 |
 |
 |
 |
|
Calls Answered Seven Days a Week |
WORKERS'
COMPENSATION LAWYERS |
|
 |
|
 |
 |
 |

Parker Scheer LLP
Boston Office
1 Constitution Plz
Boston, Massachusetts
02129
Directions
Phone: 617-886-0500
Fax: 617-886-0100
|
|
|
The Massachusetts Workers' Compensation Act
is a no fault system established to provide essentially 2
types of benefits to people injured on the job-weekly disability
checks and payment of medical expenses associated with the
care and treatment of work related injuries.
Workers' Compensation benefits vary from state
to state, but as a general rule benefits are far less than
one would receive from a lawsuit against a party whose negligence
causes injury. In negligence actions, damages include full
wage replacement, reimbursement of medical expenses, and payment
for pain and suffering. Workers' Compensation statutes provide
for payments of a percentage of lost earnings capacity, payment
of medical expenses, but no payments for pain and suffering.
While injured workers clearly are short changed
by these reduced payments, there is a trade off which explains
the disparity. Injured workers do not have to prove fault.
In other words, workers' compensation benefits are paid regardless
of who causes the accident which resulted in the injury. In
many cases, workers are injured through no one's fault. In
the traditional tort setting, a person who is injured under
those circumstances would recover nothing. If one is injured
at work through no one else's fault, however, recovery may
be available under the Workers' Compensation Act.
Perhaps the best explanation is the following
example. A worker, who was hired to move boxes on a loading
dock, injures his back while lifting a box. He cannot sue
his employer because it did not cause his injury. He cannot
sue the box. If he had to prove fault, he would not recover.
As workers' compensation does not consider fault, except in
extremely rare instances, the injured worker is entitled to
compensation benefits. The trade-off is simple-the worker
receives a portion of lost wages and full medical payments
in return, he or she does not have to prove fault. The reduction
in lost wages, however difficult it may be for one to assume,
is not as great as it would seem as these benefits are not
taxable, the injured worker does not have incur the expenses
of traveling to and from work as well as eating away form
home, and buying tools or other materials which he or she
might purchase if working.
Massachusetts Workers' Compensation does recognize
one important exception to the general no-fault rule. When
an employerıs willful and wanton misconduct causes injury,
the injured worker may pursue a double compensation claim.
If successful, all benefits are doubled, including medical
benefits. The injured worker receives a doubling of his weekly
benefits, and every time the worker receives medical care,
he receives a check in the same amount as the medical provider
as medical benefits are doubled as well. These benefits are
paid by the insurer, and not the employer, a feature which
insures that the injured worker will recover. Fortunately
these cases are rare, because they involve situations in which
the employerıs conduct must be quasi-criminal. Nonetheless
the facts of each case must be examined to determine if such
a claim is viable.
To speak with a highly experienced workers’
compensation lawyer, click
here, or telephone Parker Scheer LLP seven days
a week, toll free at 886-414-0400. There is no fee charged
to discuss your case, and all information furnished will be
kept strictly confidential.
Massachusetts
Workers' Compensation - F.A.Q's
Massachusetts
Premier Workers' Compensation Lawyers
Other Massachusetts Workers'
Compensation Resources
Massachusetts
Workers' Compensation Act
Massachusetts
Department of Industrial Accidents
Injured
Worker's Guide (Publication of Mass. Department of Labor)
The
Workers' Compensation Rating and Inspection Bureau
|
|
 |
Parker Scheer LLP lawyers handle workers' compensation claims in Massachusetts towns including Acton, Amesbury, Amherst, Andover, Arlington,
Ashburnham, Ashfield, Ashland, Athol, Attleborough, Barnstable,
Barre, Bedford, Belmont, Berkley, Berlin, Bolton, Boston, Boxborough,
Boxford, Boylston, Bradford, Braintree, Burlington, Buzzards
Bay, Cambridge, Carlisle, Charlemont, Charlestown, Charlton,
Chelmsford, Chelsea, Clinton, Concord, Danvers, Dedham, Deerfield,
Dudley, Duxbury, East Longmeadow, Essex, Fall River, Fitchburg,
Foxboro, Framingham, Franklin, Freetown, Gardner, Gill, Gloucester,
Granby, Groveland, Hadley, Hamilton, Hanover, Haverhill, Holbrook,
Holliston, Holyoke, Hopkinton, Hubbardston, Hudson, Ipswich,
Kingston, Lakeville, Lancaster, Lawrence, Leominster, Lexington
Lincoln, Lowell, Ludlow, Lynn, Lynnfield, Malden, Marblehead,
Marlborough, Marshfield, Maynard, Melrose, Methuen, Methuen,
Middleborough, Middlefield, Milford, Milton, Monterey, Nantucket,
Natick, Needham, New Bedford, Newbury, Newburyport, Newton,
North Attleborough, North Brookfield, Northampton, Northborough,
Paxton, Peabody, Pepperell, Pittsfield, Plymouth Provincetown,
Quincy, Reading, Richmond, Rockport, Rowe, Rowley, Salem, Saugus,
Sherborn, Southbridge, Spencer, Sterling, Stoughton, Stow, Sturbridge,
Sudbury, Templeton, Topsfield, Townsend, Truro, Upton, Wakefield,
Waltham, Watertown, Wayland, Wellesley, West Boylston, West
Newbury Westborough, Westford, Weston, Westport, Williamstown,
Wilmington, Winchendon, Winchester, Woburn, Worcester, Yarmouth.
Parker Scheer also provides referral services for personal injury
lawyers in states other than Massachusetts.
|
|
 |
|