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Bill Text   -   A06163
 
                           S T A T E   O F   N E W   Y O R K
       ________________________________________________________________________

           S. 3322                                                  A. 6163

                              2007-2008 Regular Sessions

                             S E N A T E - A S S E M B L Y

                                     March 3, 2007
                                      ___________

       IN SENATE -- Introduced by Sens. BRUNO, MAZIARZ, ALESI, BONACIC, DeFRAN-
         CISCO,  FARLEY,  FLANAGAN, FUSCHILLO, GOLDEN, GRIFFO, HANNON, O. JOHN-
         SON, LANZA, LARKIN, LAVALLE, LEIBELL, LIBOUS, LITTLE, MALTESE, MARCEL-
         LINO,  MORAHAN,  NOZZOLIO,  PADAVAN,  RATH,  ROBACH,  SALAND,  SEWARD,
         SKELOS,  TRUNZO,  VOLKER,  WINNER, WRIGHT, YOUNG -- (at request of the
         Governor) -- read twice and ordered printed, and when  printed  to  be
         committed to the Committee on Labor

       IN ASSEMBLY -- Introduced by M. of A. SILVER, JOHN, FARRELL, CANESTRARI,
         MORELLE,  DESTITO, SCHIMMINGER, STIRPE, DelMONTE, T. GORDON, MAGNAREL-
         LI, AUBERTINE, GABRYSZAK, KOON, EDDINGTON,  BRADLEY,  REILLY,  FIELDS,
         BING,  LUPARDO, CAHILL, HOYT -- Multi-Sponsored by -- M. of A. ALFANO,
         ARROYO, AUBRY, BACALLES, BALL, BARCLAY,  BARRA,  BENEDETTO,  BENJAMIN,
         BOYLAND,  BOYLE,  BRODSKY,  BROOK-KRASNY,  BURLING,  BUTLER,  CALHOUN,
         CAMARA, CARROZZA,  CHRISTENSEN,  CLARK,  COLE,  CONTE,  COOK,  CROUCH,
         CUSICK,  CYMBROWITZ,  L. DIAZ, R. DIAZ, DINOWITZ, DUPREY, ENGLEBRIGHT,
         ERRIGO, FINCH, FITZPATRICK, GALEF, GIANARIS, GIGLIO, D. GORDON,  GOTT-
         FRIED, GRANNIS, GREENE, GUNTHER, HAWLEY, HAYES, HEASTIE, HIKIND, HOOP-
         ER,  HYER-SPENCER,  JAFFEE, KAVANAGH, KOLB, LAFAYETTE, LAVINE, LIFTON,
         P. LOPEZ, V. LOPEZ, MAGEE, MAISEL, MARKEY, MAYERSOHN, McDONALD,  McDO-
         NOUGH,  McENENY,  McKEVITT,  MILLER,  MILLMAN,  MOLINARO, NOLAN, OAKS,
         O`MARA, ORTIZ, PAULIN, PEOPLES,  PERALTA,  PHEFFER,  POWELL,  PRETLOW,
         QUINN, RABBITT, RAIA, RAMOS, REILICH, J. RIVERA, N. RIVERA, P. RIVERA,
         ROBINSON,   SALADINO,  SAYWARD,  SCARBOROUGH,  SCHROEDER,  SCOZZAFAVA,
         SEMINERIO, SPANO, SWEENEY, TEDISCO, THIELE,  TITUS,  TONKO,  TOWNSEND,
         WALKER, WEINSTEIN, WEISENBERG, WEPRIN, WRIGHT, YOUNG, ZEBROWSKI -- (at
         request of the Governor) -- read once and referred to the Committee on
         Labor

       AN ACT to amend the workers` compensation law, the labor law, the insur-
         ance  law,  the tax law, the volunteer ambulance workers` benefit law,
         the volunteer firefighters` benefit law, and the public officers  law,
         in  relation to increasing benefits, setting maximum benefit weeks for
         receiving payments on certain claims,  providing  enhanced  return  to
         work services and expedited medical services for claimants, increasing

        EXPLANATION--Matter in ITALICS (underscored) is new; matter in brackets
                             { } is old law to be omitted.
                                                                  LBD12011-07-7

       S. 3322                             2                            A. 6163

         penalties  and  enforcement  against fraud, implementing cost-savings,
         providing for  premium  discounts,  authorizing  the  closing  of  the
         special disability fund to new claims; and to amend the public author-
         ities  law,  in relation to the issuance by the dormitory authority of
         revenue bonds secured by debt service assessments in connection there-
         with

         THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF NEW YORK, REPRESENTED IN SENATE AND  ASSEM-
       BLY, DO ENACT AS FOLLOWS:

    1    Section  1.  Section  2 of the workers` compensation law is amended by
    2  adding eight new subdivisions 16, 17, 18, 19, 20, 21, 22 and 23 to  read
    3  as follows:
    4    16. "NEW YORK STATE AVERAGE WEEKLY WAGE" SHALL MEAN THE AVERAGE WEEKLY
    5  WAGE OF THE STATE OF NEW YORK FOR THE PREVIOUS CALENDAR YEAR AS REPORTED
    6  BY THE COMMISSIONER OF LABOR TO THE SUPERINTENDENT OF INSURANCE ON MARCH
    7  THIRTY-FIRST.
    8    17.  A "SUBSTANTIALLY OWNED AFFILIATED ENTITY" OF ANY PERSON MEANS THE
    9  PARENT COMPANY OF THE PERSON, ANY SUBSIDIARY OF THE PERSON, OR ANY ENTI-
   10  TY IN WHICH THE PARENT OF THE PERSON OWNS MORE THAN FIFTY PERCENT OF THE
   11  VOTING STOCK, OR AN ENTITY IN WHICH ONE OR MORE OF THE TOP  FIVE  SHARE-
   12  HOLDERS  OF THE PERSON INDIVIDUALLY OR COLLECTIVELY ALSO OWNS A CONTROL-
   13  LING SHARE OF THE VOTING STOCK, OR AN ENTITY WHICH  EXHIBITS  ANY  OTHER
   14  INDICIA  OF  CONTROL  OVER  THE PERSON OR OVER WHICH THE PERSON EXHIBITS
   15  CONTROL, REGARDLESS OF WHETHER OR NOT THE CONTROLLING PARTY  OR  PARTIES
   16  HAVE  ANY  IDENTIFIABLE  OR  DOCUMENTED OWNERSHIP INTEREST. SUCH INDICIA
   17  SHALL INCLUDE: POWER OR RESPONSIBILITY OVER EMPLOYMENT DECISIONS; ACCESS
   18  TO AND/OR USE OF THE RELEVANT ENTITY`S ASSETS  OR  EQUIPMENT;  POWER  OR
   19  RESPONSIBILITY  OVER CONTRACTS OF THE PERSON; RESPONSIBILITY FOR MAINTE-
   20  NANCE OR SUBMISSION OF CERTIFIED PAYROLL RECORDS; AND INFLUENCE OVER THE
   21  BUSINESS DECISIONS OF THE RELEVANT ENTITY.
   22    18. THE "SPECIAL FUNDS CONSERVATION COMMITTEE" MEANS THE ENTITY ORGAN-
   23  IZED FOR THE PURPOSE OF CONSERVING ASSETS OF THE SPECIAL  FUNDS  CREATED
   24  UNDER  SUBDIVISION EIGHT OF SECTION FIFTEEN AND SECTION TWENTY-FIVE-A OF
   25  THIS CHAPTER.
   26    19. A "CLAIM FOR REIMBURSEMENT" FROM THE SPECIAL DISABILITY FUND MEANS
   27  AN APPLICATION TO THE BOARD UNDER PARAGRAPH (F) OF SUBDIVISION EIGHT  OF
   28  SECTION  FIFTEEN  OF  THIS  CHAPTER FOR A DETERMINATION THAT THE SPECIAL
   29  DISABILITY FUND IS LIABLE IN THE FIRST INSTANCE FOR ANY REIMBURSEMENT TO
   30  THE INSURANCE CARRIER, SELF-INSURED EMPLOYER OR STATE INSURANCE FUND.
   31    20. A "REQUEST FOR REIMBURSEMENT" FROM  THE  SPECIAL  DISABILITY  FUND
   32  MEANS  AN  APPLICATION  TO THE SPECIAL DISABILITY FUND FOR REIMBURSEMENT
   33  FOR SPECIFIC COSTS, SUBSEQUENT TO A DETERMINATION BY THE BOARD THAT  THE
   34  SPECIAL DISABILITY FUND IS LIABLE TO PROVIDE REIMBURSEMENT ON THE CLAIM.
   35    21. THE "WORKERS` COMPENSATION RATING BOARD" OR THE "NEW YORK WORKERS`
   36  COMPENSATION  RATING BOARD" SHALL MEAN THE COMPENSATION INSURANCE RATING
   37  BOARD UNTIL FEBRUARY FIRST, TWO  THOUSAND  EIGHT,  AND  THEREAFTER  SUCH
   38  ENTITY AS IS DESIGNATED BY LAW.
   39    22.  "COST OF COMPENSATION" MEANS THE AMOUNT THAT AN EMPLOYER MUST PAY
   40  TO  SECURE  COMPENSATION  AS CALCULATED IN ACCORDANCE WITH REGULATION OF
   41  THE BOARD OR, IN THE ABSENCE OF SUCH REGULATION, BASED ON AVERAGE MARKET
   42  RATES FOR A COMPARABLE EMPLOYER.
   43    23. "SPECIAL DISABILITY FUND ADVISORY COMMITTEE" SHALL MEAN  AN  ADVI-
   44  SORY  COMMITTEE TO THE WORKERS` COMPENSATION BOARD, ACTING BY A MAJORITY
   45  THEREOF, SOLELY WITH RESPECT TO THE SPECIAL FUND  ENTITLED  THE  SPECIAL

       S. 3322                             3                            A. 6163

    1  DISABILITY FUND, COMPOSED OF THE DIRECTOR OF THE BUDGET, THE COMMISSION-
    2  ER  OF LABOR, THE COMMISSIONER OF TAXATION AND FINANCE, THE CHAIR OF THE
    3  WORKERS` COMPENSATION BOARD, AND THE SUPERINTENDENT OF INSURANCE.
    4    S  2.  Paragraph  (a)  of  subdivision 6 of section 15 of the workers`
    5  compensation law, as amended by chapter 924 of  the  laws  of  1990,  is
    6  amended to read as follows:
    7    (a) Compensation for permanent or temporary total disability due to an
    8  accident  or  disablement  resulting  from  an occupational disease that
    9  occurs, (1) on or after January first, nineteen  hundred  seventy-eight,
   10  shall  not  exceed one hundred twenty-five dollars per week, that occurs
   11  (2) on or after July first, nineteen hundred  seventy-eight,  shall  not
   12  exceed  one hundred eighty dollars per week, that occurs (3) on or after
   13  January first, nineteen  hundred  seventy-nine,  shall  not  exceed  two
   14  hundred  fifteen  dollars  per  week,  that  occurs (4) on or after July
   15  first, nineteen hundred  eighty-three,  shall  not  exceed  two  hundred
   16  fifty-five  dollars  per  week,  that occurs (5) on or after July first,
   17  nineteen hundred eighty-four, shall not exceed two hundred  seventy-five
   18  dollars  per  week,  that  occurs  (6)  on or after July first, nineteen
   19  hundred eighty-five, shall not exceed three hundred  dollars  per  week,
   20  that  occurs  (7) on or after July first, nineteen hundred ninety, shall
   21  not exceed three hundred forty dollars per week;  and  in  the  case  of
   22  temporary  total  disability  shall  not be less than thirty dollars per
   23  week and in the case of permanent total disability  shall  not  be  less
   24  than  twenty dollars per week except that if the employee`s wages at the
   25  time of injury are less than thirty or twenty dollars per  week  respec-
   26  tively,  he  or  she shall receive his or her full weekly wages. Compen-
   27  sation for permanent or temporary partial disability due to an  accident
   28  or disablement resulting from an occupational disease that occurs (1) on
   29  or after January first, nineteen hundred seventy-eight, shall not exceed
   30  one  hundred  five  dollars  per  week, that occurs (2) on or after July
   31  first, nineteen hundred eighty-three, shall not exceed one hundred twen-
   32  ty-five dollars per week, that occurs (3) on or after July first,  nine-
   33  teen  hundred  eighty-four,  shall  not  exceed  one hundred thirty-five
   34  dollars per week, that occurs (4)  on  or  after  July  first,  nineteen
   35  hundred  eighty-five,  shall  not  exceed  one hundred fifty dollars per
   36  week, that occurs (5) on or after July first, nineteen  hundred  ninety,
   37  shall  not  exceed two hundred eighty dollars per week; nor be less than
   38  twenty dollars per week; except that if the employee`s wages at the time
   39  of injury are less than twenty dollars per week, he or she shall receive
   40  his or her full weekly  wages.  In  no  event  shall  compensation  when
   41  combined  with  decreased earnings or earning capacity exceed the amount
   42  of wages which the  employee  was  receiving  at  the  time  the  injury
   43  occurred. Compensation for permanent or temporary partial disability, or
   44  for  permanent or temporary total disability due to an accident or disa-
   45  blement resulting from an occupational disease that  occurs  (1)  on  or
   46  after  July  first, nineteen hundred ninety-one and prior to July first,
   47  nineteen hundred  ninety-two,  shall  not  exceed  three  hundred  fifty
   48  dollars  per  week; (2) on or after July first, nineteen hundred ninety-
   49  two, shall not exceed four hundred dollars per week; nor  be  less  than
   50  forty  dollars  per week except that if the employee`s wages at the time
   51  of injury are less than forty  dollars  per  week,  the  employee  shall
   52  receive  his or her full wages.  COMPENSATION FOR PERMANENT OR TEMPORARY
   53  PARTIAL DISABILITY, OR FOR PERMANENT OR TEMPORARY TOTAL  DISABILITY  DUE
   54  TO  AN  ACCIDENT  OR  DISABLEMENT RESULTING FROM AN OCCUPATIONAL DISEASE
   55  THAT OCCURS (1) ON OR AFTER JULY FIRST, TWO  THOUSAND  SEVEN  SHALL  NOT
   56  EXCEED  FIVE  HUNDRED  DOLLARS PER WEEK, (2) ON OR AFTER JULY FIRST, TWO

       S. 3322                             4                            A. 6163

    1  THOUSAND EIGHT SHALL NOT EXCEED FIVE HUNDRED FIFTY DOLLARS PER WEEK, (3)
    2  ON OR AFTER JULY FIRST, TWO THOUSAND NINE SHALL NOT EXCEED  SIX  HUNDRED
    3  DOLLARS  PER WEEK, AND (4) ON OR AFTER JULY FIRST, TWO THOUSAND TEN, AND
    4  ON  OR  AFTER  JULY  FIRST  OF  EACH  SUCCEEDING  YEAR, SHALL NOT EXCEED
    5  TWO-THIRDS OF THE NEW YORK STATE AVERAGE WEEKLY WAGE  FOR  THE  YEAR  IN
    6  WHICH  IT  IS  REPORTED. COMPENSATION FOR PERMANENT OR TEMPORARY PARTIAL
    7  DISABILITY, OR FOR PERMANENT OR TEMPORARY TOTAL  DISABILITY  DUE  TO  AN
    8  ACCIDENT  OR  DISABLEMENT  RESULTING  FROM  AN OCCUPATIONAL DISEASE THAT
    9  OCCURS ON OR AFTER JULY FIRST, TWO THOUSAND SEVEN SHALL NOT BE LESS THAN
   10  ONE HUNDRED DOLLARS PER WEEK EXCEPT THAT IF THE EMPLOYEE`S WAGES AT  THE
   11  TIME  OF INJURY ARE LESS THAN ONE HUNDRED DOLLARS PER WEEK, THE EMPLOYEE
   12  SHALL RECEIVE HIS OR HER FULL WAGES. In no event shall compensation when
   13  combined with decreased earnings or earning capacity exceed  the  amount
   14  of wages the employee was receiving at the time the injury occurred.
   15    S  3. Subdivision 5 of section 16 of the workers` compensation law, as
   16  amended by chapter 924 of the laws  of  1990,  is  amended  to  read  as
   17  follows:
   18    5. Any EXCESS OF WAGES OVER: (1) SEVEN HUNDRED FIFTY DOLLARS SHALL NOT
   19  BE  TAKEN  INTO  ACCOUNT IN COMPUTING COMPENSATION UNDER THIS SECTION IN
   20  CASES WHERE THE DEATH OCCURS ON OR AFTER JULY FIRST, TWO THOUSAND SEVEN,
   21  (2) EIGHT HUNDRED TWENTY-FIVE DOLLARS SHALL NOT BE TAKEN INTO ACCOUNT IN
   22  COMPUTING COMPENSATION UNDER THIS  SECTION  IN  CASES  WHERE  THE  DEATH
   23  OCCURS  ON  OR  AFTER  JULY  FIRST, TWO THOUSAND EIGHT, (3) NINE HUNDRED
   24  DOLLARS SHALL NOT BE TAKEN INTO ACCOUNT IN COMPUTING COMPENSATION  UNDER
   25  THIS SECTION IN CASES WHERE THE DEATH OCCURS ON OR AFTER JULY FIRST, TWO
   26  THOUSAND  NINE,  AND  (4) WHERE THE DEATH OCCURS ON OR AFTER JULY FIRST,
   27  TWO THOUSAND TEN, OR WHEN THE DEATH OCCURS ON OR  AFTER  JULY  FIRST  OF
   28  EACH  SUCCEEDING  YEAR,  AN  AMOUNT  EQUAL TO THE NEW YORK STATE AVERAGE
   29  WEEKLY WAGE FOR THE YEAR IN WHICH IT IS REPORTED SHALL NOT BE TAKEN INTO
   30  ACCOUNT IN COMPUTING COMPENSATION UNDER THIS SECTION.    ANY  excess  of
   31  wages over five hundred ten dollars and five cents per week shall not be
   32  taken into account in computing compensation under this section in cases
   33  where  the death occurs on or after July first, nineteen hundred ninety,
   34  nor shall any excess of wages over five hundred twenty-five dollars  per
   35  week  be  taken  into account in computing compensation pursuant to this
   36  section in cases where death occurs on or  after  July  first,  nineteen
   37  hundred  ninety-one,  nor  shall  any  excess  of wages over six hundred
   38  dollars per week be taken into account in computing compensation  pursu-
   39  ant  to this section in cases where death occurs on or after July first,
   40  nineteen hundred ninety-two; nor shall any excess of  wages  over  three
   41  hundred  eighty-two  dollars  and  fifty  cents  per  week be taken into
   42  account in computing compensation under this section in cases where  the
   43  death  occurs on or after July first, nineteen hundred eighty-three, nor
   44  shall any excess of wages over four hundred  twelve  dollars  and  fifty
   45  cents  per  week  be  taken into account in computing compensation under
   46  this section in cases where the death occurs on  or  after  July  first,
   47  nineteen  hundred  eighty-four,  nor shall any excess of wages over four
   48  hundred fifty dollars per  week  be  taken  into  account  in  computing
   49  compensation  under  this  section in cases where the death occurs on or
   50  after July first, nineteen hundred eighty-five; nor shall any excess  of
   51  wages  over one hundred eighty-seven dollars and fifty cents per week on
   52  or after January first,  nineteen  hundred  seventy-eight  or  over  two
   53  hundred  seventy  dollars  per  week  on  or  after July first, nineteen
   54  hundred seventy-eight or over three hundred twenty-two dollars and fifty
   55  cents per week on or after January first, nineteen hundred seventy-nine,
   56  and prior to July first, nineteen hundred eighty-three,  be  taken  into

       S. 3322                             5                            A. 6163

    1  account  in  computing  compensation  under  this  section nor shall any
    2  excess of wages over six hundred and seventeen dollars and fifty cents a
    3  month be taken into account in computing compensation under this section
    4  in  cases  where  the  death  occurred  on or after July first, nineteen
    5  hundred seventy-four, and  prior  to  January  first,  nineteen  hundred
    6  seventy-eight, nor shall any excess of wages over five hundred and twen-
    7  ty  dollars  a  month be taken into account in computing compensation in
    8  cases where death occurred on or  after  July  first,  nineteen  hundred
    9  seventy  and  prior  to  July  first, nineteen hundred seventy-four, nor
   10  shall any excess of wages over four hundred  and  fifty-five  dollars  a
   11  month  be  taken  into  account in computing compensation in cases where
   12  death occurred on or after July first, nineteen hundred sixty-eight  and
   13  prior  to  July first, nineteen hundred seventy, nor shall any excess of
   14  wages over three hundred and  ninety  dollars  a  month  be  taken  into
   15  account  in  computing  compensation in cases where death occurred on or
   16  after July first, nineteen hundred sixty-five and prior to  July  first,
   17  nineteen  hundred  sixty-eight, nor shall any excess of wages over three
   18  hundred and fifty-seven dollars and fifty cents a month  be  taken  into
   19  account  in  computing  compensation in cases where death occurred on or
   20  after July first, nineteen hundred sixty-two and prior  to  July  first,
   21  nineteen  hundred  sixty-five,  nor shall any excess of wages over three
   22  hundred and twenty-five dollars a month be taken into account in comput-
   23  ing compensation in cases where death occurred on or after  July  first,
   24  nineteen  hundred sixty and prior to July first, nineteen hundred sixty-
   25  two, nor shall any excess of  wages  over  two  hundred  and  ninety-two
   26  dollars  and  fifty  cents  a  month  be taken into account in computing
   27  compensation where death occurred  on  or  after  July  first,  nineteen
   28  hundred fifty-eight and prior to July first, nineteen hundred sixty, nor
   29  shall  any excess of wages over two hundred and sixty dollars a month be
   30  taken into account in computing compensation where death occurred on  or
   31  after  July  first, nineteen hundred fifty-four and prior to July first,
   32  nineteen hundred fifty-eight, nor shall any excess  of  wages  over  two
   33  hundred  and  twenty-seven dollars and fifty cents a month be taken into
   34  account in computing compensation where death occurred on or after  July
   35  first,  nineteen  hundred  forty-eight and prior to July first, nineteen
   36  hundred fifty-four, nor shall any excess of wages over one  hundred  and
   37  eighty-two  dollars  a  month be taken into account in computing compen-
   38  sation where the death occurred on or after June first, nineteen hundred
   39  forty-six and prior to July first, nineteen hundred forty-eight.    When
   40  death  occurred on or after July first, nineteen hundred forty-eight and
   41  prior  to  January  first,  nineteen  hundred  seventy-eight,  computing
   42  compensation to the widow or widower and children of a deceased employee
   43  in no event shall wages be deemed to be less than one hundred and thirty
   44  dollars  a  month. All questions of dependency shall be determined as of
   45  the time of the accident. When death occurred on or after January first,
   46  nineteen hundred seventy-eight, in no event shall wages be deemed to  be
   47  less  than  forty-five  dollars  a week in computing compensation to the
   48  widow or widower and/or children of the deceased employee.
   49    S 4. Paragraph w of subdivision  3  of  section  15  of  the  workers`
   50  compensation  law,  as relettered by chapter 286 of the laws of 1970, is
   51  amended to read as follows:
   52    w. Other cases. In all  other  cases  {in  this  class}  of  PERMANENT
   53  PARTIAL  disability,  the compensation shall be sixty-six and two-thirds
   54  {per centum} PERCENT of the difference between {his} THE INJURED EMPLOY-
   55  EE`S average weekly wages and his OR HER wage-earning capacity thereaft-
   56  er in the same employment or otherwise{,}. COMPENSATION UNDER THIS PARA-

       S. 3322                             6                            A. 6163

    1  GRAPH SHALL BE payable during the continuance of such PERMANENT  partial
    2  disability, but subject to reconsideration of the degree of such impair-
    3  ment  by the board on its own motion or upon application of any party in
    4  interest  HOWEVER,  ALL  COMPENSATION PAYABLE UNDER THIS PARAGRAPH SHALL
    5  NOT EXCEED (I) FIVE HUNDRED TWENTY-FIVE WEEKS IN CASES IN WHICH THE LOSS
    6  OF WAGE-EARNING CAPACITY IS GREATER THAN NINETY-FIVE PERCENT; (II)  FIVE
    7  HUNDRED  WEEKS  IN  CASES  IN WHICH THE LOSS OF WAGE-EARNING CAPACITY IS
    8  GREATER THAN NINETY PERCENT BUT NOT MORE THAN NINETY-FIVE PERCENT; (III)
    9  FOUR HUNDRED SEVENTY-FIVE WEEKS IN CASES IN WHICH THE LOSS OF WAGE-EARN-
   10  ING CAPACITY IS GREATER THAN EIGHTY-FIVE PERCENT BUT NOT MORE THAN NINE-
   11  TY PERCENT; (IV) FOUR HUNDRED FIFTY WEEKS IN CASES IN WHICH THE LOSS  OF
   12  WAGE-EARNING  CAPACITY  IS GREATER THAN EIGHTY PERCENT BUT NOT MORE THAN
   13  EIGHTY-FIVE PERCENT; (V) FOUR HUNDRED  TWENTY-FIVE  WEEKS  IN  CASES  IN
   14  WHICH  THE  LOSS  OF  WAGE-EARNING CAPACITY IS GREATER THAN SEVENTY-FIVE
   15  PERCENT BUT NOT MORE THAN EIGHTY PERCENT; (VI)  FOUR  HUNDRED  WEEKS  IN
   16  CASES IN WHICH THE LOSS OF WAGE-EARNING CAPACITY IS GREATER THAN SEVENTY
   17  PERCENT  BUT  NOT  MORE  THAN  SEVENTY-FIVE PERCENT; (VII) THREE HUNDRED
   18  SEVENTY-FIVE WEEKS IN CASES IN WHICH THE LOSS OF  WAGE-EARNING  CAPACITY
   19  IS  GREATER THAN SIXTY PERCENT BUT NOT MORE THAN SEVENTY PERCENT; (VIII)
   20  THREE HUNDRED FIFTY WEEKS IN CASES IN WHICH  THE  LOSS  OF  WAGE-EARNING
   21  CAPACITY  IS GREATER THAN FIFTY PERCENT BUT NOT MORE THAN SIXTY PERCENT;
   22  (IX) THREE HUNDRED WEEKS IN CASES IN  WHICH  THE  LOSS  OF  WAGE-EARNING
   23  CAPACITY  IS GREATER THAN FORTY PERCENT BUT NOT MORE THAN FIFTY PERCENT;
   24  (X) TWO HUNDRED SEVENTY-FIVE  WEEKS  IN  CASES  IN  WHICH  THE  LOSS  OF
   25  WAGE-EARNING  CAPACITY  IS GREATER THAN THIRTY PERCENT BUT NOT MORE THAN
   26  FORTY PERCENT; (XI) TWO HUNDRED FIFTY WEEKS IN CASES IN WHICH  THE  LOSS
   27  OF  WAGE-EARNING  CAPACITY  IS GREATER THAN FIFTEEN PERCENT BUT NOT MORE
   28  THAN THIRTY PERCENT; AND (XII) TWO HUNDRED TWENTY-FIVE WEEKS IN CASES IN
   29  WHICH THE LOSS OF WAGE-EARNING CAPACITY IS FIFTEEN PERCENT OR LESS.  FOR
   30  THOSE CLAIMANTS CLASSIFIED AS  PERMANENTLY  PARTIALLY  DISABLED  WHO  NO
   31  LONGER  RECEIVE  INDEMNITY  PAYMENTS  BECAUSE  THEY HAVE SURPASSED THEIR
   32  NUMBER OF MAXIMUM BENEFIT WEEKS, THE FOLLOWING PROVISIONS WILL APPLY:
   33    (1) THERE WILL BE A PRESUMPTION THAT MEDICAL SERVICES  SHALL  CONTINUE
   34  NOTWITHSTANDING  THE  COMPLETION OF THE TIME PERIOD FOR COMPENSATION SET
   35  FORTH IN THIS SECTION AND THE BURDEN OF GOING FORWARD AND THE BURDEN  OF
   36  PROOF  WILL  LIE WITH THE CARRIER, SELF-INSURED EMPLOYER OR STATE INSUR-
   37  ANCE FUND IN ANY APPLICATION BEFORE THE BOARD TO DISCONTINUE OR  SUSPEND
   38  SUCH SERVICES. MEDICAL SERVICES WILL CONTINUE DURING THE PENDENCY OF ANY
   39  SUCH APPLICATION AND ANY APPEALS THERETO.
   40    (2)  THE BOARD IS DIRECTED TO PROMULGATE REGULATIONS THAT ESTABLISH AN
   41  INDEPENDENT REVIEW AND APPEAL BY AN  OUTSIDE  AGENT  OR  ENTITY  OF  THE
   42  BOARD`S  CHOOSING  OF  ANY  ADMINISTRATIVE  LAW JUDGE`S DETERMINATION TO
   43  DISCONTINUE OR SUSPEND MEDICAL SERVICES BEFORE A FINAL DETERMINATION  OF
   44  THE BOARD.
   45    S  5. The workers` compensation law is amended by adding a new section
   46  35 to read as follows:
   47    S 35. SAFETY NET.  1. RETURN TO WORK.  (A) THE COMMISSIONER  OF  LABOR
   48  WILL  ISSUE  A  REPORT TO THE GOVERNOR, THE SPEAKER OF THE ASSEMBLY, THE
   49  MAJORITY LEADER OF THE SENATE, AND THE CHAIRS OF  THE  LABOR,  WAYS  AND
   50  MEANS  AND  FINANCE  COMMITTEES  OF THE ASSEMBLY AND SENATE ON OR BEFORE
   51  DECEMBER FIRST, TWO THOUSAND SEVEN, MAKING RECOMMENDATIONS AS TO HOW  TO
   52  ASSURE  THAT  WORKERS  CATEGORIZED BY THE BOARD AS PERMANENTLY PARTIALLY
   53  DISABLED RETURN TO GAINFUL EMPLOYMENT TO THE GREATEST  EXTENT  PRACTICA-
   54  BLE.  SUCH  COMMISSIONER  WILL  CONSIDER  ADMINISTRATIVE AND LEGISLATIVE
   55  REMEDIES, AND SHALL INCLUDE ESTIMATES OF COST IN THE REPORT. THE  REPORT
   56  SHALL  EXAMINE  BEST  PRACTICES  AND THE LAWS OF OTHER JURISDICTIONS, AS

       S. 3322                             7                            A. 6163

    1  WELL AS ANY RELEVANT PROGRAMS AUTHORIZED BY NEW  YORK  LAW.  THE  REPORT
    2  SHALL  ADDITIONALLY  EXAMINE  RETURN TO WORK PRACTICES AS IMPLEMENTED BY
    3  CARRIERS, THE STATE INSURANCE FUND, EMPLOYERS, AND THE BOARD.  IT  SHALL
    4  ALSO  EXAMINE  THE RELATIONSHIP OF VOCATIONAL REHABILITATION TO ULTIMATE
    5  RETURN TO WORK.
    6    (B) THE COMMISSIONER OF LABOR WILL BE ASSISTED BY AN ADVISORY  COUNCIL
    7  CONSTITUTED OF SIX PERSONS APPOINTED BY THE GOVERNOR AS FOLLOWS:
    8    (I)  A REPRESENTATIVE OF ORGANIZED LABOR APPOINTED UPON RECOMMENDATION
    9  OF THE NEW YORK STATE AMERICAN FEDERATION OF  LABOR-CONGRESS  OF  INDUS-
   10  TRIAL ORGANIZATIONS;
   11    (II)  A REPRESENTATIVE OF THE BUSINESS COMMUNITY APPOINTED UPON RECOM-
   12  MENDATION OF THE BUSINESS COUNCIL OF NEW YORK STATE, INCORPORATED;
   13    (III) ONE PERSON UPON RECOMMENDATION OF THE  MAJORITY  LEADER  OF  THE
   14  SENATE;
   15    (IV)  ONE  PERSON  UPON RECOMMENDATION OF THE SPEAKER OF THE ASSEMBLY;
   16  AND
   17    (V) TWO OTHER PERSONS IN THE GOVERNOR`S DISCRETION.
   18    2. TOTAL INDUSTRIAL DISABILITY.  NO PROVISION OF THIS ARTICLE SHALL IN
   19  ANY WAY BE READ TO DEROGATE  OR  IMPAIR  CURRENT  OR  FUTURE  CLAIMANTS`
   20  EXISTING  RIGHTS  TO  APPLY  AT  ANY  TIME TO OBTAIN THE STATUS OF TOTAL
   21  INDUSTRIAL DISABILITY UNDER CURRENT CASE LAW.
   22    3. EXTREME HARDSHIP REDETERMINATION. IN CASES WHERE THE LOSS OF  WAGE-
   23  EARNING CAPACITY IS GREATER THAN EIGHTY PERCENT, A CLAIMANT MAY REQUEST,
   24  WITHIN  THE YEAR PRIOR TO THE SCHEDULED EXHAUSTION OF INDEMNITY BENEFITS
   25  UNDER PARAGRAPH W OF SUBDIVISION THREE OF SECTION FIFTEEN OF THIS  ARTI-
   26  CLE, THAT THE BOARD RECLASSIFY THE CLAIMANT TO PERMANENT TOTAL DISABILI-
   27  TY  OR  TOTAL  INDUSTRIAL  DISABILITY  DUE TO FACTORS REFLECTING EXTREME
   28  HARDSHIP.
   29    4. ANNUAL SAFETY  NET  REPORTING.    THE  COMMISSIONER  OF  LABOR,  IN
   30  CONJUNCTION  WITH  THE  BOARD AND THE SUPERINTENDENT OF INSURANCE, SHALL
   31  TRACK ALL CLAIMANTS WHO HAVE BEEN AWARDED PERMANENT  PARTIAL  DISABILITY
   32  STATUS  AND REPORT ANNUALLY ON DECEMBER FIRST, BEGINNING IN TWO THOUSAND
   33  EIGHT, TO THE GOVERNOR, THE SPEAKER OF THE ASSEMBLY, THE MAJORITY LEADER
   34  OF THE SENATE, AND THE CHAIRS OF THE LABOR, WAYS AND MEANS  AND  FINANCE
   35  COMMITTEES OF THE ASSEMBLY AND SENATE:
   36    (I) THE NUMBER OF SAID CLAIMANTS WHO HAVE:
   37    (1) RETURNED TO GAINFUL EMPLOYMENT;
   38    (2) BEEN RECATEGORIZED AS BEING TOTALLY INDUSTRIALLY DISABLED;
   39    (3) REMAIN SUBJECT TO DURATION LIMITATIONS SET FORTH IN PARAGRAPH W OF
   40  SUBDIVISION THREE OF SECTION FIFTEEN OF THIS ARTICLE; AND
   41    (4) NOT RETURNED TO WORK, AND WHOSE INDEMNITY PAYMENTS HAVE EXPIRED.
   42    (II)  THE ADDITIONAL STEPS THE COMMISSIONER CONTEMPLATES ARE NECESSARY
   43  TO MINIMIZE THE NUMBER OF WORKERS WHO HAVE NEITHER RETURNED TO WORK  NOR
   44  BEEN RECATEGORIZED FROM PERMANENT PARTIAL DISABILITY.
   45    S  6. Subdivision 2 of section 50 of the workers` compensation law, as
   46  amended by chapter 605 of the laws  of  1946,  is  amended  to  read  as
   47  follows:
   48    2.  By  insuring  and keeping insured the payment of such compensation
   49  with any stock corporation, mutual  corporation  or  reciprocal  insurer
   50  authorized to transact the business of {workmen`s} WORKERS` compensation
   51  insurance  in  this  state THROUGH A POLICY ISSUED UNDER THE LAW OF THIS
   52  STATE.
   53    S 7. Section 52 of the workers` compensation law, as amended by  chap-
   54  ter  419 of the laws of 1961, subdivisions 1 and 5 as amended by chapter
   55  924 of the laws of 1990, subdivision 2 as amended by chapter 460 of  the

       S. 3322                             8                            A. 6163

    1  laws  of 1991 and subdivision 3 as amended by chapter 845 of the laws of
    2  1965, is amended to read as follows:
    3    S  52.  Effect  of  failure to secure compensation. 1.  (a) Failure to
    4  secure the payment of compensation FOR FIVE OR LESS EMPLOYEES  WITHIN  A
    5  TWELVE MONTH PERIOD shall constitute a misdemeanor, AND IS punishable by
    6  a  fine of not less than {five hundred} ONE THOUSAND nor more than {two}
    7  FIVE thousand {five hundred} dollars {or imprisonment for not more  than
    8  one  year,  or both}.  FAILURE TO SECURE THE PAYMENT OF COMPENSATION FOR
    9  MORE THAN FIVE EMPLOYEES WITHIN A TWELVE MONTH PERIOD SHALL CONSTITUTE A
   10  CLASS E FELONY, AND IS PUNISHABLE BY A FINE OF NOT LESS THAN FIVE  THOU-
   11  SAND  DOLLARS  NOR  MORE  THAN FIFTY THOUSAND DOLLARS IN ADDITION TO ANY
   12  OTHER PENALTIES OTHERWISE PROVIDED BY LAW.  IT SHALL BE  AN  AFFIRMATIVE
   13  DEFENSE TO ANY CRIMINAL PROSECUTION UNDER THIS SECTION THAT THE EMPLOYER
   14  TOOK REASONABLE STEPS TO SECURE COMPENSATION.
   15    (b)  Where  any  person  has previously been convicted of a failure to
   16  secure the payment of compensation within the preceding five years, upon
   17  conviction for a {second} SUBSEQUENT  violation  such  person  shall  be
   18  GUILTY  OF  A CLASS D FELONY, AND fined not less than {one} TEN thousand
   19  nor more than {five} FIFTY thousand dollars in  addition  to  any  other
   20  penalties   including   fines  otherwise  provided  by  law{,  and  upon
   21  conviction for a third or subsequent violation such person may be  fined
   22  up  to  seven  thousand  five  hundred  dollars in addition to any other
   23  penalties including fines otherwise provided by law}.
   24    (c) Where the employer is a corporation, the president, secretary  and
   25  treasurer  thereof  shall be liable for failure to secure the payment of
   26  compensation under this section. IT SHALL BE AN AFFIRMATIVE  DEFENSE  TO
   27  ANY  ACTION AGAINST ANY OFFICER OF A CORPORATION UNDER THIS SECTION THAT
   28  THE OFFICER TOOK REASONABLE STEPS TO ENSURE THAT THE CORPORATION SECURED
   29  COMPENSATION, THAT PROPER INTERNAL PROCEDURES WERE IN EFFECT TO  DO  SO,
   30  AND  THAT  PROPER  INTERNAL  CONTROLS EXISTED TO MONITOR COMPLIANCE WITH
   31  SAID PROCEDURES.
   32    (D) IF AT ANY TIME AN EMPLOYER  INTENTIONALLY  AND  MATERIALLY  UNDER-
   33  STATES  OR  CONCEALS  PAYROLL, OR INTENTIONALLY AND MATERIALLY MISREPRE-
   34  SENTS OR CONCEALS EMPLOYEE DUTIES SO AS TO AVOID  PROPER  CLASSIFICATION
   35  FOR CALCULATION OF PREMIUM PAID TO SECURE COMPENSATION, OR INTENTIONALLY
   36  AND  MATERIALLY  MISREPRESENTS  OR CONCEALS INFORMATION PERTINENT TO THE
   37  CALCULATION OF PREMIUM PAID TO SECURE COMPENSATION, SUCH EMPLOYER  SHALL
   38  BE  DEEMED TO HAVE FAILED TO SECURE COMPENSATION AND SHALL BE SUBJECT TO
   39  THE SANCTIONS APPLICABLE TO THIS SECTION.
   40    (E) A STOP-WORK ORDER ISSUED BECAUSE AN EMPLOYER  IS  DEEMED  TO  HAVE
   41  FAILED  TO  SECURE COMPENSATION UNDER SECTION ONE HUNDRED FORTY-ONE-A OF
   42  THIS CHAPTER SHALL HAVE NO EFFECT UPON AN EMPLOYER`S OR  CARRIER`S  DUTY
   43  TO  PROVIDE BENEFITS UNDER THIS CHAPTER OR UPON ANY OF THE EMPLOYER`S OR
   44  CARRIER`S RIGHTS AND DEFENSES.
   45    2. All fines imposed under this chapter, except  as  herein  otherwise
   46  provided, shall be paid directly and immediately by the officer collect-
   47  ing  the  same  to the chairman, and shall be paid by him into the unin-
   48  sured employers` fund created under section twenty-six-a of  this  chap-
   49  ter,  provided,  however,  that  all such fines collected by justices of
   50  towns and villages shall be paid to the state comptroller in  accordance
   51  with  the provisions of section twenty-seven of the town law and section
   52  4-410 of the village law respectively.
   53    3. In any prosecution hereunder the failure of the  employer  to  file
   54  with  the chairman, within ten days after demand, a statement subscribed
   55  by the employer and affirmed by him  as  true  under  the  penalties  of
   56  perjury  showing  specifically (a) the name of the stock company, mutual

       S. 3322                             9                            A. 6163

    1  corporation or reciprocal insurer in which such employer is insured  and
    2  the  number  and  the date of issuance and term of such policy of insur-
    3  ance, or (b) that the said employer is insured with the  state  fund  in
    4  which  case  he  shall  give the number of such policy of insurance, the
    5  date of issuance and term thereof, or (c) that  the  said  employer  has
    6  been  authorized  to  do  business as a self-insurer pursuant to section
    7  fifty of {the workmen`s compensation law} THIS ARTICLE, giving the  date
    8  of  said authorization, or (d) a legal reason, if any, why said employer
    9  is not required to secure compensation,  shall  constitute  prima  facie
   10  evidence  that  the employer has failed to secure compensation as herein
   11  required.  The statement to be filed herein shall be subscribed  by  the
   12  employer  or  if  the  employer  is a corporation by one of the officers
   13  herein named in which he shall state that he  has  read  such  statement
   14  subscribed  by  him and knows the contents thereof and that same is true
   15  of his own knowledge.
   16    4. If, however, there has been an accident and the  board  shall  have
   17  made an award against the employer as a non-insured employer, the making
   18  of  such  award, except in a case where the employer had secured compen-
   19  sation insurance which was in effect at the time of the accident but the
   20  carrier later became insolvent, shall constitute prima facie evidence of
   21  an employment by the employer of an employee in an occupation  in  which
   22  the  said employer was required to carry compensation and of the failure
   23  of the employer to secure the payment of  {workmen`s}  WORKERS`  compen-
   24  sation  on  the date of the accident involved in said award. A certified
   25  copy of such award shall be received as competent evidence of the making
   26  thereof in any criminal prosecution hereunder.
   27    5. The chair, upon finding that an employer has failed for a period of
   28  not less than ten consecutive days to make the provision for payment  of
   29  compensation  required  by  section fifty of this {chapter} ARTICLE, may
   30  impose upon such employer, in addition to all other penalties, fines  or
   31  assessments  provided  for  in  this  chapter, a penalty of {two hundred
   32  fifty} ONE THOUSAND dollars for each ten day period of non-compliance or
   33  a sum not in excess of two {percent of} TIMES THE COST  OF  COMPENSATION
   34  FOR  its payroll for the period of such failure, which sum shall be paid
   35  into the uninsured employers` fund created under section twenty-six-a of
   36  this chapter.  WHEN AN EMPLOYER FAILS TO PROVIDE BUSINESS RECORDS SUFFI-
   37  CIENT TO ENABLE THE CHAIR TO DETERMINE THE EMPLOYER`S  PAYROLL  FOR  THE
   38  PERIOD  REQUESTED  FOR  THE  CALCULATION OF THE PENALTY PROVIDED IN THIS
   39  SECTION, THE IMPUTED WEEKLY PAYROLL FOR EACH EMPLOYEE,  CORPORATE  OFFI-
   40  CER,  SOLE  PROPRIETOR,  OR  PARTNER SHALL BE THE NEW YORK STATE AVERAGE
   41  WEEKLY WAGE, MULTIPLIED BY 1.5. Where the employer is a corporation, the
   42  president, secretary and treasurer  thereof  shall  be  liable  for  the
   43  penalty.  If  the  employer shall within thirty days after notice of the
   44  imposition of a penalty by the chair pursuant to this  subdivision  make
   45  an  application  in  affidavit form for a redetermination review of such
   46  penalty the chairman shall make a decision  in  writing  on  the  issues
   47  raised on such application.
   48    S 8. Section 131 of the workers` compensation law, as amended by chap-
   49  ter 135 of the laws of 1998, is amended to read as follows:
   50    S  131. Payroll records.  (1) Every employer subject to the provisions
   51  of this chapter shall keep a true and accurate record of the  number  of
   52  his  OR  HER  employees,  THE  CLASSIFICATION  OF EMPLOYEES, INFORMATION
   53  REGARDING EMPLOYEE ACCIDENTS and the wages paid by  him  OR  HER  for  a
   54  period  of  four  years after each entry therein, which records shall be
   55  open to inspection at any time, and as often  as  may  be  necessary  to
   56  verify  the  same by investigators of the board, by the authorized audi-

       S. 3322                            10                            A. 6163

    1  tors, accountants or inspectors of the carrier with whom the employer is
    2  insured, or by the authorized auditors, accountants or inspectors of any
    3  workers` compensation insurance rating board or bureau  operating  under
    4  the  authority  of  the  insurance law and of which board or bureau such
    5  carrier is a member OR THE GROUP  TRUST  OF  WHICH  THE  EMPLOYER  IS  A
    6  MEMBER.  Any and all records required by law to be kept by such employer
    7  upon which the employer makes or files a return concerning wages paid to
    8  employees  shall  form part of the records described in this section and
    9  shall be open to inspection in the  same  manner  as  provided  in  this
   10  section.  Any  employer  who  shall fail to keep such records, who shall
   11  willfully fail to furnish such record as required in this section or who
   12  shall falsify any such records, shall be guilty  of  a  misdemeanor  AND
   13  SUBJECT  TO  A  FINE  OF  NOT  LESS THAN FIVE NOR MORE THAN TEN THOUSAND
   14  DOLLARS IN ADDITION TO ANY OTHER PENALTIES OTHERWISE  PROVIDED  BY  LAW,
   15  EXCEPT THAT ANY SUCH EMPLOYER THAT HAS PREVIOUSLY BEEN SUBJECT TO CRIMI-
   16  NAL  PENALTIES  UNDER  THIS  SECTION WITHIN THE PRIOR TEN YEARS SHALL BE
   17  GUILTY OF A CLASS E FELONY, AND SUBJECT TO A FINE OF NOT LESS  THAN  TEN
   18  NOR  MORE THAN TWENTY-FIVE THOUSAND DOLLARS IN ADDITION TO ANY PENALTIES
   19  OTHERWISE PROVIDED BY LAW.
   20    (2) Employers subject to {subdivision} SUBSECTION (e) of  section  two
   21  thousand  three hundred four of the insurance law and subdivision two of
   22  section eighty-nine of this chapter  shall  keep  a  true  and  accurate
   23  record  of  hours  worked for all construction classification employees.
   24  The willful failure to keep such record, or the knowing falsification of
   25  any such record, may be prosecuted as insurance fraud in accordance with
   26  the provisions of section 176.05 of the penal law.
   27    (3) THE CHAIR, UPON FINDING THAT AN EMPLOYER HAS FAILED TO  KEEP  TRUE
   28  AND  ACCURATE  RECORDS AS REQUIRED BY THIS SECTION, MAY IMPOSE UPON SUCH
   29  EMPLOYER, IN ADDITION TO  ALL  OTHER  PENALTIES,  FINES  OR  ASSESSMENTS
   30  PROVIDED  FOR  IN  THIS  CHAPTER,  ONE THOUSAND DOLLARS FOR EACH TEN DAY
   31  PERIOD OF NON-COMPLIANCE OR A SUM NOT IN EXCESS OF TWO TIMES THE COST OF
   32  COMPENSATION FOR ITS PAYROLL FOR THE PERIOD OF SUCH VIOLATION, WHICH SUM
   33  SHALL BE PAID INTO THE UNINSURED EMPLOYERS` FUND CREATED  UNDER  SECTION
   34  TWENTY-SIX-A OF THIS CHAPTER. WHEN AN EMPLOYER FAILS TO PROVIDE BUSINESS
   35  RECORDS  SUFFICIENT  TO  ENABLE  THE  CHAIR  TO DETERMINE THE EMPLOYER`S
   36  PAYROLL FOR THE PERIOD REQUESTED FOR  THE  CALCULATION  OF  THE  PENALTY
   37  PROVIDED  IN THIS SECTION, THE IMPUTED WEEKLY PAYROLL FOR EACH EMPLOYEE,
   38  CORPORATE OFFICER, SOLE PROPRIETOR, OR PARTNER SHALL  BE  THE  NEW  YORK
   39  STATE  AVERAGE  WEEKLY  WAGE, MULTIPLIED BY 1.5. WHERE THE EMPLOYER IS A
   40  CORPORATION, THE CORPORATION AND ANY OF THE FOLLOWING  SHALL  BE  LIABLE
   41  FOR  THE PENALTY PROVIDED IN THIS SUBDIVISION:  THE PRESIDENT, SECRETARY
   42  AND TREASURER. IF THE EMPLOYER SHALL WITHIN THIRTY DAYS AFTER NOTICE  OF
   43  THE  IMPOSITION  OF  A PENALTY BY THE CHAIR PURSUANT TO THIS SUBDIVISION
   44  MAKE AN APPLICATION IN AFFIDAVIT FORM FOR A  REDETERMINATION  REVIEW  OF
   45  SUCH  PENALTY,  THE CHAIR SHALL MAKE A DECISION IN WRITING ON THE ISSUES
   46  RAISED ON SUCH APPLICATION.
   47    S 9. Subdivision 4 of section 114 of the workers` compensation law, as
   48  amended by chapter 635 of the laws of 1996, is amended and a new  subdi-
   49  vision 5 is added to read as follows:
   50    4.  Consistent  with  the provisions of the criminal procedure law, in
   51  any prosecution alleging a violation of subdivision one, two or three of
   52  this section, OR SECTIONS FIFTY-TWO AND ONE HUNDRED THIRTY-ONE  OF  THIS
   53  CHAPTER,  in  which  the  act  or  acts  alleged  may  also constitute a
   54  violation of the penal or other law, the prosecuting official may charge
   55  a person pursuant to the provisions of this  section  and  in  the  same
   56  accusatory instrument with a violation of such other law.

       S. 3322                            11                            A. 6163

    1    5.  A  PERSON  (A)  WHO IS CONVICTED OF A SECOND OR SUBSEQUENT OFFENSE
    2  UNDER THIS SECTION WITHIN TEN YEARS  OF THE PRIOR CONVICTION, OR (B) WHO
    3  VIOLATES ANY PROVISION OF THIS SECTION CONCERNING TWO OR MORE CLAIMANTS,
    4  SHALL BE GUILTY OF A CLASS D FELONY.
    5    S  10.    Section 114-a of the workers` compensation law is amended by
    6  adding a new subdivision 3 to read as follows:
    7    3. IF THE BOARD OR ANY COURT HAVING JURISDICTION OVER  PROCEEDINGS  IN
    8  RESPECT OF ANY CLAIM FOR COMPENSATION DETERMINES THAT THE PROCEEDINGS IN
    9  RESPECT  OF  SUCH  CLAIM, INCLUDING ANY APPEALS, HAVE BEEN INSTITUTED OR
   10  CONTINUED WITHOUT REASONABLE GROUND:
   11    (I) THE COST OF SUCH PROCEEDINGS SHALL BE ASSESSED AGAINST  THE  PARTY
   12  WHO HAS SO INSTITUTED OR CONTINUED THE PROCEEDINGS, WHICH SHALL BE PAYA-
   13  BLE  TO  THE  BOARD  FOR ADMINISTRATIVE EXPENSES PURSUANT TO SECTION ONE
   14  HUNDRED FIFTY-ONE OF THIS CHAPTER;
   15    (II) REASONABLE ATTORNEYS` FEES SHALL BE ASSESSED AGAINST AN  ATTORNEY
   16  OR  LICENSED  REPRESENTATIVE WHO HAS INSTITUTED OR CONTINUED PROCEEDINGS
   17  WITHOUT REASONABLE GROUNDS, WHICH ASSESSMENT SHALL  BE  PAYABLE  TO  THE
   18  BOARD  FOR  ADMINISTRATIVE  EXPENSES  PURSUANT  TO  SECTION  ONE HUNDRED
   19  FIFTY-ONE OF THIS CHAPTER.  FEES AWARDED UNDER THIS PROVISION MAY NOT BE
   20  RECOUPED FROM THE PARTY; AND
   21    (III) SUCH ASSESSMENTS SHALL BE  IN  ADDITION  TO  ANY  OTHER  PENALTY
   22  PERMITTED UNDER THIS CHAPTER.
   23    S  11.  Section  141  of  the workers` compensation law, as amended by
   24  chapter 398 of the laws of 1997, is amended to read as follows:
   25    S 141. General powers and duties of the {chairman} CHAIR.  The {chair-
   26  man} CHAIR shall be the administrative head of the workers` compensation
   27  board and shall exercise the powers and perform the duties  in  relation
   28  to  the  administration of this chapter heretofore vested in the commis-
   29  sioner of labor by chapter fifty of the laws of nineteen  hundred  twen-
   30  ty-one, and acts amendatory thereof, and by this chapter excepting arti-
   31  cle  six  thereof,  and  except  in so far as such powers and duties are
   32  vested by this chapter in the workers` compensation board.  The  {chair-
   33  man}  CHAIR shall preside at all meetings of the board and shall appoint
   34  all committees and panels of the board; shall designate  the  times  and
   35  places  for  the  hearing of claims under this chapter and shall perform
   36  all administrative functions of the board as in this chapter set  forth.
   37  The  {chairman}  CHAIR,  in the name of the board, shall enforce all the
   38  provisions of this chapter, and may make administrative regulations  and
   39  orders providing for the receipt, indexing and examining of all notices,
   40  claims  and  reports,  for the giving of notice of hearings and of deci-
   41  sions, for certifying of records, for the fixing of the times and places
   42  for the hearing of claims, and for providing for the conduct of hearings
   43  and establishing of calendar practice to  the  extent  not  inconsistent
   44  with  the  rules of the board.  The {chairman} CHAIR shall issue and may
   45  revoke certificates of authorization of  physicians,  chiropractors  and
   46  podiatrists  as  provided  in  sections thirteen-a, thirteen-k and thir-
   47  teen-1 of this chapter, and licenses for medical bureaus and  x-ray  and
   48  other  laboratories  under  the provisions of section thirteen-c of this
   49  chapter, ISSUE STOP WORK ORDERS  AS  PROVIDED  IN  SECTION  ONE  HUNDRED
   50  FORTY-ONE-A  OF THIS ARTICLE, and shall have and exercise all powers not
   51  otherwise provided for herein in relation to the administration of  this
   52  chapter heretofore expressly conferred upon the commissioner of labor by
   53  any of the provisions of this chapter, or of the labor law.  The {chair-
   54  man}  CHAIR,  on  behalf of the workers` compensation board, shall enter
   55  into the agreement provided for in section one hundred seventy-one-h  of
   56  the  tax  law,  and shall take such other actions as may be necessary to

       S. 3322                            12                            A. 6163

    1  carry out the agreement provided for in such section for matching  bene-
    2  ficiary  records  of  workers` compensation with information provided by
    3  employers to the state directory of new hires for the purposes of  veri-
    4  fying  eligibility  for  such  benefits  and  for administering workers`
    5  compensation.
    6    S 12. The workers` compensation law is amended by adding a new section
    7  141-a to read as follows:
    8    S 141-A. CIVIL ENFORCEMENT.  1. TO INVESTIGATE VIOLATIONS OF  SECTIONS
    9  FIFTY-TWO  AND  ONE HUNDRED THIRTY-ONE OF THIS CHAPTER, THE CHAIR OR HIS
   10  OR HER DESIGNEES SHALL HAVE THE POWER TO:
   11    (A) ENTER AND INSPECT ANY PLACE OF BUSINESS AT ANY REASONABLE TIME FOR
   12  THE PURPOSE OF INVESTIGATING EMPLOYER COMPLIANCE.
   13    (B) EXAMINE AND COPY BUSINESS RECORDS.
   14    (C) ADMINISTER OATHS AND AFFIRMATIONS.
   15    (D)  ISSUE  AND  SERVE  SUBPOENAS  FOR  ATTENDANCE  OF  WITNESSES   OR
   16  PRODUCTION  OF BUSINESS RECORDS, BOOKS, PAPERS, CORRESPONDENCE, MEMORAN-
   17  DA, AND OTHER RECORDS. SUCH SUBPOENAS MAY BE SERVED WITHOUT THE STATE ON
   18  ANY DEFENDANT OVER WHOM A NEW YORK COURT WOULD HAVE  PERSONAL  JURISDIC-
   19  TION  UNDER  THE  CIVIL  PRACTICE LAW AND RULES AS TO THE SUBJECT MATTER
   20  UNDER INVESTIGATION, PROVIDED THE INFORMATION OR TESTIMONY SOUGHT  BEARS
   21  A REASONABLE RELATIONSHIP TO THE SUBJECT MATTER UNDER INVESTIGATION.
   22    2. THE CHAIR SHALL SPECIFY BY RULE THE BUSINESS RECORDS THAT EMPLOYERS
   23  MUST MAINTAIN AND PRODUCE TO COMPLY WITH THIS SECTION.
   24    3.  IF A PERSON HAS REFUSED TO OBEY A SUBPOENA, THE CHAIR MAY COMMENCE
   25  AN ACTION IN SUPREME COURT OF ANY COUNTY WHERE VENUE IS  PROPER  FOR  AN
   26  ORDER  REQUIRING  COMPLIANCE WITH THE SUBPOENA. COSTS, INCLUDING REASON-
   27  ABLE ATTORNEY`S FEES, INCURRED BY THE CHAIR TO  OBTAIN  AND  ENFORCE  AN
   28  ORDER  GRANTING,  IN  WHOLE OR IN PART, A PETITION TO ENFORCE A SUBPOENA
   29  SHALL BE TAXED AGAINST THE SUBPOENAED PARTY.
   30    4. (A) WHENEVER THE CHAIR DETERMINES THAT AN EMPLOYER WHO IS  REQUIRED
   31  TO  SECURE  COMPENSATION  IN  ACCORDANCE WITH THIS CHAPTER HAS FAILED TO
   32  SECURE SUCH COMPENSATION, OR WHERE AN EMPLOYER HAS FAILED TO PAY  PENAL-
   33  TIES ASSESSED AGAINST IT PURSUANT TO THIS CHAPTER, SUCH FAILURE SHALL BE
   34  DEEMED  AN IMMEDIATE SERIOUS DANGER TO PUBLIC HEALTH, SAFETY, OR WELFARE
   35  SUFFICIENT TO JUSTIFY SERVICE BY THE CHAIR OF A STOP-WORK ORDER  ON  THE
   36  EMPLOYER,  REQUIRING  THE CESSATION OF ALL BUSINESS OPERATIONS EFFECTIVE
   37  IMMEDIATELY, EXCEPT WHERE THE EMPLOYER`S FAILURE CONCERNS ONLY  DOMESTIC
   38  OR  CHILD  CARE WORKERS IN HIS OR HER OWN HOUSEHOLD. THE CHAIR MAY ISSUE
   39  SUCH ORDER, WHICH SHALL TAKE EFFECT AS TO A PARTICULAR EMPLOYER WORKSITE
   40  WHEN SERVED AT THAT WORKSITE, OR AS TO ALL  EMPLOYER  WORKSITES  IN  THE
   41  STATE  FOR  WHICH  THE  EMPLOYER IS NOT IN COMPLIANCE WHEN SERVED ON THE
   42  EMPLOYER. A STOP-WORK ORDER MAY BE SERVED WITH REGARD TO  AN  EMPLOYER`S
   43  WORKSITE  BY  POSTING  A  COPY  OF  THE STOP-WORK ORDER IN A CONSPICUOUS
   44  LOCATION AT THE WORKSITE. THE ORDER SHALL REMAIN  IN  EFFECT  UNTIL  THE
   45  CHAIR  DIRECTS THAT THE STOP-WORK ORDER BE REMOVED, UPON A DETERMINATION
   46  THAT THE EMPLOYER HAS COME INTO COMPLIANCE WITH  THE  COVERAGE  REQUIRE-
   47  MENTS OF THIS CHAPTER AND HAS PAID ANY PENALTY ASSESSED UNDER THIS CHAP-
   48  TER.  IF THE EMPLOYER SHALL WITHIN THIRTY DAYS AFTER NOTICE OF THE STOP-
   49  WORK ORDER MAKE AN APPLICATION IN AFFIDAVIT FORM FOR  A  REDETERMINATION
   50  REVIEW  OF  SUCH ORDER THE CHAIR SHALL MAKE A DECISION IN WRITING ON THE
   51  ISSUES RAISED IN SUCH APPLICATION.  THE CHAIR MAY DIRECT  A  CONDITIONAL
   52  RELEASE  FROM  A  STOP-WORK  ORDER  UPON A FINDING THAT THE EMPLOYER HAS
   53  COMPLIED WITH COVERAGE REQUIREMENTS OF THIS CHAPTER AND  HAS  AGREED  TO
   54  REMIT  PERIODIC  PAYMENTS OF THE PENALTY PURSUANT TO A PAYMENT AGREEMENT
   55  SCHEDULE WITH THE CHAIR. IF AN AGREEMENT OR ORDER OF CONDITIONAL RELEASE
   56  IS ISSUED, FAILURE BY THE EMPLOYER TO MEET ANY TERM OR CONDITION OF SUCH

       S. 3322                            13                            A. 6163

    1  PAYMENT AGREEMENT SHALL RESULT IN THE  IMMEDIATE  REINSTATEMENT  OF  THE
    2  STOP-WORK  ORDER  AND  THE  ENTIRE  UNPAID  BALANCE OF THE PENALTY SHALL
    3  BECOME IMMEDIATELY DUE. THE CHAIR MAY REQUIRE AN EMPLOYER WHO  IS  FOUND
    4  TO  HAVE FAILED TO COMPLY WITH THE COVERAGE REQUIREMENTS OF THIS CHAPTER
    5  TO FILE WITH THE BOARD, AS A  CONDITION  OF  RELEASE  FROM  A  STOP-WORK
    6  ORDER,  PERIODIC REPORTS FOR A PROBATIONARY PERIOD THAT SHALL NOT EXCEED
    7  TWO YEARS, AND THAT DEMONSTRATE THE EMPLOYER`S CONTINUED COMPLIANCE WITH
    8  THIS CHAPTER.  THE BOARD SHALL BY RULE SPECIFY THE REPORTS REQUIRED  AND
    9  THE TIME FOR FILING UNDER THIS SUBDIVISION.
   10    (B)  A  STOP-WORK  ORDER ISSUED AGAINST AN EMPLOYER UNDER THIS SECTION
   11  SHALL BE IN EFFECT AGAINST ANY NON-COMPLIANT SUBSTANTIALLY-OWNED  AFFIL-
   12  IATED ENTITY.
   13    5.  THE  CHAIR MAY FILE A COMPLAINT IN THE SUPREME COURT OF ANY COUNTY
   14  WHERE VENUE IS PROPER: (A) TO  ENJOIN  ANY  EMPLOYER  FROM  VIOLATING  A
   15  STOP-WORK  ORDER;  OR  (B)  TO  ENJOIN  ANY OTHER PRACTICE PROHIBITED BY
   16  SECTION FIFTY-TWO OR ONE HUNDRED THIRTY-ONE  OF  THIS  CHAPTER.  IN  ANY
   17  ACTION  BROUGHT  BY  THE  CHAIR  PURSUANT  TO  THIS  SECTION IN WHICH IT
   18  PREVAILS, THE COURT MAY AWARD COSTS, INCLUDING THE REASONABLE  COSTS  OF
   19  INVESTIGATION AND REASONABLE ATTORNEYS` FEES.
   20    6.  ANY  JUDGMENT OBTAINED BY THE CHAIR AND ANY PENALTY DUE UNDER THIS
   21  SECTION SHALL, UNTIL COLLECTED, CONSTITUTE A LIEN UPON THE ENTIRE INTER-
   22  EST OF THE EMPLOYER, LEGAL  OR  EQUITABLE,  IN  ANY  PROPERTY,  REAL  OR
   23  PERSONAL,  TANGIBLE  OR INTANGIBLE; HOWEVER, SUCH LIEN IS SUBORDINATE TO
   24  CLAIMS FOR UNPAID WAGES AND ANY PRIOR RECORDED LIENS, AND A LIEN CREATED
   25  BY THIS SECTION IS NOT VALID AGAINST ANY PERSON WHO, SUBSEQUENT TO  SUCH
   26  LIEN AND IN GOOD FAITH AND FOR VALUE, PURCHASES REAL OR PERSONAL PROPER-
   27  TY FROM SUCH EMPLOYER OR BECOMES THE MORTGAGEE ON REAL OR PERSONAL PROP-
   28  ERTY  OF  SUCH  EMPLOYER,  OR  AGAINST  A SUBSEQUENT ATTACHING CREDITOR,
   29  UNLESS, WITH RESPECT TO REAL ESTATE OF THE EMPLOYER,  A  NOTICE  OF  THE
   30  LIEN  IS  RECORDED  IN  THE  PUBLIC RECORDS OF THE COUNTY WHERE THE REAL
   31  ESTATE IS LOCATED, AND WITH RESPECT TO PERSONAL PROPERTY OF THE  EMPLOY-
   32  ER, THE NOTICE IS RECORDED WITH THE SECRETARY OF STATE.
   33    7.  IN  ANY  COURT  PROCEEDINGS UNDER THIS SECTION, THE CHAIR SHALL BE
   34  REPRESENTED BY THE ATTORNEY GENERAL.
   35    S 13. The workers` compensation law is amended by adding a new section
   36  141-b to read as follows:
   37    S 141-B.  SUSPENSION AND DEBARMENT.   ANY PERSON SUBJECT  TO  A  FINAL
   38  ASSESSMENT OF CIVIL FINES OR PENALTIES OR A STOP-WORK ORDER, OR THAT HAS
   39  BEEN  CONVICTED OF A MISDEMEANOR FOR A VIOLATION OF SECTIONS TWENTY-SIX,
   40  FIFTY-TWO OR ONE HUNDRED THIRTY-ONE OF THIS CHAPTER,  AND  ANY  SUBSTAN-
   41  TIALLY-OWNED  AFFILIATED  ENTITY  OF SUCH PERSON, SHALL BE INELIGIBLE TO
   42  SUBMIT A BID ON OR BE AWARDED ANY PUBLIC WORK  CONTRACT  OR  SUBCONTRACT
   43  WITH THE STATE, ANY MUNICIPAL CORPORATION OR PUBLIC BODY FOR A PERIOD OF
   44  ONE  YEAR  FROM  THE  FINAL  DETERMINATION  OR  CONVICTION.   ANY PERSON
   45  CONVICTED OF A  FELONY  UNDER  THIS  ARTICLE,  OR  A  MISDEMEANOR  UNDER
   46  SECTIONS  ONE  HUNDRED TWENTY-FIVE AND ONE HUNDRED TWENTY-FIVE-A OF THIS
   47  CHAPTER SHALL BE INELIGIBLE TO SUBMIT A BID ON OR BE AWARDED ANY  PUBLIC
   48  WORK  CONTRACT  OR SUBCONTRACT WITH THE STATE, ANY MUNICIPAL CORPORATION
   49  OR PUBLIC BODY FOR A PERIOD OF FIVE YEARS FROM SUCH CONVICTION.
   50    S 14. The workers` compensation law is amended by adding a new section
   51  141-c to read as follows:
   52    S 141-C. COORDINATION OF FORMS. THE BOARD, THE COMMISSIONER OF  LABOR,
   53  THE  COMMISSIONER  OF  TAXATION  AND  FINANCE, THE COMMISSIONER OF MOTOR
   54  VEHICLES, AND THE SUPERINTENDENT OF INSURANCE SHALL CONSULT ON AN  ONGO-
   55  ING BASIS TO COORDINATE THE AMENDMENT OF FORMS USED TO GATHER DATA HELP-
   56  FUL  IN IDENTIFYING FRAUD, SO AS TO PROMOTE EFFECTIVE USE AND SHARING OF

       S. 3322                            14                            A. 6163

    1  SUCH INFORMATION FOR IDENTIFYING FRAUD IN THE AREA OF  WORKERS`  COMPEN-
    2  SATION. THROUGH SUCH CONSULTATIONS AND OTHER MEANS, THESE AGENCIES SHALL
    3  STUDY THE IMPLEMENTATION OF APPROPRIATE PRACTICABLE TECHNOLOGY TO VERIFY
    4  THE AUTHENTICITY OF FORMS, INCLUDING CERTIFICATES OF COVERAGE.
    5    S 15. The workers` compensation law is amended by adding a new section
    6  114-c to read as follows:
    7    S  114-C.    MULTIPLE  OFFENSES.  ANY  PROVISION OF THIS CHAPTER WHICH
    8  IMPOSES ADDITIONAL PENALTIES FOR A SECOND OR  SUBSEQUENT  OFFENSE  SHALL
    9  APPLY  WHENEVER THE PRIOR OFFENSE WAS COMMITTED BY A SUBSTANTIALLY OWNED
   10  AFFILIATED ENTITY OF THE PARTY SUBJECT TO PENALTY.
   11    S 16. Subdivision 5 of section 136 of the workers`  compensation  law,
   12  as  added  by  chapter  635  of  the laws of 1996, is amended to read as
   13  follows:
   14    5. Disclosure of information. The inspector general shall not publicly
   15  disclose information which is:
   16    (a) a part of an ongoing investigation or prosecution; or
   17    (b) specifically prohibited from disclosure by any other provision  of
   18  law.
   19    THE  DISCLOSURE  OF  INFORMATION IN ORDER TO COORDINATE INVESTIGATIONS
   20  WITH THE INSURANCE FRAUDS BUREAU OF THE DEPARTMENT OF INSURANCE, INCLUD-
   21  ING THE UNIT FOR WORKERS` COMPENSATION INSURANCE  FRAUDS  INVESTIGATIONS
   22  WITHIN  SUCH INSURANCE FRAUDS BUREAU, AND ANY FRAUDS INVESTIGATIONS UNIT
   23  OF THE STATE INSURANCE FUND, TO PROVIDE THE REPORT REQUIRED BY PARAGRAPH
   24  (C) OF SUBDIVISION THREE OF THIS SECTION OR  TO  APPRISE  THE  CHAIR  OF
   25  ONGOING  INVESTIGATIONS  SHALL  NOT  BE CONSIDERED PUBLIC DISCLOSURE FOR
   26  PURPOSES OF THIS SECTION.
   27    S 17. Section 406 of the insurance law, as amended by chapter  635  of
   28  the laws of 1996, is amended to read as follows:
   29    S 406. Immunity. In the absence of fraud or bad faith, no person shall
   30  be  subject  to  civil  liability,  and  no civil cause of action of any
   31  nature shall arise against such person (i) for any information  relating
   32  to suspected fraudulent insurance transactions furnished to law enforce-
   33  ment officials, their agents and employees; and (ii) for any information
   34  relating  to  suspected  fraudulent  insurance transactions furnished to
   35  other persons subject to the provisions of this chapter; and  (iii)  for
   36  any  such  information  furnished  in  reports  to  the insurance frauds
   37  bureau, its agents or employees  or  {the  workers`  compensation  fraud
   38  inspector  general}  ANY  STATE AGENCY INVESTIGATING FRAUD OR MISCONDUCT
   39  RELATING TO WORKERS` COMPENSATION INSURANCE, its  agents  or  employees.
   40  Nor  shall  the  superintendent  or any employee of the insurance frauds
   41  bureau, in the absence of fraud  or  bad  faith,  be  subject  to  civil
   42  liability and no civil cause of action of any nature shall arise against
   43  them  by  virtue of the publication of any report or bulletin related to
   44  the official activities of the insurance frauds bureau.  Nothing  herein
   45  is intended to abrogate or modify in any way any common law privilege of
   46  immunity heretofore enjoyed by any person.
   47    S  18. Paragraph 3 of subsection (e) of section 697 of the tax law, as
   48  amended by chapter 748 of the laws  of  2005,  is  amended  to  read  as
   49  follows:
   50    (3)  Nothing herein shall be construed to prohibit the department, its
   51  officers or employees from  furnishing  information  to  the  office  of
   52  temporary and disability assistance relating to the payment of the cred-
   53  it for certain household and dependent care services necessary for gain-
   54  ful  employment  under subsection (c) of section six hundred six of this
   55  article and the earned income credit under subsection (d) of section six
   56  hundred six of this article, or pursuant to a local  law  enacted  by  a

       S. 3322                            15                            A. 6163

    1  city  having  a population of one million or more pursuant to subsection
    2  (f) of section thirteen hundred ten of this chapter, only to the  extent
    3  necessary  to  calculate  qualified  state  expenditures under paragraph
    4  seven  of  subdivision  (a)  of section four hundred nine of the federal
    5  social security act or to document the  proper  expenditure  of  federal
    6  temporary assistance for needy families funds under section four hundred
    7  three of such act. The office of temporary and disability assistance may
    8  redisclose  such  information  to the United States department of health
    9  and human services only to the extent necessary to calculate such quali-
   10  fied state expenditures or to document the proper  expenditure  of  such
   11  federal  temporary  assistance  for needy families funds. Nothing herein
   12  shall be construed to prohibit the delivery by  the  commissioner  to  a
   13  commissioner  of jurors, appointed pursuant to section five hundred four
   14  of the judiciary law, or, in counties within cities having a  population
   15  of one million or more, to the county clerk of such county, of a mailing
   16  list  of  individuals to whom income tax forms are mailed by the commis-
   17  sioner for the sole purpose of compiling a list of prospective jurors as
   18  provided in article sixteen of the judiciary law.    Provided,  however,
   19  such  delivery  shall  only  be  made  pursuant to an order of the chief
   20  administrator of the courts, appointed pursuant to section  two  hundred
   21  ten  of the judiciary law. No such order may be issued unless such chief
   22  administrator is satisfied that such mailing list is needed to compile a
   23  proper list of prospective jurors for the county for which such order is
   24  sought and that, in view of the responsibilities imposed by the  various
   25  laws  of  the  state  on the department, it is reasonable to require the
   26  commissioner to furnish such list. Such order shall  provide  that  such
   27  list  shall be used for the sole purpose of compiling a list of prospec-
   28  tive jurors and that such commissioner of jurors, or such county  clerk,
   29  shall take all necessary steps to insure that the list is kept confiden-
   30  tial  and  that there is no unauthorized use or disclosure of such list.
   31  Furthermore, nothing herein shall be construed to prohibit the  delivery
   32  to  a  taxpayer or his or her duly authorized representative of a certi-
   33  fied copy of any return or report filed in connection with  his  or  her
   34  tax  or  to  prohibit  the publication of statistics so classified as to
   35  prevent the identification of particular  reports  or  returns  and  the
   36  items  thereof, or the inspection by the attorney general or other legal
   37  representatives of the state of the report or return of any taxpayer  or
   38  of  any  employer  filed under section one hundred seventy-one-h of this
   39  chapter, where such taxpayer or employer shall bring action to set aside
   40  or review the tax based thereon, or against whom an action or proceeding
   41  under this chapter or under this chapter and  article  eighteen  of  the
   42  labor  law has been recommended by the commissioner, the commissioner of
   43  labor with respect to unemployment insurance matters,  or  the  attorney
   44  general  or  has  been  instituted,  or the inspection of the reports or
   45  returns required under this article by the comptroller  or  duly  desig-
   46  nated  officer or employee of the state department of audit and control,
   47  for purposes of the audit of a refund of any  tax  paid  by  a  taxpayer
   48  under  this  article, or the furnishing to the state department of labor
   49  of unemployment insurance information obtained or derived from quarterly
   50  combined withholding, wage reporting and unemployment insurance  returns
   51  required  to  be  filed  by  employers  pursuant  to  paragraph  four of
   52  subsection (a) of section six hundred seventy-four of this article,  for
   53  purposes  of  administration  of  such department`s {employment security
   54  programs, evaluation of employment and training programs for which  such
   55  department  has  administrative,  reporting,  monitoring  or  evaluating
   56  responsibilities} UNEMPLOYMENT INSURANCE  PROGRAM,  EMPLOYMENT  SERVICES

       S. 3322                            16                            A. 6163

    1  PROGRAM,  FEDERAL AND STATE EMPLOYMENT AND TRAINING PROGRAMS, EMPLOYMENT
    2  STATISTICS AND LABOR  MARKET  INFORMATION  PROGRAMS,  WORKER  PROTECTION
    3  PROGRAMS,  FEDERAL  PROGRAMS FOR WHICH THE DEPARTMENT HAS ADMINISTRATIVE
    4  RESPONSIBILITY  OR  FOR OTHER PURPOSES DEEMED APPROPRIATE BY THE COMMIS-
    5  SIONER OF LABOR CONSISTENT WITH THE PROVISIONS OF  THE  LABOR  LAW,  and
    6  redisclosure  of such information {when necessary to enable such depart-
    7  ment to comply with} IN ACCORDANCE  WITH  the  provisions  of  {section}
    8  SECTIONS  five  hundred  THIRTY-SIX AND FIVE HUNDRED thirty-seven of the
    9  labor law or any other applicable law, or the furnishing  to  the  state
   10  office of temporary and disability assistance of information obtained or
   11  derived  from New York state personal income tax returns as described in
   12  paragraph (b) of subdivision two of section one hundred seventy-one-g of
   13  this chapter for the purpose of reviewing support orders enforced pursu-
   14  ant to title six-A of article three of the social services law to aid in
   15  the determination of whether such orders  should  be  adjusted,  or  the
   16  furnishing  of  information  obtained  from  the  reports required to be
   17  submitted by employers  regarding  newly  hired  or  re-hired  employees
   18  pursuant  to  section  one  hundred seventy-one-h of this chapter to the
   19  state office of temporary and disability assistance, the  state  depart-
   20  ment  of  health, the state department of labor and the workers` compen-
   21  sation board  for  purposes  of  administration  of  the  child  support
   22  enforcement program, verification of individuals` eligibility for one or
   23  more  of  the  programs  specified  in  subsection (b) of section eleven
   24  hundred thirty-seven of the federal social security act  and  for  other
   25  public  assistance  programs authorized by state law, and administration
   26  of the state`s employment security and workers`  compensation  programs,
   27  and  to  the  national  directory  of  new hires established pursuant to
   28  section four hundred fifty-three-A of the federal  social  security  act
   29  for  the  purposes  specified  in such section, or the furnishing to the
   30  state office of temporary and disability assistance of the amount of  an
   31  overpayment  of  income  tax and interest thereon certified to the comp-
   32  troller to be credited against past-due support pursuant to section  one
   33  hundred seventy-one-c of this chapter and of the name and social securi-
   34  ty  number  of the taxpayer who made such overpayment, or the disclosing
   35  to the commissioner of finance of the city  of  New  York,  pursuant  to
   36  section  one  hundred seventy-one-l of this chapter, of the amount of an
   37  overpayment and interest thereon certified  to  the  comptroller  to  be
   38  credited against a city of New York tax warrant judgment debt and of the
   39  name  and  social security number of the taxpayer who made such overpay-
   40  ment, or the furnishing to the New York state higher education  services
   41  corporation  of  the amount of an overpayment of income tax and interest
   42  thereon certified to the comptroller to be credited against  the  amount
   43  of  a  default  in  repayment  of  a guaranteed student loan pursuant to
   44  section one hundred seventy-one-d of this chapter and of  the  name  and
   45  social security number of the taxpayer who made such overpayment, or the
   46  furnishing to the state department of health of the information required
   47  by  subdivision two-a of section two thousand five hundred eleven of the
   48  public health law, or the furnishing to the state university of New York
   49  or the city university of New York respectively or the attorney  general
   50  on  behalf of such state or city university the amount of an overpayment
   51  of income tax and interest thereon certified to the  comptroller  to  be
   52  credited against the amount of a default in repayment of a state univer-
   53  sity  loan pursuant to section one hundred seventy-one-e of this chapter
   54  and of the name and social security number of the taxpayer who made such
   55  overpayment, or the disclosing to a state agency,  pursuant  to  section
   56  one  hundred seventy-one-f of this chapter, of the amount of an overpay-

       S. 3322                            17                            A. 6163

    1  ment and interest thereon certified to the comptroller  to  be  credited
    2  against  a  past-due legally enforceable debt owed to such agency and of
    3  the name and social security number of the taxpayer who made such  over-
    4  payment, or the furnishing of employee and employer information obtained
    5  through  the  wage  reporting  system,  pursuant  to section one hundred
    6  seventy-one-a of this chapter, as added by chapter five  hundred  forty-
    7  five  of the laws of nineteen hundred seventy-eight, to the state office
    8  of temporary and disability assistance  for  the  purpose  of  verifying
    9  eligibility  for and entitlement to amounts of benefits under the social
   10  services law or similar law of  another  jurisdiction,  locating  absent
   11  parents  or  other persons legally responsible for the support of appli-
   12  cants for or recipients of public assistance and care under  the  social
   13  services law and persons legally responsible for the support of a recip-
   14  ient  of  services  under  section  one  hundred  eleven-g of the social
   15  services law and, in appropriate cases, establishing support obligations
   16  pursuant to the social services law and the family court act or  similar
   17  provision  of  law of another jurisdiction for the purpose of evaluating
   18  the effect on earnings of participation in employment, training or other
   19  programs designed to promote self-sufficiency authorized pursuant to the
   20  social services law by current recipients of public assistance and  care
   21  and  by  former applicants and recipients of public assistance and care,
   22  (except that with regard to former recipients, information which relates
   23  to a particular former recipient shall be provided with client identify-
   24  ing data deleted), and to the state department of labor, or other  indi-
   25  viduals  designated by the commissioner of labor, for the purpose of the
   26  administration  of  such  department`s  {employment  security  programs,
   27  public assistance work programs} UNEMPLOYMENT INSURANCE PROGRAM, EMPLOY-
   28  MENT  SERVICES  PROGRAM,  FEDERAL  AND  STATE  EMPLOYMENT  AND  TRAINING
   29  PROGRAMS, EMPLOYMENT STATISTICS AND LABOR MARKET  INFORMATION  PROGRAMS,
   30  WORKER  PROTECTION  PROGRAMS,  FEDERAL PROGRAMS FOR WHICH THE DEPARTMENT
   31  HAS ADMINISTRATIVE RESPONSIBILITY or for other purposes deemed appropri-
   32  ate by the commissioner of labor consistent with the provisions  of  the
   33  labor  law{,  as well as for the evaluation of the effect on earnings of
   34  participation in training programs with respect to which the  department
   35  of  labor  has  reporting,  monitoring,  administration,  or  evaluation
   36  responsibilities}, AND REDISCLOSURE OF SUCH  INFORMATION  IN  ACCORDANCE
   37  WITH THE PROVISIONS OF SECTIONS FIVE HUNDRED THIRTY-SIX AND FIVE HUNDRED
   38  THIRTY-SEVEN  OF  THE LABOR LAW, or the furnishing of information, which
   39  is obtained from the wage reporting system operated pursuant to  section
   40  one  hundred  seventy-one-a  of  this  chapter, as added by chapter five
   41  hundred forty-five of the laws of nineteen hundred seventy-eight, to the
   42  state office of temporary and  disability  assistance  so  that  it  may
   43  furnish  such information to public agencies of other jurisdictions with
   44  which the state office of temporary and  disability  assistance  has  an
   45  agreement  pursuant  to  paragraph  (h)  or  (i) of subdivision three of
   46  section twenty of the social services law, and to the  state  office  of
   47  temporary  and disability assistance for the purpose of fulfilling obli-
   48  gations and responsibilities otherwise incumbent upon the state  depart-
   49  ment  of  labor,  under  section  one hundred twenty-four of the federal
   50  family support act of  nineteen  hundred  eighty-eight,  by  giving  the
   51  federal  parent locator service, maintained by the federal department of
   52  health and human services, prompt access to such information as required
   53  by such act, or to the state department of health to establish eligibil-
   54  ity under the child health insurance plan pursuant to subdivision  two-a
   55  of section two thousand five hundred eleven of the public health law and
   56  to  verify eligibility for the program for elderly pharmaceutical insur-

       S. 3322                            18                            A. 6163

    1  ance coverage under title three of article two of the elder law,  or  to
    2  the  office  of vocational and educational services for individuals with
    3  disabilities of the education department, the commission for  the  blind
    4  and  visually  handicapped and any other state vocational rehabilitation
    5  agency, for purposes of obtaining reimbursement from the federal  social
    6  security administration for expenditures made by such office, commission
    7  or  agency  on behalf of disabled individuals who have achieved economic
    8  self-sufficiency or to the higher education services corporation for the
    9  purpose of assisting the corporation in default prevention  and  default
   10  collection of federal guaranteed student loans through the federal fami-
   11  ly  education  loan program as codified in chapter twenty-eight of title
   12  twenty of the United States code; provided, however, that such  informa-
   13  tion shall be limited to the names, social security numbers, home and/or
   14  business  addresses,  and  employer  names  of  defaulted  or delinquent
   15  student loan borrowers.
   16    Provided, however, that  with  respect  to  employee  information  the
   17  office  of  temporary  and disability assistance shall only be furnished
   18  with the names, social security account numbers and gross wages of those
   19  employees who are (A) applicants for or recipients of benefits under the
   20  social services law, or similar provision of law of another jurisdiction
   21  (pursuant to an agreement under subdivision three of section  twenty  of
   22  the social services law) or, (B) absent parents or other persons legally
   23  responsible  for  the  support of applicants for or recipients of public
   24  assistance and care under the social services law or  similar  provision
   25  of  law of another jurisdiction (pursuant to an agreement under subdivi-
   26  sion three of section twenty of the social services law), or (C) persons
   27  legally responsible for the support of a  recipient  of  services  under
   28  section  one  hundred  eleven-g  of  the  social services law or similar
   29  provision of law of another jurisdiction (pursuant to an agreement under
   30  subdivision three of section twenty of the social services law), or  (D)
   31  employees   about  whom  wage  reporting  system  information  is  being
   32  furnished to public agencies of  other  jurisdictions,  with  which  the
   33  state  office  of  temporary  and disability assistance has an agreement
   34  pursuant to paragraph (h) or (i) of subdivision three of section  twenty
   35  of  the  social services law, or (E) employees about whom wage reporting
   36  system information is being furnished  to  the  federal  parent  locator
   37  service,  maintained  by  the  federal  department  of  health and human
   38  services, for the purpose of enabling the state office of temporary  and
   39  disability assistance to fulfill obligations and responsibilities other-
   40  wise  incumbent  upon  the  state department of labor, under section one
   41  hundred twenty-four of  the  federal  family  support  act  of  nineteen
   42  hundred eighty-eight, and, only if, the office of temporary and disabil-
   43  ity  assistance certifies to the commissioner that such persons are such
   44  applicants, recipients, absent parents or  persons  legally  responsible
   45  for  support  or  persons about whom information has been requested by a
   46  public agency of another jurisdiction or by the federal  parent  locator
   47  service  and further certifies that in the case of information requested
   48  under agreements with  other  jurisdictions  entered  into  pursuant  to
   49  subdivision  three  of  section  twenty of the social services law, that
   50  such request is in compliance with any applicable federal law. Provided,
   51  further, that where the office of temporary  and  disability  assistance
   52  requests  employee information for the purpose of evaluating the effects
   53  on earnings of participation in employment, training or  other  programs
   54  designed  to  promote self-sufficiency authorized pursuant to the social
   55  services law, the office of temporary and  disability  assistance  shall
   56  only  be  furnished with the quarterly gross wages (excluding any refer-

       S. 3322                            19                            A. 6163

    1  ence to the name, social security number or any other information  which
    2  could  be  used  to  identify any employee or the name or identification
    3  number of any employer) paid to employees who are former applicants  for
    4  or  recipients of public assistance and care and who are so certified to
    5  the commissioner by the commissioner of  the  office  of  temporary  and
    6  disability  assistance. Provided, further, that with respect to employee
    7  information, the department of health shall only be furnished  with  the
    8  information  required pursuant to subdivision two-a of section two thou-
    9  sand five hundred eleven of the public health law with respect to  those
   10  children  whose  eligibility under the child health insurance plan is to
   11  be determined pursuant to such subdivision two-a  and  with  respect  to
   12  those  members  of  any such child`s household whose income affects such
   13  child`s eligibility and who are so certified to the commissioner  or  by
   14  the  department of health. Provided, further, that wage reporting infor-
   15  mation shall be furnished to the office of  vocational  and  educational
   16  services  for individuals with disabilities of the education department,
   17  the commission for the blind and  visually  handicapped  and  any  other
   18  state  vocational  rehabilitation agency only if such office, commission
   19  or agency, as applicable, certifies to the commissioner that such infor-
   20  mation is necessary to obtain  reimbursement  from  the  federal  social
   21  security  administration  for  expenditures  made  on behalf of disabled
   22  individuals who have achieved self-sufficiency.    Reports  and  returns
   23  shall be preserved for three years and thereafter until the commissioner
   24  orders them to be destroyed.
   25    S  19. Paragraph 1 of subsection (l) of section 697 of the tax law, as
   26  amended by chapter 214 of the laws  of  1998,  is  amended  to  read  as
   27  follows:
   28    (1)  Notwithstanding  any  provision of law to the contrary, the state
   29  department of labor shall furnish to the department information required
   30  from employers pursuant to article eighteen of the labor  law,  and  the
   31  department  shall  furnish  to  the  state department of labor, or other
   32  individuals designated by the commissioner of labor who are  engaged  in
   33  purposes deemed appropriate by the commissioner of labor consistent with
   34  the  provisions  of the labor law, {the name, social security number and
   35  wages of individuals, and the name and federal  employer  identification
   36  number  of  employers  contained  within}  withholding  tax  information
   37  {required from employers} OBTAINED OR DERIVED pursuant to part V of this
   38  article, or pursuant to equivalent provisions enacted under the authori-
   39  ty of article thirty, thirty-A or thirty-B of this chapter  {or  article
   40  two-E  of the general city law}, AND TAXPAYER IDENTIFICATION INFORMATION
   41  ACQUIRED UNDER ANY OF THE PROVISIONS OF THIS CHAPTER, for  tax  adminis-
   42  tration  and  employment  security  {and public assistance work} program
   43  purposes.
   44    S 20. Subdivision 1 of section 537 of the labor  law,  as  amended  by
   45  chapter 346 of the laws of 1948, is amended to read as follows:
   46    1.  Use of information. Information acquired from employers or employ-
   47  ees pursuant to this article shall be for the exclusive use and informa-
   48  tion of the commissioner in the discharge of his OR  HER  duties  {here-
   49  under}  UNDER  THIS  CHAPTER  and shall not be open to the public nor be
   50  used in any court in any action or proceeding pending therein unless the
   51  commissioner is a party to such action or proceeding, OR SUCH ACTION  OR
   52  PROCEEDING  INVOLVES  INFORMATION  PROVIDED  PURSUANT  TO PARAGRAPH G OF
   53  SUBDIVISION THREE OF THIS SECTION, notwithstanding any other  provisions
   54  of  law.  Such  information  insofar as it is material to the making and
   55  determination of a claim for benefits OR TO  ADJUDICATING  A  CLAIM  FOR
   56  BENEFITS  shall be available to the parties affected and, in the commis-

       S. 3322                            20                            A. 6163

    1  sioner`s discretion, may be made available to the  parties  affected  in
    2  connection with effecting placement.
    3    S  21.  Subdivision  2  of section 537 of the labor law, as amended by
    4  chapter 346 of the laws of 1948, is amended to read as follows:
    5    2. {Penalties.} VIOLATIONS OF THE CONFIDENTIALITY PROVISIONS  OF  THIS
    6  SECTION.  Any  {officer  or  employee of the state} PERSON, who, without
    7  authority of the commissioner or as otherwise  required  by  law,  shall
    8  disclose   {such}   information  IN  VIOLATION  OF  THE  CONFIDENTIALITY
    9  PROVISIONS OF THIS SECTION, UPON CONVICTION, shall be guilty of a misde-
   10  meanor.
   11    S 22. The opening paragraph  and  paragraph  a  of  subdivision  3  of
   12  section  537  of the labor law, as amended by chapter 442 of the laws of
   13  1994, are amended to read as follows:
   14    The commissioner may, however, disclose the information  described  in
   15  {subdivision}  SUBDIVISIONS  one  AND  FOUR  of  this  section under the
   16  following circumstances:
   17    a. Federal {agencies} LAW.  The commissioner shall  report  fully  and
   18  completely  to the appropriate agency of the United States on the effect
   19  and administration of this article in  the  manner  prescribed  by  such
   20  agency,  and  further  he  or she shall make INFORMATION available, upon
   21  request, to any FEDERAL, STATE OR LOCAL agency  {of  the  United  States
   22  charged  with  the  administration  of  public works or other assistance
   23  through public employment, the name, address, ordinary  occupation,  and
   24  employment  status of each recipient of unemployment insurance benefits,
   25  and a statement of such recipient`s right to further benefit under  this
   26  article.  The commissioner may also make the state`s records relating to
   27  the administration of this article available  to  the  federal  railroad
   28  retirement  board  and  may  furnish, at the expense of such board, such
   29  copies thereof as the federal railroad retirement board deems  necessary
   30  for its purposes} ENTITLED TO SUCH INFORMATION UNDER THE SOCIAL SECURITY
   31  ACT  OR  ANY  OTHER FEDERAL LAW IN THE MANNER PRESCRIBED BY SUCH FEDERAL
   32  LAW OR ITS IMPLEMENTING REGULATIONS.
   33    S 23. Subdivision 3 of section 537 of the  labor  law  is  amended  by
   34  adding a new paragraph g to read as follows:
   35    G.  FEDERAL, STATE AND LOCAL AGENCIES. (I) UPON REQUEST TO THE COMMIS-
   36  SIONER, SUCH INFORMATION MAY BE DISCLOSED TO CERTAIN FEDERAL, STATE  AND
   37  LOCAL  AGENCIES.  THE  COMMISSIONER  MAY REQUIRE WRITTEN AGREEMENTS WITH
   38  REQUESTING AGENCIES  IN  A  FORM  DETERMINED  BY  THE  COMMISSIONER  AND
   39  CONSISTENT  WITH  20 CFR 603 AND OTHER FEDERAL REGULATIONS. THE INFORMA-
   40  TION THAT MAY BE DISCLOSED PURSUANT TO THIS PARAGRAPH SHALL BE DISCLOSED
   41  ONLY AFTER THE REQUESTING AGENCY HAS DEMONSTRATED, TO THE COMMISSIONER`S
   42  SATISFACTION, THAT THE INFORMATION SHALL BE  KEPT  CONFIDENTIAL,  EXCEPT
   43  FOR  THOSE  PURPOSES FOR WHICH IT WAS PROVIDED TO THE REQUESTING AGENCY,
   44  AND THAT THE REQUESTING AGENCY  HAS  SECURITY  SAFEGUARDS  IN  PLACE  TO
   45  PREVENT THE UNAUTHORIZED DISCLOSURE OF SUCH INFORMATION.
   46    (II)  THE  INFORMATION  DISCLOSED  PURSUANT  TO  THIS PARAGRAPH MAY BE
   47  DISCLOSED TO THE FOLLOWING AGENCIES  TO  BE  USED  EXCLUSIVELY  FOR  THE
   48  FOLLOWING LEGITIMATE GOVERNMENTAL PURPOSES:
   49    (1)  ANY  FEDERAL, STATE OR LOCAL AGENCY IN THE INVESTIGATION OF FRAUD
   50  OR MISUSE OF PUBLIC FUNDS;
   51    (2) ANY STATE OR UNITED STATES  TERRITORIAL  WORKFORCE  AGENCY,  LOCAL
   52  WORKFORCE  INVESTMENT BOARD AND ITS AGENTS, AND ONE-STOP OPERATING PART-
   53  NER RECEIVING FUNDS UNDER THE  WORKFORCE  INVESTMENT  ACT  OF  1998  FOR
   54  PROGRAM  PERFORMANCE PURPOSES AND OTHER LEGITIMATE PROGRAMMATIC PURPOSES
   55  AUTHORIZED BY THE COMMISSIONER;

       S. 3322                            21                            A. 6163

    1    (3) THE UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT OF LABOR OR ITS AGENTS,  AS  REQUIRED
    2  BY  LAW,  OR  IN CONNECTION WITH THE REQUIREMENTS IMPOSED AS A RESULT OF
    3  RECEIVING FEDERAL ADMINISTRATIVE FUNDING;
    4    (4) STATE AND LOCAL ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT AGENCIES, WHERE SUCH INFORMA-
    5  TION IS NECESSARY TO CARRY OUT THE STATUTORY FUNCTIONS OF SUCH AGENCIES,
    6  SHALL  RECEIVE  THE  EMPLOYER`S NAME, ADDRESS AND INDUSTRY CODE RECEIVED
    7  FROM THE REGISTRATION OF EMPLOYERS; AND
    8    (5) THE WORKERS` COMPENSATION BOARD, THE STATE INSURANCE FUND AND  THE
    9  STATE  INSURANCE DEPARTMENT, FOR PURPOSES OF DETERMINING COMPLIANCE WITH
   10  THE COVERAGE OF WORKERS` COMPENSATION AND DISABILITY INSURANCE.
   11    S 24. Subdivision 4 of section 537 of the labor  law,  as  amended  by
   12  chapter 724 of the laws of 2006, is amended to read as follows:
   13    4.  Wage  reporting  information  obtained  by the department from the
   14  state department of taxation and finance pursuant to subdivision four of
   15  section one hundred seventy-one-a of the tax law, AS  ADDED  BY  CHAPTER
   16  FIVE  HUNDRED  FORTY-FIVE OF THE LAWS OF NINETEEN HUNDRED SEVENTY-EIGHT,
   17  AND INFORMATION OBTAINED OR DERIVED FROM QUARTERLY COMBINED WITHHOLDING,
   18  WAGE REPORTING AND UNEMPLOYMENT INSURANCE RETURNS REQUIRED TO  BE  FILED
   19  BY EMPLOYERS PURSUANT TO PARAGRAPH FOUR OF SUBSECTION (A) OF SECTION SIX
   20  HUNDRED SEVENTY-FOUR OF THE TAX LAW shall be considered confidential and
   21  SHALL  BE  USED  FOR  THE  ADMINISTRATION  OF THE UNEMPLOYMENT INSURANCE
   22  PROGRAM, EMPLOYMENT SERVICES PROGRAM, FEDERAL AND STATE  EMPLOYMENT  AND
   23  TRAINING  PROGRAMS,  EMPLOYMENT  STATISTICS AND LABOR MARKET INFORMATION
   24  PROGRAMS, EMPLOYER SERVICES PROGRAM, WORKER PROTECTION PROGRAMS, FEDERAL
   25  PROGRAMS FOR WHICH THE DEPARTMENT HAS ADMINISTRATIVE  RESPONSIBILITY  OR
   26  FOR  OTHER  PURPOSES  DEEMED  APPROPRIATE BY THE COMMISSIONER UNDER THIS
   27  CHAPTER. SUCH INFORMATION shall not be disclosed to persons or  agencies
   28  other  than  those  considered  entitled  to  such information under the
   29  social security act or other federal law, or as provided in  subdivision
   30  three of this section or when such disclosure is necessary for the prop-
   31  er  administration  of the department`s {employment security programs as
   32  well as for the evaluation of the effect on earnings of participation in
   33  training programs with respect to which the  department  has  reporting,
   34  monitoring  or evaluating responsibilities. No such evaluations shall be
   35  made with regard to data concerning individuals whose application to  or
   36  participation  in such programs, whichever occurred later, was completed
   37  more than ten years from the time  of  evaluation.  When  used  for  the
   38  purpose  of evaluating, monitoring or reporting on such programs, access
   39  to such information obtained from the department of taxation and finance
   40  shall be limited to that which concerns individuals who  applied  to  or
   41  participated  in  such programs} UNEMPLOYMENT INSURANCE PROGRAM, EMPLOY-
   42  MENT  SERVICES  PROGRAM,  EMPLOYMENT  AND  TRAINING   PROGRAMS,   WORKER
   43  PROTECTION  PROGRAMS,  FEDERAL  PROGRAMS  FOR  WHICH  THE DEPARTMENT HAS
   44  ADMINISTRATIVE RESPONSIBILITY OR FOR OTHER PURPOSES  DEEMED  APPROPRIATE
   45  BY  THE  COMMISSIONER UNDER THIS CHAPTER. Any reports concerning employ-
   46  ment {security} and training programs submitted to a  state  or  federal
   47  agency  shall also be submitted to the governor, the temporary president
   48  of the senate, the speaker of the assembly and the chairs of  the  labor
   49  committees in the senate and the assembly.
   50    S  25. Subdivision (a) of section 13 of the workers` compensation law,
   51  as amended by chapter 451 of the laws of 1996 and the closing  paragraph
   52  as  separately amended by chapter 635 of the laws of 1996, is amended to
   53  read as follows:
   54    (a) The employer shall promptly provide for an injured  employee  such
   55  medical,  DENTAL, surgical, optometric or other attendance or treatment,
   56  nurse and hospital service,  medicine,  optometric  services,  crutches,

       S. 3322                            22                            A. 6163

    1  eye-glasses,   false   teeth,  artificial  eyes,  orthotics,  PROSTHETIC
    2  DEVICES, functional assistive and adaptive  devices  and  apparatus  for
    3  such  period  as the nature of the injury or the process of recovery may
    4  require. The employer shall be liable for the payment of the expenses of
    5  medical,  DENTAL, surgical, optometric or other attendance or treatment,
    6  nurse and hospital service,  medicine,  optometric  services,  crutches,
    7  eye-glasses,   false   teeth,  artificial  eyes,  orthotics,  PROSTHETIC
    8  DEVICES, functional assistive and adaptive  devices  and  apparatus,  as
    9  well  as  artificial  members of the body or other devices or appliances
   10  necessary in the first instance to replace, support or relieve a portion
   11  or part of the body resulting from and necessitated by the injury of  an
   12  employee,  for such period as the nature of the injury or the process of
   13  recovery may require, and the employer shall also be liable for replace-
   14  ments or repairs of such artificial members of the body  or  such  other
   15  devices, eye-glasses, false teeth, artificial eyes, orthotics, PROSTHET-
   16  IC  DEVICES,  functional  assistive  and  adaptive devices or appliances
   17  necessitated by ordinary wear or loss or damage to a {prothesis} PROSTH-
   18  ESIS, WITH OR without bodily injury to the employee. Damage to  or  loss
   19  of a prosthetic device shall be deemed an injury except that no disabil-
   20  ity  benefits shall be payable with respect to such injury under section
   21  fifteen of this article. Such a  replacement  or  repair  of  artificial
   22  members  of  the  body  or such other devices, eye-glasses, false teeth,
   23  artificial eyes, orthotics, PROSTHETIC DEVICES, functional assistive and
   24  adaptive devices or appliances or the providing of medical treatment and
   25  care as defined herein shall not constitute the payment of  compensation
   26  under  section  twenty-five-a  of  this  {chapter} ARTICLE. All fees and
   27  other charges for such treatment and services shall be limited  to  such
   28  charges  as  prevail  in  the  same  community  for similar treatment of
   29  injured persons of a like standard of living.
   30    The chair shall prepare and establish a schedule  for  the  state,  or
   31  schedules  limited  to  defined localities, of charges and fees for such
   32  medical treatment  and  care,  {to  be  determined}  AND  INCLUDING  ALL
   33  MEDICAL,  DENTAL, SURGICAL, OPTOMETRIC OR OTHER ATTENDANCE OR TREATMENT,
   34  NURSE AND HOSPITAL SERVICE,  MEDICINE,  OPTOMETRIC  SERVICES,  CRUTCHES,
   35  EYE-GLASSES,   FALSE   TEETH,  ARTIFICIAL  EYES,  ORTHOTICS,  PROSTHETIC
   36  DEVICES, FUNCTIONAL ASSISTIVE AND  ADAPTIVE  DEVICES  AND  APPARATUS  in
   37  accordance with and to be subject to change pursuant to rules promulgat-
   38  ed  by the chair. Before preparing such schedule for the state or sched-
   39  ules for limited localities the chair shall request the president of the
   40  medical society of the state of New York and the president  of  the  New
   41  York  state osteopathic medical society to submit to him or her a report
   42  on the amount of remuneration deemed by such  society  to  be  fair  and
   43  adequate  for  the types of medical care to be rendered under this chap-
   44  ter, but consideration shall be given to the view  of  other  interested
   45  parties.  In the case of physical therapy fees schedules the chair shall
   46  request the president of a recognized professional  association  repres-
   47  enting  physical therapists in the state of New York to submit to him or
   48  her a report on the amount of remuneration deemed by such association to
   49  be fair and  reasonable  for  the  type  of  physical  therapy  services
   50  rendered  under  this  chapter,  but consideration shall be given to the
   51  views of other interested parties. The  chair  shall  also  prepare  and
   52  establish  a  schedule  for  the  state, or schedules limited to defined
   53  localities, of charges and fees for  outpatient  hospital  services  not
   54  covered  under  the  medical fee schedule previously referred to in this
   55  subdivision, to be determined in accordance with and to  be  subject  to
   56  change pursuant to rules promulgated by the chair. Before preparing such

       S. 3322                            23                            A. 6163

    1  schedule  for  the  state  or schedules for limited localities the chair
    2  shall request the president of the  hospital  association  of  New  York
    3  state  to  submit  to  him or her a report on the amount of remuneration
    4  deemed  by  such  association  to  be fair and adequate for the types of
    5  hospital outpatient care to be rendered under this chapter, but  consid-
    6  eration  shall be given to the views of other interested parties. In the
    7  case of occupational therapy fees schedules the chair shall request  the
    8  president  of a recognized professional association representing occupa-
    9  tional therapists in the state of New York to submit to  him  or  her  a
   10  report  on  the  amount of remuneration deemed by such association to be
   11  fair and reasonable  for  the  type  of  occupational  therapy  services
   12  rendered  under  this  chapter,  but consideration shall be given to the
   13  views of other interested parties. The amounts payable by  the  employer
   14  for  such  treatment  and  services shall be the fees and charges estab-
   15  lished by such schedule.   Nothing  in  this  schedule,  however,  shall
   16  prevent  voluntary  payment of amounts higher or lower than the fees and
   17  charges fixed therein, but no physician rendering medical  treatment  or
   18  care,  and no physical or occupational therapist rendering their respec-
   19  tive physical or occupational therapy services may  receive  payment  in
   20  any  higher  amount  unless such increased amount has been authorized by
   21  the employer, or by decision as provided in section thirteen-g  of  this
   22  article.  Nothing  in  this section shall be construed as preventing the
   23  employment of a duly authorized  physician  on  a  salary  basis  by  an
   24  authorized compensation medical bureau or laboratory.
   25    S 26. Section 13 of the workers` compensation law is amended by adding
   26  a new subdivision (i) to read as follows:
   27    (I) (1) WHEN A CLAIMANT OR PHARMACY SUBMITS A CLAIM TO THE EMPLOYER OR
   28  ITS  CARRIER  FOR PAYMENT OF PRESCRIBED MEDICINE OR FOR REIMBURSEMENT OF
   29  THE COST OF PRESCRIBED  MEDICINE  WHICH  THE  EMPLOYER  IS  REQUIRED  TO
   30  PROVIDE UNDER THIS SECTION, THE EMPLOYER OR CARRIER SHALL PAY THE AMOUNT
   31  PRESCRIBED  BY THE FEE SCHEDULE ADOPTED UNDER SECTION THIRTEEN-O OF THIS
   32  ARTICLE, OR IF THE PRESCRIBED MEDICINE IS NOT INCLUDED  ON  THE  CURRENT
   33  FEE  SCHEDULE, THE USUAL AND CUSTOMARY CHARGES FOR SUCH PRESCRIBED MEDI-
   34  CINE, WITHIN FORTY-FIVE DAYS OF RECEIPT OF THE CLAIM, UNLESS THE LIABIL-
   35  ITY OF THE EMPLOYER OR CARRIER ON THE CLAIM FOR WHICH THE CLAIMANT SEEKS
   36  PAYMENT OR REIMBURSEMENT OF PAYMENT FOR THE PRESCRIBED MEDICINE  IS  NOT
   37  ESTABLISHED,  OR  THE  PRESCRIBED MEDICINE IS NOT FOR A CAUSALLY RELATED
   38  CONDITION.
   39    (2) WHERE THE LIABILITY OF THE EMPLOYER OR CARRIER ON  THE  CLAIM  FOR
   40  WHICH  THE  CLAIMANT  SEEKS  PAYMENT OR REIMBURSEMENT OF PAYMENT FOR THE
   41  PRESCRIBED MEDICINE OR REIMBURSEMENT FOR PAYMENT OF PRESCRIBED  MEDICINE
   42  IS  NOT  ESTABLISHED,  OR  IS  NOT FOR A CAUSALLY RELATED CONDITION, THE
   43  EMPLOYER OR CARRIER SHALL PAY ANY UNDISPUTED PORTION  OF  THE  CLAIM  IN
   44  ACCORDANCE  WITH  THIS  SECTION  AND NOTIFY THE CLAIMANT OR PHARMACY, AS
   45  APPROPRIATE, IN WRITING WITHIN FORTY-FIVE DAYS OF RECEIPT OF THE CLAIM:
   46    (I) THAT THE CLAIM IS NOT BEING PAID AND EXPLAINING  THE  REASONS  FOR
   47  NONPAYMENT; OR
   48    (II) TO REQUEST ALL ADDITIONAL INFORMATION REASONABLY NEEDED TO DETER-
   49  MINE  THE  EMPLOYER`S OR CARRIER`S LIABILITY FOR THE CLAIM. UPON RECEIPT
   50  OF THE INFORMATION REQUESTED  IN  THIS  SUBPARAGRAPH,  THE  EMPLOYER  OR
   51  CARRIER SHALL COMPLY WITH PARAGRAPH ONE OF THIS SUBDIVISION.
   52    (3) EACH CLAIM FOR PAYMENT OF PRESCRIBED MEDICINE OR REIMBURSEMENT FOR
   53  PAYMENT  OF  PRESCRIBED  MEDICINE THAT IS PROCESSED IN VIOLATION OF THIS
   54  SECTION SHALL CONSTITUTE A SEPARATE VIOLATION. IN ADDITION TO THE  OTHER
   55  PENALTIES  PROVIDED  IN THIS CHAPTER, ANY EMPLOYER OR CARRIER THAT FAILS
   56  TO REIMBURSE THE CLAIMANT OR PAY THE PHARMACY,  AS  APPROPRIATE  AND  AS

       S. 3322                            24                            A. 6163

    1  REQUIRED  IN  THIS  SECTION SHALL BE OBLIGATED TO PAY TO THE CLAIMANT OR
    2  PHARMACY THE AMOUNT PRESCRIBED ON THE FEE SCHEDULE ADOPTED UNDER SECTION
    3  THIRTEEN-O OF THIS  ARTICLE,  OR  IF  THE  PRESCRIBED  MEDICINE  IS  NOT
    4  INCLUDED  ON  THE  CURRENT FEE SCHEDULE, THE USUAL AND CUSTOMARY CHARGES
    5  FOR THE PRESCRIBED MEDICINE PLUS SIMPLE INTEREST AT THE RATE  SET  FORTH
    6  IN SECTION FIVE THOUSAND FOUR OF THE CIVIL PRACTICE LAW AND RULES.
    7    (4)  NOTHING  IN THIS SUBDIVISION SHALL PROHIBIT EMPLOYERS OR CARRIERS
    8  FROM AGREEING TO OR ARRANGING FOR DIRECT BILLING BY THE PHARMACY TO  THE
    9  EMPLOYER  OR  CARRIER  FOR THE COST OF PRESCRIBED MEDICINE, IN ORDER FOR
   10  CLAIMANTS TO MORE PROMPTLY RECEIVE PRESCRIBED MEDICINE FOR WHICH EMPLOY-
   11  ERS AND CARRIERS ARE LIABLE UNDER THIS SECTION.
   12    (5) NOTWITHSTANDING ANY OTHER PROVISION OF THIS CHAPTER, IF AN EMPLOY-
   13  ER OR CARRIER HAS CONTRACTED WITH A PHARMACY TO PROVIDE PRESCRIBED MEDI-
   14  CINE TO CLAIMANTS, THEN SUCH EMPLOYER OR CARRIER MAY  REQUIRE  CLAIMANTS
   15  TO  OBTAIN  ALL PRESCRIBED MEDICINES FROM THE PHARMACY WITH WHICH IT HAS
   16  CONTRACTED, EXCEPT IF A MEDICAL EMERGENCY OCCURS AND  IT  WOULD  NOT  BE
   17  REASONABLY  POSSIBLE  TO OBTAIN IMMEDIATELY REQUIRED PRESCRIBED MEDICINE
   18  FROM THE PHARMACY WITH WHICH THE EMPLOYER OR CARRIER HAS A CONTRACT.  AN
   19  EMPLOYER  OR  CARRIER THAT REQUIRES CLAIMANTS TO OBTAIN PRESCRIBED MEDI-
   20  CINES FROM A PHARMACY WITH WHICH IT HAS A CONTRACT MUST NOTIFY CLAIMANTS
   21  OF THE PHARMACY  OR  PHARMACIES  WITH  WHICH  IT  HAS  A  CONTRACT,  THE
   22  LOCATIONS  AND  ADDRESSES  OF THE PHARMACY OR PHARMACIES, IF APPLICABLE,
   23  HOW TO INITIALLY FILL AND REFILL PRESCRIPTIONS THROUGH THE MAIL,  INTER-
   24  NET,  TELEPHONE  OR OTHER MEANS, AND ANY OTHER REQUIRED INFORMATION THAT
   25  MUST BE SUPPLIED TO THE PHARMACY OR PHARMACIES. IF THE PHARMACY OR PHAR-
   26  MACIES WITH WHICH THE EMPLOYER OR CARRIER CONTRACTS DOES NOT OFFER  MAIL
   27  ORDER  SERVICE AND DOES NOT HAVE A PHYSICAL LOCATION WITHIN A REASONABLE
   28  DISTANCE FROM THE CLAIMANT, AS DEFINED BY REGULATION OF THE  BOARD,  THE
   29  CLAIMANT  MAY  OBTAIN PRESCRIBED MEDICINES AT THE PHARMACY OR PHARMACIES
   30  OF HIS OR HER CHOICE AND THE EMPLOYER OR CARRIER WILL BE LIABLE FOR SUCH
   31  CHARGES IN ACCORDANCE WITH THE FEE SCHEDULE PRESCRIBED IN SECTION  THIR-
   32  TEEN-O OF THIS CHAPTER.
   33    S 27. The workers` compensation law is amended by adding a new section
   34  13-o to read as follows:
   35    S  13-O.  PHARMACEUTICAL FEE SCHEDULE. THE CHAIR SHALL ADOPT A PHARMA-
   36  CEUTICAL FEE SCHEDULE WHICH SHALL ESTABLISH MAXIMUM ALLOWABLE  FEES  FOR
   37  PRESCRIPTION  MEDICINES  PROVIDED PURSUANT TO THIS CHAPTER. THE SCHEDULE
   38  SHALL INCLUDE A SINGLE DISPENSING FEE. NOTHING IN THE FEE SCHEDULE SHALL
   39  PRECLUDE MAIL ORDER SUPPLY OF SCHEDULED  MEDICINES,  PROVIDED  THAT  THE
   40  FEES FOR SUCH MAIL ORDERED MEDICINES DO NOT EXCEED THE COSTS PROVIDED BY
   41  SUCH  FEE  SCHEDULE. ANY PHARMACY PROVIDING PRESCRIPTION MEDICINES SHALL
   42  PROVIDE THE GENERIC DRUG EQUIVALENT, IF A GENERIC EQUIVALENT  IS  AVAIL-
   43  ABLE,  UNLESS  THE PRESCRIBING PHYSICIAN SPECIFICALLY PROVIDES OTHERWISE
   44  BY PRESCRIPTION. THE FEE SCHEDULE MAY BE  MODIFIED  ON  EACH  SUCCEEDING
   45  APRIL  FIRST,  PROVIDED,  HOWEVER,  THAT USUAL AND CUSTOMARY FEES MAY BE
   46  CHARGED FOR DRUGS THAT ARE NOT INCLUDED IN A THEN-CURRENT FEE  SCHEDULE,
   47  BUT ARE APPROVED FOR USE BY THE CHAIR.
   48    S  28. Subdivision 5 of section 13-a of the workers` compensation law,
   49  as added by chapter 21 of the laws  of  1991,  is  amended  to  read  as
   50  follows:
   51    (5)  No  claim  for  specialist  consultations,  surgical  operations,
   52  physiotherapeutic or occupational therapy procedures, x-ray examinations
   53  or special diagnostic laboratory tests costing more than {five  hundred}
   54  ONE  THOUSAND  dollars  shall  be valid and enforceable, as against such
   55  employer, unless such special services shall have been authorized by the
   56  employer or by the board, or unless such authorization has  been  unrea-

       S. 3322                            25                            A. 6163

    1  sonably  withheld, or withheld for a period of more than thirty calendar
    2  days from receipt of a request for authorization, or unless such special
    3  services are required in an emergency, provided, however, that the basis
    4  for  a  denial  of such authorization by the employer must be based on a
    5  conflicting second opinion rendered by a  physician  authorized  by  the
    6  {workers`  compensation}  board.  THE  BOARD,  WITH  THE APPROVAL OF THE
    7  SUPERINTENDENT OF INSURANCE, SHALL ISSUE AND MAINTAIN A LIST OF  PRE-AU-
    8  THORIZED PROCEDURES UNDER THIS SECTION.
    9    S  29.  Section  13-a  of  the workers` compensation law is amended by
   10  adding a new subdivision 7 to read as follows:
   11    (7)(A) NOTWITHSTANDING ANY OTHER PROVISION  OF  THIS  CHAPTER  TO  THE
   12  CONTRARY,  ANY  INSURANCE CARRIER AUTHORIZED TO TRANSACT THE BUSINESS OF
   13  WORKERS` COMPENSATION INSURANCE IN THIS STATE, SELF-INSURER OR THE STATE
   14  INSURANCE FUND MAY CONTRACT WITH A  NETWORK  OR  NETWORKS,  LEGALLY  AND
   15  PROPERLY  ORGANIZED,  TO  PERFORM  DIAGNOSTIC TESTS, X-RAY EXAMINATIONS,
   16  MAGNETIC RESONANCE IMAGING, OR OTHER RADIOLOGICAL EXAMINATIONS OR  TESTS
   17  OF CLAIMANTS AND MAY REQUIRE CLAIMANT TO OBTAIN OR UNDERGO SUCH DIAGNOS-
   18  TIC TEST, X-RAY EXAMINATIONS, MAGNETIC RESONANCE IMAGING OR OTHER RADIO-
   19  LOGICAL  EXAMINATIONS  OR TESTS WITH A PROVIDER OR AT A FACILITY THAT IS
   20  AFFILIATED  WITH  THE  NETWORK  OR  NETWORKS  WITH  WHICH  THE   CARRIER
   21  CONTRACTS,  EXCEPT  IF A MEDICAL EMERGENCY OCCURS REQUIRING AN IMMEDIATE
   22  DIAGNOSTIC TEST, X-RAY EXAMINATION, MAGNETIC RESONANCE IMAGING OR  OTHER
   23  RADIOLOGICAL EXAMINATION OR TEST OR IF THE NETWORK WITH WHICH THE INSUR-
   24  ANCE  CARRIER,  SELF-INSURER  OR THE STATE INSURANCE FUND CONTRACTS DOES
   25  NOT HAVE A PROVIDER OR FACILITY ABLE TO PERFORM THE EXAMINATION OR  TEST
   26  WITHIN  A  REASONABLE DISTANCE FROM THE CLAIMANT`S RESIDENCE OR PLACE OF
   27  EMPLOYMENT, AS DEFINED BY REGULATION OF THE BOARD.
   28    (B) ANY INSURANCE CARRIER, SELF-INSURER OR THE  STATE  INSURANCE  FUND
   29  WHICH  REQUIRES  CLAIMANTS  TO OBTAIN OR UNDERGO DIAGNOSTIC TESTS, X-RAY
   30  EXAMINATIONS, MAGNETIC RESONANCE IMAGING OR OTHER RADIOLOGICAL  EXAMINA-
   31  TIONS  OR  TESTS  WITH  A  PROVIDER  OR  AT A FACILITY AFFILIATED WITH A
   32  NETWORK OR NETWORKS WITH WHICH IT CONTRACTS, MUST NOTIFY THE CLAIMANT OF
   33  THE NAME AND CONTACT INFORMATION FOR THE NETWORK OR NETWORKS AT THE SAME
   34  TIME THE WRITTEN STATEMENT OF  THE  CLAIMANT`S  RIGHTS  AS  REQUIRED  BY
   35  SUBDIVISION TWO OF SECTION ONE HUNDRED TEN OF THIS CHAPTER OR IMMEDIATE-
   36  LY  AFTER  IMPOSING SUCH REQUIREMENT IF THE TIME PERIOD WITHIN WHICH THE
   37  WRITTEN STATEMENT OF THE CLAIMANT`S RIGHTS AS  REQUIRED  BY  SUBDIVISION
   38  TWO OF SECTION ONE HUNDRED TEN OF THIS CHAPTER HAS EXPIRED.
   39    (C)  AT  THE  TIME  A REQUEST FOR AUTHORIZATION FOR SPECIAL DIAGNOSTIC
   40  TESTS, X-RAY EXAMINATIONS, MAGNETIC RESONANCE IMAGING OR OTHER RADIOLOG-
   41  ICAL EXAMINATIONS OR TESTS COSTING MORE THAN  ONE  THOUSAND  DOLLARS  AS
   42  REQUIRED  BY SUBDIVISION FIVE OF THIS SECTION IS APPROVED, THE INSURANCE
   43  CARRIER, SELF-INSURER OR STATE INSURANCE FUND, OR IF  SO  DELEGATED  THE
   44  NETWORK  WITH  WHICH THE INSURANCE CARRIER, SELF-INSURER OR STATE INSUR-
   45  ANCE FUND HAS CONTRACTED, SHALL NOTIFY THE PHYSICIAN REQUESTING AUTHORI-
   46  ZATION OF THE REQUIREMENT  THAT  THE  CLAIMANT  OBTAIN  OR  UNDERGO  THE
   47  SPECIAL  DIAGNOSTIC  TEST, X-RAY EXAMINATION, MAGNETIC RESONANCE IMAGING
   48  OR OTHER RADIOLOGICAL EXAMINATION OR TEST WITH A PROVIDER OR AT A FACIL-
   49  ITY  AFFILIATED  WITH  THE  NETWORK  OR  NETWORKS  WITH  WHICH  IT   HAS
   50  CONTRACTED,  THE  CONTACT  INFORMATION FOR THE NETWORK AND A LIST OF THE
   51  PROVIDERS AND FACILITIES WITHIN THE CLAIMANT`S GEOGRAPHIC  LOCATION,  AS
   52  DEFINED  BY REGULATION OF THE BOARD.  THE CLAIMANT, IN CONSULTATION WITH
   53  THE PROVIDER WHO REQUESTED THE SPECIAL DIAGNOSTIC TEST,  X-RAY  EXAMINA-
   54  TION,  MAGNETIC  RESONANCE  IMAGING  OR OTHER RADIOLOGICAL TEST OR EXAM,
   55  WILL DETERMINE THE PROVIDER OR FACILITY FROM WITHIN  THE  NETWORK  WHICH

       S. 3322                            26                            A. 6163

    1  WILL PERFORM SUCH DIAGNOSTIC TEST, X-RAY EXAMINATION, MAGNETIC RESONANCE
    2  IMAGING OR OTHER RADIOLOGICAL EXAMINATION OR TEST.
    3    (D)  THE  RESULTS  OF  THE SPECIAL DIAGNOSTIC TEST, X-RAY EXAMINATION,
    4  MAGNETIC RESONANCE IMAGING OR OTHER RADIOLOGICAL TEST OR  EXAM  MUST  BE
    5  SENT  TO  THE  PHYSICIAN WHO REQUESTED THE TEST OR EXAM IMMEDIATELY UPON
    6  COMPLETION OF THE REPORT DETAILING THE RESULTS.
    7    S 30. Subdivisions 1, 2 and 3 of section 21-a of the workers`  compen-
    8  sation  law, as added by chapter 635 of the laws of 1996, are amended to
    9  read as follows:
   10    1.  Notwithstanding any other provision of this chapter to the contra-
   11  ry, in any instance in which an employer is unsure of the extent of  its
   12  liability  for  a claim for compensation by an injured employee pursuant
   13  to this chapter, such employer may initiate  compensation  payments  and
   14  PAYMENTS  FOR  PRESCRIBED  MEDICINE  AND  continue such payments for one
   15  year, without prejudice and without admitting liability,  in  accordance
   16  with a notice of temporary payment of compensation, on a form prescribed
   17  by the board.
   18    2.  The  notice  of  temporary  payment  of compensation authorized by
   19  subdivision one of this  section  shall  be  delivered  to  the  injured
   20  employee  and  the  board. Such notice shall notify the injured employee
   21  that the temporary payment of compensation AND PRESCRIBED MEDICINE shall
   22  not be deemed to be an admission of liability by the  employer  for  the
   23  injury or injuries to the employee.  The board, upon receipt of a notice
   24  of temporary payment of compensation, shall send a notice to the injured
   25  employee stating that:
   26    (a)    the board has received a notice of temporary payment of compen-
   27  sation relating to such injured employee;
   28    (b) the payment of temporary compensation AND PRESCRIBED MEDICINE  and
   29  the  injured  employee`s  acceptance  of such temporary compensation AND
   30  PRESCRIBED MEDICINE shall not  be  an  admission  of  liability  by  the
   31  employer, nor prejudice the claim of the injured employee;
   32    (c)  the  payment  of  temporary  compensation AND PRESCRIBED MEDICINE
   33  shall terminate on the elapse of: one year, or the employer`s contesting
   34  of  the  injured  employee`s  claim  for  compensation  AND   PRESCRIBED
   35  MEDICINE, or the board determination of the injured {employees`} EMPLOY-
   36  EE`S claim, whichever is first; and
   37    (d)  the  injured  employee may be required to enter into an agreement
   38  with the employer to ensure the continuation of  payments  of  temporary
   39  compensation AND PRESCRIBED MEDICINE.
   40    3. An employer may cease making temporary payments of compensation AND
   41  PRESCRIBED MEDICINE if such employer delivers within five days after the
   42  last  payment, to the injured employee and the board, a notice of termi-
   43  nation of temporary payments of compensation on a form prescribed by the
   44  board.  Such notice shall inform the injured employee that the  employer
   45  is  ceasing  temporary  payment of compensation AND PRESCRIBED MEDICINE.
   46  Upon the cessation of temporary payments of compensation AND  PRESCRIBED
   47  MEDICINE,  all  parties  to  any  action  pursuant to this chapter shall
   48  retain all rights, defenses and obligations they  would  otherwise  have
   49  pursuant  to  this  chapter  without regard for the temporary payment of
   50  compensation AND PRESCRIBED MEDICINE.
   51    S 31. Section 54-b of the workers` compensation  law,  as  amended  by
   52  chapter 113 of the laws of 1946, is amended to read as follows:
   53    S 54-b. Enforcement on failure to pay award or judgment. {In the event
   54  of  the  failure  of a carrier or self-insurer to pay an award after the
   55  expiration of thirty days from the entry thereof, from  which  award  or
   56  decision in connection therewith no appeal has been taken as provided by

       S. 3322                            27                            A. 6163

    1  law,  the  chairman  may  enforce  the payment of said award against the
    2  carrier or self-insurer by the entry of judgment in accordance with  the
    3  provisions  hereof  and section twenty-six.  Where, however, the carrier
    4  or  self-insurer  has  taken  an  appeal  and  the  award or decision in
    5  connection therewith has been finally affirmed, as provided by law,  and
    6  no  rehearing  has  been  ordered by the board herein, if such award and
    7  accrued costs and interest are not paid within  thirty  days  after  the
    8  entry  of  a  final  order by the court of last resort, the chairman may
    9  enforce, in like manner, payment against such carrier or self-insurer of
   10  all sums of money due thereon.} IN CASE  OF  DEFAULT  BY  A  CARRIER  OR
   11  SELF-INSURED  EMPLOYER  IN  THE PAYMENT OF ANY COMPENSATION DUE UNDER AN
   12  AWARD FOR THE PERIOD OF THIRTY DAYS AFTER PAYMENT IS DUE AND PAYABLE, OR
   13  IN THE CASE OF FAILURE BY A CARRIER OR  SELF-INSURED  EMPLOYER  TO  MAKE
   14  FULL  PAYMENT  OF  AN  AWARD FOR MEDICAL CARE ISSUED BY THE BOARD OR THE
   15  CHAIR PURSUANT TO SECTION THIRTEEN-G OF THIS CHAPTER, THE CHAIR  IN  ANY
   16  SUCH  CASE OR ON THE CHAIR`S CONSENT ANY PARTY TO AN AWARD MAY FILE WITH
   17  THE COUNTY CLERK FOR THE COUNTY IN WHICH  THE  INJURY  OCCURRED  OR  THE
   18  COUNTY  IN  WHICH  THE  CARRIER  OR SELF-INSURED EMPLOYER HAS HIS OR HER
   19  PRINCIPAL PLACE OF BUSINESS, (1) A CERTIFIED COPY OF THE DECISION OF THE
   20  BOARD AWARDING COMPENSATION OR ENDING, DIMINISHING OR INCREASING COMPEN-
   21  SATION PREVIOUSLY AWARDED, FROM WHICH NO APPEAL HAS  BEEN  TAKEN  WITHIN
   22  THE  TIME  ALLOWED THEREFOR, OR IF AN APPEAL HAS BEEN TAKEN BY A CARRIER
   23  OR SELF-INSURED EMPLOYER WHO HAS NOT COMPLIED  WITH  THE  PROVISIONS  OF
   24  SECTION FIFTY OF THIS ARTICLE, WHERE HE OR SHE FAILS TO DEPOSIT WITH THE
   25  CHAIR  THE  AMOUNT  OF  THE AWARD AS SECURITY FOR ITS PAYMENT WITHIN TEN
   26  DAYS AFTER THE SAME IS DUE AND PAYABLE, OR (2) A CERTIFIED COPY  OF  THE
   27  AWARD  FOR  MEDICAL  CARE  ISSUED PURSUANT TO SECTION THIRTEEN-G OF THIS
   28  CHAPTER, AND THEREUPON JUDGMENT MUST BE ENTERED IN THE SUPREME COURT  BY
   29  THE  CLERK  OF SUCH COUNTY IN CONFORMITY THEREWITH IMMEDIATELY UPON SUCH
   30  FILING. IF THE PAYMENT IN DEFAULT  BE  AN  INSTALLMENT,  THE  BOARD  MAY
   31  DECLARE  THE  ENTIRE AWARD DUE AND JUDGMENT MAY BE ENTERED IN ACCORDANCE
   32  WITH THE PROVISIONS OF THIS SECTION. SUCH JUDGMENT SHALL BE  ENTERED  IN
   33  THE  SAME  MANNER,  HAVE  THE  SAME  EFFECT  AND  BE SUBJECT TO THE SAME
   34  PROCEEDINGS AS THOUGH RENDERED IN A SUIT DULY HEARD  AND  DETERMINED  BY
   35  THE  SUPREME  COURT,  EXCEPT  THAT NO APPEAL MAY BE TAKEN THEREFROM. THE
   36  COURT SHALL VACATE OR MODIFY SUCH JUDGMENT TO CONFORM TO ANY LATER AWARD
   37  OR DECISION OF THE BOARD UPON PRESENTATION OF A CERTIFIED COPY  OF  SUCH
   38  AWARD  OR  DECISION.  THE AWARD MAY BE SO COMPROMISED BY THE BOARD AS IN
   39  THE DISCRETION OF THE BOARD MAY BEST SERVE THE INTEREST OF  THE  PERSONS
   40  ENTITLED  TO  RECEIVE  THE  COMPENSATION OR BENEFITS. WHERE AN AWARD HAS
   41  BEEN MADE AGAINST A CARRIER OR SELF-INSURED EMPLOYER IN ACCORDANCE  WITH
   42  THE  PROVISIONS  OF  SUBDIVISION  NINE OF SECTION FIFTEEN, OR OF SECTION
   43  TWENTY-FIVE-A OF THIS CHAPTER, SUCH AN AWARD MAY  BE  SIMILARLY  COMPRO-
   44  MISED BY THE BOARD, UPON NOTICE TO A REPRESENTATIVE OF THE FUND TO WHICH
   45  THE  AWARD  IS  PAYABLE,  BUT  IF THERE BE NO REPRESENTATIVE OF ANY SUCH
   46  FUND, NOTICE SHALL BE GIVEN TO SUCH REPRESENTATIVE AS MAY BE  DESIGNATED
   47  BY  THE  CHAIR  OF THE BOARD; AND NOTWITHSTANDING ANY OTHER PROVISION OF
   48  LAW, SUCH COMPROMISE SHALL BE EFFECTIVE WITHOUT  THE  NECESSITY  OF  ANY
   49  APPROVAL  BY  THE  STATE COMPTROLLER. NEITHER THE CHAIR NOR ANY PARTY IN
   50  INTEREST SHALL BE REQUIRED TO PAY ANY FEE  TO  ANY  PUBLIC  OFFICER  FOR
   51  FILING  OR RECORDING ANY PAPER OR INSTRUMENT OR FOR ISSUING A TRANSCRIPT
   52  OF ANY JUDGMENT EXECUTED IN PURSUANCE OF THIS SECTION.  THE  CARRIER  OR
   53  SELF-INSURED  EMPLOYER  SHALL BE LIABLE FOR ALL COSTS AND ATTORNEYS FEES
   54  NECESSARY TO ENFORCE THE AWARD. FOR THE PURPOSES OF  THIS  SECTION,  THE
   55  TERM  "CARRIER"  SHALL  INCLUDE  THE  STATE INSURANCE FUND AND ANY STOCK

       S. 3322                            28                            A. 6163

    1  CORPORATION, MUTUAL CORPORATION  OR  RECIPROCAL  INSURER  AUTHORIZED  TO
    2  TRANSACT THE BUSINESS OF WORKERS` COMPENSATION INSURANCE IN THIS STATE.
    3    S  32.  Subdivision 1 of section 354 of the workers` compensation law,
    4  as added by chapter 635 of the laws of  1996,  is  amended  to  read  as
    5  follows:
    6    1.  Each preferred provider organization shall provide at least {five}
    7  TWO  providers  in  every  medical specialty from which the employee may
    8  choose and at least {three} TWO hospitals from which  the  employee  may
    9  choose  in  the  event  that  hospitalization  is necessary. The {chair}
   10  COMMISSIONER OF HEALTH may waive  such  numerical  requirements  upon  a
   11  finding  that  the  geographical  area  in  which the preferred provider
   12  organization is located cannot meet the requirements.
   13    S 33. Section 134 of the workers` compensation law, as added by  chap-
   14  ter 635 of the laws of 1996, is amended to read as follows:
   15    S  134. Workplace safety and loss prevention program; certification of
   16  safety and loss management specialists.  1. The commissioner  of  labor,
   17  in consultation with the superintendent of insurance{,} AND the chair of
   18  the  {workers`  compensation}  board{,  and the president of the compen-
   19  sation insurance rating board,} shall  develop  a  compulsory  workplace
   20  safety  and  loss prevention program for all employers whose most recent
   21  annual payroll is in excess of eight hundred thousand dollars and  whose
   22  most recent experience rating exceeds the level of 1.2.  The commission-
   23  er  of  labor{,  shall request that the safety panel established by this
   24  section provide recommendations  for  the  establishment,  creation  and
   25  implementation  of the safety incentive program provided for in subdivi-
   26  sion six of this section and} shall promulgate rules and regulations for
   27  the  implementation  of  {this  program}  SAFETY,   DRUG   AND   ALCOHOL
   28  PREVENTION, AND RETURN TO WORK INCENTIVE PROGRAMS.
   29    2.  The  {compensation  insurance  rating  board  or such other rating
   30  organization licensed by the state for the purpose of providing loss and
   31  rate information} COMMISSIONER OF LABOR shall provide written  notifica-
   32  tion to employers whose most recent annual payroll is in excess of eight
   33  hundred thousand dollars and whose most recent experience rating exceeds
   34  the  level  of  1.2 that they are required to undergo a workplace safety
   35  and loss prevention consultation and written evaluation.  Copies of  the
   36  written  notification  shall  be provided to the department of labor and
   37  the employer`s insurer.  The employer must arrange for the  consultation
   38  and  evaluation  within thirty days after receiving the notification and
   39  must within ten days thereafter notify its insurer and the department of
   40  labor in writing of the means by which the evaluation is  to  be  accom-
   41  plished.    The  employer must provide its insurer and the department of
   42  labor with a copy of the evaluation within thirty days  after  receiving
   43  it from the safety and loss consultant.  Any remedial action recommended
   44  in  the  evaluation must be implemented by the employer within a reason-
   45  able period of time, but not to exceed six  months  after  the  employer
   46  receives the evaluation.  The insurer, within sixty days after the expi-
   47  ration  of  such six month period, shall conduct an inspection to ascer-
   48  tain whether the recommended remedial action has been  implemented,  and
   49  the  insurer  shall  within  forty-five  days  thereafter provide to the
   50  employer and the department of labor a copy of its inspection report.
   51    3. If the employer does not arrange for a consultation and  evaluation
   52  or  fails  to  implement  recommended  remedial  action within the times
   53  prescribed, the insurer  shall  surcharge  the  employer`s  manual  rate
   54  premium  by  .05 for the next ensuing policy period, and so long as non-
   55  compliance continues there shall be an additional .05 surcharge for each
   56  year thereafter of non-compliance. An employer may challenge  an  insur-

       S. 3322                            29                            A. 6163

    1  er`s determination that the employer has not taken the recommended reme-
    2  dial action by appeal to the department of labor on notice to the insur-
    3  er.  The  department  of  labor  shall thereafter conduct an independent
    4  inspection  and  its determination of compliance or non-compliance shall
    5  be final. However, such appeal may not be entertained  if  the  employer
    6  has not paid its billed premium including any surcharge thereof.
    7    4.  Employers required to participate in the workplace safety and loss
    8  prevention program established by this section  shall  be  permitted  to
    9  utilize  the  services  of  either the department of labor, or a private
   10  safety and loss consultant which has been certified by the department of
   11  labor and has paid the appropriate certification fee prescribed by rules
   12  and regulations promulgated under this section.  Private safety and loss
   13  consultants may charge employers a fee for  their  services,  and  where
   14  employers  elect  to  have  the  services  provided by the department of
   15  labor, they shall pay for such services in accordance with fee schedules
   16  established by the department of labor`s rules and regulations.
   17    5. Fees charged by the department of labor to employers for  workplace
   18  safety  and  loss  prevention  consultations  and  evaluations  and fees
   19  charged to private safety and loss consultants for  certification  shall
   20  be  paid to the commissioner of taxation and finance and the comptroller
   21  and deposited in the department of labor accounts  designated  for  such
   22  purposes.  The fees deposited in those designated accounts shall be used
   23  to cover administrative expenses of this program.
   24    6.  Safety,  DRUG AND ALCOHOL PREVENTION, AND RETURN TO WORK incentive
   25  {program} PROGRAMS.  Employers insured through the state insurance  fund
   26  (except  those  who  are  current  policyholders  in a recognized safety
   27  group) or any other insurer that issues  policies  of  workers`  compen-
   28  sation  insurance,  shall  be  eligible for a credit in workers` compen-
   29  sation insurance premiums if they:
   30    a. pay annual workers` compensation insurance  premiums  of  at  least
   31  five thousand dollars; and
   32    b.  maintain an experience rating of under 1.30 for the year preceding
   33  and the years in which the credit has been applied for provided that  no
   34  insured  required  to implement a safety program pursuant to subdivision
   35  one OF THIS SECTION shall be eligible for a premium  credit  under  this
   36  subdivision; and
   37    c. implement ANY OF THE FOLLOWING:
   38    (1) a safety incentive plan, that has been recommended by a safety and
   39  loss  management  specialist after such specialist has been certified by
   40  the {safety panel established pursuant to this  section.    The  credit,
   41  which  shall  be  five  percent  of  the workers` compensation insurance
   42  premium, shall be provided to the employer at  the  end  of  the  policy
   43  year.  The credit shall be available for two consecutive years, provided
   44  that the safety incentive plan shall have been implemented for a minimum
   45  of  six months during the first year for which the credit is sought, and
   46  that such plan shall have been implemented  for  a  full  twelve  months
   47  during  the second year for which the credit is sought.} COMMISSIONER OF
   48  LABOR, OR IF SUCH PLAN OTHERWISE CONFORMS TO REGULATIONS PROMULGATED  BY
   49  THE COMMISSIONER OF LABOR;
   50    (2) A DRUG AND ALCOHOL PREVENTION PROGRAM THAT CONFORMS TO REGULATIONS
   51  ISSUED  BY THE COMMISSIONER OF LABOR, IN CONSULTATION WITH THE OFFICE OF
   52  ALCOHOLISM AND SUBSTANCE ABUSE SERVICES; AND
   53    (3) A RETURN TO WORK PROGRAM THAT CONFORMS TO  REGULATIONS  ISSUED  BY
   54  THE COMMISSIONER OF LABOR.

       S. 3322                            30                            A. 6163

    1    THE  CREDIT  FOR EACH SUCH PROGRAM SHALL BE ESTABLISHED BY REGULATIONS
    2  ISSUED BY  THE  SUPERINTENDENT  OF  INSURANCE.  SUCH  REGULATIONS  SHALL
    3  INCLUDE PROVISIONS FOR RECERTIFICATION ON AN ANNUAL BASIS.
    4    7.  A  self-insured  employer shall be eligible for a reduction in the
    5  security deposit provided for in subdivision three of section  fifty  of
    6  this article if such employer has implemented ANY OF THE FOLLOWING: A. a
    7  safety  incentive  plan  that  has been recommended by a safety and loss
    8  management specialist after such specialist has been  certified  by  the
    9  {safety  panel  established pursuant to this section.  The amount of the
   10  reduction in the required security deposit shall be no greater than five
   11  percent or such lesser amount as determined by the chair of the board to
   12  be necessary to assure that the deposit remains sufficient to secure the
   13  employer`s liability to pay the compensation provided in  this  chapter.
   14  The reduction shall be provided to the employer at the end of the policy
   15  year.  The  reduction  shall  be  available  for  two consecutive years,
   16  provided that the safety incentive plan shall have been implemented  for
   17  a minimum of six months during the first year for which the reduction is
   18  sought, and that such plan shall have been implemented for a full twelve
   19  months  during  the  second  year  for  which  the reduction is sought.}
   20  COMMISSIONER OF LABOR OR IF SUCH PLAN OTHERWISE CONFORMS TO  REGULATIONS
   21  PROMULGATED BY THE COMMISSIONER OF LABOR;
   22    B.  A DRUG AND ALCOHOL PREVENTION PROGRAM THAT CONFORMS TO REGULATIONS
   23  ISSUED BY THE COMMISSIONER OF LABOR, IN CONSULTATION WITH THE OFFICE  OF
   24  ALCOHOLISM AND SUBSTANCE ABUSE SERVICES; AND
   25    C. A RETURN TO WORK PROGRAM THAT CONFORMS TO REGULATIONS ISSUED BY THE
   26  COMMISSIONER OF LABOR.
   27    THE  CREDIT  FOR  EACH PROGRAM SHALL BE NO GREATER THAN ESTABLISHED BY
   28  REGULATIONS ISSUED BY THE SUPERINTENDENT OF  INSURANCE  OR  SUCH  LESSER
   29  AMOUNT AS DETERMINED BY THE CHAIR OF THE BOARD TO BE NECESSARY TO ASSURE
   30  THAT  THE  DEPOSIT REMAINS SUFFICIENT TO SECURE THE EMPLOYER`S LIABILITY
   31  TO PAY THE COMPENSATION PROVIDED IN THIS CHAPTER. THE CHAIR, IN  CONSUL-
   32  TATION  WITH  THE  SUPERINTENDENT  OF INSURANCE, SHALL ADOPT REGULATIONS
   33  WHICH PROVIDE FOR RECERTIFICATION ON AN ANNUAL BASIS.
   34    8. {There is hereby established a safety panel which  shall  have  the
   35  responsibility  to}  THE  COMMISSIONER OF LABOR SHALL:   (i) receive and
   36  review applications from