February 21, 1913: Legislature Passes Workers' Compensation System

On February 21, 1913, the legislature passed an act creating a workers’ compensation system.

It had been a major campaign issue for incoming Governor Henry Hatfield. In his work as a coalfields physician, Hatfield recognized the need to support injured workers financially.

The system went into effect in October 1913. In the case of a fatal accident, workers’ compensation paid the funeral expenses of the deceased and a stipend for widows and children. In the case of partial disability, workers received half their salaries.

The funds came from a premium paid by employers in exchange for a guarantee they couldn’t be sued by workers injured on the job. This stipulation changed in 1978, when the U.S. Supreme Court ruled that injured workers could still sue employers under certain conditions.

The workers’ compensation system was always a financial challenge and a source of political controversy. Some felt workers took advantage of workers’ comp, and others accused businesses of not paying their fair share. In 2005, with the system facing bankruptcy, the legislature transferred workers’ comp to a private mutual insurance company, which would become BrickStreet Mutual.

Workers' Comp Rate Drop to Save West Virginia Employers $36 Million

West Virginia Gov. Earl Ray Tomblin says the state will save employers $36 million through lower workers’ compensation premiums.

Tomblin said in a news release Friday that the savings result from a 12th reduction in workers’ compensation premiums in 12 years. Tomblin’s office says that amounts to a savings of more than $352 million since the program was privatized in 2006.

The National Council on Compensation Insurance filed a proposed drop of 14.7 percent in workers’ compensation loss cost rates with the West Virginia Insurance Commissioner. The new rate is effective Nov. 1.

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