home  |   atlanta mainstream  |   campaign finance  |   salary du jour  |   crooked politicians registry  |   about this site  |  
 


Atlanta Mainstream goes deeper into news covered by the mainstream media -- posting documents to show the story behind the story.


 

 

Auditors find weak workers' comp coverage, enforcement

June 2 --
Nearly half the eligible businesses in Georgia may not carry workers' compensation insurance as required, state auditors say.

If that's true, roughly 1.5 million workers potentially would not be covered in the event of a workplace accident.

The state's methods of monitoring compliance are inefficient and could be improved with the use of relatively simple methodologies used by other states, auditors said in a report released last week.

Auditors identified 86,000 businesses in Georgia who might be required to have worker's comp coverage. But as many as 39,000 -- or 45 percent -- might not carry the insurance, based on a comparison with data kept by the National Council on Compensation Insurance. (Some businesses, such as those employing farm or domestic workers, are exempt.)

The State Board of Workers' Compensation does not check those businesses. Instead, in 2008, it inspected 4 percent of Georgia businesses by going door-to-door in selected geographic areas without knowing whether there's a particular problem there. At that rate, the reported noted, it would take 30 years to inspect each of the state's 217,000 businesses.

As a start, the auditors suggested mailing inspection forms to the 39,000 potentially non-compliant businesses and asking for proof of insurance. The board could also target industries that are most likely to produce worker's comp claims, which it does not appear to do now.

In response, the board said it had begun discussions with the Georgia Department of Labor to access its business and insurance data. It also plans to begin coding its records by industry to identify high-risk business sectors.

Auditors also questioned the board's enforcement practices. The staff often assesses lighter fines than it could, anticipating that an administrative law judge would probably reduce a higher fine.

Some businesses save money by skipping the insurance and rolling the dice on whether they will be fined, auditors said. The state fined one timber company $2,500 in 2007, rather than the maximum $5,000; the company obtained insurance carrying a $28,000 annual premium, but dropped it a few months later and has not reinstated coverag since.

Auditors found no evidence that inspectors routinely recheck previous offenders, as their procedures manual calls for.

 

 

 













 

'Consistent rejection, lack of cooperation' from ATL police

MARTA to hike  parking fee, fares, move to variable fares

BankTracker uses public data to sort out troubled banks

GBI: Witness protection files left unprotected

Auditors: Too many police downtown?

Judge lobbied legislator who was defendant

Congressman's daughter left out income   from court job

Atlanta sits on $4 million in user refunds

Ethics agency drops Lisa Borders lobbying case

Bolton took comp time for movie, Tupac food drive

DeKalb may owe Bolton thousands

Report: DeKalb chief hid luxury cars

DK chief's 56 unapproved comp days

ATL schools to renegotiate BeltLine deal

Fired DeKalb chief scored perfect eval

Regents' Vigil -- $76 million in sales to Georgia

New jobs would cost Georgians $265K apiece

BeltLine bill would avoid new vote

MARTA OK'd gave 10-40% raises to 114

$248K in liens filed against 12  legislators

Bank sues Regents chair on land deal