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DESCRIPTION:    2/9 Oakland Speak-Out For Injured Workers At CA State Hearings     
 (415)738-2184/510-978-7435  On Thursday Feb 9 at the Oakland State Building 
 at 9:30 AM injured workers will speak-out about  the attack on them as a 
 result of the deregulation of workers' comp. Tens of thousands of  workers 
 have been unable to receive medical care for their injuries and some have 
 committed  suicide as well as losing their homes and families.  The 
 California Coalition For Workers Memorial Day  Supports  Labor Speak-out At 
  State Hearing On Health & Safety and Workers' Compensation    Date: 
 Thursday - February 9, 2006  Time: Hearing at 10 AM- Press Conference at 
 9:30 AM  Place: Elihu M. Harris State Building  1st Floor, Auditorium  The 
 deregulation of Workers' comp has been a disaster for tens of thousands of 
 injured workers in California. They have faced insurance companies who 
 refuse to pay for healthcare and compensation for their injuries with no 
 penalties for this criminality. Workers are no longer able to go to their 
 own doctors and company doctors are refusing to treat them under the "new" 
 guidelines that the legislature and the governor implemented. Workers are 
 dying who are being ignored by these companies, the governor and nearly 
 every one of the Democratic and Republican legislators who supported this 
 deregulation.  The law however has been very good for the employers and 
 insurance companies. Over $15 billion which should have gone to injured 
 workers has instead ended up in the coffers of these corporations.  At the 
 same time self-insurers like the Adventist Hospital Chain and Kaiser have 
 run wild do to the lack of regulation.  When injured workers fight back 
 like Nurse Practitioner Barb Clark who was hurt at a the Adventist Hospital 
 in Bakersfield they become the target of the employer. Her medical records 
 were released to the public to retaliate against her, she was attacked on 
 the road and the company with the support of the California DIR have sought 
 to prevent her from suing by arguing that she is mentally incompetent.  
 “The shell games have to stop,” Clark said, referring to the 
 Governor’s legal affairs secretary, Andrea Hoch, allegedly running the 
 Division of Worker’s Compensation (DWC) from the Governor’s office.  
 The DWC should be operated from within the DWC with strict accountability, 
 not by a political aide on the Governor’s staff,” cited Clark. 
 Clark’s lawsuit alleges that Andrea Hoch is more or less still running 
 the DWC while acting as the Governor’s legal affairs secretary even 
 though she left the post of DWC head almost six months ago.  DIR director 
 John Rhea is also personally responsible for these criminal cover-ups and 
 his department with the support of Governor has done damage control for 
 these insurance and corporate executives attacking injured workers.  Join 
 injured workers and health and safety advocates when they will speak-out at 
 the Oakland hearing on Thursday Feb 9, 2006. There will be a press 
 conference at 9:30 AM in the Lobby.  The Coalition also is for the 
 establishment of a single payer medical system in California that would 
 eliminate the role and control of the insurance companies in healthcare. 
 Californians cannot afford to allow the insurance companies to run the 
 healthcare system and all workers whether injured at work or off the job 
 are entitled to medical care. The present "employer based" medical 
 insurance system is a life and death threat to millions of California 
 workers.  The California Coalition For Workers Memorial Day is also 
 planning a statewide protest on Workers Memorial Day Friday April 28, 2006 
 at 11:00 AM on the west steps of the State Capitol in Sacamento. You can 
 find more out about this by going to  http://www.workersmemorialday.org  or 
 phoning  (415)738-2184 (510)978-7435  
 http://www.dir.ca.gov/CHSWC/Meetings/2006/CHSWC_Agenda02092006.html  
 Commission on  Health and Safety  and Workers' Compensation  ommission on 
 Health and Safety and Workers' Compensation - commission meeting  Date: 
 Thursday - February 9, 2006  Time: 10 AM  Place: Elihu M. Harris State 
 Building  1st Floor, Auditorium  1515 Clay Street  Oakland, California  
 AGENDA  I. Call to Order  * Approval of minutes from the December 9, 2005 
 CHSWC meeting in Oakland  Angie Wei, CHSWC Chair  II. DWC Update: Carrie 
 Nevans, Acting Director (Invited)  Reform Efforts and Regulations  Destie 
 Overpeck, Chief Counsel  Insurance Study  Glen Shor, Research Program 
 Specialist  Medical Access Study  Anne Searcy, MD, Associate Medical 
 Director  III. * Permanent Disability Rating Schedule Recommendation  Lach 
 Taylor, Workers' Compensation Judge, CHSWC  Christine Baker, CHSWC 
 Executive Officer  IV. A Report on Repackaged Drugs  Frank Neuhauser, 
 Survey Research Center, UC Berkeley  V. * Executive Officer Report  
 Christine Baker, CHSWC Executive Officer  VI. * Other Business / Proposals 
 / Public Questions and Comments**    * May result in an action item for 
 CHSWC consideration and/or vote  **Please Note: Public comments are limited 
 to three minutes per speaker.  Topics are subject to CHSWC review and 
 approval.  The agenda may be adjusted, if necessary, depending upon the 
 time needed for discussion of each item.      From the Los Angeles Times    
 Workers' Comp Savings Detailed    State employers' costs have been cut by 
 at least $8.1 billion, a  report finds. Critics say injured employees are 
 paying through loss  of benefits.  By Marc Lifsher  Times Staff Writer  
 February 4, 2006  SACRAMENTO  California's overhaul of its troubled 
 workers' compensation  insurance system has saved employers at least $8.1 
 billion over the last  three years, and the benefits to the economy are 
 expected to continue,  according to a study sent to the governor and 
 Legislature on Friday.  The report commissioned by the state Department of 
 Industrial Relations  found that workers' comp premiums paid by businesses 
 and nonprofit  organizations, which soared as much as 200% in the early 
 part of the  decade, have been almost cut in half since July 2003.  What's 
 more, rates in California, the highest in the nation in 2004,  have dropped 
 to 1996 levels and now are lower than those in other big  states such as 
 Texas and Florida, the report said.  Democratic lawmakers, labor unions and 
 advocates for injured workers  complain that at least some of the savings 
 created by passage of the  2003 and 2004 workers' compensation laws has 
 been at the expense of  benefits and medical care for employees injured on 
 the job.  "We're pleased that the rates are dropping, but this [report] 
 only looks  at half of the equation," said Steven Maviglio, a spokesman for 
 Assembly  Speaker Fabian Nuñez (D-Los Angeles). "It doesn't look at 
 whether the  savings are coming out of the hide of injured workers."  
 Maviglio noted that another major study being finalized by the state  
 Commission on Health, Safety and Workers' Compensation concluded that  
 rules imposed last year by Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger's administration  had 
 reduced benefits for permanently injured workers by more than 50%.  
 "Clearly, insurance companies have done very well by the reforms, and so  
 have businesses," Maviglio said. "But we think that everybody has to  
 benefit."  To that end, Democratic leaders in the Legislature said they 
 hoped to  work with the governor's office on revising regulations to 
 "address the  shortfalls that we seem to be seeing," Maviglio said.  A 
 spokesman said the governor was open to fine-tuning some regulations  that 
 determine the extent of a worker's injuries  the key factor in  
 calculating benefits. But Schwarzenegger is not interested in rolling  back 
 any of the accomplishments of his signature workers' compensation  
 legislation, spokesman Daryl Ng said.  For his part, state Insurance 
 Commissioner John Garamendi, a strong  supporter of the workers' comp 
 overhaul, urged both the governor and  lawmakers to make sure that 
 "employees are not being shortchanged by the  very system designed to help 
 them."  Garamendi has complained that insurers have been profiting unduly 
 from  the workers' comp overhaul at the expense of their policyholders.  
 The study circulated Friday, however, noted that although insurers had  
 reported record profits, they had shared 86% of the savings from the new  
 laws with their customers.  "Major employers are seeing significant 
 reductions" in their insurance  bills, said Jeanne Cain, senior vice 
 president of the California Chamber  of Commerce. "This allays concerns 
 that the insurance industry would not  pass their savings on to employers." 
  Insurers also said they were open to doing research that would go beyond  
 what they dismissed as "anecdotal evidence" presented by injured  workers' 
 advocates of flaws in the workers' comp overhaul. They said  they hoped 
 that the report would quiet calls by some Democratic  legislators for a law 
 capping workers' comp insurance rates.  Workers have complained that since 
 the system was overhauled they have  had trouble getting insurance company 
 approval for medical treatments,  prescription drugs, surgeries and 
 physical therapy.  The new report, compiled by insurance consulting firm 
 Bickmore Risk  Services for $768,000, underscores that the drop in claims 
 and expenses  has made workers' compensation "a profitable line of 
 coverage." Private  insurers now are competing strongly for business and 
 are undercutting  premiums quoted by the State Compensation Insurance Fund 
 by an average  of 15.2% in 2005, the report said.  As a result, the State 
 Fund, a government-sponsored insurer of last  resort for businesses that 
 have trouble buying coverage, has lost some  of its market dominance. Its 
 share of the state's workers' compensation  business has dropped from 58% 
 in 2003 to 36% in 2005, the Bickmore  report said.  Are The 7th Day 
 Adventists Hospital Bosses Crazy?  Barbara Clark was a nurse at the 7th Day 
 Adventist Hospital in Bakersfield and was injured on the job due to the 
 conditions in the hospital. Although she was seriously injured, the 7th Day 
 Adventists refused to care for her and instead tried to terrorize her. She 
 has lost her house and her life has been torn apart. Now the 7th Day 
 Adventists in order to silence her have enlisted the support of 
 Shwarzenegger's California DIR director Andrea Hoch who is trying to get 
 her ruled "mentally incompetent" so she will not be able to continue with 
 her lawsuit. One has to ask who is "mentally incompetent" the injured 
 worker or the 7th Day Adventists, DIR and the Governor?  
 http://www.barbclark.org  http://www.barbclark.org/BC_Clip1.mp3 Ku Klux 
 Klan style terrorism in California  
 http://news.yahoo.com/s/prweb/20060123/bs_prweb/prweb335876_1    Sacramento 
 Protest Planned by Handicapped Workers to Stop Governor Schwarzenegger from 
 Shuffling off Accountability for the Disabled  Feb 1, 2006 Rally  12:00 
 Noon  651 I St./6th St. Sacramento Federal Courthouse  Mon Jan 23, 7:00 AM 
 ET  (PRWEB) - Sacramento (PRWEB) January 23, 2006 -- Handicapped and 
 disabled injured workers are planning a protest on the steps of the 
 Sacramento federal courthouse February 1st at noon to complain about the 
 Governor’s handling of federal funding used in rehabilitation and workers 
 compensation programs and seek a Department of Justice probe into alleged 
 funding abuses.    “There are two many “acting directors” creating a 
 puzzling shell game where no one seems accountable for enforcement of the 
 rights of the disabled and federal rehabilitation funds,” reports nurse 
 Barbara Clark. She is suing the acting director of the Department of 
 Industrial Relations (DIR), John Rea, in Sacramento federal court (see 
 Clark vs. Rea, Case No.: NO. 2:05-CV-2410-FCD-KLM) for enforcement of the 
 rights of handicapped injured workers under the Americans with Disabilities 
 Act.  “The shell games have to stop,” Clark said, referring to the 
 Governor’s legal affairs secretary, Andrea Hoch, allegedly running the 
 Division of Worker’s Compensation (DWC) from the Governor’s office.  
 “The DWC should be operated from within the DWC with strict 
 accountability, not by a political aide on the Governor’s staff,” cited 
 Clark. Clark’s lawsuit alleges that Andrea Hoch is more or less still 
 running the DWC while acting as the Governor’s legal affairs secretary 
 even though she left the post of DWC head almost six months ago.  “I 
 never thought I would see the day when the lives of disabled and 
 handicapped people would be in the hands of a legal secretary reporting to 
 a cash register Governor who seems accountability only to his special 
 interest pals,” Clark said.  Clark is a disabled handicapped injured 
 worker that was injured on the job while on duty at an Adventist hospital 
 chain medical center. According to Clark, John Rea and Andrea Hoch have the 
 power to enforce several court orders against the Adventists for payment of 
 her untreated medical injuries.  For more information about Barbara 
 Clark’s lawsuit visit: http://www.barbclark.org and 
 http://www.myfundstory.com \n 
 https://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2006/02/06/87033.php
SUMMARY:  Oakland Speak-Out For Injured Workers At CA State Hearings
LOCATION:Oakland State Building  1st Floor, Auditorium  1515 Clay Street Oakland, 
 California
URL:https://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2006/02/06/87033.php
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DTEND:20060209T193000Z
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