
May 26, 2010
STATE BAR ASSOCIATION ANNOUNCES OPPOSITION TO
“MANAGED ADJUDICATION PATH” PROGRAM
Proposed Workers Compensation Board Initiative
Would Limit Due Process Hearing Rights of Workers and Employers
The New York State Bar Association today announced its opposition to
the Managed Adjudication Path (MAP) program currently being proposed by
the New York State Workers’ Compensation Board, arguing that the
initiative would severely limit due process rights traditionally
afforded to workers, employers and insurance companies in workers’
compensation claims.
The issue of settling disputes outside the Law Judge Hearing Process
has been closely monitored by the Workers’ Compensation Law
Division of the State Bar’s Torts, Insurance and Compensation Law
Section, chaired by Christopher Lemire, Esq. (Lemire Johnson LLC of
Malta). Members of the section division expressed their concerns and
opposition to representatives of the Workers’ Compensation Board
at a recent section division meeting in Albany. A webinar describing the
Managed Adjudication Path program hosted earlier this month by the Board
erroneously suggested the division and the State Bar were in favor of
the MAP program.
The implementation of the MAP program will divert an undetermined
number of cases with disputed issues away from Law Judge Hearings to an
informal process that allows decisions to be issued without notice to or
appearance by the involved parties, without the benefit of legal
counsel, and without any development of the record.
“The MAP program represents a major departure from the
Board’s longstanding practice of resolving disputed issues through
adjudicatory hearings. Simply put, it would erode the due process rights
of injured workers and employers,” said State Bar Association
President Michael E. Getnick (Getnick Livingston Atkinson & Priore,
LLP of Utica and of counsel to Getnick & Getnick of New York City).
“The rights of both injured workers and employers will be
protected, and the timely resolution of disputed issues accomplished,
only by affording both parties a prompt hearing before a Law Judge. The
State Bar Association continues to urge the Board to remove this
proposal and work toward what should be the common goal of achieving
efficiency with justice.”
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Founded in 1876, the 77,000-member New York State Bar Association is
the official statewide organization of lawyers in New York and the
largest voluntary state bar association in the nation. The State
Bar’s programs and activities have continuously served the public
and improved the justice system for more than 130 years. For more
information, visit us at our Web site at www.nysba.org.
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