Canadian Occupational Safety

Aug/Sep 2016

Canadian Occupational Safety (COS) magazine is the premier workplace health and safety publication in Canada. We cover a wide range of topics ranging from office to heavy industry, and from general safety management to specific workplace hazards.

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August/September 2016 17 NORM KEITH WORKERS' COMPENSATION Workers' compensation fraud a signifi cant problem 'Whistleblower bounty' could help catch fraudsters E very Canadian workers' com- pensation system regulator has to deal with the problem of fraud. Fraud comes in many forms and is typically defi ned as "a wrong- ful or criminal deception intended to result in fi nancial gain." Fraud always has an element of deliberate decep- tion to secure unfair personal gain. Fraud can be a civil wrong, a criminal wrong or both. In the workers' com- pensation context, there are clear rules about proper reporting of workplace accidents and material change by employers, workers and medical prac- titioners. However, temptation looms whenever money is available under workers' compensation systems. Each stakeholder in the worker's compensation system may be a party to fraud. For example, an employer may seek to pay a worker "under the table" to stay at home and not report a claim, for the unlawful purpose that it wants to avoid the adverse effect on its experience rating system if it reports the workplace accident. Workers may commit compen- sation fraud by claiming an injury occurred at work when it happened at the hockey arena or ski hill for the unlawful purpose of getting workers' compensation when it would not oth- erwise be available. There are also cases where medi- cal practitioners or other health-care providers engage in workers' com- pensation fraud. For example, when medical practitioners have a cap by their government medical program on fees, they may be tempted to characterize a medical examination and treatment of a worker as arising from a workplace injury, in order to avoid that income affecting the cap on government medical paid services. Doctors may become co-conspirators with workers, or employers, in perpe- trating a fraud on the system. Finally, medical practitioners may commit fraud by conspiring with workers to report non-occupational injuries as work-related. Every workers' compensation statute and board across Canada pro- hibits both innocent and intentional false reporting of accidents. Legitimate disputes may occur regarding whether a worker's injury was sustained at work, whether the worker is able to return to modifi ed duties or whether the employer reported the accident in a timely fashion. Fraud, however, involves an intentional access to the workers' compensation benefi ts with- out a legitimate basis. Making or participating in a fraudulent claim is an offence under provincial workers' compensation legislation and the Criminal Code, section 380. Since Canadian employ- ers exclusively fund the workers' compensation system, fraud costs them millions of dollars in premiums, which impacts business profi tability. Fraud also undermines confi dence and integrity in the system. To stop or signifi cantly reduce workers' compensation fraud in Canada, all stakeholders must consider the following: Speak up: Employers — and employer associations — need to become more engaged in the enforcement of workers' compensa- tion anti-fraud provisions. They also need be more vocal and demand more rigorous scrutiny of workers' compensation claims. Fraud hurts everybody because it takes money from a system that is legitimately set aside for injured workers. Better investigations: Workers' compensation boards need to use more sophisticated investigation tech- niques to detect fraud. There appears to be a general reluctance on the part of workers' compensation boards across Canada to hire staff with police investigative backgrounds, establish appropriate enforcement branches and scrutinize workers, employers and physicians who are defrauding the system. Leadership in these key areas of enforcement needs to be improved in all workers' compensation boards across Canada. Recently, the Work- place Safety and Insurance Board of Ontario has been cracking down on fraudulent claims. Public awareness: A public infor- mation and media campaign is needed to stop workers' compensa- tion fraud — it is not a "victimless crime." For example, in the instances when a worker is not injured at work or is able to return to work on modi- fi ed duties but refuses to do so, there needs to be open, public disapproval of that practice. A public awareness campaign would provide greater appreciation of the costs to employ- ers, workers and the community of workers' compensation fraud. Whistleblower bounties: Workers' compensation boards across Canada should consider a "whistleblower bounty/reward" program. Individuals who report workers' compensation fraudsters (employers, workers or phy- sicians) to the applicable enforcement branch would receive an appropriate bounty or reward if the tip results in prosecution and conviction of a fraud- ster. This initiative is being introduced later this year by the Ontario Securi- ties Commission to prevent securities fraud. The volume of workers' com- pensation claims far exceeds the more isolated instances of securities fraud, which tends to be white-collar crime. While these two systems may be dif- ferent, they are similarly affected by the integrity and confi dence in their respective systems. A whistleblower bounty/reward program is an innova- tive concept whose time has come in the prevention and reduction of work- ers' compensation fraud in Canada. All these suggestions can go a long way to addressing the problem. Workers' compensation boards across Canada, together with employers who fund the workers' compensa- tion system and workers who benefi t from it, all need to help stop fraud. Fundamentally, those who perpetrate a fraud on workers' compensation systems in Canada are taking money from employers and workers for their own illegitimate benefi t. Fraud, by any other name, is still fraud. Norm Keith, an OHS lawyer and consultant, is a partner at Fasken Martineau DuMoulin in Toronto. He can be reached at (416) 868-7824 or nkeith@fasken.com, or visit www. ehslaw.ca for more information. NORM KEITH COMPENSATION The classic OH&S resource in the format you prefer Now you can access the go to OH&S resource for Ontario companies – the "Green Book" – as a smart eBook on your iPad, Android tablet or directly from your web browser. Powered by the Thomson Reuters ProView™ app, our eBook gives you the freedom and fl exibility to work wherever and whenever you want. You get fast, convenient access to the complete current Ontario Occupational Health & Safety Act and regulations, and a list of OH&S information resources. To see what updates to the Act and Regulations are included in the 2016 edition, go to www.carswell.com/Pocket-ohs. Pocket Ontario OH&S Act & Regulations – Consolidated Edition is also available in a larger tabbed version with larger font, the Ontario OH&S Act & Regulations 2016 – Consolidated Edition. Pocket Ontario OH&S Act & Regulations 2016 – Consolidated Edition Ontario OH&S Act & Regulations 2016 – Consolidated Edition Now available as an eBook on Thomson Reuters ProView™ Pocket Ontario OH&S Act & Regulations 2016 – Consolidated Edition Order # 987050-65203 $23.95 Softcover + ProView eBook approx. 1050 pages March 2016 978-0-7798-7050-9 Ontario OH&S Act & Regulations 2016 – Consolidated Edition Order # 987207-65203 $23.95 Softcover + ProView eBook approx. 750 pages March 2016 978-0-7798-7207-7 Shipping and handling are extra. 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