Back injuries and repetitive motion injuries such as carpel tunnel syndrome are among the most common work-related injuries for which workers' compensation benefits are paid. Contact an attorney to determine whether you have a valid claim.
Answers to Your Workers' Compensation Questions
If you have been seriously injured at work, you want to know more about your rights and options. The short answer is that all injured workers are entitled to workers' compensation. The long answer depends on the extent of your injury and how it occurred. At the Oak Brook, Illinois Law Offices of Francis J. Discipio, our attorneys are here to answer any questions you may have about the benefits you deserve. Contact us today for a free initial consultation.
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Workers suffer all types of injuries on the job. Some injuries come in sudden accidents, such as a slip and fall off scaffolding, while other workers develop diseases or conditions after years of exposure to dangerous chemicals or repetitive stress. If your injury is work related, you have a claim, and our lawyers can help. Contact us today for a free initial consultation.
With over twenty years of experience protecting the rights of injured workers throughout the greater Chicago and Cook County area, our lawyers understand the Illinois Workers' Compensation Act. We will take a careful look at your claim, and do everything we can to make sure you get the full extent of benefits you deserve. Contact us today for a free initial consultation.
Employer Retaliation against the Workers' Compensation Claimant
Workers' compensation is sometimes viewed as a compromise between employees and employers: workers give up the right to sue for large awards in court in exchange for certain and timely, albeit relatively lower, reimbursement for work-related injuries and illnesses. Employers accept responsibility for these injuries and illnesses even if they are not at fault, but they no longer have to worry about being tied up in court or about potential liability for large verdicts.
Unfortunately, even in this spirit of compromise, sometimes an employer may retaliate against an employee for filing or even talking about filing a workers' compensation claim. In most states, employees have legal rights and remedies in response to such adverse employer actions. If you encounter retaliation from your employer in a workers' compensation matter, an experienced workers' compensation attorney at Francis J. Discipio in Oak Brook, Illinois, can advise you of your legal options.
Examples of Retaliation
Most commonly, people think of employer retaliation in the form of retaliatory discharge - unjustly firing an employee for pursuing his or her workers' compensation rights. But improper employer retaliation can also come in other forms short of termination, such as discrimination or harassment in the following ways:
- Undeservedly poor performance review
- Failure to promote
- Adverse wage action
- Isolation or intimidation in the workplace
- Demotion
- Threats of adverse action
- Negative reassignment, reclassification or transfer
- Interference with the workers' compensation claims process
- Refusal to rehire
- Negative action vis-à-vis employment benefits or terms of employment, such as insurance, vacation or scheduling
- Unreasonable increase or decrease in job duties
- Unwarranted disciplinary action
- Undeservedly negative employment references
- Retaliation against a co-employee testifying in support of a claimant or cooperating in the investigation
Legal Remedies for Retaliation
Although a relatively recent development, most states have some legal remedy for employees whose employers have retaliated against them for taking workers' compensation action. Many states have legislatively created legal protections for such employees. These remedies may be available through state agencies and/or in court actions. Even where legislative action has not protected such workers, many states' courts have allowed retaliatory discharge lawsuits for exercising workers' compensation rights. Some states allow both statutory and court-created or common-law remedies; other states may only provide for one or the other. The remedies available vary from state to state, so it is a good idea to consult a lawyer to learn about your particular options.
Even if your state has not recognized these remedies for employer retaliation in the workers' compensation setting, there may be other ways to find legal help.
Justifiable Employer Action
Employers may still legitimately terminate or discipline any employee, regardless of workers' compensation status, as long as the negative action is not a pretext for workers' compensation retaliation and the action does not violate any other employment laws.
Conclusion
Stand up for yourself if you have been the victim of employer retaliation in response to the exercise of your workers' compensation rights. A skilled attorney from Francis J. Discipio in Oak Brook, Illinois, can advise you of the law in your state surrounding workers' compensation retaliation.
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