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Contents contributed and discussions participated by Haley C

Haley C

Workers compensation | LII / Legal Information Institute - 0 views

  • Workers' Compensation laws are designed to ensure that employees who are injured or disabled on the job are provided with fixed monetary awards, eliminating the need for litigation. These laws also provide benefits for dependents of those workers who are killed because of work-related accidents or illnesses. Some laws also protect employers and fellow workers by limiting the amount an injured employee can recover from an employer and by eliminating the liability of co-workers in most accidents.
Haley C

Workers' compensation - what is it? - 0 views

  • Each state has its own workers' compensation laws to handle claims from employees who are injured on the job. These laws are strict liability - fault and negligence by the employer are not considered in order to collect benefits. Punitive damages are not available to the employee. The legal defenses available in a civil action such as comparative negligence and assumption of the risk are not available to the employer in workers' compensation. However, the injury or illness has to be incurred in the course of employment in order for the workers' compensation system to provide benefits to the injured worker. Workers' compensation is generally the excluysive remedy for an employee's injuries or illnesses arising out of the course of employment. It is  typically required by the state for every employee - although state law may provide for specific exemptions for officers/owners, small companies (those with three/four/five or fewer employees), domestic workers, farm hands, and independent contractors. Workers' compensation hearings, if necessary, are normally administrative proceedings that take place in a separate court system. However, there are some limits to workers' compensation being an "exclusive remedy."
Jim Brinling

CHAPTER 2: Answering the three Questions of Economics - 17 views

NPR economics EG10 traditional
started by Jim Brinling on 02 Feb 10 no follow-up yet
  • Haley C
     
    If they built the dam, it would cause people who have lived there for generations and generations to move. The people who live there right now have barely anything to eat, they're short of fish, and they don't earn very much money. But on the other hand, if they built the dam, it will help a lot of other people. It will serve as a hydroelectric power plant. So its a toss up. Build the dam, or don't build the dam.
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