Blog
ILLINOIS WORKERS’ COMPENSATION COVID 19 EMERGENCY RULE
By Donald W. Fohrman
28 Apr, 2020
On April 13, 2020, the Illinois Workers’ Compensation Commission (IWCC) enacted an emergency rule which is designed to protect essential employees should they become ill with COVID 19. The rule creates a “rebuttable presumption” that if an essential employee contracts COVID 19, the contraction occurred during-the-course of his or her employment.
Turbulence Causes a Wave of Injuries for Flight Attendants
By Donald W. Fohrman
13 Sep, 2016
Recent reports reveal that severe turbulence has been responsible for a wave of injuries involving flight attendants in the past few years. Although numerous passengers have become severely injured as well, flight attendants are at a much higher risk of suffering significant, turbulence-related injuries that result in medical treatment, lost time from work, disability, and even death.
Domestic Aviation Accidents: Types Of Legal Claims
By Donald W. Fohrman
13 Sep, 2016
Aviation accidents may involve multiple legal claims, including negligence, violations of the Federal Torts Claim Act and products liability claims. When an airplane accident happens, the risk of catastrophic injuries and death is high. Pilot error sometimes factors into airplane crashes, but there may also be defects in the design or manufacture of component parts leading to the crash. An airplane accident lawyer may use experts to help pinpoint all of the potential causes so that he or she might plead the available legal claims appropriately.
Cases We Handle
- United Airlines Employees
- Firefighters, Paramedics, Police
- Officers and Certain Other Public
- Employees
- Union Members
- Carpal Tunnel Syndrome
- Social Security
- Retaliatory Discharge
- Sexual Harassment
- Employment Discrimination
- Statutes of Limitations
- Fair Labor Standards Act (FLSA)
- Family Medical Leave Act
- Working Women
- Back Injuries
- Chicago Transit Authority (CTA) And Workers Compensation
- Ford Motor Company And Illinois
- Workers’ Compensation
- All Types of Injury Cases
The Rate of Workplace Injuries Continues to Decline
By Donald W. Fohrman
12 Sep, 2016
The United States Bureau of Labor Statistics recently reported that the rate of employer-reported occupational injuries and illness continued to decline in 2015. According to the report, there were about 2.9 million workplace injuries and illnesses reported by private sector employers -- down approximately 48,000 from 2014. With about three reported cases per 100 workers, the rate was lower than it had been since 2002. Aside from 2012, the pattern of decline has been steady for the past 13 years. According to Assistant Secretary of Labor for OSHA David Michaels, however, the numbers are still too high.
Elderly Drivers: How Old is Too Old to Drive?
By Donald W. Fohrman
25 Jul, 2016
According to the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration, elderly drivers only account for about 9 percent of the population, but accident statistics show that they account for 14 percent of all traffic fatalities and 17 percent of all pedestrian fatalities. Illinois car accident lawyers commonly see serious injuries caused by elderly drivers behind the wheel.
Landlords Have a Duty to Prevent Dog Bites
By Donald W. Fohrman
20 Jul, 2016
Landlords in Illinois have a duty of care that includes the responsibility of protecting tenants and visitors from dog bites. This duty includes making sure that dangerous dogs are not housed on the property, making sure tenants adhere to lease terms and stipulations, and ensuring that doors, gates, etc. are properly secured so that dogs living on the property can't get out of their residence or yard to cause harm to others.
The Fohrman Blog Categories
Car Accident
Car Accident Category Description
Personal Injury
Personal Injury Category Description
Workers' Compensation
Workers’ Compensation Blog Category Description
Nursing Home
Nursing Home Blog Category Description