California Workers Compensation Coverage
California workers' compensation
coverage began in the 20th century when the number
of workplace injuries was rising and there was little effective
legislation to insure fair reparation to employees or to shield
companies from expensive lawsuits. As a result, California
worker compensation coverage was initiated in many states
with California being one of the first to adopt such a system.
California's first workers' compensation law was established
under the Compensation Act in 1911. A compulsory system was
established two years later as the Workers' Compensation,
Insurance and Safety Act of 1913, which required employers
to provide benefits for all employees on the job and generally
prohibited employees from suing their employers over their
injuries. The Act blocked employees from recovering money
for pain and suffering and seeking punitive damages. It also
called for the establishment of a competitive state insurance
fund. It remains the foundation for workers' compensation
in California today.
Workers' Compensation laws are designed to ensure employees
injured and/or disabled on the job are provided for with fixed
monetary awards, thereby eliminating the need for litigation.
Workers' Compensation laws also provide benefits for dependents
of workers killed because of work-related accidents or illnesses.
Laws also protect employers and fellow workers by limiting
the amount an injured employee can recover from an employer
and by eliminating the liability of co-workers in most accidents.
State Workers Compensation statutes establish this framework
for most employment. Federal statutes are limited to federal
employees or those workers employed in some significant aspect
of interstate commerce. Contact Kelly Williams Insurance for
California
workers compensation coverage. |