The second-highest ranking member of the Florida Senate pledged a legislative review of a state law that employers and insurance companies are using to have injured undocumented workers arrested and potentially deported to avoid paying them workersâ compensation benefits.
âLegitimate injuries shouldnât be denied just because the person was an undocumented immigrant,â said Republican Sen. Anitere Flores, the president pro tempore of the state Senate and chair of the Banking and Insurance Committee.
âOne needs to balance the going after fraudulent claims,â she said, âwith not overcompensating and then denying claims to those individuals who have actually been injured.â
Flores spoke in response to a recent NPR and ProPublica investigation and a subsequent statement by the nationâs largest insurance fraud group, which called on Florida lawmakers to change the law. The Coalition Against Insurance Fraud said employers and insurance companies are applying the law in ways that place âthe credibility of combating real fraud at risk.â
âLegislators in the Sunshine State need to correct this loophole so workers hurt on the job get the care they need,â said Dennis Jay, executive director of the coalition, which is made up of insurance companies, government agencies, consumer organizations and insurance fraud investigators.
âI just see the credibility of the anti-fraud effort being hurt by such practices,â Jay said in an interview.
NPR and ProPublica found that nearly 800 undocumented workers in Florida have been charged with workersâ comp fraud for using illicit Social Security numbers to either get their jobs, file for workersâ compensation benefits or both. More than 560 didnât actually file workersâ comp claims but still were charged with fraud. Another 130 suffered legitimate workplace injuries but were denied benefits and prosecuted. Some were detained by federal immigration authorities and deported.
Like most states, Florida provides workersâ comp benefits to undocumented workers despite their legal status. The stateâs workersâ comp law was amended in 2003 to make the use of false identification in obtaining jobs and workersâ comp benefits a felony.
âI donât see how they can legally justify that,â Jay said. âIt also paints insurers as uncaring, greedy corporations that allow human suffering to make a buck.â
Some of the insurance companies who have used the Florida law to deny claims are members of Jayâs coalition, as is the state agency that administers the law.
Jon Moore, spokesman for the Florida Division of Investigative and Forensic Services, said his agency is âobligated to enforce the law as it relates to the workersâ compensation system in Florida.â But he said, âanother look into the questions that are being posed may be warranted. What is the balance between the harm and the benefits that are being produced?â
Flores said she is especially concerned about companies who may hire undocumented workers knowing that the threat of prosecution and deportation may keep them from pursuing workersâ comp claims if they are injured at work.
âThatâs borderline unconscionable,â Flores said, adding that sheâll seek the legislatureâs review of this use of Florida law as part of a planned broader look at the stateâs workersâ compensation law.
John Porreca, the owner of SouthEast Personnel Leasing and subsidiaries Lion Insurance and Packard Claims, did not respond to a request for comment. Porrecaâs companies were featured in NPR and ProPublicaâs story and turned in far more injured workers than any others.
Steve Cassell, the president of Command Investigations, which investigates the backgrounds of undocumented workers for insurers and features a gallery of injured workers on its website, also did not respond.
Brian Carter, a Florida workersâ comp attorney, welcomed the call for changes to the Florida law. He says undocumented workers use illicit Social Security numbers because they canât get jobs without them and employers in Florida need those workers.
âIt is illogical to legislatively provide workersâ compensation benefits to undocumented workers,â Carter said, âand then legislatively make it criminal to use a false Social Security number for identification.âÂ
Jay added that his group is already engaging Florida lawmakers and will offer assistance in drafting alternative legislation.