At the beginning of the 20th century, the “grand bargain” was enacted. That grand bargain provided:
Over the years, however, with pressure from industry and insurance carrier lobbyists, that concept of “industry should pay for its own casualties” has been whittled away. More and more costs are now transferred to the general public, to the federal Social Security system or to the injured workers themselves and to subsequent injuries funds.
The formulation of Subsequent Injuries Benefits Trust Fund protocols has been a major benefit and cost saver to industry over decades. This is because, with the SIBTF liability, industry does not pay for what it causes but pays only for what it does not cause. Some examples:
These two examples show that for decades, and particularly since the apportionment changes in 2005 — changes that greatly benefitted employers — insurance carriers have used the SIBTF as an escape valve.
No wonder SIBTF costs are skyrocketing. The SIBTF is paying for what it has not caused; it pays for what the subsequent industrial injury has caused. It is paying for the subsequent industrial injury itself, and the industrial carrier is paying as if no preexisting disability existed at all. This is a fiction — a fiction that greatly benefits carriers.
This very issue was previously addressed by our Supreme Court 72 years ago. In a unanimous decision in SIBTF v. State of California (Patterson) — with the example of a one-eyed man becoming industrially blind — the court found it reasonable to impose the cost of total blindness on the SIBTF rather than the employer causing that total blindness. This, to encourage employers to “employ the handicapped.”
Now, 72 years later, as a Rand study itself points out, that reasoning is outmoded based on the many other benefits systems encouraging (and requiring) employers to hire the handicapped. But what about those who cannot be hired, those who are totally disabled? It is those workers who are most in need of SIBTF benefits. It is those workers whose benefit this administration-sponsored study seeks to take away, those totally disabled from a combination of industrial and preexisting disabilities — those most in need of those SIBTF benefits.
The SIBTF gift
If the underlying increase in SIBTF costs is being analyzed, the root causes of that underlying cost increase should be looked at. This study is a superficial analysis strictly looking at SIBTF costs, but it does not look at what is the root cause of the increased SIBTF liability based on an underlying gift to employers: The gift of SIBTF.
The gift is that SIBTF actually pays for the cost of the subsequent industrial injury, as the fund now pays the increase from what was the preexisting disability to what is the overall disability. In actuality, the root cause of the increase in overall disability is, in fact, the subsequent industrial injury.
To control the SIBTF costs, a paradigm shift should be made in the compensation system as follows:
So, if the SIBTF is being evaluated for policy changes, the present underlying policy of shifting the costs from what industry causes to SIBTF should also be analyzed. And the analysis should be based on the underlying premise from more than 100 years ago that industry should pay for the costs of its casualties.
Currently, SIBTF is paying for the casualties of industry. That analysis was not even mentioned in the SIBTF study.
A study based on inaccurate and incomplete analysis is like a house built on sand, not a good foundation.
Suggested statutory amendments
To ensure the continued solvency of the SIBTF, the following legislative amendments to Labor Code 4663 should be implemented forthwith:
Arthur L. Johnson is a founding attorney for Butts & Johnson, a workers' compensation and Social Security disability law firm in San Jose. This opinion appears here with permission.
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