
An employee injured on the job is entitled to
file a worker compensation claim. The employee's injury may
be temporary or permanent and may be of a nature that the worker can
continue to work or require the worker to take time off work.
Employer Retaliation and Employee Claims
Under Rhode Islandlaw, if the employer
retaliates against the employee for filing a worker's compensation
claim, the employee can also file a claim for additional
compensation to punish the employer under the worker
compensation claim.
What happens under the disability
discrimination laws if the employer also fires the worker?
It depends on whether the employee is able
to do his job either with or without accommodation. If the injured
employee can do his or her job, the employer cannot fire the
employee even if the employer thinks the employee may get reinjured
on the job.
If the employee is fired when the employee
can do the job, the employee can also file a claim for
discrimination.
Damages
Damages recoverable under worker compensation
are very limited and set by a predetermined formula. Damages under
disability discrimination can include all, part, and future
loss of wages, benefits, emotional distress, attorney fees and even
punitive damages.
The Jury's Point of View on Disability
Claims, Workman's Compensation
What happens if the doctor says the
injured worker can't do the job, needs retraining, but the worker is
actually doing his or her job?
If the employer's doctor tells the employer
that the injured worker can't perform his job, but the worker is
actually doing the job, then the employer who fires the worker, does
so at his own peril.
The jury will probably use their common
sense and say that if the worker is doing his or her job, then the
doctor is wrong.
Juries don't like malingerers but do like
people who stick it out and try to work even if injured. Therefore,
the injured employee who wants to work has the jury sympathy and the
employer who fires that injured worker may face the wrath of the
jury.
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