amount, and duration of living expenses;
156156
157157 (7) The total cost of the plan; and
158158
159159 (8) The employee's approval of the plan.
160160
161161 [(g)] (h) The employer shall have ten calendar days from the postmark date on which the plan was mailed to submit in writing to the director any objections to the plan.
162162
163163 [(h)] (i) The director may approve a plan that does not include all of the requirements outlined in subsection [(f);] (g); provided that the director finds the plan:
164164
165165 (1) Is in the best interest of the employee;
166166
167167 (2) Contains reasonable assurances that the employee will be placed in suitable gainful employment; and
168168
169169 (3) Has been approved by the employee.
170170
171171 [(i)] (j) If the plan requires the purchase of any tools, supplies, or equipment, the purchase deadline shall be included in the plan. Tools, supplies, and equipment shall be considered to be the property of the employer until the plan is determined by the director to be successfully completed, after which it shall become the property of the employee. If the plan requires the purchase, etc., the employer shall purchase the items [prior to] before the purchase deadline in the plan.
172172
173173 [(j)] (k) An employee with an approved plan who is determined as able to return to usual and customary employment may choose to complete the plan or request a new plan of which the goal may be the employee's usual and customary employment.
174174
175175 [(k)] (l) An injured employee's enrollment in a rehabilitation plan or program shall not affect the employee's entitlement to temporary total disability compensation if the employee earns no wages during the period of enrollment. If the employee receives wages for work performed under the plan or program, the employee shall be entitled to temporary total disability compensation in an amount equal to the difference between the employee's average weekly wages at the time of injury and the wages received under the plan or program, subject to the limitations on weekly benefit rates prescribed in section 386-31(a). The employee shall not be entitled to temporary total disability compensation for any week during this period where the wages equal or exceed the average weekly wages at the time of injury.
176176
177177 [(l)] (m) The director shall adopt rules for additional living expenses necessitated by the rehabilitation program, together with all reasonable and necessary vocational training.
178178
179179 [(m)] (n) If the rehabilitation unit determines that vocational rehabilitation is not possible or feasible, it shall certify the determination to the director.
180180
181181 [(n)] (o) Except as otherwise provided, determinations of the rehabilitation unit shall be final unless a written request for reconsideration is filed with the rehabilitation unit within ten calendar days of the date of the determination.
182182
183183 The rehabilitation unit shall issue a reconsideration determination to affirm, reverse, or modify the determination or refer the request for reconsideration for hearing.
184184
185185 [(o)] (p) A reconsideration determination shall be final unless a written request for hearing is filed within ten calendar days from the date of the reconsideration determination. All hearings shall be held before a hearings officer designated by the director. A written decision shall be issued in the name of the director.
186186
187187 [(p)] (q) The eligibility of any injured employee to receive other benefits under this chapter shall in no way be affected by the employee's entrance upon a course of vocational rehabilitation as [herein] provided[.] in this section.
188188
189189 [(q)] (r) Vocational rehabilitation services for the purpose of developing a vocational rehabilitation plan may be approved by the director and the director may periodically review progress in each case."
190190
191191 SECTION 3. Statutory material to be repealed is bracketed and stricken. New statutory material is underscored.
192192
193- SECTION 4. This Act shall take effect on July 1, 2050.
193+ SECTION 4. This Act shall take effect on July 1, 3000.
194194
195- Report Title: Workers' Compensation; Vocational Rehabilitation Services; Certified Providers; Automatic Approval Description: Clarifies the process for selecting a certified provider of rehabilitation services. Requires providers to automatically approve vocational rehabilitation services for an injured employee if those services will likely be required for suitable gainful employment. Requires providers to file an employee's vocational plan no later than ninety days after submitting an initial evaluation report, with certain exceptions. Effective 7/1/2050. (SD1) The summary description of legislation appearing on this page is for informational purposes only and is not legislation or evidence of legislative intent.
195+ Report Title: Workers' Compensation; Vocational Rehabilitation Services; Certified Providers Description: Clarifies the process for selecting a certified provider of rehabilitation services. Requires providers to automatically approve vocational rehabilitation services for an injured employee if those services will likely be required for suitable gainful employment. Effective 7/1/3000. (HD2) The summary description of legislation appearing on this page is for informational purposes only and is not legislation or evidence of legislative intent.
196196
197197
198198
199199
200200
201201 Report Title:
202202
203-Workers' Compensation; Vocational Rehabilitation Services; Certified Providers; Automatic Approval
203+Workers' Compensation; Vocational Rehabilitation Services; Certified Providers
204204
205205
206206
207207 Description:
208208
209-Clarifies the process for selecting a certified provider of rehabilitation services. Requires providers to automatically approve vocational rehabilitation services for an injured employee if those services will likely be required for suitable gainful employment. Requires providers to file an employee's vocational plan no later than ninety days after submitting an initial evaluation report, with certain exceptions. Effective 7/1/2050. (SD1)
209+Clarifies the process for selecting a certified provider of rehabilitation services. Requires providers to automatically approve vocational rehabilitation services for an injured employee if those services will likely be required for suitable gainful employment. Effective 7/1/3000. (HD2)
210210
211211
212212
213213
214214
215215
216216
217217 The summary description of legislation appearing on this page is for informational purposes only and is not legislation or evidence of legislative intent.