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WORKPLACE INSURANCE: THE BASICS
What Is Workplace Insurance?
The workplace insurance system was established by
the Government of Ontario to pay for health care and partial lost wages
if you are injured at work. You may receive benefits and services from
the Workplace
Safety and Insurance Board (WSIB) after a work-related injury
if you work in an industry that is covered by the Workplace
Safety and Insurance Act, 1997 (WSIA). You must meet all the
conditions set out in that law.
If you are covered by the WSIA, you cannot sue your
employer in court for your injuries. Workplace insurance is a "no-fault"
system. This means you can get workplace insurance benefits without proving
that your employer was to blame. Even if you think that the accident at
work was your own fault, you are still entitled to benefits and services
from WSIB in almost all cases.
What Can WSIB Do for You?
This depends on when you were injured. From 1915
until the end of 1997, benefits for workplace injuries were paid under
one version or another of the Workers' Compensation Act (WCA). The government
has changed (amended) the WCA many times over the years. Each time the
WCA changed, workers injured after the date of the change were covered
by the new rules. Workers injured before that date were still covered
under some of the old rules. The WSIA repealed and replaced the WCA as
of January 1, 1998.
Workers Injured on or After January 1, 1998
You may receive the following benefits and services
from WSIB:
- Wages on Day of Injury - Your employer
pays your usual wages and benefits for this day.
- Loss of Earnings (LOE) Benefits - WSIB
pays you 85% of your net earnings loss from the day after your injury
until you are no longer impaired or until you no longer suffer a wage
loss (or until WSIB believes you should no longer be suffering a wage
loss). You can receive LOE benefits until the age of 65, unless you
were 63 or older at the time of your injury. If you were age 63 or older,
you can receive LOE benefits for up to two years after the accident.
See OWA Fact Sheet 9 called Loss
of Earnings Benefits.
- Retirement Benefits - If you are under
the age of 64 at the time of your injury and receive LOE benefits for
more than 12 consecutive months, you will receive a retirement benefit
at age 65. WSIB pays this monthly benefit from amounts set aside as
a percentage of your LOE benefits.
You may receive the following benefits and services
from WSIB:
- Return to Work - You and your employer
must co-operate in your return to work or to some suitable job with
the employer. If you do not return to work with your employer, WSIB
may assist you in preparing to re-enter the labour market. See OWA Fact
Sheets 10 and 12 called Early
and Safe Return to Work and Labour
Market Re-entry.
- Re-employment - The WSIA may obligate your
employer to offer you re-employment after your injury. Not all employers
have this obligation and not all workers qualify. There are also time
limits involved. If your employer does not offer to re-employ you after
an injury, speak to a qualified representative as soon as possible.
See OWA Fact Sheet 11 called Re-Employment.
- Health Care - WSIB will pay for health
care that is necessary and appropriate as a result of your injury. For
serious injuries, this may include the services of an attendant to assist
with your daily living activities, changes to your home to enable you
to live independently, or other measures to improve your quality of
life.
- Non-Economic Loss (NEL) Award - A NEL award
is meant to compensate you for losses other than wages, such as pain
and suffering. The amount of the NEL award is determined after a medical
examination by an impartial doctor who is not employed by WSIB. WSIB
pays smaller NEL awards as a lump sum. Larger NEL awards are paid monthly,
unless you choose to receive a lump sum. See OWA Fact Sheet 13 called
Non-economic Loss Awards.
- Employment Benefits - If you continue with
contributions to your regular employment benefits, such as a dental
or pension plan, your employer also must continue to make contributions
to these benefits for the first year that you are off work because of
your injury.
Some of the different types of benefits that WSIB
pays to workers injured before 1998 are listed below. Speak with a qualified
representative about the benefits and services that may be available in
your case.
Workers Injured Between January 2, 1990 and December
31, 1997
- Future Economic Loss (FEL) Award - A FEL
award pays you in part for lost earnings. The amount is 90% of the difference
between what you earned before your injury and what you earn, or what
WSIB believes you can earn after the injury. It is normally paid monthly.
The amount of the FEL will usually be reviewed whenever you report a
"material change in circumstances" to WSIB, however, the reward
may be reviewed at other times as well. These reviews usually stop five
years after the first decision about the amount of your FEL. When you
turn 65, your FEL payments will stop and you will receive a retirement
pension based on amounts that were set aside each month by WSIB in a
separate fund. See OWA Fact Sheet 21 called Future
Economic Loss Awards.
Workers Injured Prior to January 2, 1990
- Permanent Disability Pensions - If you
were injured before January 2, 1990 and are suffering a permanent disability
as a result of your injury, you may be entitled to a lifetime monthly
pension as compensation for your loss of earning capacity. The amount
of this pension is determined through a medical examination performed
by a WSIB doctor. See OWA Fact Sheets 22 and 23 called Pension
Re-Assessments and Pension
Commutations.
- Pension Supplements - Since a permanent
disability pension is based only on a medical exam, it may not fully
repay you for your lost earnings. In some cases WSIB will add an extra
amount called a supplement to your pension, to partly make up the difference.
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IMPORTANT INFORMATION
There are time limits for appealing WSIB decisions. If you wish
to appeal a decision, contact a qualified representative as soon
as possible. For more information on time limits, see OWA Fact Sheets
24 and 25 called Appealing
to WSIB and Appealing
to WSIAT.
This Fact Sheet contains general information only. It is not
a legal document. To see what the law says, you should look at the
Workplace Safety and Insurance Act and WSIB policies.
If you require help and do not have a union to assist you, contact
the Office of the Worker Adviser:
- Our toll free telephone
number is 1-800-435-8980 (English) or 1-800-661-6365 (French)
- or visit our website at http://www.owa.gov.on.ca
Cette feuille-info est aussi
disponible en français
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OWA Fact Sheet 2 - January 2003
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