ACC’s Cull of 170 ‘Giltrap’ Claimants Wrong
ACC’s Cull of 170 ‘Giltrap’ Claimants
Wrong
In June 2009 ACC issued decisions stopping weekly compensation to 170 sexually abused claimants because it claimed a District Court decision of ‘Giltrap’ in 2006 meant they could not be compensated for loss of earnings. However, in a recent District Court decision of ‘Vandy’ Judge Beattie has turned the ‘Giltrap’ decision on its head.
Judge Beattie’s comments are quite telling and worth quoting:
[25] The Court
of Appeal has on a number of occasions identified that the
provisions of the Act should be given a generous and
unniggardly interpretation, and I find it to be the case
that if the interpretation is given to it as Judge Ongley
identified, albeit most reluctantly, then that
interpretation is far from generous and is denying weekly
compensation to the category of persons who were not earners
at the time of injury but who subsequently became earners
and at some later point the injury caused them to
be
unable to continue as an earner.
[26] I acknowledge that this decision is one
which may be charting a new course, and further acknowledge
that the provisions of Section 103(2) simply continue on
with the more or less exact wording of comparable sections
of earlier statutes, namely Section 85 of the 1998 Act and
Section 37(A) of the 1992 Act.
- Vandy v ACC (DC
23/2010)
Access Support Services has already overturned a number of decisions where claimants have been “giltrapped” by ACC. However, there are a significant number of claimants who would not have challenged ACC’s decision with the 3 month time limit.
“ACC has
been operating a miserly interpretation of the ACC
legislation, some of it quite wrong, since the current
Minister of ACC changed the ACC Board last year” says
Mr Wadsworth, head of Access Support Services. “I
wonder if ACC will be as quick to revoke those decisions in
light of the ‘Vandy’ decision.”
Access Support Services recommends those claimants
who have had their weekly compensation payments stopped
because of the ‘Giltrap’ decision request ACC recommence
compensation from the date of cessation and ask for a new
decision to be issued so they exercise their review rights,
if necessary.
Read Judge Beattie’s decision in full - Vandy v ACC (DC 23/2010)
ENDS