PUBLIC
SAFETY PERSONNEL: Benefits report shocks
officials
Local
governments in Nevada facing estimated $2.8
billion liability over next 30 years
By LISA KIM BACH
REVIEW-JOURNAL
State laws requiring
ironclad compensation for public safety workers
who develop heart disease, lung disease or
hepatitis C have local governments scrambling to
identify how to pay for what is expected to be a
multibillion-dollar liability over the next 30
years.
An actuarial report
recently completed for the city of
Las
Vegas found that it
faced at least $791 million of claims-related
expenses.
The study, conducted by the
New York firm Mercer
Oliver
Wyman Actuarial
Consulting Inc., also reviewed North
Las
Vegas, Henderson,
Reno, Sparks and part of the Metropolitan Police
Department. The combined claims cost to all
participating entities over the next three
decades was estimated at $2.8 billion.
The report called the
estimates conservative.
Las
Vegas officials were
shocked at the totals.
"We have never really had
this type of information available to use
before," said Vicki Robinson, manager of
Insurance Services for the city. "We were all
really surprised by the numbers."
The laws raising fiscal red
flags for local governments were put on the
books by Nevada legislators in 1965.
They have been amended and
expanded in numerous sessions since then, with
legislative minutes showing that changes have
benefited mostly police and firefighters.
Two facets of what are
called the HLH laws contribute to the costly
nature of the claims, Robinson said. The first
is the "presumptive" clause, which means that if
police officers or firefighters develop heart or
lung problems at any point in their lifetimes,
it's presumed to be job-related. No connection
has to be made between the disease and the
workplace.
"It's a presumptive
benefit," Robinson said. "You can't even talk
about abuse. Unless we can demonstrate that the
condition came from an individual's own
behaviors, there's no abuse."
The second aspect of the
law that drives up the cost of claims is that
the worker has the option of electing to be
permanently disabled after the development of a
health problem covered by the law. It does not
take into account rehabilitation or the chance
for alternative employment.
The benefits include about
67 percent of an individual's wages -- or up to
about $34,000 annually -- medical costs and
related rehabilitation expenses. Should
recipients die, the wage benefits are paid to
spouses for the span of their lives. Each claim
amounts to about $1 million.
"Our intent is not to take
away this benefit," Robinson said. "But we do
need to look at it realistically, determine what
the liability is, and find a way to fund it."
Currently,
Las
Vegas receives about
two to four new claims a year, Robinson said.
The report said that number will increase
significantly in coming years. By 2013, the city
will probably see six to eight claims a year,
adding to the cumulative cost to the city, which
is self-insured.
Robinson said
Las
Vegas now pays out
on 33 HLH claims. The city's insurance services
spent about $3.2 million in the last fiscal year
on claims. About $550,000 of that was for a
catastrophic injury claim, Robinson said.
Excluding that, 40 percent of the remaining $2.6
million went to pay for the 33 active HLH
claims.
Mark Vincent, director of
finance and business services for
Las
Vegas, said that
plans need to be made now to prepare for the
mushrooming liability predicted by the report.
The rising costs come at a time when Nevada has
limited local governments' ability to raise
revenue through options like property taxes,
which were capped at 3 percent annual increases
by lawmakers earlier this year.
If maintaining the current
level of benefits for public safety workers is
the goal, Vincent said that the most likely
recourse is cutting funding for nonessential
services, such as parks and recreation. Another
option is asking the Legislature to revisit the
law and perhaps seek state assistance in bearing
the cost.
"I am so thankful that
there are young men and women who want to grow
up and be firefighters and police officers,"
Vincent said. "Without those people, life would
be difficult. But does that mean that the sky's
the limit when it comes to their benefits?"
Although city officials
have to deal with the numbers, representatives
for police officers and firefighters approach
the existing heart, lung and hepatitis laws from
an emotional perspective.
Both Ron Dreher of the
Police Officers Research Association of Nevada
and Rusty McAllister, president of Professional
Firefighters of Nevada, said that the law is a
pact between the state and the people who take
extreme risk to protect the public welfare.
Police officers and firefighters spend a
lifetime responding to situations that expose
them to hazardous substances and stressful
circumstances.
"This was their promise to
us," McAllister said of the legislators who
passed the laws. "It was their way of saying:
'We promise that if you get hurt, we will take
care of you.' Only now that cities and counties
are self-insuring, they don't want to make good
on that promise they made way back when."
McAllister is a captain
with the Las
Vegas Fire
Department. His group represents firefighters in
Clark County, Las
Vegas, North
Las
Vegas, Reno and
Sparks.
McAllister and Dreher both
said they are willing to work with city, county
and state officials to reach a workable solution
to meeting the cost of the HLH laws, although
both are skeptical of the veracity of the
actuarial report done for
Las
Vegas. Both said
they would want to see additional information
before drawing any conclusions about future
financial burdens.
"I think there is a
movement statewide by self-insurers who
obviously want to do away with the conclusive
presumption," Dreher said.
Excising that part of the
law is something Dreher said he would oppose, as
would McAllister. The presumption that the
condition is job-related is vital, Dreher said.
Police officers spend years working in
conditions in which extreme stress sets in with
no notice at all. You can't point to one call or
case as the one that gave you a heart condition,
Dreher said.
The opinions of the unions
and associations that represent police and
firefighters have significant influence on
decisions about these laws, said Sen. Randolph
Townsend, R-Reno.
Townsend, a veteran of
Nevada government, has taken part in the
numerous debates on the heart, lung and
hepatitis laws that have transpired since 1979.
The most significant changes, such as the
adoption of the presumptive clause, grew out of
a desire to recognize the importance of public
safety personnel.
Assemblyman John Oceguera,
D-Las
Vegas, who pushed
for the addition of the hepatitis C clause for
firefighters in 2001, shares that opinion.
Oceguera is a battalion chief for the North
Las
Vegas Fire
Department.
"Our police, firefighters
and public safety people do a job every day
where there's a chance they might not come
back," Oceguera said. "All they want to know is
if something happens, they're going to be taken
care of."
Both lawmakers are open to
future discussion of the law -- in fact, they
expect it. Clark County spokesman Erik Pappa
said that the county is about to launch an
actuarial study of its own to assess its
share of future HLH liability. The county's
expense is expected to exceed the city of
Las
Vegas' since it has
a larger number of public safety personnel.
Townsend said he wants to
make one thing clear before the issue unfolds in
the 2007 session. When public safety employee
benefits are revisited, he expects to see
solutions offered, not just talk about financial
problems from municipal and county governments.
"This legislator isn't
going to have a lot of sympathy for Clark County
on a financial problem," Townsend said. "They
have more money than the state. ... I think it's
a stretch to ask the state to participate in
paying for something when it's the municipality
that gets the benefits."
http://www.reviewjournal.com/lvrj_home/2005/Jul-31-Sun-2005/news/26968056.html
as
retrieved on Feb 4, 2008 21:44:01 GMT