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Jimmy Novy's state of Wisconsin worker’s compensation paperwork is seen July 29, 2025, in Hillsboro, Wis. Novy is one of more than 300 permanently and totally disabled individuals who haven’t received a raise in their worker’s comp benefits since 2016. (Joe Timmerman / Wisconsin Watch)

Big raise on its way for permanently and totally disabled workers as Tony Evers signs worker’s comp bill

Democratic Gov. Tony Evers this morning signed legislation that would give raises for the first time in a decade to permanently and totally disabled people receiving worker’s compensation.

The bill, which includes other changes to the worker’s comp system, was passed by the Assembly (97-0 vote) in January and by the Senate (32-1) in February. Both chambers are majority Republican.

The bill would help people like 65-year-old Bob Hurley, who suffered a back injury in 1982, at age 22. While helping build a car wash, he fell 15 feet from a forklift and “landed flat on my back in a concrete pit.”

Two printed photos show a person wearing a medical brace sitting in a chair, with a child standing beside the person in the lower photo.
Bob Hurley after his back injury in 1982 and pictured with his nephew, Chad Hurley. (Courtesy of Bob Hurley)

Through four surgeries, Hurley continued working for 17 years before being declared PTD. 

Hurley, now living in Minnesota, said he receives $2,900 in monthly worker’s comp benefits. He said his only other income is $2,600 monthly in Social Security benefits. Without cost-of-living adjustments in his PTD payments, “it gets harder and harder every year,” he said.

Wisconsin Watch reported in September that more than 300 permanently and totally disabled recipients haven’t received a raise in their worker’s comp benefits since 2016.

The bill would also make these changes for PTD recipients:

  • Make an estimated 210 more PTD recipients eligible for raises. Currently, only PTD recipients injured before Jan. 1, 2003, are eligible for raises. The bill would change that date to Jan. 1, 2020.
  • Raise the maximum weekly benefit for PTD recipients by 57%, from $669 to $1,051.
  • Give PTD recipients annual raises, with the amounts set shortly before taking effect. The raise amounts would vary based on when the recipients were injured and their earnings at the time. 
A close-up shows a person wearing glasses smiling, with facial lines and marks visible on the skin.
Jimmy Novy, seen at home on July 29, 2025, in Hillsboro, Wis., is one of more than 300 permanently and totally disabled individuals collecting worker’s comp checks from the state since his injury in his late 20s. (Joe Timmerman / Wisconsin Watch)

One example, provided by the state Department of Workforce Development: A PTD recipient injured in 1985 and receiving $535 a week would get a 57% increase to $840. The increase would amount to nearly $16,000 per year.

This article first appeared on Wisconsin Watch and is republished here under a Creative Commons Attribution-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License.

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