Bill Text: HI SR148 | 2023 | Regular Session | Amended


Bill Title: Requesting The Department Of Labor And Industrial Relations To Analyze The Available Data On Hawaii Workers' Compensation Cases Relating To Death Benefits For The Past Ten Years And Obtain Any Additional Data From The Hawaii Insurers Council Or Any Other State Or Federal Source To Recommend Any Updates To The Workers' Compensation Law.

Spectrum: Partisan Bill (Democrat 7-0)

Status: (Passed) 2023-05-22 - Certified copies of resolutions sent. [SR148 Detail]

Download: Hawaii-2023-SR148-Amended.html

THE SENATE

S.R. NO.

148

THIRTY-SECOND LEGISLATURE, 2023

S.D. 1

STATE OF HAWAII

 

 

 

 

 

SENATE RESOLUTION

 

 

REQUESTING THE DEPARTMENT OF LABOR AND INDUSTRIAL RELATIONS to analyze the available data on Hawaii workers' compensation cases relating to death benefits for the past ten years and obtain any additional data from the Hawaii Insurers Council or any other state or federal source to recommend any updates to the Workers' Compensation Law.

 

 


     WHEREAS, the purpose of the Workers' Compensation Law is to compensate workers and their dependents fairly and equitably in the event of work-related disability or death; and

 

     WHEREAS, chapter 386, Hawaii Revised Statutes (HRS) establishes Hawaii's Workers' Compensation Law; and

 

     WHEREAS, section 386-41, HRS, makes distinctions among dependent surviving spouses, dependent surviving children, dependent surviving parents, and dependent surviving grandparents of deceased lawfully covered employees for purposes of calculating various weekly benefit amounts; and

 

     WHEREAS, section 386-41, HRS, also makes a distinction between wholly dependent and partially dependent parents for purposes of calculating weekly benefit amounts; and

 

     WHEREAS, the Department of Labor and Industrial Relations is tasked with implementing chapter 386, HRS, including section 386-41 thereof; and

 

     WHEREAS, the Department of Labor and Industrial Relations customarily conducts an administrative hearing to determine in certain cases whether a surviving beneficiary was wholly or partially dependent on the deceased employee; and

 

     WHEREAS, according to its oral testimony before the Senate Committee on Labor and Technology concerning Senate Bill No. 1115 (2023) on February 15, 2023, the Department of Labor and Industrial Relations asserted that it continues to base its calculations for different generations of surviving beneficiaries using an actuarial table created in 1963; and

 

     WHEREAS, longevity and generational dependency trends may well have changed significantly over the course of sixty years, resulting in unreasonable and unfair distribution of benefits by current parameters; now, therefore,

 

     BE IT RESOLVED by the Senate of the Thirty-second Legislature of the State of Hawaii, Regular Session of 2023, that the Department of Labor and Industrial Relations is requested to analyze the available data on Hawaii workers' compensation cases relating to death benefits for the past ten years and obtain any additional data from the Hawaii Insurers Council or any other state or federal sources to recommend any updates to the Workers' Compensation Law; and

 

     BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED that the Department of Labor and Industrial Relations is requested to submit a report of its findings and recommendations for updating the Workers' Compensation Law, particularly section 386-41, Hawaii Revised Statutes, to the Legislature no later than twenty days prior to the convening of the Regular Session of 2024; and

 

     BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED that a certified copy of this Resolution be transmitted to the Director of Labor and Industrial Relations.

Report Title: 

Department of Labor and Industrial Relations; Workers' Compensation; Beneficiaries; Report

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