Uh-huh.
Undocumented workers Illegal aliens in Idaho have the right to claim workers’ comp payments and even temporary disability payments if they’re hurt on the job.
Now, the Idaho Supreme Court says their immigration [illegal] status isn’t an absolute bar from long-term disability payments, either.
The high court’s ruling, issued Friday, stems from a 2015 complaint filed by a Mexican citizen living in Emmett against the Treasure Valley painting company that employed him.
Elfego Marquez came to the U.S. illegally in 2000, when he was about 30 years old. He had a college degree and had worked as an elementary school teacher in Mexico, but in the U.S. he used fake Social Security cards to get jobs doing manual labor.
Marquez injured his right wrist, arm and shoulder at work in 2010, while preparing a building to be painted. He needed multiple shoulder surgeries and couldn’t return to his job.
Marquez qualified for benefits under the Workers’ Compensation Act, since Idaho law says a worker’s legal status cannot disqualify him from workers’ comp coverage. The State Insurance Fund paid $87,527 for Marquez’s medical bills, $30,986 for total temporary disability and $8,488 for permanent partial impairment benefits.
If undocumented immigrants are hurt at work, can they get disability payments?
News > Idaho Mon., Aug. 6, 2018, 1:30 p.m. Undocumented workers in Idaho have the right to claim workers’ comp payments and even temporary disability payments if they’re hurt on the job. Now, the Idaho Supreme Court says their immigration status isn’t an absolute bar from long-term disability payments, either.