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F I S C A L I M P A C T R E P O R T





SPONSOR: Griego DATE TYPED: 03/01/01 HB
SHORT TITLE: Implement Ergonomic Claims Procedures SB 791
ANALYST: Carrillo


APPROPRIATION



Appropriation Contained
Estimated Additional Impact
Recurring

or Non-Rec

Fund

Affected

FY01 FY02 FY01 FY02
$ 2,100.0 Recurring General Fund



(Parenthesis ( ) Indicate Expenditure Decreases)

SOURCES OF INFORMATION



Public School Insurance Authority



SUMMARY



Synopsis of Bill



Senate Bill 791 appropriates $2.1 million from the general fund to the Public School Insurance Authority for training expenses to comply with training requirements to implement claims procedures for ergonomic claims pursuant to federal workplace requirements (OSHA CFR Part 1910 of Title 29 - Ergonomics Programs).



The bill contains a reversion clause.



Significant Issues



According to PSIA staff:



The bill will allow PSIA to provide the services required by the Statute Amendment, services not currently provided by any other agency. The OSHA change requires districts to provide ergonomics training within 14 days of hire. A professional ergonomics or safety professional must provide the training. It further requires that the training be repeated for all employees every three years. The Amendment also requires in-depth training and administrative processes for employees who have an ergonomics claim.



Claim administration and costs are outside the current Workers' Compensation and NM State OSHA provisions. Further the penalties for non-compliance rage from $5,000 to $70,000 per violation. PSIA estimates that 2/3 of the member districts will be required to provide medical treatment and work place engineering for individuals with a musculoskeletal disorders (MSD). Failure to comply with the requirements may also lead to increases in litigation cost. Current analysis indicates that claims filed would be outside of the exclusive remedy clause of Workers' Compensation.



The cross over between tort liability and exclusive remedy has not been solved. The requirements for the ergonomics program and payment of wages are required under OSHA separate and apart from payments and benefits provided under Workers Compensation. Governmental agencies that are currently exempted from OSHA fines will not be exempted from Ergonomic Program fines.



PERFORMANCE IMPLICATIONS



PSIA indicates neither they nor its member districts are providing MSD related programs to the extent required by the Statue Amendment. PSIA will provide the services required in the Statute and meet the deadlines and performance measures required under the Amendment. These include statewide training for current employees within seven months, ongoing training for new employees, MSD case management, ergonomic council development and maintenance and reduction of MSD related claims.



FISCAL IMPLICATIONS



The appropriation of $2.1 million contained in this bill is a recurring expense to the general fund. Any unexpended or unencumbered balance remaining at the end of FY02 shall revert to the general fund.



ADMINISTRATIVE IMPLICATIONS



PSIA will contract with an outside agency to perform these services. Contract oversight will not affect current PSIA FTEs. The bill will provide services through PSIA rather than expenditures being born by member districts. Current contractors will be required to coordinate services with the ergonomics contractor for payment of benefits and execution of services.



WJC/prr