Saturday, February 18, 2006 

Workers Compensation Laws - Workers' comp premiums down again in Pa.


Workers' comp premiums down again in Pa.
Pittsburgh Business Times - Workers' comp premiums down again in Pa. Pennsylvania will lower workers' compensation insurance rates this year, saving state employers about $100 million on 2006 premiums, Gov. Ed Rendell said Monday. Overall, the decrease will average 8.6 percent

State Of The City Address 2006
Madison Courier - Council, it is my honor this evening to deliver Madison s State of the City Address to you and the citizens of our great City. I stand before you tonight and report that the year two thousand and six holds great promise for the City of Madison

Employers and Insurers Must Comply with Workers Comp Programs, the
Insurance News Net - NEW YORK, February 13, 2006 - Employers and their insurers need to be prepared for the tens of thousands of physically injured veterans returning from conflicts in Iraq and Afghanistan, according to the I.I.I. "Workplace injuries that are primarily

In brief
Times-Leader - M ortgage giant Fannie Mae last year fell a bit short of some of the government-set goals for making home ownership affordable as it worked to untangle its accounting in an $11 billion scandal. A preliminary analysis by the government-sponsored

Tuesday, February 14, 2006 

Workers Compensation Laws - July News Briefs


July News Briefs
Politics NH - FPC poll: Likely NH Democartic primary voters interested Gore and HRC candidacies More results from a Franklin Pierce College poll released this week finds if Al Gore or Hillary Rodham Clinton entered the Democratic presidential race today they

Workers' comp revision voted down
Denver Business Journal - House Bill 1097, sponsored by Rep. Morgan Carroll, D-Aurora, would have given workers a right to a one-time change of doctors after 60 days. Under the current system, she said, workers have a right to request a change but no right to receive one

Case could cost workers' comp system more than $200 million
Montana Standard - HELENA A looming workers compensation court case could cost taxpayers $100 million and force rate hikes and other measures to cover an additional $160 million in potential liability at the Montana State Fund, the agency s top official said