It’s estimated that in 2014, there were nearly 120,000 robberies involving firearms in the U.S. Many of those are perpetrated on businesses. That accounts for a percentage of the violence people experience in the workplace. The Bureau of Justice Statistics reports...
Georgia Workers’ Compensation
11th Circuit: Work Safety Violations Not Pinned on ‘Rogue Supervisor’
When it comes to accountability from the Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) for work safety hazards, employers aren’t going to be able to rely heavily on the narrow exception courts have carved for “rogue supervisors.” That was the ruling recently...
Report: Injured Workers at High Risk of Job Loss
A new study shows that work-related injuries increase the risk of job loss. Researchers at the Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health in Boston sifted through six months of data among nursing home industry workers, comparing those who had reported job injuries and...
Postal Worker Killed on Job by Falling Tree
DeKalb County officials are investigating the death of a 36-year-old U.S. Postal worker who was killed when a large tree fell onto his truck as he was delivering mail. Authorities say the worker had been driving past a grove of tall pine trees when one suddenly...
Baker v. Bridgestone – When You Don’t File for Workers’ Comp Benefits Immediately
There are some work injuries where one knows immediately the effects are serious and lasting. However, there are other situations in which the injury may well be serious, but the worker may not instantly know it’s disabling. That’s why it’s important to report each...
Panoke v. Reef Dev. of Hawaii, Inc. – Presumptions of Injuries as Work-Related
At the core of the workers’ compensation system in America is the compromise between the employer and the injured employee: That the employer won’t face civil litigation, for which it would potentially be liable for big payouts for pain and suffering and other...
King v. CompPartners – Workers Must be Weaned Gradually From Powerful Drugs
A 2015 report by the National Safety Council, “Prescription Pain Medications: A Fatal Cure for Injured Workers,” details the fact that 25 percent of workers’ compensation prescription drug claim costs were for opioid painkillers. Although the percentage of workers...
Investigation: Work Injury “Middlemen” Seeing Huge Profits While Workers Languish
Recently in Las Vegas, reporters described a scene of great excess: Thinly-clothed acrobats performing from ceiling swings, dancers in lingerie on poles shaking to the techno music, actors dressed as aliens looking for a photo op, a live alligator, rock stars...
Sevy v. SVL Analytical – Proof Burden in Total Permanent Disability Cases
In Georgia workers’ compensation cases, proving one is totally and permanently disabled is not easy. Unless claimant has suffered a severe traumatic brain injury or a condition like quadriplegia or blindness, it will require substantial evidence from medical experts...
Easter-Rozzelle v. City of Charlotte – Subrogation of Personal Injury Awards in Workers’ Compensation Cases
Workers’ compensation is the exclusive remedy for employees injured on-the-job. That rule is applicable only insofar as employers and workers’ compensation insurance companies are concerned. When a work injury is due in full or in part to the negligent actions of a...

