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DESCRIPTION:Free Buses From Northern California To  Sacramento April 28, 2005 Workers 
 Memorial Day    California Coalition For Workers Memorial Day CCWMD  P.O. 
 Box 720027 San Francisco, CA 94172  (415)867-0628     Pick Up Information 
 For  April 28, 2005 Workers Memorial Day Protest  Pick-up times  Thursday 
 April 28, 2005  San Francisco/Oakland  Four  Locations  8:30 AM Bill Graham 
 Auditorium Grove and Polk St.  Be there by 8:15 Bus Leaves Promptly  8:30 
 AM ILWU Local 10   400 North Point/Mason St.  Be there by 8:15 AM  Oakland  
 8:30 AM 560 20th St. Oakland  Be there by 8:15 AM  Vallejo  9:30 AM   
 Holiday Inn at Marine World Parkway  Off Highway 80  Trip To Sacramento 
 Capitol Building West Steps of Capitol  Return Time to Bay Area 3:30 PM  
 CALL (415)867-0628 FOR RESERVATIONS  http://www.workersmemorialday.com   
 For Workers' Memorial Day 2005   Stop Terrorizing Injured Workers!   Single 
 Payer For All!   Sacramento Capital on West Steps from 11:00 am  to 1:00 PM 
 April 28, 2005   - Buses Leaving from East Bay at SEIU 250-560 20th St. 
 Oakland April 28, 2005 8:30 AM   - Buses Leaving From San Francisco at 8:30 
 AM on April 28, 2005 at Bill Grahm Auditorium on Grove St/Polk   - Buses 
 Leaving From South Bay Labor Temple 8:00 AM on April 28, 2005  - Please 
 call (415)867-0628 for reservations. We are requesting a $5.00 reservation 
 fee.   [To download a PDF version of the Workers' Memorial Day leaflet for 
 distribution to friends and co-workers, please go to our website at 
 http://www.workersmemorialday.com .]     Dear Brothers and Sisters,   
 Injured and disabled workers are under direct attack. As a result of the 
 deregulation of the California Workers' Comp System, insurance companies 
 can refuse to care for injured and disabled workers and are not penalized. 
 The governor and the Democrats have both passed a bill that destroys our 
 health & safety.   Already injured workers have been unable to get proper 
 medical care,  payments for their housing and their families. Some workers 
 have committed suicide. We cannot afford to let this continue. While 
 profits are going up for the insurance billionaires like Buffet, retraining 
 benefits have been permanently cut and now temporary workers' comp is 
 limited to two years. The media has ignored and censored the plight of the 
 injured workers. Instead of exposing the daily nightmares we face, they are 
 only concerned about the insurance companies and the employers. Workers' 
 Comp was established to protect our rights and not the profit of the 
 insurance companies yet today, they are making a giant profit off of our 
 misery.   Health and safety on the job is also being threatened. When 
 workers realize that they will not be receiving care when they are injured 
 on the job this will create even more of a stressful and dangerous 
 condition on the job. Every day in California, two workers die on the job 
 and this is bound to grow unless injured and disabled workers along with 
 their families and the entire labor movement stand together now to defend 
 our basic rights. We need tens of thousands of disabled and injured worker 
 in Sacramento.   At the same time we believe that all workers should be 
 entitled to healthcare. We need to push now for single payer in California 
 and get the insurance companies out of the healthcare industry!   Please 
 join our organizing committee and we will provide a speaker and videos for 
 organizing. Also if you can, get your organization to endorse this.   Buses 
 will leave from SF, the E. Bay and the South Bay   Please send 
 contributions to   California Coalition For Workers Memorial Day   P.O. Box 
 720027   San Francisco, CA 94172   For more information, (415) 867-0628, 
 http://www.workersmemorialday.com P.O. Box 720027, SF 94172   California 
 Injured Workers Coalition (415) 738-2184 
 http://www.injuredworkerscoalition.com   San Francisco - San Francisco 
 Labor Council , (415) 440-4809 info@sflaborcouncil.org   South Bay Area - 
 The Chelsie Group, (408) 347-0331, billmeyer@chelsiegroup.org   North Bay 
 Area  - (707) 795-0783, fightN4yourlife@aol.com   Sacramento Area  - Dina 
 Padilla (916) 725-2673 blndi26@cs.com   Los Angeles Area - Christine Pietz 
 (818) 846-1632 Cpietz@sbcglobal.net   Monterey/Santa Cruz Area - Barri 
 Boone (831) 465-9786, unmaid@pacific.net   This rally is endorsed by: SF 
 Labor Council, N. Bay Labor Council, S. Bay Labor Council, ILWU 
 International,  IBT Jt Council 7, CA Injured Workers Coalition, Inc., 
 UTLA-AFT1021, SEIU 790, UAPD/AFSCME, NALC 214, CWA 9423, CWA Dist. Council 
 9, CWA 9410, UA 393, SEIU 616,  SEIU 535 Disability Caucus , ATU1555, UAW 
 2244, Sign & Display Union 510, ILWU10, SEIU 415, BAC 3, AMFA 9, KPFA, KPFA 
 Labor Collective, The Chelsie Group, Labor Action Coalition (LAC), Million 
 Worker Movement, Labor Video Project, FACE Intel, Dr. June Fisher, Dr. 
 Larry Rose, Victims of UPS/Red Thursday Committee, Pushing Limits-KPFA, 
 Jerome Otis; Pres. N.Cal Chapt. TNBC, Voters Injured at Work., Butte County 
 Health Care Coalition, Healthcare For All-California, WILPF-SC   ********** 
   Resolution From San Francisco Labor Council Supporting April 28, 2005   
 http://sflaborcouncil.org/control/assets/12-13-04SptofWrkrsMemorialDay.pdf  
  **********   
 http://www.latimes.com/business/la-fi-comp27mar27,1,2062627.story      From 
 Injury to Insult   Legal uncertainties and case backlogs have left 
 thousands in the lurch--and awaiting benefits--11 months after the state 
 revamped workers' comp rules   By Marc Lifsher   Times Staff Writer   March 
 27, 2005   Every Wednesday morning at 8:30 sharp, lawyers begin queuing 
 outside the cramped Santa Monica office of Pamela Foust, a veteran judge 
 with the California Division of Workers' Compensation.   The lawyers, 
 representing injured workers and the companies that employ them, idle 
 beneath moldy ceiling tiles in the crowded outer room. To enter Foust's 
 chamber, they dodge waist-high stacks of case files piled along the walls 
 of the court complex's warren of rooms.   Helping themselves to penny candy 
 in a dish that Foust keeps on a corner of her desk, the lawyers huddle with 
 the judge for so-called mandatory settlement conferences, talks aimed at 
 resolving workers' injury cases without the time and expense of a court 
 trial.   But these days, few of the attorneys are settling. Most, in fact, 
 want nothing more than time - asking for delays in cases that are already 3 
 to 4 years old.   "Not one person was ready for trial, and not one has 
 settled," an exasperated Foust complained during a midmorning lull in late 
 February. "We churn and churn, and now we're setting trials for June."   
 Eleven months after the Legislature approved the biggest overhaul in the 
 92-year history of the state system for providing medical care and 
 financial compensation to victims of on-the-job injuries, crucial details 
 remain to be worked out. Many aspects of the sometimes ambiguous law won't 
 be clear until they are decided in court months or years from now. 
 Lawmakers have introduced scores of bills that could alter the law even 
 before it is fully implemented.   Because of the uncertainty, insurers have 
 been slow to slash rates on workers' comp policies, although a premium 
 reduction recommended by a key ratings bureau last week gave hope that 
 significant savings may not be far off - achieving a prime goal of Gov. 
 Arnold Schwarzenegger when he shepherded the overhaul through the 
 Legislature in April.   Meanwhile, an estimated 100,000 workers' comp cases 
 have been stalled as doctors rewrite medical evaluations to meet the new, 
 more stringent standards mandated by the law. And sparring over what now 
 constitutes appropriate medical treatment and who should pay for it has 
 forced injured workers to wait a year or more for their cases to be 
 reviewed by independent medical specialists.   Nowhere is the confusion 
 more evident than in the 24 workers' comp courts, the destination for the 
 one-third of workplace injury cases that are not resolved routinely among 
 employers, workers and insurers.   It's a high-volume, specialized legal 
 system that can begin to bog down unless most of its cases are settled. But 
 uncertainty about how the new world of workers' comp will eventually evolve 
 is making lawyers on both sides of injury cases resist settling - or even 
 deciding to go to trial.   "The lack of legal clarity has the potential of 
 grinding the entire system to a halt," said David Leonard, an attorney who 
 helps doctors deal with the system.   There are signs the system is bogging 
 down, especially in Los Angeles County and other busy venues.   Throughout 
 the state, trial postponements rose 21% last year as lawyers balked at 
 settling, and orders to take cases off the calendar - in effect setting 
 them back to square one - rose by a similar percentage.   Meanwhile, with 
 more workers' comp claims going to trial, it now takes 93 days to get a 
 case into court in Santa Monica, 55% longer than a year ago and almost 
 twice as long as in 2003.   "The cases are going to trial and not being 
 settled," said Douglas Felchlin, a defense attorney who represents UCLA and 
 several school districts in the Los Angeles area. The workers "are getting 
 screwed and not getting benefits."   Mario Reynoso, one of the workers 
 waiting for a hearing in Santa Monica last month, would agree. The truck 
 driver, who hurt his left knee while lifting boxes of produce in 2001, is 
 going to court rather than accept the $26,000 settlement offer from his 
 employer's workers' comp insurer.   "My doctor, who did two surgeries on 
 me, told me I better close the case because the laws are going to change," 
 he said, shakily supporting his heavy frame on two wobbling canes in the 
 crowded waiting room.   "They're just throwing me a bone. I'm going to 
 trial," he said. "I'm 61 years old and got five more years to retirement. 
 Who's going to hire me without a driver's license and with crippled legs?"  
  Tension lined the faces of many of the workers and attorneys milling about 
 the shabby, low-rise office building on Ocean Park Boulevard that houses 
 the workers' comp court.   Some waited stoically for trials or conferences 
 in regimented rows of straight-backed chairs. Lawyers wheeled carts full of 
 case files around a first-floor courtyard and a second-floor balcony, 
 dickering with one another in a scene resembling a legal swap meet.   In 
 her first-floor office, Foust paused between two of the 34 conferences she 
 had scheduled for the day and lamented that she had never seen such anxiety 
 among her usually close-knit group of colleagues.   "Attorneys are 
 terrified about their livelihoods," she said, noting that stress levels 
 around her court are mounting along with the uncertainty over the new law.  
  As if on cue, a lawyer rushed into her office a few minutes later, dressed 
 in a bowling shirt instead of the usual business suit.   "Excuse my 
 appearance, your honor," he pleaded to the astonished judge. "I had to wear 
 this because I've got hives and hypertension."   Drama aside, the 
 Schwarzenegger administration contends that a series of regulations now 
 being implemented will alleviate the confusion in the workers' comp system. 
   What's more, the state is reversing the effect of years of budget cuts in 
 the workers' comp courts by hiring more judges and clerical staff to make 
 backlogs "relatively short-lived phenomena," said Kenneth Peterson, the 
 acting chief judge at the Division of Workers' Compensation.   
 Schwarzenegger spokesman Vince Sollitto said the governor was committed 
 equally to cutting employers' insurance premiums and delivering speedy 
 medical care to "truly injured" workers.   Attorneys and labor unions, he 
 said, are trying to stymie the governor's efforts to fix the system by 
 "causing uncertainty and seeking to undo the law."   Finger-pointing by 
 both sides is probably inevitable, given the sweeping nature of last year's 
 overhaul - "probably the most significant in the workers' comp system since 
 1917 in California," said Merle Rabine, chairman of the Workers' 
 Compensation Appeals Board.   "There are a whole lot of things that are 
 new," he noted, "and it's hard to say how they are going to work out."   
 Until then, Judge Foust will continue to juggle her calendar - and keep her 
 candy dish filled.   "I'm spending twice as much on candy as I was before," 
 she joked.   *******************     
 http://www.sfbg.com/39/27/cover_workers_comp.html   The working wounded   
 How Schwarzenegger is saving Wall Street by decimating workers' comp - a 
 report from the front lines.   By Rachel Brahinsky   Crushed twice: Barbara 
 Harlan has been out of work for most of the past five years - and has been 
 fighting for her right to health care and pay for lost work hours the whole 
 time. Photo by Lori Spears.   IT WAS AN extremely fashionable thing in 
 California politics last year to rant and rave about the workers' 
 compensation insurance system. Newly elected governor Arnold Schwarzenegger 
 made it a top discussion item, and the newspapers followed suit. To many 
 people, it might have seemed like a bizarre obsession. As a political 
 issue, the arcane system of laws governing how to treat work-injured people 
 is mind-numbing.   It's true there were real problems with the system. 
 Skyrocketing insurance rates were hurting businesses, and the insurance 
 companies were still reeling from 9/11, a slow economy, and the unintended 
 consequences of California's 1995 deregulation of the industry. And there 
 was naturally some waste and fraud associated with the massive state 
 bureaucracy.   Schwarzenegger needed a simpler story. The actor turned pol 
 insisted the problem was litigation-happy attorneys and the injured workers 
 themselves -- a group he painted as cheats and scammers. Only by strictly 
 limiting cash payouts to workers and keeping the attorneys at bay could he 
 right this upside-down program -- a system so shaky that more than 20 
 insurance carriers had gone belly-up in recent years.   He bullied 
 legislators into passing a reform package just five months after he took 
 office, and he has since declared victory: "Workers' comp reform has been a 
 tremendous success," spokesperson Vince Sollitto told me. Since then, most 
 lawmakers have moved on, occupied with other political fights.   But the 
 real story behind workers' comp is still unfolding. Just days after the new 
 law kicked in last April, life began to change dramatically for injured 
 Californians. Once-routine medical visits were heavily scrutinized as 
 potential crimes. Insurance companies started saying no to just about 
 everything ˆ according to doctors, workers, and attorneys I interviewed ˆ 
 almost as if they were testing the limits of the new law.   My interest was 
 more than journalistic. I went through the system, after having developed a 
 repetitive strain injury (RSI) in both arms from spending so much time in 
 front of my computer. I hurt myself in 2001, when covering a particularly 
 tough election season left me with numbness and pain. It was months before 
 I could work full-time again, and I learned I needed acupuncture, good 
 ergonomic equipment, and a daily dose of stretching to keep pace.   Among 
 the million people who file workers' comp claims each year in California, I 
 was a pretty low-cost case. I didn't need surgery or any particularly 
 expensive medical gear. But under the new regime, even I was denied care 
 recommended by my doctor. Those who fall victim to similar injuries in the 
 future are likely to have it rougher, due to a remarkable, little-reported 
 new rule: after the first few months, pain is no longer considered a sign 
 of an injury. Doctors are now prevented from treating certain workers for 
 their pain.   I was amazed to learn this, so I set out to understand what 
 was happening to the system that was supposed to protect workers. Yes, 
 there were litigation-happy attorneys, just like Arnold said, and there 
 were doctors who seemed to overprescribe treatments, perhaps just to make a 
 buck. I even found a small handful of workers trying to defraud the system 
 by inflating their claims. But what I learned was that these were just 
 symptoms of a larger, far more troubling problem -- one that threatens the 
 future of all working Californians.   Fighting for care   It was late 
 afternoon, and the plaza near Oakland City Hall bustled with people walking 
 briskly under a gray midwinter sky. Mike Gerson emerged from a pair of 
 massive glass doors and sighed. A grimace appeared on the attorney's 
 weathered face. "You see?" he asked. He'd been showing me the ropes at the 
 East Bay's main workers' compensation court, a place where 
 miserable-looking workers sit in a waiting room for hours while attorneys 
 cut deals in fast-paced, acronym-laden sessions down the hall.   It's never 
 been a real friendly place to visit: this is where injured people wind up 
 when they're fighting for medical care or when there's a disagreement over 
 how to settle their cases. Workers' compensation laws can confuse 
 professionals, let alone these neophytes.   That's why attorneys have long 
 had a toehold in the workers' comp arena: confusing language leads to 
 differing interpretations that often end up in court, along with all the 
 cases in which insurance companies, employers, and wounded workers vie to 
 protect their interests. These days even the attorneys are grim, as nearly 
 a year under new regulations has spawned a whole new level of mistrust and 
 fear.   Gerson's take: it's chaos, and the insurance companies are taking 
 advantage of it.   "I've got clients from all over the country, cases that 
 are 25 years old, who call me and say, 'I can't get my medical care,' " 
 Gerson told me. "They're just saying no -- sometimes for no reason. It's 
 because they can."   Gerson runs a major Democratic law firm (his partner 
 is married to Sen. Barbara Boxer), so it's not surprising that he has 
 unkind things to say about the governor and his new law. Schwarzenegger has 
 gone out of his way to vilify attorneys like Gerson, and the new law was 
 designed in part to eliminate the attorney's role. The logic is clear: you 
 have a system that seems too expensive, so if you cut out the disagreements 
 and limit the need for litigation, you'll save money.   But the way the 
 governor's people set out to achieve this goal doesn't just cut out money 
 for the lawyers. Penalties that used to be levied against insurance 
 companies for unfair delays and denials have been diminished dramatically. 
 So it's harder to get a lawyer to take certain cases, since the chance of 
 making money is far slimmer. It doesn't mean workers are suddenly getting 
 what they need -- it just means they have a harder time getting help.   As 
 of April 2003, there were 3.69 million active cases in the state, and a 
 million workers file new claims each year. About 200,000 of them are in the 
 market for an attorney each year. (The state also keeps statistics on 
 fraud, by the way, which show that only a tiny percentage of workers are 
 even suspected of gaming the system -- along with a handful of insurance 
 companies, doctors, and attorneys.)   The law -- passed last April by the 
 legislature as Schwarzenegger threatened to bring even more stringent 
 reforms to the ballot -- cut costs in several other ways as well. It 
 limited compensation for lost wages, gutted the state's job-retraining 
 program, gave insurance companies the right to strictly manage medical 
 treatment, and -- perhaps most significantly -- slashed the amount of money 
 an injured worker can get to pay for the medical costs that will come with 
 a lifetime of disability. Rules being promoted by workers' comp chief 
 Andrea Hoch have made these changes even more severe.   The state hasn't 
 done a study to show how payments for permanent disability will change, but 
 according to UC Davis researcher Paul Leigh, those benefits will be cut by 
 as much as 70 percent. A carpal tunnel syndrome patient he cites would see 
 her payment -- meant to cover medical care for the rest of her life -- drop 
 from $116,000 to just $17,000. Why? Much of this disability is measured in 
 pain, and after the initial treatment, pain no longer counts.   Even those 
 who deal with the law on a day-to-day basis are baffled by the changes. An 
 investigation by the Los Angeles Times published March 27 showed that as 
 many as 100,000 cases are stalled, and delays are rising steadily as 
 bureaucrats and attorneys wrestle over legal interpretations. I saw what 
 they were talking about on my visits to local courts: nearly every person I 
 spoke with -- including judges and attorneys on both sides -- said 
 uncertainty dominates and delay is the norm. So costs come down while 
 injuries go untreated.   Sam Sorich, president of the Association of 
 California Insurance Companies, said the system is just going through 
 growing pains and insisted the reforms will lessen the chaos of the past. 
 "There are still a lot of unanswered questions, but things are on the right 
 track. We're getting close to a situation in California where insurance 
 companies can come in and charge a good price and make a good profit. 
 That's how it should work," Sorich said. "I have not seen any evidence that 
 any insurance company is trying to deprive appropriate treatment to injured 
 workers."   But in the San Francisco court, the stress on injured people is 
 palpable. A ruddy 32-year-old mechanic named Steve Gilbert sat in the 
 waiting room on a recent Monday morning, wearing a blue cotton workman's 
 jacket. Gilbert has a herniated disk in his neck from a 2001 injury. He 
 spent about six months recovering and since then has been able to work, 
 although he still has occasional pain.   He settled his case with an 
 agreement that the insurance company would cover future medical costs, and 
 every once in a while he has a flare-up and needs to return to his 
 chiropractor for a few visits. But recently his insurance company, possibly 
 emboldened by the new law, suddenly tried to renege on its agreement.   
 "The pain comes and goes," he told me. "I just go on with my life. But what 
 good is having workers' comp if they're not gonna help me out? I want 
 medical care when I need medical care."   Such depressing stories are 
 typical in court, as I learned over several weeks there. Linda Lajes told 
 me she filed a claim after slipping while cleaning a meat grinder at the 
 Fremont FoodMax. She and her daughter had been waiting in the airless room 
 for hours to see if she'd be allowed more medical care.   Lajes hurt 
 herself more than a year ago, just before the reforms. She told me that in 
 addition to a chest-wall injury from the meat-room tumble, she has carpal 
 tunnel syndrome in her wrists that she thinks comes from her years as a 
 checkout cashier. Now, Lajes said, she's in fairly constant pain. "Whenever 
 I grip, push, or shove, my hand and elbow hurts," she said. Her insurance 
 company won't pay for carpal tunnel surgery because of a dispute over what 
 caused it. Her regular doctors will turn her away the moment she says the 
 injury is work-related. So she may not ever have surgery that could help 
 her heal.   Surrounding Lajes were rows of anxious people, some pawing 
 through medical reports, others just waiting, with dead looks on their 
 faces. The smell in the place was strong -- many of these folks had been 
 camped out here since 8:30 a.m., and it was now well past 2 in the 
 afternoon.   These are the people Schwarzenegger blames for the workers' 
 comp problem. I found a few other suspects, particularly when I looked at 
 who's funding the governor's political ambitions.   Reform or bailout?   
 Growing backlash: Injured workers rallied April 4 in San Francisco to 
 protest proposed cuts in workers' comp disability pay. Photo by Lori 
 Spears.   Schwarzenegger has become known as a prodigious and persistent 
 fundraiser in his short tenure. His top-dollar dinners have generated 
 almost as much press as his policy proposals. His various committees have 
 taken in more than $1.2 million from insurance companies, including at 
 least $560,000 from workers' compensation firms, according to an analysis 
 by the Santa Monica-based Foundation for Taxpayer and Consumer Rights 
 (FTCR).   And so far the reforms have been kindest to insurance firms. 
 Financial reports at the end of 2004 showed they were pulling in 
 dramatically higher profits -- just eight months after the law's passage.   
 AIG, the largest private carrier in the state, reported $11.05 billion in 
 profits for 2004 -- up 19 percent from 2003. The California Applicants 
 Attorneys Association, which represents lawyers for injured workers, 
 reports that this is in spite of a dramatic 1,300 percent increase in 
 payout by AIG for hurricanes, earthquakes, and tsunamis. Another one of the 
 big guys, the Zenith National Insurance Co., also saw income rising. The 
 CAAA's review of Zenith's books shows workers' comp income shooting up 250 
 percent, from $29.3 million in 2003 to $104 million last year.   From this 
 perspective, the "reforms" start to look more like a massive 
 corporate-bailout scheme: keep rates unregulated and give the insurance 
 companies the right to cut costs any way they can. Some smart investors may 
 have seen the bonanza coming: billionaire Warren Buffett, one of 
 Schwarzenegger's top financial policy advisers, opened a new line of 
 workers' compensation insurance just a few months after the law was signed, 
 through his company Berkshire Hathaway.   Meanwhile, the cost of insurance 
 has dropped slightly for business owners -- about an average of 16 percent 
 -- and prices may come down again later this month. But many businesses, 
 particularly small companies or those with high-risk employees, are 
 reporting little to no change, and some are even seeing rate hikes as 
 insurance companies get creative with their billing plans.   High costs to 
 businesses were what originally drew the public's attention. The state 
 insurance commissioner, who has only an advisory role, had suggested 
 10-to-20 percent hikes several years in a row, but some companies reported 
 having to pay hikes of 30 to 50 percent a year for the past few years. Yet 
 those increases seem mainly due to deregulation and the high cost of health 
 care in general.   Just as deregulation of the electricity market sparked a 
 self-destructive path for energy firms, things went sour for insurers right 
 around the time they convinced legislators to open up the workers' comp 
 market. After the deregulation law kicked in, companies underbid each other 
 in a frenzied customer grab. With health and legal costs rising, company 
 reserves dwindled -- even as worker injury rates declined. When the 
 national economy tanked, the remaining financial cushion was deflated. 
 Those that stayed solvent did so by charging ever higher rates.   "It's a 
 cycle that we see in the insurance industry just about every decade," FTCR 
 executive director Doug Heller explained. He said the insurance companies 
 sunk themselves. "The economy goes south, stock prices are down, and bonds 
 are devalued. When that happens, investment income declines. So they 
 tighten their belts -- or tighten the noose around policy holders."   No 
 surprise there. After all, this is the insurance industry we're talking 
 about, the same field targeted by New York attorney general Eliot Spitzer 
 in a wide-ranging corruption probe. One of Spitzer's top targets is AIG, 
 which is accused of inflating profits in a deal cut with Buffett's 
 Berkshire Hathaway.   Squeezing workers   I was shocked the first time I 
 heard a story about someone made homeless by a work-related injury: I had 
 always, perhaps naively, believed the system had an obligation to workers 
 who'd hurt themselves on the job. But as I interviewed more and more people 
 for this story, I heard too many tales of homelessness, bankruptcy, and 
 even suicide.   One man I spoke to has a Ph.D. from the Massachusetts 
 Institute of Technology, yet a debilitating RSI in his arms has left him 
 emotionally and physically worn and unable to earn money in his field. 
 "I've been totally devastated by this," he told me. "I was homeless for a 
 while. I lost pretty much everything you can lose."   That wasn't what Gov. 
 Hiram Johnson had in mind for us when he called on California to create a 
 workers' comp insurance system after he took office in 1911, though Johnson 
 was looking out for business at least as much as for injured workers.   At 
 the time, work-related accidents were high on the national agenda. The 
 quickening pace of industrialization had pushed laborers into increasingly 
 rushed and risky work environments, and it was taking a heavy toll. In a 
 1990 UC Berkeley doctoral dissertation, workers' compensation analyst Glenn 
 Shorr quotes an American Federation of Labor boss saying that more than 
 half a million workers were killed or injured each year at that time, many 
 from mining and railroad accidents. Another estimate put the total wounded 
 at 2 million one year, out of around 26 million men in the workforce. 
 Lawsuits against employers were climbing.   Then, in March 1911, in what 
 became a galvanizing event for organized labor, 500 employees were locked 
 inside the Triangle Shirtwaist Manufacturing Co. in New York while a fire 
 raged, killing 145 and igniting the burgeoning labor movement to push 
 through new protections.   Soon states began passing workers' compensation 
 laws. Essentially, it was a social compact. Workers gave up their right to 
 sue in exchange for the promise of health care and some money to live on 
 during recovery. Employers were relieved of the threat of costly lawsuits 
 -- as long as they paid their monthly premiums. Some states created 
 government-run insurance plans; others, like California, left insurance 
 largely up to the marketplace but also created a quasi-public insurer of 
 "last resort" so that every worker could be covered.   These days the costs 
 of work-related illness and injury are still a tremendous burden 
 nationally. A 2000 study calculated that 70,000 job-related deaths and more 
 than 13 million injuries in 1992 cost the nation about five times the price 
 of treating AIDS, and almost as much as treating cancer.   Each year in 
 California, about 1 in 18 workers files a claim. Many of these are for 
 relatively minor sprains or muscle strain, but many are for workers run 
 over by tractors or maimed in traffic accidents while on the job. Truck 
 drivers, cops, and construction, maintenance, and farm laborers have it the 
 worst. But the nature of workplace injuries has changed since Johnson's 
 day. While deadly mining and construction accidents still happen with 
 alarming frequency, 70 percent of the injured workforce toils in the 
 service industry. In 2003, nearly half of all injuries nationally were due 
 to sprains, strains, and repetitive stress injuries.   Invisible pain   It 
 was the third day I'd glued myself to my computer writing a postelection 
 wrap-up, and the thing was, my arms hurt. My fingers felt swollen and 
 stiff, the muscles in my forearms burned, and my shoulders and wrists felt 
 weak and achy. Logic told me not to push my body so hard, but as a 
 reporter, I found it tough to consistently take breaks and stretch -- even 
 though I'd seen so many of my colleagues fall to RSIs like carpal tunnel 
 syndrome and tendonitis. When I was first injured, I couldn't grip the 
 brakes on my bike, lift heavy pots and pans, or even chop vegetables.   I 
 wasn't alone. Of the half million people who missed work because of a 
 job-related injury in 2003, about 5 percent were hit by carpal tunnel or 
 tendonitis; a full third of the injured were felled by musculoskeletal 
 problems, many of which are caused by repetitive motion. Still, those 
 numbers don't tell the whole story -- the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics 
 doesn't count those who are injured and continue to work anyway, or those 
 who never report their pain.   The thing about an injury that comes from 
 your work is that it's all-consuming in its devastation. If you love what 
 you do, your wounds divide you from your passion. And it's hard to feel 
 good about yourself when you can't live up to your potential. If you are 
 working to put food on the table, as most of us are, the anxiety attendant 
 on work-related pain is a constant. Imagine living in a city as expensive 
 as San Francisco with a physical condition that has the potential to lay 
 you up for weeks at a time. Imagine doing that while you support children.  
  In my case, I have no kids to feed, and if it came down to it, I have 
 family who would take care of me. But I've also worked hard at healing 
 myself with daily yoga, which, along with my doctor and acupuncture visits, 
 keeps me healthy.   I'm lucky I started the yoga when I did, and that it 
 turned out to do the trick, because my injury is one of those that have 
 been targeted for virtual elimination under the new rules. I don't mean to 
 say Schwarzenegger wants to eradicate repetitive strain problems -- I wish 
 that were the case.   Instead, he's allowing insurance companies to rely on 
 a set of medical guidelines doctors say don't acknowledge pain as a factor 
 when determining how injured a person is. RSI sufferers will still get some 
 temporary treatment under the new law, but the new time limit imposed on 
 benefits ignores the reality of chronic pain. In his zeal to cut costs, the 
 governor is relying on guidelines that insist on objectively measurable 
 physical changes, and pain is sometimes impossible to witness from the 
 outside.   Repetitive strain injuries emerged as an epidemic in the 
 mid-'90s, propelled by the tech boom. Since then they have taken a steady 
 toll. In 2002 repetitive motion was the fourth-highest cause of injury on 
 the job, costing at least $2.8 billion nationally in health care and lost 
 work hours, according to Liberty Mutual, an insurance company. The top 
 injury cause was overexertion, a category that includes a lot of RSIs as 
 well, costing $13.2 billion.   Without much help from workers' 
 compensation, the ranks of office employees working wounded is likely to 
 swell -- as is the number of them applying for state-funded disability 
 payments, welfare, and Medicaid. So the insurance companies will save, but 
 someone will have to take on the burden. Exacerbating the problem is a lack 
 of federal recognition: under former president Bill Clinton, the federal 
 Occupational Health and Safety Administration agreed to ergonomic standards 
 to force employers to create safer work spaces, but President George W. 
 Bush's OSHA repealed them.   At the same time, the social safety net is 
 under attack, both by the governor -- who wants to cut welfare grants and 
 trim pensions -- and by Bush. The moves to change personal bankruptcy laws 
 and privatize Social Security are especially ominous for injured workers.   
 Although pain won't be fully acknowledged by workers' comp insurers, people 
 will still be struggling. One RSI sufferer told me he goes through periods 
 where he can't even sit and read because his neck aches. His whole life is 
 arranged around the injury: groceries have to be carried in small bags, 
 dishes often don't get done, and he can no longer drive a car for more than 
 an hour. His work has slowed to a painful pace: his body lags behind his 
 mind, leaving him depressed. Meanwhile, he's been refused disability 
 benefits and has to continue working through agonizing pain. "I feel like 
 I'm living in a cage," he said.   Navigating the system   Digital divide: 
 Since developing an RSI, Lee Worden has gone on to run a monthly RSI 
 support group in San Francisco and is trying to organize support networks 
 among injured people. Photo by Lori Spears.   For an injured person, it has 
 never been particularly easy to make it through the workers' comp system. 
 Even before the Schwarzenegger reforms took hold, it was standard to hear 
 complaints about health care delays and rejections, with insurance 
 companies hiring private investigators to track patients to see if they 
 were lying. Now it's just more extreme.   Barbara Harlan, a woman I met in 
 the San Francisco court, had to wait so long for postsurgery physical 
 therapy that thick scar tissue built up around her shoulder joint -- enough 
 that it had to be surgically torn off before she could finally begin 
 therapy. She was battered when 40 heavy sheets of Plexiglass and hard 
 lighting gel snapped against her legs with a force so powerful that the 
 meniscus in both of her knees was split in two. She came away from the 
 accident, which happened while she was working on a movie set, with back, 
 neck, and shoulder injuries from clawing through more than a thousand 
 pounds of plastic, and has had to stay away from her job as a stagehand for 
 the better part of five years.   Several surgeries and court appearances 
 later, Harlan has a stomach-grinding $40,000 debt on the credit cards she's 
 used to support herself while the insurance company delays her health care. 
   As with most work-injured people I spoke with, this was just one of many 
 stories Harlan has about the challenges of the system. She's had problems 
 stemming from an insurance industry merger, dealt with bizarre questioning 
 about her prior health history (one insurance representative implied that 
 because she'd had back pain during childbirth, she might have a 
 predisposition to pain), and faced off against the sluglike pace of the 
 state agency that oversees workers' comp disputes. "We're almost two years 
 behind in my treatment because of the court delays," she told me.   The 
 state Division of Workers' Compensation doesn't deny that delays are 
 happening, but it insists staffers are working around the clock to move 
 forward under a complex new set of rules.   In the meantime, injured people 
 wait. Chiropractor William Ruch told me that every single workers' comp 
 patient of his is being denied care. If he wants to get paid, he has to 
 file liens against the insurance companies. "They'll set a date [to defend 
 the request in court], with 25 others, and I'll have to clear my schedule 
 and go sit on line all day. Their goal is to disrupt. They just don't want 
 people treating injured workers."   Ruch's profession is under attack by 
 Schwarzenegger, who says chiropractors and acupuncturists in particular are 
 wont to overtreat. But that's a tough call: the alternative is to use 
 painkillers, which are more easily approved but often have lingering nasty 
 side effects.   Plus, Ruch said, by refusing to treat pain, and by limiting 
 care for chronic injuries, the Schwarzenegger law is actually making 
 injuries worse. "Trauma initiates chronic degenerative changes. [But now] 
 health care is limited to functional restorations. Not pain, or 
 tingling.... There's a denial that once a joint has been injured, it 
 changes over time, so the idea is that over the years there's less reason 
 to treat. In fact, there's more reason to treat."   My doctor, osteopath 
 Jerel Glassman, added, "They don't want to pay for anything they call 
 maintenance; they want to treat to cure. They're basing this on an old 
 19th-century model of a guy who got his hand caught in a machine, and we 
 have to pay for his prosthesis and we're done with him.... If a person's 
 diabetic, you don't say to them, 'Well, you've had enough insulin.' "   The 
 frustrating experience of fighting with insurance company medics has many, 
 including Glassman, opting out of the industry. The new law kills your 
 right to choose your doctor anyway, leaving patients to grapple mainly with 
 doctors hired by employers and insurance companies whose primary interest 
 is in cutting costs.   But as Glassman noted, while there are deep problems 
 within the system, there's a larger societal issue that needs addressing: 
 "Ultimately, some of it comes down to not having universal health care that 
 follows you from job to job." That way you wouldn't have to prove your pain 
 was job-related ˆ you would just be treated.   What's next?   Perhaps 
 there won't be a real move toward nationalized health care in the next few 
 years, but there does seem to be momentum building against Schwarzenegger 
 and his entire political agenda that could transform into real action on 
 workers' compensation law.   In the first of three planned demonstrations 
 this month, injured workers and their allies clustered together on the 
 steps outside the workers' comp division's San Francisco offices April 4. 
 They came out to protest workers' comp chief Hoch's proposed permanent 
 disability rules -- the ones that threaten to cut payments so dramatically. 
 The demonstration was put together by Voters Injured at Work, which was 
 started with seed money from attorneys and says it has attracted nearly 
 1,000 members in just three months.   Later that day former state senate 
 president John Burton spoke at a hearing on Hoch's rules, saying they 
 deform the spirit of the law he signed off on last year. "In my judgment, 
 they are of questionable legality," said Burton, who helped broker the deal 
 to pass the reforms.   If VIAW begins to build power, it will be a real 
 shift from the current climate, where even politicians who oppose the 
 Schwarzenegger reforms, including insurance commissioner John Garamendi, 
 are keeping a low profile.   Sen. Richard Alarcon is pressing forward with 
 a rate regulation bill (Garamendi won't talk about rate regulation) that, 
 while it has little chance of passing under Schwarzenegger, keeps the issue 
 on the table. He's also scheduled a hearing on the impact of the reforms 
 for April 19. At the same time, several lawsuits have been filed 
 (Schwarzenegger was messing with attorneys, after all) that challenge 
 various elements of the law.   While it's all sorted out, injured people 
 will still need support, and the already overtaxed county hospitals and 
 social welfare systems will have to bear some of the burden -- even as they 
 themselves are under assault. With the shredding of the safety net in full 
 effect, what was once a financial muddle for a handful of insurance 
 companies will become a crisis of far grander proportions: an injured 
 public, without access to health care or a way to pay for a roof over their 
 heads.   "It's part of the Grover Norquist program -- returning to the days 
 of Dickens, essentially," Lee Worden, a 35-year-old with a decade-old RSI, 
 told me. (Norquist is a conservative policy strategist and a Schwarzenegger 
 ally.) "You can't look at this separately from the dismantling of the 
 safety net. Pretty soon we'll have a direct path from white-collar 
 employment to workers' comp to the streets. It's not really shifting the 
 burden to programs like G.A. [General Assistance]. It's sinking all boats 
 at once."   Rally April 19 for injured workers in Sacramento: go to 
 http://www.votersinjuredatwork.org   soon for details. Commemorate Workers 
 Memorial Day April 28, 11 a.m.-1 p.m., State Capitol west steps, 
 Sacramento. http://www.workersmemorialday.com     E-mail Rachel Brahinsky   
        \n https://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2005/04/23/64213.php
SUMMARY:Workers Memorial Day Rally In Sacramento
LOCATION:There will be a Workers Memorial Day rally in Sacramento on April 28, 2004 
 at 11:00 AM to 1:00 PM  to protest the deaths of workers on the job and 
 those workers who are injured on the job and now face no health care and 
 the loss of their families and homes. There will be free buses from the Bay 
 Area.
URL:https://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2005/04/23/64213.php
DTSTART:20050428T180000Z
DTEND:20050428T200000Z
END:VEVENT
END:VCALENDAR
