Why the Mail May Stop on July 1, 2011
Collins & Lacy, P.C.
April 26, 2011

By July 1, 2011, mail carrying “required
information” may not reach the South Carolina Second Injury Fund
(SIF). With the enactment of § 42-7-320, an employer, self-insurer or
insurance carrier must have submitted all required information for
consideration of accepting a claim to the Second Injury Fund. According
to § 42-7-320(B)(2), failure to submit all required information to the
fund by June 30, 2011, shall bar an employer, self-insurer or insurance
carrier from recovery from the fund.
The SIF functions within the South Carolina Workers’ Compensation
system. Its mission is to protect employers from the higher cost of
insurance that can occur when an injury combines with a prior disability
that results in substantially increased medical or disability costs.
What does this mean practically speaking? If an employer had a
qualifying injury (one that meets the Act’s requirements and occurred on
or before June 30, 2008) and was able to submit a notice for the claim
before the December 31, 2010 deadline, then the employer must provide
all supporting evidence for the claim by June 30, 2011. The SIF will
need medical records, pleadings, affidavits, medical questionnaires’,
deposition transcripts and anything else needed for consideration to
support the claim. The SIF has verified that it will not accept any
documents after June 30, 2011.
The SIF interprets § 42-7-320 (B)(2) to mean the information must be
received by June 30. Without knowing how the Courts will interpret a
challenge to this section, Collins & Lacy recommends submitting all
required information in support of the claim by the June 30, 2011
deadline, just to be safe. Action (or inaction) now can make the
difference in an accepted claim or a denied claim after July 1, 2011. So, send out medical questionnaires, request hearing transcripts and
medical subpoenas immediately. With roughly 10 weeks remaining, time is
of the essence. Consider sending your records and material through
some verification of receipt; certified mail, tracking or confirm
receipt by telephone call or fax. It is also suggested to verify with
the SIF what information it already has on file to make sure previously
sent material reached the Fund.
Christian Boesl is a shareholder and chair of the Employment Law
Practice Group for Collins & Lacy. His practice focus includes both
employment law and workers’ compensation law. For more information,
contact him at (803) 256-2660 or cboesl@collinsandlacy.com.
About Collins & Lacy, P.C.


