Per California Code of Regulations§ 10116.9(h), modified work or “light duty” means regular work modified so that the employee has the ability to perform all the functions of the job and that offers wages and compensation that are at least 85 percent of those paid to the employee at the time of injury, and located within a reasonable commuting distance of the employee’s residence at the time of injury.
If you were injured in 2013 or later and your employer can offer you work, the claims administrator must send you a “Notice of Offer of Regular, Modified, or Alternative Work” on DWC-AD form 10133.35.
The claims administrator must send this to you within 60 days after the claims administrator learns you have a permanent partial disability that has become permanent and stationary, or “P&S”.
Your primary treating physician or another physician who makes this determination must complete and send the claims administrator a report of your permanent and stationary status and work capacity on DWC-AD form 10133.36.
The offer must be for a job that you are able to perform. In addition, the job must:
The offer could involve one of the following:
Light or modified duty is a temporary work modification given to an injured worker in order to accommodate their physical restrictions while recovering from the injury. Upon filing a workers’ compensation case, injured worker is expected to continue working if it is determined they can safely perform the modified duty.
Modified work involves working with the same employer with less physical demands of the job. Modified duty or restricted work enables the injured worker to keep working while they recover from their work injury.
The modified work depends on two parts:
1) modified work restriction given by a doctor; and
2) the employer’s ability to find work for the injured worker within the allotted restrictions.
Soon after your injury, the primary treating physician examines you and sends a report to the claims administrator and employer about your medical condition. If the doctor says you are able to work, he or she should describe the following:
If the doctor reports that you cannot work at all while recovering, you cannot be required to work.
In an accepted claim, an injured worker will be examined by a “primary treating physician” (PTP) who decides which physical activities an injured worker is able to do while recovering from an injury.
At this juncture, the employer informs the injured worker if it can offer the injured worker modified work or light duty within the physical limits given by the primary treating physician.
In the event the employer indicates there is no modified work or light duty available, an injured worker will receive temporary disability benefits for his or her lost wages.
However, an injured worker who is offered but refuses restricted work or light duty will not receive temporary disability benefits for the time he or she is not working.
Yes, if the workers’ compensation claim is accepted and the employer indicates there is no modified work or light duty available, an injured worker will receive temporary disability benefits for his or her lost wages.
Yes, an injured worker who is offered but refuses restricted work or light duty will not receive temporary disability benefits for the time he or she is not working. Often, injured workers refuse light duty because they disagree with the primary treating physician’s recommendation on modified or light duty.
The injured worker may be in exorbitant pain with modified work and/or feel that the light duty provided is intended to ridicule or penalize the injured worker (paper cutting, sitting in a room for 8 hours). California Work Injury Law Center can help you navigate the workers’ compensation process, specifically any offer of modified duty by your employer.