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RELIEF WORKERS

COMPENSATION. RATES

HIGHER LEVEL PROPOSED

While it is likely that relief workers who suffer temporary or permanent disablcn.int as the result of injuries sustained while on Unemployment Board work will, in the near future, receive a higher rate of compensation than has been the case in the past, there is no need.for an amendment to the Workers' Compensation Act to ensu.e this

Tho Unemployment Board carries its own insurance on relief workers and can thus make whatever arrangements it likes for the payment of compensation, provided, of course, that these payments are not below those prescribed in tho Workers' Compensation Act. In the past, compensation to relief workers has been on the basis laid'down in the Act, as a result of which they have been limited to obtaining not more than two-thirds of the amount they have earned on relief work.

The board has been reviewing for some time tho question of granting higher rates of compensation to relief workers, and it is understood that it has now reached a new basis, especially for men who are permanently disabled while on relief work. The new rates will shortly be brought into operation and their effect will be. to put a man who is permanently disabled on a basis approaching that of a man who is injured while in full-time employ-

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Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/EP19331031.2.108

Bibliographic details

Evening Post, Volume CXVI, Issue 105, 31 October 1933, Page 10

Word Count
222

RELIEF WORKERS Evening Post, Volume CXVI, Issue 105, 31 October 1933, Page 10

RELIEF WORKERS Evening Post, Volume CXVI, Issue 105, 31 October 1933, Page 10