Posts Tagged bill

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.

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Protecting Our Military

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Protecting the military

Lawmakers should arm military members with voting, custody rights

Tuesday, May 17, 2011  03:06 AM

The Columbus Dispatch

Ohioans fighting overseas for America’s freedoms are making considerable sacrifices already, so two laws under consideration at the Statehouse are much needed to secure their voting and child-custody rights.

The first bill would remove barriers to getting an absentee ballot and having it count. While members of the military are more likely to register to vote, they’re far more likely to have their long-distance efforts thwarted.

The second bill would protect military parents from having custody arrangements altered while they are overseas. The law also aims to help deployed parents stay in touch with their children, accommodating visits during leaves and letting a close adult – a grandparent, for example – to fill in for them while away. It also would allow the military parent to participate in custody and visitation proceedings using electronic means.

The nation is now at war on three fronts. Ohio owes its sons and daughters these protections. Service members defending their countrymen’s democratic rights should never be denied their own.

“Members of our military are being forced to choose between serving our nation and raising a family,” said Rep. Cliff Rosenberger, R-Clarksville, who is sponsoring House Bill 121, the military custody-rights act.

The current law allows courts to take into consideration a parent’s active military service when changing custody orders. The new law would forbid this.

While the welfare of the child always should be the top consideration, military parents deserve some protections. It’s important for America’s military to be able to focus on missions, undistracted by personal problems. This law, passed unanimously by the House on Tuesday, offers assurance that family bonds will be honored and preserved.

The second proposed law, House Bill 224, comes from bitter experience. In 2007, Mike Dovilla was deployed with the Navy to Iraq and wanted to vote in the local election.

The Cuyahoga County Board of Elections never got him an absentee ballot, having rejected his application as incomplete. By the time letters flew back and forth , the election was over.

He vowed if he was ever in a position to prevent this from happening to someone else, he would. Dovilla is now a Republican state representative from Berea, and he’s teamed up with a Columbus Democrat who also knows the problem first-hand: Michael Stinziano, a past director of the Franklin County Board of Elections.

The House is considering other voting reforms, but Dovilla and Stinziano believe the military issues deserved their own bill, as problems are well-documented.

In 2010, Ohio had 1.1 million absentee voters. The return rate for voted ballots from members of the military was half that of the general public – 45 percent compared with 93 percent.

And military votes are less likely to be counted, either because the voted ballots arrive late or lack identifying information. In the 2008 presidential election, boards rejected one in 15 military ballots nationally, compared to one in 50 for other absentee voters.

Those abroad face slow mail, frequent changes in address and challenges meeting notarization or verification requirements.

Dovilla and Stinziano’s bill, introduced Tuesday, would permit voters outside the United States to apply online for absentee ballots. Voters would be able to register at the same time, eliminating another delay. Read the rest of this entry »

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

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Are we going back to the wild west? Ohio House approves bill to allow weapons in bars

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COLUMBUS, Ohio — The Ohio House has approved two bills that relax gun restrictions.

One bill would allow certain gun owners to take concealed firearms into bars, restaurants and other places where alcohol is served. The other would allow people convicted of certain misdemeanor drug offenses to possess firearms. That measure comes in response to a U.S. Supreme Court ruling. Read the rest of this entry »

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

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Progressive Chairman Peter B. Lewis aims to put medical marijuana issue on 2012 Ohio ballot

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COLUMBUS, Ohio — The movement to legalize medical marijuana in Ohio has been reignited. Read the rest of this entry »

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

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Ohio Gov. John Kasich sued over his program to privatize the Ohio Department of Development violates the state constitution.

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State Rep. Dennis Murray, D-Sandusky, and two plaintiffs are suing Gov. John Kasich, alleging his program to privatize the Ohio Department of Development violates the state constitution.

Murray said Tuesday he tried to raise the same points when the measure moved through the Ohio Legislature, but Republicans didn’t listen. Read the rest of this entry »

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

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THIS IS URGENT – CONTACT YOUR STATE REPRESENTATIVE

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Hard to believe, but the legislature in Ohio is about to give Emergency Room doctors a free pass. They won’t be held accountable to uphold the minimum standard of care if this bill passes. SHOUT LOUD AND SHOUT HARD TO GET THIS BILL DEFEATED.

Today the Ohio Senate introduces Senate Bill 129, a bill that would grant immunity to physicians who provide emergency medical services. Read the rest of this entry »

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

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Ohio GOP hopes to hasten vote on Senate Bill 5

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Call your State Representative to complain about this Collective-bargaining bill

House panel’s hearings could be over in nine days, speaker suggests

Thursday, March 10, 2011  04:21 AM

THE COLUMBUS DISPATCH

House Speaker William G. Batchelder now says he hopes to bring the collective-bargaining bill to the floor for a vote next week, after indicating for the past several days that he wanted to hold three weeks’ worth of hearings.

Asked whether the timetable had suddenly been moved up, the Medina Republican said it will be the “equivalent” of three weeks of hearings “because they’re going to meet every day.”

The point is how many days of hearings you have,” he said. “I probably misstated that (before). We’re looking at nine days, probably.” Read the rest of this entry »

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

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A SAD DAY FOR OHIO’s CITIZENS

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By a single vote, the Republicans in the Ohio Senate approved a bill that will weaken the middle class, kill jobs and destroy communities.

Yesterday was a sad day for Ohio, but today the fight must continue.

In the past three weeks, thousands upon thousands of Ohio Citizens rallied at the Statehouse, wrote letters to the editor and made phone calls.

These efforts have been nothing short of remarkable, and we can’t let up.

Because of our Ohio Citizens hard work, six Republicans broke ranks and sided with all ten Democrats in voting against the bill. We came closer to defeating this bill than any of the pundits thought possible. And we sent a loud and clear message to the Republicans that the people of Ohio do not support their reckless agenda. While we fell one vote short of killing Senate Bill 5, the battle is far from over.

Should John Kasich sign this awful legislation it into law, the Ohio Democratic Party will work with our friends in labor to wage a referendum campaign. That effort will require the collection of more than 230,000 signatures and a major statewide campaign in which millions of dollars will be spent. And we will work to defeat all Republicans who turned their backs on Ohio’s police, firefighters, teachers and other public servants.

Stay tuned for more information as this saga continues to unfold.

Mike Gruhin

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

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Ohio Senate Bill Seeks to Expand Investigations into Wage Theft

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wage theftThe Columbus Dispatch reports that Senate Democrats have introduced a bill to increase protections for Ohio workers against wage theft by allowing the Commerce Department to investigate and take action on individual complaints up to $100,000. 

Read the rest of this entry »

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