WorkSafeNB tribunal 'scapegoated,' says appeals chair
Board evaluating record number of appeals
CBC News
Posted: Mar 8, 2013 7:11 PM AT
Last Updated: Mar 8, 2013 7:44 PM AT
Related
Related Stories
External Links
(Note:CBC does not endorse and is not responsible for the content of external links.)
There is nothing wrong with the appeals tribunal, says chair Ronald Gaffney. (CBC)WorkSafeNB decisions are repeatedly violating the New Brunswick Workers Compensation Act, giving the impression that the economic interests of employers trump workers' rights, says the chair of the appeals tribunal.
Ronald Gaffney, a Fredericton lawyer who's been managing the WorkSafeNB appeals tribunal since 2009, said they are evaluating a record number of appeals — 800 cases a year.
Several doctors and clients are saying workers are being unjustly denied benefits by WorkSafeNB.
About 90 per cent of denials get overturned when they go to the appeals level.
Gaffney said WorkSafeNB has been clawing back benefits when a client receives a pension, even though a court ruling said that is not legitimate.
The agency also stops payments for a job injury if the client runs into a health problem that doesn't relate to their job, he said.
'There are some people who see it basically as an insurance system and an insurance company.'—Ronald Gaffney
"WorkSafe has no authority to do that. We've told the commission that, but we continue to get cases involving that," said Gaffney.
Gaffney said there's nothing wrong with the appeals board and sometimes he feels scapegoated for the discrepancy.
He said the tribunal is making decisions to the right standard and that nine times out of 10, the judicial system — the New Brunswick Court of Appeal — concurs with the decisions.
Gaffney said it may be a problem at the workers' compensation level.
"I personally see one philosophical problem. There are some people, and it may well be that their view is correct — although the court of appeal has disagreed with this approach — but see it basically as an insurance system and an insurance company. And that the employers of the province who pay the assessments are the shareholders. And, you know, they are very sensitive to that," said Gaffney.
An audit is being done to determine whether the appeals process could be shorter, said Gaffney, But he said he is worried that it will slide into some kind of effort to tamper with their mandate.
Share Tools
Latest New Brunswick News Headlines
- Grace Foundation dodges Trudeau questions
- The board of a Saint John, N.B., charity involved in a dispute with Justin Trudeau is refusing to discuss his offer to repay them. more »
- 'Sense of panic' surrounded Ashley Smith
- The prison where Ashley Smith died had a sense of panic around the teenager, an inquest heard Tuesday. more »
- Who's who in the Senate expense controversy
- Keeping track of the names popping up in the ongoing Senate expenses controversy — from the investigators to the four senators themselves — could be a difficult task for even the most seasoned political observers. more »
- Conservatives closer to selling government airplane
- New Brunswick's Progressive Conservative government is a step closer to fulfilling a promise to sell the government-owned airplane used by the premier and members of cabinet. more »
Must Watch
Top News Headlines
- Neil Macdonald: Washington's obsession with leakers
- Julian Assange and Edward Snowden are just the most prominent targets in an all-out legal and propaganda campaign that America's security apparatus is mounting against leakers everywhere, Neil Macdonald writes. more »
- Who's who in the Senate expense controversy
- Keeping track of the names popping up in the ongoing Senate expenses controversy — from the investigators to the four senators themselves — could be a difficult task for even the most seasoned political observers. more »
- Mixed reviews for Ottawa's new 'open data' website
- Treasury Board President Tony Clement is touting the federal government's revamped data portal as a "new natural resource." But that online window for previously published data arrives at the same time the government faces controversy over just how open it really is. more »
- 2 men jailed in Dominican wedding fight return to Canada
- Two Canadian men who were detained in the Dominican Republic for nearly three weeks after a post-wedding fight broke out at a resort have returned to Toronto, the latest step in a drama that the wife of one of the men said was "like a scene from the movies." more »
- Grace Foundation dodges Trudeau questions
- 'Sense of panic' surrounded Ashley Smith
- Miramichi student mourned after fatal crash
- Conservatives closer to selling government airplane
- FHS students arrive in style to their prom
- Catastrophic drug plan coming by fall, health minister says
- Province urged to deal with shale-gas protests
- Tory minister denies nixing class trip to Trudeau rally
- Thieves steal 9-metre rowing dock in Fredericton

