(TRENTON) – Legislation sponsored by Assembly Democrats Linda Stender,
Joseph V. Egan, Jason O’Donnell and Benjie E. Wimberly to ensure public safety
workers who suffer a disability or death due to their often extreme work
requirements are covered by workers’ compensation received final legislative
approval Monday and now heads to the governor’s desk.
The bill
(A-1196), known as the “Thomas P.
Canzanella Twenty First Century First Responders Protection Act,” is named after
the late Thomas P. Canzanella, a Hackensack Fire Department deputy chief who
spent several weeks at Ground Zero after the 9/11 terrorist attacks and
advocated for better conditions for public safety workers.
“These workers are our
first line of defense. Their jobs are not only stressful, they are dangerous,”
said Stender (D-Middlesex/Somerset/Union). “This bill ensures that public safety
workers are adequately covered if they suffer a debilitating illness or worse
related to their duties at work.”
“Public safety workers
expose themselves to dangerous situations that could prove debilitating and even
deadly,” said Egan (D-Middlesex/Somerset). “The work is grueling not just
physically, but mentally. The work itself can be a health hazard. They deserve
comparable coverage.”
“The work of fire, police
and other public safety workers is demanding. They respond to situations that
most of us only experience vicariously by watching or reading the news,” said
O’Donnell (D-Hudson). “They are entitled to coverage that stands up to the
demands of the job.”
“It took years for Ground
Zero first responders to get coverage for cancers stemming from the recovery
efforts at the World Trade Center site,” said Wimberly (D-Bergen/Passaic). “This
bill helps protect first responders of such a nightmarish scenario by preventing
similar delays in the future.”
The bill creates a
rebuttable presumption of workers’ compensation coverage for any death or
disability, including post traumatic stress disorder, if the death or disability
arises from the physical or psychological impact of stress or injury experienced
by a public safety worker engaged in response to a terrorist attack, epidemic,
or other catastrophic emergency, in which the worker is exposed to pathogens or
biological toxins from biological warfare or epidemics, hazardous chemicals used
in, or related to, chemical warfare, or cancer-causing radiation or radioactive
substances, or witnesses death and suffering of a magnitude sufficient to cause
significant psychological trauma.
The bill provides that,
with respect to all of the rebuttable presumptions of coverage, employers may
require workers to undergo, at employer expense, reasonable testing, evaluation
and monitoring of worker health conditions to determine whether exposures or
other presumed causes are actually linked to the deaths, illnesses or
disabilities, and further provides that the presumptions of compensability are
not adversely affected by failures of employers to require testing, evaluation
or monitoring.
The public safety workers
covered by the bill include paid or volunteer emergency, correctional, fire,
police, including the state police, medical personnel and any other nurse, basic
or advanced medical technician or staff responding to a catastrophic incident
and directly involved and in contact with the public during such an incident,
either as a volunteer, member of a Community Emergency Response Team or employed
or directed by a health care facility.
The bill approved 53-19-4
Thursday by the Assembly, and 21-13 by the Senate last week.
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