Police sue city over workers’ compensation plan
Torus Tammer
HUNTINGTON BEACH -- The Huntington Beach Police Officers Assn. has
filed suit against the city, alleging it has failed to properly provide a
workers’ compensation insurance plan for the Police Department and other
city employees.
In the suit filed Aug. 24 in Orange County Superior Court, the police
union says the city, a self-insured entity, is violating the law by using
the employees’ health plan to cover certain work-related claims instead
of paying employees through the workers’ compensation plan.
The police officers association is seeking unspecified compensatory
and general damages.
Neither the Huntington Beach Police Assn. nor its representatives were
available for comment.
By using the employee health plan to pay these claims, the city forces
employees to pay 20%. Workers’ compensation requires the employer to pay
100% of each claim, according to a statement by the police association.
The health plan, the union claims, is an 80-20 split between the employer
and employee, with the city paying only 80%.
The union wants to stop the city from relying on its employee health
plan as a workers’ compensation plan.
However, Karen Foster, the city’s risk manager, said the city provides
workers’ compensation and does so in compliance with the law.
“All the allegations are patently false and without foundation
whatsoever,” she said.
Foster said the city of Huntington Beach has been self-administered
and self-insured since 1988, and that there is no room for mistakes or
carelessness.
“The vast majority of claims are routinely accepted, and only 2% to 3%
are rejected,” Foster said. “We have to make sure that we have
substantial evidence if we reject a claim because workers’ compensation
is always liberally construed in favor of the injured worker.”
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