City Council Meeting February 10, 2016 Committee on Budget on Government Operations
RESOLUTION
WHEREAS, a system providing for the compensation of workers' families after the death of the worker due to a workplace accident was first created in Illinois in 1910; and
WHEREAS, that system was expanded in 1913 to provide for the compensation of workers injured at the workplace; and
WHEREAS, the City Council of the City of Chicago created a Bureau of Workmen's Compensation shortly thereafter to administer workers' compensation claims filed by employees of the City of Chicago; and
WHEREAS, that bureau, ever since, has been housed within the Committee on Finance; and
WHEREAS, the structure of the administration of city programs and services has changed dramatically since then, although the structure of that bureau has changed little; and
WHEREAS, that structure shields the Committee on Finance, which manages $100 million annually, from oversight by the Inspector General of the City of Chicago, placing the bureau at risk for waste and inefficiency, despite best efforts, and
WHEREAS, in 2015 the City of Chicago appropriated $69,512,605 for workers' compensation costs; and
WHEREAS, the municipal code does not require full, independent and transparent audits of programs, processes and instance of claims; and
WHEREAS, without disclosure of data on workers' compensation protocol and practice it is impossible to ascertain if administrators utilize effective and efficient policies and procedures or if specific procedures are in place to prevent, identify and resolve waste, fraud and abuse.
WHEREAS, across the country, the modern legal jurisprudence of workers' compensation law, employment law and labor law at the state and federal level has shifted worker's compensation administration away from the legislative arm of government; and
WHEREAS, that shift has been in direct response to the need for reform of excessive waste and abuse as they relate to workers' compensati...
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