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By WorkSafeBC | May 4, 2009 - 8:27 pm - Posted in Your Stories | 890 views

On April 28 2009 I held a rally at the WCB (WorkSafeBC) office in Prince George BC.

The turn out for picketers was poor due to the cold but I was able to get 168 signatures on my petition.
There was hundreds of people that drove by honking their horns and giving thumbs up. An old couple in their seventies pulled up and thanked me for taking action. They are currently looking after their son that was hurt at work and is now so upset he is contemplating suicide.
I plan to hold the rally again next year! Instead of only having a month to get ready I have all year. The next rally should be bigger and better.
For more information I can be contacted by posting comments on this post.

By WorkSafeBC | February 10, 2008 - 3:14 pm - Posted in Your Stories | 940 views

In response to Teresa’s Story:

In 1999 i started a corporation, applied for wcb coverage and in 2000 i was assaulted by an ex employee. Wcb rejected my claim completely because they claimed i was not on the job. Well i was and As the years have been going by i have been slowly winning and also racking up legal bills that i cannot recover. I have made it as far as the wcat reconsideration. And still i am not getting what i am entitled to. Even though wcat is an INDEPENDENT government body the burden of proof still lies with the injured worker and wcat does side with wcb even though you have proven your case. I have received $5000 of hearing aids, and yet wcb has denied the fact that i suffer from tinnitus and inner ear injury. , i have a facial disfigurement , an eye twitch, eye tearing and yet they will not acknowledge that i suffer from a head/brain injury I have many other problems associated to this incident. I was awarded a 40 percent phyc disability and yet All medical documents support the facts that i suffered a head/brain injury. By not acknowledging these injuries, they were able to deny the treatment that i required at the time of injury and the treatment that is available presently.

This may be an opportunity for you to open a door that has to be recognized by the government. I may not be able to personally sue wcb for my legal fees or for inducing further trauma and hardships, but my corporation should be able to sue wcb for fraud. Taking premiums from the Corporation and denying compensation and medical help immediately when required did in fact create a permanent and irreversible mental and physical state . You may ask “why did i not go to my own doctor” ANSWER When you are messed up as much as i was, mentally and physically i was not capable of doing so. My file is proof that this has happened. I lost everything!!! What needs to happen is the corporations and companies that wcb represents need to stand up for their employees. They are afraid to because they fear their rates will go up. Wcb was created to protect companies from employee lawsuits. Well my corporation is willing to do this if a legal firm is willing to take this on.

If you are interested to pay for the legal fees, my corporation will open this door and fight for the injured worker. I am a well educated individual and yet i was classified as a janitor and i am receiving a janitors wage. This is not fair or correct, This is corruption at the highest level. Lets put a stop to it.

MaxKodiak

By WorkSafeBC | February 9, 2008 - 8:52 am - Posted in Your Stories | 1,894 views

My name is Teresa Roper and I am an advocate of many disabled people before the WCB in Alberta and throughout Canada. The issue of the bonuses is a tough subject with me because WCB in Alberta has continually said ( as has their Board of Directors) that there is no bonus for “termination” or closing of a claim. I however, do have the paperwork to prove it. Since 2004 I have been trying to find a way to get the issue before the legislature. I had contacted old Ralphie (Klein) and of course he was not interested in the least. I tried the NDP, and never got a call back from anyone (and no I didn’t try only one call) Finally I tried Kevin Taft, and his wife was a wonderful person to talk to, she called back and told me he was away for a short time and that he would get back to me when he returned. He spoke to me for a while, took the paperwork. NOT ONLY about the bonuses but also other proof of FRAUD committed by the WCB, as well as what can only be called “proof they cook their books” to create overpayments on claimants files. In 2005 I participated in an award winning radio documentary program on WCB, I sent him the proof I had and the documentation to support it.. Too bad that after a visit from WCB that talk show host no longer has a talk show!! Anyway. Mr. Taft wrote to the Auditor General, Mr. Fred Dunn, and asked him to have one of his auditors meet with me. I have been informed numerous times that someone will meet with me, and that any significant deficiencies identified from the assessment will be included in the Annual Report of The Auditor General to the Legislative Assembly… So fart many, many letter that say this, and help from Mr. Taft, but no one has ever contacted me from the Auditor General Office.

So I keep taking on claims one by one and plodding away, hoping that someday the Government has the courage to look at what the WCB are doing. That WCB stops being able to commit fraud and not even get their hand slapped and that maybe someone with some clout in the Media doesn’t just write about it for a week, and I thank you wholeheartedly for your series Mr. Loome!! ( Even though you put an “h” in my name – LOL –)

BUT this need to be there every day – a la Britney – till someone somewhere does something.

Also.. You write: “The most important bit of information you need to understand when faced with a WCB claim is that the minute you cash that first check from WCB, you sign away all your rights to sue your employer for causing your injury. Make sure you are completely aware of this . . . WCB will cut you off for no reason and will cause you great difficulty in your recovery.”

This is not quite right.. sorry.. The moment your employer pays his first premium, you cant sue him, and if the employer is in a mandatory industry and hasnt even paid or applied – he’s still protected, and as one worker/employer I represented found out.. even if you dont want WCB coverage.. if your a truck driver for 20 years with massive liability insurance, if and when you have an accident – its WCB and you can do nothing but hope they treat you well!

Teresa Roper

By WorkSafeBC | June 28, 2007 - 5:53 am - Posted in Your Stories | 1,168 views

Ever since her accident, the single mom has survived on social assistance and lived perilously close to the poverty line. ” People’s taxes have been paying for me to live while the employer funded insurance policy denies my claim.”

Echo Wylie’s battle to survive did not end when she narrowly escaped death in an Oct. 3, 1987 head-on car crash. Her struggle continues to this day. Twenty years later, at age 45, Wylie is still angry about a decision by Workmen’s Compensation Board (WCB) now WorkSafe B.C. to refuse her disability claim.

Ever since her accident, the single mom has survived on social assistance and lived perilously close to the poverty line. Enough is enough. Now what she wants, she says, is for WCB to “own up” and allow her to live a better quality life. She blames what she calls a quasi-judicial body for dragging out the case so long, forcing her onto welfare.

“It took years to find a doctor who knew what was wrong with me. In the meantime, I don’t think tax payers should have had to support me. Why should they? That’s why employers and employees pay into the WCB fund in the first place.”

Wylie’s case was clouded, said Prince George WorkSafe B.C. manager of client services Brett Hopson because of other injuries she suffered in a second accident – a pedestrian motor vehicle accident.

“The judge in the ICBC matter heard evidence that Ms. Wylie’s injuries from her car accident ” which notably were mostly soft tissue injuries” had been resolved.” That was partly what WCB relied on in its decision, Hopson said. Wylie refutes that.

“That’s wrong. My injuries from the first accident were not resolved. I never testified they were. This is more than a ‘he said, she said.’ The facts are there, in the file.”

Wylie has told her story hundreds of times to her friends, family, lawyers and WCB case workers but reliving it still brings tears to her eyes.

“I was in my fifth year working for CN Rail, riding in the passenger seat of a CN crew cab when it collided head-on with a a semi truck, just outside Fort Langley. I could see the truck coming at us, so I tore off my seat belt and tried to save myself by climbing into the back and putting my arms over my head. The impact caused us to hit the truck’s fuel tank. It bounced off hitting our back dullie (where trailer is hitched) and we ended up underneath the trailer. The truck was completely destroyed.”

Wylie said WCB never looked at the severity of the car accident when considering her injuries. Following the crash, Wylie said she suffered memory loss, chronic pain, constant fatigue and post traumatic stress disorder. Her moods swung erratically.

“It got so bad, I couldn’t go anywhere. If I had to stand in line or something I would just blow up because I couldn’t cope with stress. I’m still a smart person but I can’t carry on a conversation very long, I can’t stay focused.”

She lists her injuries which exist to this day.

“My jaw has receded a half inch back into my head. They diagnosed whiplash right after the accident. I have a TMJ problem. My disc was stretched in my jaw, there was a bleeding vessel in my brain and what they now call a brain injury – the bones in my skull are overlapping at the site of the bleeding vessel.”

Her injuries only added to her real problem, she says. Wylie wanted to work.

“I sat around for 16 years not able to work. I felt useless.”

During all this time, Wylie was raising a young son.

“Welfare kept me on emergency funds for years. That’s just wrong, that’s money that belongs to the taxpayers.” The local woman’s fight has taken her to the offices of the Ministry of Labour, Law Society of B.C., Human Rights Commission, Workers’ Advisors, Ministry of Social Services and Housing, Northern Association of Injured and Disabled Workers, WCB Ombudsman, United Way, Prince George Brain Injured Group, several MLAs and the media.

In 2006, she requested access to her medical records and WCB files under the Freedom of Information and Protection of Privacy Act. Over the years, she’s seen numerous doctors and specialists. She’s consulted 23 lawyers about her case. Currently Prince George lawyer Bruce Kaun is looking into her file — a file that, stacked on Wylie’s lap, is three feet high.

“Files like this take a great deal of time,” Kaun said Tuesday.

Still he understands the plight of people like Wylie and likes the challenge of helping clients in a seemingly uphill battle. Such files can take years to conclude, Kaun says, but they are also very satisfying.

Recent legislation changes have meant cases can be reopened if there is new evidence and that can be brought before a WCB (WorkSafe) review tribunal, he said. “When a lot of time has passed it is often difficult to connect it to the original injury.”

Kaun suggests injured workers become good record keepers.

“They should keep a diary and record how they feel, their symptoms, trips to doctors. They should keep receipts for all costs related to their injury, even things like cab fares. I always advise people to deal only in writing to WCB or ICBC.”

Meanwhile, Wylie waits in her trailer park and continues to write letters to all levels of government, interest groups, the media. She sends emails and makes telephone calls to anyone she thinks could help. For her it’s an issue of fairness and quality of life.

“I feel that I have been robbed of years of my life. All I want is my independence and my life back,” she said Tuesday, sitting on a park bench outside her home in a trailer park overlooking the Fraser River.

“I believe I have work related injuries. People’s taxes have been paying for me to live while the employer funded insurance policy denies my claim. I am a proud Canadian and I believe the medical and social systems have been made to pay for what I think is the WCB’s responsibility since my accident. My son is 15 now. He’s grown up with this.”

During her lengthy battle with WCB, former CN Rail worker Echo Wylie said she’s talked to 23 lawyers but most of them have no time to read, let alone fight her case. So far, Prince George barrister Bruce Kaun is hanging in there. Kaun said he’s seen many cases like Wylie’s that drag on for years.

“One thing people have to remember,” he said, “is the history of WCB. It’s not an insurance fund, as many people think.” He said there’s lots of horror stories like Wylie’s out there, the “little guy against Goliath” variety where lawyers have to wade through enormous files that take hours to digest and many more to litigate. Is 20 years a long time?

“I had one that went back to the 1950’s,” he said.

Presently Kaun is reviewing Wylie’s file to see if there’s any way he can assist her. In the meantime, she is left to ponder her fate.

Prince George WCB (WorkSafe) office manager of client services Brett Hopson agreed to talk with the Free Press last week after accident victim Echo Wylie gave him written permission to discuss her case. He thinks she was “treated fairly.”

Hopson agrees her file got caught up in backlogs and has been around “probably as long as I have been at WCB, 20 years.” However, for about seven of those years, during the 1990’s, Wylie had no contact with their office, he said. Hopson added that each year, hundreds of case files are processed in a timely fashion.

New rules introduced a few years ago have streamlined the process. Wiley’s case has issues which Hopson who was not the case worker on the file, would rather not discuss. However he does agree the appeals process took time on the part of both parties.

“As far as I know, she’s exhausted all her appeals,” Hopson said.

“I knew of the file but I only just read the file in its entirety for the first time the other day to prepare for this call [to the Free Press].” It took Hopson two days to read its contents and he can sift through files faster than most because he’s familiar with the terms and forms. The hefty file, filled with thousands of pages of documents, medical reports, case worker’s information and letters would be daunting for anyone.

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By WorkSafeBC | June 23, 2007 - 12:52 am - Posted in Your Stories | 1,060 views

A one way street

I was injured in 1995 and worked to 2000. I have gone through all the wcb hoops and rehab places and am no better. I tried a slow return to work and that just didn’t work, my pain got worse from doing physical labour. WCB was going to pay for my computer coarse but also screwed me out of that. So i took a student loan and was in school 3 months, but i couldn’t take the pain and did poorly. I have just recently quit school, have no income myself and don’t know what to do? Every where I have turned to this B.C. government for support, I have been turned down. It’s so amusing that I worked for 26 years and payed into all these systems and now that I’m chronically injured for the rest of my life , the same systems I paid into do not want to help me? isn’t this a one way street and I’m on the wrong side ?

I almost forgot to name the people at WCB who are screwing me Brent St-Gelais, they are as follows:
1-adjudicators – Brian Simpson
2-adjudicator – Walter Stazuik
3-Voc rehab – Mitch Rosenburg
4-Voc rehab – Shelly Rose

all of the Victoria.B.C. office.

Brent S
Victoria BC.

Disclaimer:
What I write here is all based on my opinion, my observations and my experiences. Please take it as such and form your own opinion. WCB Digest is in no way responsible for my viewpoint or opinion.

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By WorkSafeBC | June 22, 2007 - 2:09 am - Posted in Your Stories | 1,166 views

I’ve already had the wcb ombudsman involved HA!

I’ve had an experience last year with the Fraser Valley Phsyio / Rehab center ltd. in Chilliwack, I had numerous complaints of pain in my right ankle after my 3rd surg. to remove scar tissue as well as bone fragments, well the doctor left 1 behind, a 7mm x 4mm located in the deltoid ligament “that couldn’t be appreciated” (well get a dr. that can), anyways they cut me off due to this therapists statement (who is not a doctor.) after having a meeting with the owner and therapist (Dec.13/02) she said “how can I do a proper evaluation when I only saw you 7 times”, after paying for my own MRI there seemed to be more problems (doctor would not authorize mri) lucky for me decision letter was dated Oct.28/02 one day before they wiped out the Med Reveiw panel. I finally got my hearing Aug.6/03 where they appoint another doctor to see me before a med certificate would be issued, he appt. another doctor to do a nerve blk. specifing this doctor only. well False Creek Surg. set me up w/ a dr.chow who was the wrong dr. then performed the wrong procedure (2 times in emerg.), now i’m waiting to get the procedure done again! not only am I in more pain but on hardship welfare all this time!!! w/ no med cert. yet. I’ve talked to Joe Pinto but it seems they do not want to take responsibility! any suggestions???
thanks for the therapy!

wes gerela
ph.604-316-3744

Disclaimer:
What I write here is all based on my opinion, my observations and my experiences. Please take it as such and form your own opinion. WCB Digest is in no way responsible for my viewpoint or opinion.

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