A Partner at Boxer & Gerson LLP, Julius Young has practiced worker’s compensation law and social security disability law since 1979. He has represented thousands of individuals who have sustained life-changing injuries or illnesses while on the job. In every case, his goal is to secure the medical treatments his clients need.
Frank Brass recently retired from the WCAB after over a decade and a half as a WCAB Commissioner. The retirement, which occurred at the end of January 2018, has not been widely publicized. Workerscompzone wishes him all the best in his well-deserved retirement. Brass was appointed to the WCAB in 2001 and was reappointed in […]
An eagerly awaited 2018 report on the future of health care in California fails to mention workers’ compensation at all. The report, dated March 12, 2018, is under the aegis of University of California San Francisco and is titled “A Path to Universal Coverage and Unified Health Care Financing in California”. The report, written by […]
One of the recent most closely watched California workers’ comp cases has now been decided. The case is County of San Diego v. WCAB (Christopher Pike), a 2018 case out of the California Court of Appeal, Fourth Appellate District, Division One (see link to the decision at the bottom of this post). The case generated enough […]
In 2017 there was quite a flap in the California legislature over a single-payer healthcare bill. That bill, SB 562, known as “The Healthy California Act”, passed the California Senate in June 2017 by 23 to 17 on essentially a party-line vote. Sponsored by the California Nurses Union, a panoply of labor organizations and liberal activist groups joined […]
What is the effect on a claim for temporary disability or permanent disability if a worker self-procures treatment that was denied by utilization review and IMR? That was the question in a 2017 WCAB panel decision, Belinda Go v. Sutter Solano Medical Center (ADJ 10168011) . The result in Go stands, as both the California Court of Appeal and […]
How significant will the concept of apportionment based on genetics become? Now that at least one California Court of Appeal decision has given the green light to apportionment to genetic causation, it is an issue being debated in the California workers’ comp community. At the recent 2018 CAAA winter convention at Rancho Mirage I moderated […]
The term “sudden and extraordinary” might sound like a term suited to describe one of Steph Curry’s game winning three-pointers, or a clutch pass from Tom Brady clinching a comeback win. But in the California work comp world it’s a vague but critical statutory term that can determine whether an employee of less than six months duration […]