Day 1-3 Jane Doe, who works for the district 30 hours a week (6 hours a day,
five days a week) is injured at work at the end of her work day on January
4th. As a result of the injury, she cannot work January 5th, 6th or 7th.
She is not paid for the three days she missed work due to a workers' comp.
law.
After the First 3 Days Jane continues to be off work from January 10th through the 14th as
a result of her physician's assessment that she should not be working.
As a result, she receives Temporary Total Disability (TTD) for five days
for sixty-six and two-thirds (.6667) of her gross pay. (The sixty-six
and two-thirds of her gross pay is up to, but cannot exceed, a state-mandated
cap set each year by the legislature.) If Jane has adequate paid leave
(usually sick leave) with the District, she will also receive a regular
paycheck from the District, minus the amount received in her TTD check.
The amount she receives from the insurance carrier
is not taxed. The amount received from the District will be taxed as a
regular paycheck.
Jane's average gross weekly
wage is $320.40 for the period she could not work (6 hrs. a day
x $10.68 an hr. x 5 days a week). She receives a time loss (TTD)
check from the District's workers' comp. insurance carrier for $213.16,
or sixty-six and two-thirds (.6667) of her gross pay. If she has
adequate sick leave, her gross-wages paycheck from the District
will be for $107.24, the difference between her TTD check and her
regular gross pay ($320.40 minus $213.16 = $107.24). (Remember,
taxes will be deducted from the District check, so the check Jane
receives will be for less than $107.24.)
If Jane has remaining sick leave, sick leave hours will be credited
back to her depending on the amounts of her TTD checks. The amount
of her TTD check will be divided by her daily rate of pay then multiplied
by the number of hours worked per day to calculate the number of
sick leave hours credited back to her sick leave bank.
For example, if Jane's hourly rate is $10.68, and she is receiving
time loss payments for the six hours a day she cannot work, here
is how the calculations for crediting her sick leave bank will be
done:
$10.68 (hourly rate) times the 6 (assignment hours) equals $64.08
(daily rate of pay).
$213.16 (TTD check) divided by 64.08 (daily rate of pay) multiplied
by 6 (the number of hours worked each day) equals 20 hours.
20 hours will be credited back to Jane's sick leave bank.
The Workers' Comp. Carrier Has 90 Days to Accept or Deny Your Claim On
January 15th, Jane is released by her physician to return to work for
three hours a day in a temporary light duty position. During this time
she is paid by the District for three hours a day for an average weekly
gross wage of $160.20 (3 hrs. a day x 10.68 an hr. x 5 days a week).
In addition, she will
receive a Temporary Partial Disability (TPD) payment from the District's
workers' comp. insurance carrier for the 3 hours a day her physician has
said she cannot work. Her TPD check will be $106.81 (.6667 x her gross
pay of $160.20). Remember, the gross pay amount from the District is subject
to taxes; the TPD payment is not.
If Jane has remaining sick leave, her sick leave bank will be credited
as described above. Since Jane is now working part-time in a light duty
position, the credit to her sick leave bank will be based on the amount
of the time loss checks she receives for the three hours a day she is
unable to work. The same formula used above in the example under "After
the First 30 Days" will be applied to determine her sick leave credits.