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I Got Hurt on the Job and I Need Legal Help – How do I find an Attorney?

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Do Lawyers Specialize in Work Comp?  Here’s a short ‘how-to’ guide on what you should look for when you need to Hire an Ohio Workers’ Comp Lawyer.

You’ve been injured in a workplace accident, now what? In today’s OhioBWC climate you should retain an Ohio workers’ comp attorney. And, it’s critically important find a lawyer who is Board Certified in Ohio Workers’ Compensation.

There’s a lot of attorneys out there who take on Ohio Work Comp Claims, but they might only be doing a few. Think about your family doctor. You go to him/her for chest pains and the doctor sends you to a board certified medical specialist. In that instance, a cadiologist.

Well, when you get hurt on the job and need an Ohio work comp lawyer, don’t you think you should look for a board certified Ohio work comp specialist attorney to take on your claim?

Before hiring a work comp lawyer, there are things to think about.

Call several attorneys who take Ohio Workers’ Compensation Claims. You should interview the lawyer, either by phone or in person, before making your  hiring decision. Check out their websites. See if there are client testimonials.

Interviewing Ohio Workers’ Comp Lawyers

After gathering the name of one or more Ohio workers’ comp lawyers, call each one to set up an initial consultation. This is a brief interview where you can introduce yourself and talk about your on-the-job accident. Make sure that you ask each lawyer you call if he/she is a Board Certified Ohio Workers’ Compensation Specialist Attorney. If not, it’s probably because he/she does not do that much work comp.

You can accomplish many goals at the initial consultation. You’ll learn about the attorney’s background, skills, and strategy. You’ll be able to get some feedback about the strength of your Ohio workers’ comp claim. You will be able to ‘get a feel’ as to whether this is the attorney you want to represent your legal interests. Remember, your decision will affect you and your family.

Get a free initial consultation. Ask if the lawyer charges for the initial meeting. If he/she does, call someone else.  Initial consultations should be free of charge.

Whether you are in Cleveland, Lorain, Elyria, Akron, Canton or any other part of Ohio, make sure you prepare ahead of time for your free initial consultation. Bring your questions with you, along with some writing materials to record the answers and bring any documents you have received from your injury claim.

Background & Experience

Ask the Ohio workers’ comp attorney about his or her background and experience. Questions can include:

    • Are you a Board Certified Ohio Workers’ Compensation Specialist Attorney?
    • How long have you been practicing Ohio Workers’ Compensation law?
    • Do you take other kinds of cases? If so, what kinds? How many Ohio Work Comp Claims do you handle at any given time?
    • Have you had a client before with a workplace accident similar to mine or with injuries like mine?

To understand or ‘get a feel’ of how the lawyer approaches Ohio workers’ comp claims, think about this:

  • How do you approach handling Ohio workers’ comp claims?
  • Do you aggressively seek as many allowances/awards as are available?
  • What allowances/awards are available in an Ohio Work Comp Claim?
  • When it comes to making a decision in my comp claim, do you communicate with the client?  Do you present various options to the client in the decision making process?
  • Do you tell the client what you would do in the claim, if it was your injury, using your experience?

You should also ask the attorney what his/her opinion and assessment of the claim might be.

Fees

You’ve probably wondered how much an Ohio workers’ comp lawyer costs. The fee is usually a contingency fee. So getting a Board Certified Ohio Work Comp Specialist Attorney won’t cost more than the general practitioner who happens to take in work comp claims along with any other legal issue.  But you should ask how each lawyer you call handles fees. You should ask if the attorney charges by the hour? If so, how much?

What is the contingency percentage you take of funds I receive. What funds are subject to contingency fees?

Hiring an Ohio Workers’ Compensation Lawyer

Once you’ve talked or met with each attorney on your list, it’s time to choose one to represent you. If you only interviewed one and he or she was fantastic or if you interviewed several but one was a real stand-out, than your decision is easy.

After you have gone through the interview process, you should have the answer to the most important question: Which is the best attorney to handle your Ohio workers’ compensation claim? When you have this answer, you are ready to move forward in your efforts to get compensation for your workplace accident and injuries.

There are many nuances to a BWC claim. There are time limits and taking the wrong course of action can severely impact on any Ohio BWC claim.

Call Mike Gruhin, The Comp Specialist, to discuss any aspect of your Ohio Workers’ Compensation Claim. Act now, Call now!

Additional Resources

Gruhin & Gruhin, Attorneys
Gruhin & Gruhin Facebook Fan Page
Mike Gruhin’s Personal Facebook Page

© 2011, Gruhin & Gruhin Attorney’s. All rights reserved.

© 2011, Gruhin & Gruhin Attorney's. All rights reserved.

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Calculating Ohio Workers’ Compensation Wage Loss

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You’ve been injured on the job, but because of your injury restrictions you’re unable to return to work at your former position or former hours.

What can you do to protect yourself when you receive a lower rate of pay. What can you do about the difference between your pre-injury earnings and post-injury reduced wages? Read on . . . . Read the rest of this entry »

© 2011, Gruhin & Gruhin Attorney's. All rights reserved.

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I have an allowed OhioBWC claim – how do I get the bills paid?

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Even if you have an allowed OhioBWC claim, there are rules relating to the payment of medical bills.

The first step, in some instances, is having your Physician of Record request authorization for services. This is done through the utilization of a C-9 Request for Authorization Form. Once the request is authorized, the medical bill must be filed wihing 2 years from the date of service.  If it is filed after the 2 year deadline, the bill will not be paid even if the procedure was approved and related to your allowed claim condition.

The bottom line: an Injured Worker should periodically check with his/her medical providers to make sure their medical bills are paid.

Additionally, according to OhioBWC rules, if your medical provider is OhioBWC Certified and has accepted payment from the BWC for your medical care, the provider cannot pursue you for any money billed over the amount paid by the BWC. In other words, the provider cannot chase an injured worker for payment in excess of the BWC UCR (usual and customary fee).

Ohio Administrative Code Section 4123-3-23 sets forth the Limitations on the filing of fee bills and payments by the OhioBWC:

Fee bills requesting payment for medical or other services rendered in a claim shall be filed with the bureau or  commission within two years of the date on which the service was rendered or shall be forever barred. In cases where the claim was disallowed and by later action is allowed, such fee bills shall be filed within six months from the date of the mailing of the final order allowing the claim or be forever barred. Thus, a fee bill to be timely filed, must be filed either within two years from the date services were rendered or within six months from the date of the mailing of the final order of allowance of claim, whichever period of time is longer, or be forever barred.

If you are the victim of an Ohio Work Injury, call a Board Certified Ohio Workers’ Compensation Specialist Attorney to represent you.  Protect yourself and your family.

Additional Resources

Gruhin & Gruhin, Attorneys
Gruhin & Gruhin Facebook Fan Page

Mike Gruhin’s Personal Facebook Page

 

© 2011, Gruhin & Gruhin Attorney's. All rights reserved.

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Sorry for the lack of postings – I’ve been out of the office in a 4 day jury trial

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It’s been a long, hard week and I apologize for the lack of postings on the blog and here where I post legal items of interest regarding injury claims, and Ohio Worker’s compensation claims. Mike Gruhin together with co-counsel, John Vanik, were in jury trial all week against a major Cleveland Area workers’ comp self-insured (SI) employer. Under Ohio Workers’ Compensation Law, if a company has over 500 employees, it can be self insuring for work comp.  If any readers were injured in the employment of a self-insured employer, you know how litigious your work comp claim can be and usually is. In this case, I have to believe the SI employer spent thousands of dollars to deny & fight our client’s work comp claim.   But the jury saw through the employer’s “smoke & mirrors” and disregarded BOTH of the HIRED doctors’ testimony. John  & I successfully discredited the employer’s expert witnesses – a Board Certified Occupational Health & Internal Medicine doctor AND a Board Certified Orthopeadic Surgeon. Gruhin & Gruhin showed the jury the real story through the testimony of our client, his wife, his co-worker who was at the scene of the injury and who worked with our client for many years before and for a short time after the injury, together with our expert medical witness, our client’s treating doctor. That testimony, backed up by the medical records, sank the SI employer’s ship.  I am glad to report that the jury paid attention to every aspect of the trial. Bottom line, the 8 jury members voted 8-0 in favor of Gruhin & Gruhin’s client.  With Gruhin & Gruhin, our clients can and do fight ‘city hall’.  This is our 12th trial over the past few years and , I am glad to report, our 12th win in a row.  Let’s hear it for our clients, “the little guy”, who can go up against Goliath and win.  If you have an Ohio Work Comp claim, feel free to contact Gruhin & Gruhin to discuss your claim with Mike Gruhin, Board Certified Ohio Workers’ Compensation Specialist Attorney. Check out our client’s video testimonials, hear how we protect our client’s rights.  Thanks for reading our blog.   Mike Gruhin.

© 2011, Gruhin & Gruhin Attorney's. All rights reserved.

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Older Claims and the Danger of Continuing to Seek PPD Increases

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Injured workers don’t realize that in an Ohio BWC claim, a person, for all OhioBWC claims that person might have, can only obtain a maximum of 100% permanent partial disability (PPD) over all claims. What does this mean? Read on. Read the rest of this entry »

© 2011, Gruhin & Gruhin Attorney's. All rights reserved.

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OhioBWC – My Temporary Total Disability ran out – Now what??

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If your temporary total disability compensation (TTD) is over or about to end with a finding of maximum medical improvement (MMI) by a BWC doctor, then it may be time to think about enrolling in OhioBWC Vocational Rehabilitation (VocRehab) which can start a different type of compensation payment coming your way.

Discuss this with a Board Certified Ohio Workers’ Compensation Specialist Attorney.  Don’t lose benefits and don’t walk about from your legal rights and benefits.

There are many benefits available through an Ohio Bureau of Workers’ Compensation Claim that the Ohio BWC will not tell you about. Be smart, hire a Board Certified Specialist.

Mike Gruhin is a Board Certified Specialist. He works on a Contingency Fee basis – he doesn’t get paid unless he wins for you!  You have nothing to lose and everything to gain. Call now there are time limits!

© 2011, Gruhin & Gruhin Attorney's. All rights reserved.

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Toy Helicopters Recalled – I always wanted one

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Toy Helicopters Recalled

 

The Consumer Product Safety Commission has announced a recall of 18,500 Danbar Knight Hawk toy helicopters. The recall was issued after it was discovered the batteries in the toy can overheat, posing a fire hazard. There have been no injuries reported associated with the product.  Staff Report, PR Newswire 05/11/2011

Read Article: PR Newswire

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Secret GPS on cars upheld

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A Franklin County judge has ruled that deputies didn’t violate the constitutional rights of two home-invasion suspects by attaching a GPS device to their car without a warrant.

Common Pleas Judge Michael J. Holbrook issued the decision yesterday in the case of Montie E. Sullivan and David L. White, who are awaiting trial in six home-invasion robberies in Franklin County.

The ruling is consistent with a decision handed down last year by a judge in Fairfield County, where the pair were convicted in what investigators said was the last in a string of home invasions.

An Ohio appeals court also ruled last year that motorists should not expect privacy when traveling on public roads, meaning that their movements could be monitored with a tracking device.

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Attorneys for Sullivan and White filed a motion in October asking Holbrook to throw out the evidence against their clients. They argued that Franklin County deputy sheriffs violated their clients’ Fourth Amendment protection against unlawful searches by tracking their movements without a court order. Their movements were tracked for nine days using a GPS device attached to Sullivan’s car.

Holbrook wrote that “a reasonable expectation of privacy” does not exist for those parking and traveling on public roads.

“The device was attached to a vehicle found on public property” and “monitored their travel in public and at no time did the defendant attempt to shield the vehicle from the public,” he wrote.

“Clearly, without an expectation of privacy, the defendant cannot assert the protection of the Fourth Amendment.”

Sullivan’s attorney, Joe Scott, called it “a sad day,” not just for his client, “but for all (of) us who believe in the Constitution.

“It says that police can put a GPS device on any of our cars, without probable cause, without a court order, and follow us indefinitely.”

A Franklin County deputy placed the device on a car registered to Sullivan in a public parking lot on Jan. 14, 2010, after Sullivan and White were linked to a series of home invasions.

The car’s movements were monitored until an officer detected suspicious activity in the area of a Fairfield County residence on Jan. 23.

Within minutes, a resident reported a home invasion on Bickel Church Road. By the time Fairfield County deputies arrived, two gunmen had fled after shooting through a side door and killing a Labrador retriever inside.

The GPS was used to track Sullivan and White to an apartment on the East Side of Columbus, where they were arrested.

A trial date in Holbrook’s courtroom for Sullivan, 19, and White, 23, has not been set.

jfutty@dispatch.com
Tuesday, May 10, 2011  03:07 AM
By John Futty

THE COLUMBUS DISPATCH


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HOW DO YOU FIND THE BEST LAWYER FOR YOUR OHIO WORKERS’ COMPENSATION CASE

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http://gruhin.com/video-testimonials

 

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Suit: Anti-Smoking Meds Caused Murderous Rage

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Suit: Anti-Smoking Meds Caused Murderous Rage
A lawsuit has been filed against Pfizer over a Pennsylvania murder-suicide by a man who was taking the anti-smoking medication Chantix. The lawsuit alleges the medication caused the man to experience a rage that led him to kill his wife and then himself. The victims were not warned that the medication could cause the symptoms the husband experienced, the suit says.  Staff Report, Pittsburgh Post-Gazette 05/10/2011
Read Article: Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

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