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Bill > HF421


IA HF421

IA HF421
A bill for an act relating to injuries subject to workers' compensation and including retroactive applicability provisions.


summary

Introduced
02/17/2025
In Committee
02/17/2025
Crossed Over
Passed
Dead

Introduced Session

91st General Assembly

Bill Summary

This bill relates to injuries under the workers’ compensation program. Under current law, a proceeding on a claim for workers’ compensation benefits must generally be commenced within two years from the date of the occurrence of the injury for which benefits are claimed in order to be valid. The bill provides that if the two-year period is exceeded because the employee was unable to obtain an accurate diagnosis of the injury within the period from a health service provider chosen by the employer, the period shall be extended until such time as the employee can obtain such a diagnosis. This exception to the two-year period only applies if a delay in such a diagnosis beyond the period was solely the result of action taken or not taken by the health service provider and if the employee demonstrates that the employee made a diligent effort to obtain such a diagnosis from the health care provider without undue delay on the employee’s part. Under current law, “date of the occurrence of the injury” is defined for purposes of the two-year period as the date that the employee knew or should have known that the injury was work-related. The bill provides that this term is defined as the date that the employee knew or should have known, based on the nature, seriousness, and probable compensable character of the injury, that the injury was serious enough to have a permanent adverse impact on the employee’s employment or employability. The bill applies retroactively to injuries occurring on or after August 1, 2022.

AI Summary

This bill modifies workers' compensation law by expanding the timeframe for filing injury claims and redefining key terms related to injury occurrence. Specifically, the bill allows an extension of the standard two-year filing period if an employee is unable to obtain an accurate diagnosis from an employer-chosen health service provider, but only if the delay was solely due to the provider's actions and the employee made diligent efforts to obtain the diagnosis. The bill also changes the definition of "date of the occurrence of the injury" from simply knowing the injury was work-related to knowing, based on the injury's nature, seriousness, and probable compensable character, that the injury was serious enough to permanently impact the employee's employment or employability. This modification provides more flexibility for workers who may not immediately understand the full extent of their work-related injury, giving them additional time to file a workers' compensation claim. The bill applies retroactively to injuries occurring on or after August 1, 2022, which means it can be applied to injuries that happened before the bill's passage but within that specified timeframe.

Committee Categories

Labor and Employment

Sponsors (1)

Last Action

Introduced, referred to Labor and Workforce. H.J. 335. (on 02/17/2025)

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