Employers face 15% hike in workers' compensation rates - Action News
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New Brunswick

Employers face 15% hike in workers' compensation rates

New Brunswick employers will face a 15 per cent hike in workers' compensation assessment rates next year, and future increases are anticipated without legislative changes, WorkSafeNB announced on Monday.

WorkSafeNB announces 2018 rate will be $1.70 per $100 of payroll, up from $1.48 this year

A man with short gray hair and a thin mustache looks slightly off to the right while facing the camera in a head and shoulders image. He's wearing a light blue dress shirt, and a dark blue suit. The background is an office building corridor or lobby.
WorkSafeNB acting president and CEO Tim Petersen says the organization has worked diligently to find savings in the face of rising claim costs. (CBC)

New Brunswick employers will face a 15 per cent hike in workers' compensation rates next year, and future increases are anticipated without legislative changes, WorkSafeNB announced Monday.

Employers are "very concerned" about the second increase in premiums in a row, which could forcelayoffs, and about the long-term viability of the workers' compensation system, said Joel Richardson, chair of the Coalition of New Brunswick Employers.

Meanwhile, a task force struck by the provincial government in response to last year's 33 per cent rate hikeis expected to file a report with recommendations before the end of the year.

The 2018 assessment rate will be$1.70 per $100 of payroll, up from $1.48, said WorkSafe, citingrising claim costs.

The board of directors estimates the cost to manage the workers' compensation system will actuallybe $1.93 per $100 of payroll, which could have resulted in a 28 per cent jump.

But the board has instead revised its target of having 110 per cent of what it has to pay out in its fund to 100 per cent, and found a 16 per cent savings in administrative costs, acting president and CEO Tim Petersen said in a release.

Still, board chairperson Dorine Pirie said those measures "won't resolve the challenges facing the system in the long-term."

"To balance our goal of long-term sustainability while ensuring the security of benefits for injured workers and their families, the board expects that future rate increases will be needed under current legislation."

Joel Richardson, chair of the Coalition of New Brunswick Employers, contends WorkSafeNB's decision to draw the benefit fund down to 100 per cent funding puts the workers' compensation system at risk. (CBC)
Richardson said employers are "very frustrated with WorkSafeNB and its ability to sustainably manage the system."

"Given the importance of the workers compensation system, it is financially prudent and necessary for us to take the time over the coming days to assess the new rate increase to determine its impact on the short and long-term viability of the overall system and the employers level of affordability," he said.

The companies represented by the Coalition of New Brunswick Employers employ nearly two-thirds of the province's private sector workforce and pay millions of dollars in WorkSafeNB funding to provide accident coverage in support of injured employees.

There'sa lot of tough decisions that employers are goingto have to make when they're faced with such substantial cost increases that they just can't keep upwith.- Joel Richardson,Coalition of New Brunswick Employers

Although the 2018 rate hike is not as high as initially feared, it still comes on the heels oflast year's 33 per cent spike and other increasing costs that take away from their bottom line, said Richardson.

"Employers are going to be faced with some very difficult choices whether they're going to be able to afford to keep people working, whether they'll be able to afford to hire more people if theyneed people, whether they will potentially need to look at automating some forms of their operations.

"There'sa lotof tough decisions that employers are going to have to make when they're faced with such substantial cost increases that they just can't keep upwith."

In May, then-labour minister Donald Arseneault announced a new task force would look into WorkSafeNB's escalating rates.

The auditor general also agreed to audit the Crown corporation, Arseneaultsaid.

Richardson said the task force is scheduled to go to public hearings this fall.

A report with recommendationsis expected before Christmas, he said.