Public Liability Lawyers Canberra
If you have been injured at work, or suffered a disease or condition caused by your work, you will be eligible to make a claim for workers compensation.
This includes claims for psychological injuries, for example, if you have been bullied at work.
The ACT workers compensation scheme covers you for your time off work and treatment expenses. There is also a provision for a small lump sum if you have suffered permanent impairment.
The ACT workers compensation scheme also allows for wider compensation if your injury was caused by your employer’s negligence. This is called a common law claim. If you are successful in your common law claim, you will be entitled to any damages you have incurred for:
- Pain and suffering and loss of enjoyment of life;
- Past and future medical, rehabilitation, and care expenses;
- Past and future loss of income and earning capacity; and
- Past and future loss of superannuation contributions.
What to do?
- See your doctor and obtain a workers compensation medical certificate.
- Call Blumers or book an appointment.
Construction Claims
Blue collar workers are the backbone of Australia but suffer the most injuries at work.
Blumers Personal Injury Lawyers have acted in all kinds of workplace accident claims from concrete screeding to roof tiling to working with scaffolds.
If a worker is injured on a construction site there is often more than one company or person who was negligent. It is crucial that all responsible companies are identified quickly, as strict time limits apply.
Can my employer come to my doctor’s appointment?
Our clients pursuing claims for workers compensation often ask us if their employer can attend their medical appointments.
Workplace injury, the elephant on the worksite
Workplace safety is not a topic often raised in typical worksite banter, but with huge numbers of Australian men suffering from workplace illness and injury each year, perhaps it should be.
Women twice as likely to experience workplace bullying than men
ABS data has reported that women are more than twice as likely than men to suffer from mental conditions caused by workplace bullying or stress-related work injuries.