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- Presentation for Agency Representatives
- February 15, 2007
- Elizabeth Way
- U. S. Department of Labor
- Branch of Technical Assistance
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- COP Defined
- Eligibility for COP
- Controverting COP
- Terminating COP
- Calculating COP
- Determining Dates
- Counting COP Days
- COP Examples
- Light Duty and COP
- References
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- Continuation of regular pay for up to 45 calendar days of wage loss due
to disability and/or medical treatment after a traumatic injury
- Intent is to avoid interruption of pay while the claim is adjudicated
- Subject to usual deductions from pay, such as income tax, retirement,
allotments, etc.
- Decision to use leave over COP is not irrevocable. Employee who uses leave can later
elect COP within one year of the leave usage or date the case is
accepted by OWCP, whichever is later.
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- Must be a traumatic injury
- Must file the CA-1(or notice of injury) within 30 days of the date of
injury
- Must begin losing time from work within 45 days of the injury.
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- Agency may controvert (not pay) COP ONLY if one of the following
applies:
- Disability is a result of occupational disease or illness
- Employee comes within the exclusions of 5 USC 8101 (1) (B) or (E) (volunteers)
- Employee is neither a citizen nor resident of the US or Canada
- Injury occurred off the agency’s premises and the employee was not
engaged in official “off premises” duties
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- Employee’s willful misconduct, intentional harm or death, or proximate
intoxication
- Injury not reported within 30 days of injury
- Work stoppage first occurred more than 45 days after the injury
- Employee reported injury after employment was terminated
- Employee is enrolled in Civil Air Patrol, Peace Corps, or other group
covered by special legislation
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- Injury was not witnessed
- Employee was careless
- Employee is a “bad” employee and doesn’t deserve any benefits
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- Indicate controversion on CA-1 and attach narrative statement and
specific evidence substantiating controversion
- Advise employee of controversion
- Can also terminate COP if no prima facie medical evidence received
within ten calendar days
- OWCP reviews COP controversion and can overturn it and require that COP
be paid. Agency is provided with
explanation of basis for decision.
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- Where the employer has paid COP, it may be stopped only when at least
one of the following occurs:
- Medical evidence is not received within 10 calendar days after the
claim is submitted
- Medical evidence shows that the employee is not disabled from his/her
regular position
- Medical evidence shows that the employee is capable of performing light
duty, and the employee has refused a suitable written job offer
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- Employee returns to work with no loss of pay
- Employee’s period of employment expires
- OWCP directs the employer to stop
- COP has been paid for 45 days
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- The pay rate for COP purposes is equal to the employee’s regular weekly
pay rate
- Excludes overtime pay, but includes other applicable extra pay except to
the extent prohibited by law
- Changes in pay which would have otherwise occurred during the 45 day
period are to be reflected. (i.e., promotion, demotion, step increases)
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- For full or part time workers (permanent or temporary) who work the same
number of hours each week of the year, the weekly pay rate is the hourly
pay rate (A) in effect on the date of injury multiplied by (x) the
number of hours worked each week (B):
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- For part-time workers who do not work the same number of hours each
week, but who do work each week of the year, the weekly pay rate is an
average of the weekly earnings established by dividing (/) the total
earnings from the year immediately preceding the injury (A) by the
number of weeks worked in that year (B):
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- The weekly pay rate is the average weekly earnings established by
dividing (/) the total earnings during the full 12 month period
immediately preceding the date of injury (A) by the number of weeks (or
partial weeks) worked during the year (B) (that is A / B); or 150 times
the average daily wage earned in the employment during the days employed
within the full year immediately preceding the date of injury divided by
52 weeks, whichever is greater.
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- The first day of COP is the day following the date of injury (DOI) where
there is immediate time loss
- If there is immediate time loss on the DOI and if the employee was
injured during official work hours, time lost on DOI is charged to
Administrative Leave
- If employee is injured before work hours and there is immediate time
loss, the first day of COP is the DOI
- If disability wasn’t immediate, the timeline begins on the first return
to work date – so long as that was within 45 days of the DOI
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- If continual disability for work begins within 45 days after the first
return to work, and all 45 days of COP haven’t been used, COP continues
until 45 days of COP have been used
- If the disability for work was intermittent, COP can be used only up to
45 calendar days after the first return to work – even if less than 45
days of COP have been used (Procedure Manual §2-0807- 6)
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- COP looks at calendar days, not just work days
- Using any part of a day towards COP makes it a COP day (1 hr COP to see
MD = 1 day COP)
- Time lost must be certified by physician – read medical carefully for
disability for work dates
- COP is charged for weekends and holidays if medical evidence shows IW
was disabled on those days
- Determining factors for COP are disability for work or absence for
obtaining medical care for injury
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- Worker is injured on 6/1
- Disability starts on 6/2
- Worker returns to full time limited duty on 6/14.
- Disability returns on 6/22 and is continual.
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- Used 12 days COP for 6/2 – 6/13
- 6/14 is first RTW date
- 6/22 – disability resumes and is continuous
- Can use balance of 33 days of COP because continual disability is within
45 days of first RTW
- 45th of COP is 7/24
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- Worker is injured on 6/1.
- Disability starts on 6/1. Physician certifies IW disabled through 6/13.
- Worker returns to full time limited duty on 6/14. Physician wants IW to
attend PT on Tuesdays and Thursdays for the next 2 weeks.
- Physician certifies another 10 days of disability starting 7/1.
- IW returns to full time limited duty on 7/12.
- Physician takes IW off work again starting 7/30.
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- Used 12 days COP for 6/2 – 6/13
- 6/14 is first RTW date
- Uses 4 more days of COP for PT – making 16 days of COP used through 6/24
- Uses 10 more days of COP 7/1 – 7/11 – total of 26 days of COP used
through 7/12
- Not eligible for COP for period of disability starting 7/30 because 7/30
is more than 45 days after 1st RTW.
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- IW may be charged COP when assigned to light duty if the light duty job
is
- Assigned by a personnel action; and
- Is a bonafide position with a job description; and
- Is classified at a lower pay level than the pay level of the job the
employee held when injured; or a lower grade or rate of pay than IW’s
preinjury job; or is on a different schedule which causes a loss of
salary or premium pay authorized as part of the IW’s normal work week
(e.g. Sunday premium or night differential)
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- IW may not be charged COP if an agency assigns IW to limited or light
duty in the absence of a personnel action unless it results in loss of
salary or premium pay as a result of being on a different schedule
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- OWCP Procedure Manual – Part 2 – 807 – on web at
http://www.dol.gov/esa/regs/compliance/owcp/INDEXofResources.htm#bookmark3
- CA-810 – Chapter 5
- CA – 550 – Chapter D
- Injury Compensation Specialist Training – on CD or on web at
http://www.dol.gov/esa/owcp/share/Shareppt/ppt.aspx
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