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DEFENSE BASE ACT

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Title: Global Underwriters DBA Presentation Author: Aaron Laine Last modified by: Derek Patterson Created Date: 7/30/2004 4:24:26 PM Document presentation format – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: DEFENSE BASE ACT


1
DEFENSE BASE ACT
2
Defense Base Act
  • Defense Base Act (DBA)
  • History Purpose
  • Where does it apply?
  • Who is covered?
  • Zone of Special Danger
  • War Hazards Compensation Act

3
Defense Base Act
  • History Purpose
  • Defense Base Act, 42 U.S.C. Section 1651, et seq
    enacted by Congress in August 1941
  • Extends the benefits payable under Longshoreman
    and Harbor Workers Compensation Act, 33 U.S.C.
    Section 901, et seq (LHWCA)
  • Original goal To provide compensation for
    disability and death to civilians employed at
    American military bases outside the Continental
    U.S.
  • Scope of Act amended (after WW II) to include
    public work contracts with the U.S. government
    for building of non-military projects outside the
    U.S.

4
Defense Base Act
  • Where does it apply?
  • Today DBA covers the following employment
    activities
  • Working for private employers on U.S. Military
    bases or on any lands used by the U.S. for
    military purposes outside of the United States,
    including those in U.S. Territories and
    possessions
  • Working on public work contracts with any U.S.
    government agency, including construction and
    service contracts in connection with national
    defense or with war activities outside the United
    States
  • Working on contracts approved and funded by the
    U.S. under the Foreign Assistant Act, generally
    providing for cash sale of military equipment,
    materials, and services to its allies, if the
    contract is performed outside of the United
    States
  • Working for American employers providing welfare
    or similar services outside of the United States
    for the benefit of the Armed Forces, e.g. the USO.

5
Defense Base Act
  • Who is covered?
  • Any employee engaged in employment of contracts
    listed above regardless of nationality.
  • All employees of sub-contractors and their
    sub-ordinate contractors of the prime contractor.
  • The Prime Contractor is responsible for ensuring
    that the subcontractor has required DBA
    insurance.
  • If the subcontractor fails to secure DBA
    coverage, the prime contractor will be liable for
    and be required to secure the payment of such
    benefits.
  • If any employer fails to secure DBA they can face
    fines and imprisonment.
  • If the employer is a corporation and fails to
    secure DBA, the president, secretary and
    treasurer shall be severally and personally
    liable, jointly with the corporation, for any
    compensation or other benefits payable under the
    Act for injury or death which may occur to any of
    its employees.

6
Defense Base Act
  • Zone of Special Danger
  • DBA will provide compensation for injury or death
    of an employee arising out of and in the course
    of employment.
  • Zone of Special Danger Doctrine challenges this
    traditional concept of causal relationship.
  • Zone of Special Danger U.S. Supreme Court in
    1951 defined the scope of compensability under
    the Defense Base Act as follows
  • The test of recovery is not a causal relation
    between the nature of employment of the injured
    person and the accident. Nor is it necessary that
    the employee be engaged at the time of the injury
    in activity of benefit to his employer. All that
    is required is that the obligation or condition
    of employment create the zone of special danger
    out of which the injury arose.

7
Defense Base Act
  • Zone of Special Danger (continued)
  • Reasonable Recreation
  • Injury from certain recreational activities while
    off-duty may be compensable. Courts have ruled
    that
  • Employees working under the Defense Base Act, far
    away from their families and friends, in remote
    places where there are severely limited
    recreational and social activities, are in
    different circumstances from employees working at
    home. Personal activities of a social or
    recreational nature must be considered as
    incident to the overseas employment relationship.
  • The harsher or more remote the environment, the
    more likely a court will find compensability.
  • Despite broad interpretation of the courts not
    a 24-hour cover.

8
War Hazards Compensation Act (WHCA)
  • War Hazards Compensation Act
  • Enacted at the request of the Secretary of War in
    December 1942.
  • Shortly after U.S. entry in WWII most insurance
    carriers were reluctant to underwrite DBA
    exposures for employees exposed to the hazards of
    war or otherwise required to work in a war
    setting.
  • WHCAs purpose to induce insurance carriers to
    provide DBA coverage for employees in hostile or
    war-like settings.
  • WHCA provides full reimbursement to the insurer
    of all paid compensation and medical benefits
    (including ALE) for losses from a war risk
    hazard. Reimbursement includes 15 handling fee
    and complete relief of future obligations (U.S.
    Government take over administration of claim) and
    is paid from the Employees Compensation Fund.

9
War Hazards Compensation Act (WHCA)
  • War Hazards Compensation Act (continued)
  • WHCA provides compensation to overseas employees
    of contractors and certain other employees for
  • Injury or death due to a war-risk hazard
  • Detention by a hostile force or person
  • Three requirements for WHCA reimbursement
  • Injured employees employment must come within
    the WHCA provision (e.g. DBA)
  • Injury must have occurred from a war risk
    hazard
  • The carrier must not have charged its insured a
    premium for war risks hazards

10
War Hazards Compensation Act (WHCA)
  • War Hazards Compensation Act (continued)
  • War Risk Hazard defined as a hazard arising
    during
  • A war in which the U.S. is engaged
  • An armed conflict in which the U.S. is engaged
    whether or not war has been declared
  • A war or armed conflict between military forces
    of any origin, occurring within any country in
    which a covered employee is serving
  • The hazard arises from
  • Discharge of a missile, including liquids and gas
    or the use of weapons, explosives, or other
    noxious things by a hostile force or person
  • Action of a hostile force or person, including
    rebellion or insurrection against the U.S. or any
    of its allies

11
War Hazards Compensation Act (WHCA)
  • War Hazards Compensation Act (continued)
  • Hostile force or person is defined as
  • A nation, a subject of a foreign nation, or any
    person serving a foreign nation engaged in
  • A war against the United States or any of its
    allies
  • Armed conflict, whether or not war has been
    declared against the United States or any of its
    allies or
  • A war or armed conflict between military forces
    of any origin in any country in which a person
    covered by the WHCA is serving.
  • The statutory definition of war-risk hazard does
    not specifically address terrorist attacks but
    the term has been liberally interpreted to
    include any and all actions of insurgents,
    terrorists, rioters and proponents of violence
    directed toward American interests.
  • Quote from Department of Labor Our procedures
    specifically contemplate consideration of
    terrorist activity as a war risk hazard. Bottom
    line Terrorist activity must be considered in
    conjunction with the definitions of war-risk
    hazard and hostile force or individual.
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