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Workers' Compensation Death Benefits

Did you know that by the 1920s almost all US states had some type of workers' compensation system? To learn more about your state's workers' compensation laws, contact an experienced attorney.

Lancaster County Workers' Compensation Attorney

For more than 20 years, attorney Mike Vanasse has practiced exclusively in the area of workers' compensation. At Vanasse Law LLC, in Lancaster, we are dedicated to helping injured workers in central Pennsylvania, obtain benefits to cover lost wages and medical expenses. If you have been hurt on the job, you need to speak with an experienced lawyer as soon as possible to ensure that you do not lose our on important benefits.

Contact our firm to schedule a free initial consultation about your workers' compensation issues. Let us serve your needs and give you the answers and legal counsel that you deserve. Send us an e-mail or call our Lancaster office at 717-397-1010 (toll free at 888-576-0240).

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The majority of employers in Pennsylvania are required by law to have workers' compensation insurance that will cover the medical expenses and lost wages of injured workers. By applying for workers' comp benefits, employees give up their rights to pursue other legal remedies, giving businesses confidence about avoiding expensive litigation.

Workers' compensation benefits work on a no-fault model, which means that regardless of who caused your workplace accident, you may file for benefits. There is no need to prove exactly what happened in order to obtain benefits.

Workers' Compensation Death Benefits

In addition to workers' compensation benefits for workers for their job-related injuries and illnesses, if such maladies ultimately result in death, certain survivors have the right to receive death benefits through their states' workers' compensation systems. If you are the family member or dependent of an employee who died from an injury or sickness incurred in the course of his or her employment, a knowledgeable workers' compensation attorney at Vanasse Law LLC in Lancaster, Pennsylvania, can advise you about workers' compensation death benefits.

The right to workers' compensation death benefits is usually created by state law and details of the program vary among the states. Therefore, it is crucial to understand the law in your particular jurisdiction. This article will summarize the typical features of death benefits in most states.

Beneficiaries

In most states, the designation of appropriate beneficiaries of workers' compensation death benefits looks at two main relationships:

  • Dependents
  • Members of the deceased's family or household

Death benefits are designed to provide monetary support for those people who will suffer most from the worker's death. Naturally, those dependent upon the worker for financial support will be negatively impacted by the death. Some states differentiate between those wholly and those partially dependent, with preference for naming the completely dependent people beneficiaries over those only partially dependent. In some states, partially dependent individuals receive reduced awards.

Sometimes certain family members, such as spouses and children, are presumed to be dependent without having to provide proof. However, if there has been a severance of the marital relationship, such as a voluntary separation with financial independence, a surviving spouse may not be assumed dependent.

Many states look at family relationships or household makeup. For example, sometimes states prescribe lists of familial relationships eligible for death benefits. Where states look to household membership, unmarried cohabiting partners, in-laws, stepchildren or stepparents, or even unrelated persons may qualify for death benefits, so long as they were living in shared households with the deceased workers, especially where financial dependence was present.

Generally, states are liberal in determining who should be named a beneficiary, consistent with the benevolent nature of the benefit.

Type and Amount

Beneficiaries receive benefits to cover funeral and burial expenses capped at certain levels varying widely from state to state. The other component of the death benefit is a monetary amount compensating for lost wages that is usually a percentage of weekly wages.

The length of time a beneficiary receives death benefits varies widely by jurisdiction. Depending on the state, a surviving spouse may receive benefits until his or her own death, for a set number of weeks, until remarriage or until another intimate relationship. A child usually receives death benefits until reaching the age of majority. Other types of dependents usually receive benefits for life or until they become financially independent.

Other Requirements

For the right to death benefits to accrue, some states require that the work-related death occur within a particular length of time after the work injury, after the last treatment for the work injury or after some other occurrence. Some states require continuous disability from injury to death.

Finally, although the cause of death must be a job-related injury or disease, usually the cause of death does not have to be exclusively that injury or sickness, as long as it contributes significantly to the death.

Pending Claims or Accrued Benefits

A living employee's workers' compensation benefits are considered separate and distinct from the death benefits generated later for beneficiaries. When accrued regular workers' compensation benefits are due a worker at the time of death, most states provide either that these accrued benefits pass through the estate of the deceased or to dependents. A death benefit award is a separate claim.

Conclusion

If you are the surviving spouse, child, relative, dependent or household member of someone who died from a work-related injury or disease, you may have a claim for workers' compensation death benefits. Do not delay in obtaining legal advice and filing an application; your state probably has time limits for applying. A skilled workers' compensation lawyer at Vanasse Law LLC in Lancaster, Pennsylvania, can answer your questions.

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DISCLAIMER: This site and any information contained herein are intended for informational purposes only and should not be construed as legal advice. Seek competent legal counsel for advice on any legal matter.

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Vanasse Law LLC
1366 Harrisburg Pike
Lancaster, PA 17601
Map and Directions

Phone: 717-397-1010
Toll Free: 888-576-0240
Fax: 717-397-2644
Send an E-Mail

About our location
You will find Vanasse Law LLC conveniently located in central Lancaster just off Route 30. We are in the NorthWest Business Park on Harrisburg Pike right next to the main Lancaster Post Office. Our office has plenty of free parking and is handicapped accessible.

Our clients can easily access our office to meet with us, or to drop off information about their case without a lot of hassle. We pride ourselves on the personal attention we give to our clients and our ability to provide help every step of the way.

Serving the Communities of

Vanasse Law LLC is located in Lancaster, Pennsylvania and serves injured workers throughout the greater communities of Lancaster County, including Columbia, Manheim, Lititz, Ephrata and Quarryville, as well as surrounding counties such as Dauphin County and York County.

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