The Issue Whether Respondent violated the provisions of chapter 440, Florida Statutes (2013)1/, by failing to obtain workers? compensation insurance coverage, as alleged in the Stop-Work Order and Amended Order of Penalty Assessment; and, if so, the appropriate penalty.
Findings Of Fact The Department is the state agency responsible for enforcing the requirement that employers secure the payment of workers? compensation insurance coverage, pursuant to chapter 440, Florida Statutes, for their employees. Respondent is a Florida-limited liability company engaged in business operations for the time period of March 16, 2010, through March 15, 2013. Mark Markisen is the managing member of Respondent listed with the State of Florida, Division of Corporations. On March 15, 2013, Jack Gumph, an investigator with the Department, conducted a random on-site compliance inspection of a construction site for a single family residence. Gumph determined that the general contractor for the job was Gulf Shore Homes and that it had subcontracted with Tradewinds Design for certain work inside the home. As Gumph interviewed the different workers present on the worksite, he spoke with Mark and Brett Markisen, who informed him that they worked for Tradewinds Design. Gumph observed Brett Markisen installing a wine cabinet in the home. Gumph confirmed through the Department?s online records that Gulf Shores Homes and Tradewinds Design had current workers? compensation insurance coverage on March 15, 2013. Based on this initial information, Gumph left the worksite. On March 19, 2013, Gumph subsequently learned from a conversation with Mark Markisen that Mark and Brett Markisen were not employees of Tradewinds Design. Rather, Tradewinds had subcontracted with Respondent, Cabinetry by Design of Collier County, L.L.C., to build and install the wine cabinets. Mark Markisen stated that he was the managing member of Cabinetry by Design of Collier County, L.L.C., and that he had selected to be exempt from workers? compensation insurance coverage. Gumph confirmed that Mark Markisen had selected to be exempt from workers? compensation insurance coverage. However, because Respondent did not have worker?s compensation coverage for Brett Markisen, the Department issued a Stop-Work Order on March 19, 2013, and Request for Production of Business Records for Penalty Assessment Calculation on April 8, 2013. Mark Markisen possessed an exemption from the workers? compensation insurance coverage requirement during the penalty period of March 16, 2010, through March 15, 2013. Brett Markisen did not possess an exemption from the workers? compensation insurance coverage requirement during the penalty period. Brett Markisen was employed by Respondent throughout the penalty period. During the penalty period, Brett Markisen received approximately $187,000.00 from Respondent. The amount of this money attributed to wages is unclear, based on the fact that Mark Markisen indicated that some of the payments reflected loans, not wages. Respondent was an “employer” as defined in chapter 440, Florida Statutes, throughout the penalty period. On March 15, 2013, Brett Markisen was Respondent?s “employee” working on the installation of cabinets in the single family residence.2/ On March 15, 2013, Respondent failed to provide workers? compensation insurance coverage for Brett Markisen. Respondent also failed to provide coverage during the penalty period of March 16, 2010, through March 15, 2013. Therefore, the Department properly entered a Stop-Work Order on March 19, 2013. Respondent failed to provide sufficient business records in order to establish a payroll. Therefore, the Department correctly imputed payroll against Respondent. The Amended Order of Penalty Assessment used the proper class code for the calculation of the penalty, concerning the installation of cabinets, and correctly followed the procedure set out in section 440.107(7)(d)1, Florida Statutes, and Florida Administrative Code Rule 69L-6.028.
Recommendation Based on the foregoing Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law, it is RECOMMENDED that the Department of Financial Services enter a final order upholding the Stop-Work Order and Amended Order of Penalty Assessment, assessing a penalty against Respondent in the amount of $21,436.61. DONE AND ENTERED this 30th day of December, 2013, in Tallahassee, Leon County, Florida. S THOMAS P. CRAPPS Administrative Law Judge Division of Administrative Hearings The DeSoto Building 1230 Apalachee Parkway Tallahassee, Florida 32399-3060 (850) 488-9675 Fax Filing (850) 921-6847 www.doah.state.fl.us Filed with the Clerk of the Division of Administrative Hearings this 30th day of December, 2013.
Findings Of Fact Petitioner, Department of Labor and Employment Security, Division of Unemployment Compensation (Division), administers the State Unemployment Compensation Program, which includes the payment of benefits to unemployed individuals and the collection of taxes or reimbursement payments from employers to finance these benefits. By law petitioner is authorized to seek reimbursement from political subdivisions for a pro-rata portion of benefits paid to their employees. If a subdivision fails to timely reimburse the State, the Division may certify the delinquent amount to the Department of Banking and Finance, and request the Comptroller to transfer funds otherwise due that entity to the Unemployment Compensation Trust Fund (Trust Fund). If a subdivision contends an employee is not entitled to unemployment benefits, it may contest a claim for benefits with a claim examiner employed by the Division. That decision may be reviewed by an appeals referee, and if either side is still aggrieved, a final administrative appeal may be heard by the full Unemployment Compensation Commission. Those decisions are then reviewed only by the First District Court of Appeal. Respondent, Board of County Commissioners of Flagler County (Board), is a political subdivision of the state, and is required by law to reimburse the Trust Fund for its pro-rate share of benefits paid to former employees. On July 10, 1984, petitioner issued to respondent a notice of intent to certify delinquency wherein it claimed that between October 1, 1979 and December 31, 1983 respondent incurred a liability to the State totaling $6,409.71. This amount included $5,704.92 in benefits paid to former employees and $703.79 for 6 percent interest on overdue payments. That precipitated the instant controversy. The amount due was later reduced to $5,204.79 by the issuance of an amended notice of intent to certify delinquency on January 11, 1985. At hearing respondent conceded it owed all claimed monies except those due for two individuals: Emma Worthington and Margaret Prather. This resolved more than 60 percent of the Division's claim leaving only around $600 in dispute. Emma Worthington was a former employee of the Clerk of the Circuit Court of Flagler County (Clerk) and was never employed by the Board of County Commissioners of Flagler County. Nonetheless, for some reason, the Clerk reported Worthington's wages to the Division under the Employer Identification Number assigned to respondent. Because of this, the Division assumed respondent was Worthington's employer. When Worthington was terminated by the Clerk's office, she requested unemployment benefits. The Clerk filed an appeal with a claims examiner contesting the payment of such benefits. The examiner ruled that such benefits were due, and this decision was affirmed by both an appeals referee and the full commission. As required by law, on an undisclosed date the Division forwarded a reimbursement notice to respondent advising that certain monies were due because of unemployment compensation payments made to Worthington. The Board did not respond to this notice but simply referred it to the Clerk's office. There is no evidence that the Division was ever formally notified by the Board that the employee was actually a Clerk employee, that the bill was forwarded to another party, or that the wrong Employer Identification number had been used. The bill was never paid. Margaret Prather was an employee of the Flagler County Supervisor of Elections (Supervisor) when she was terminated from employment. Before that, she was a Board employee. While employed by the Supervisor of Elections, Prather's wages were erroneously reported to the Division under the Employer Identification number of respondent. Because of this, the Division assumed Prather was a Board employee. After she was terminated by the Supervisor, Prather received unemployment benefits. Whether the Supervisor contested these benefits is not known. In any event, the Division sent the Board a Reimbursement Invoice on an undisclosed date requesting reimbursement for benefits paid to Prather. The Board did not respond to the Invoice but simply forwarded it to the Supervisor. Again, there is no evidence that the Board advised the Division of the erroneous use of its Employer Identification number, that the bill had been forwarded to another party, or that Prather was not an employee. To date, the bill has not been paid.
Recommendation Based on the foregoing findings of fact and conclusions of law, it is RECOMMENDED that respondent reimburse petitioner for benefits paid to employees Worthington and Prather as set forth in the amended notice of intent to certify delinquency within thirty days from date of final order. DONE and ORDERED this 23rd day of April, 1985, in Tallahassee, Florida. DONALD R. ALEXANDER Hearing Officer Division of Administrative Hearings The Oakland Building 2009 Apalachee Parkway Tallahassee, Florida 32301 (904) 488-9675 Filed with the Clerk of the Division of Administrative Hearings this 23rd day of April, 1985.
The Issue At issue in this proceeding is whether the Respondent, Forever Floors and More, Inc. ("Forever Floors"), failed to abide by the coverage requirements of the Workers' Compensation Law, chapter 440, Florida Statutes by not obtaining workers' compensation insurance for its employees, and, if so, whether the Petitioner properly assessed a penalty against the Respondent pursuant to section 440.107, Florida Statutes.
Findings Of Fact Based on the oral and documentary evidence adduced at the final hearing, and the entire record in this proceeding, the following findings of fact are made: The Department is the state agency responsible for enforcing the requirement of the Workers' Compensation Law that employers secure the payment of workers' compensation coverage for their employees and corporate officers. § 440.107, Fla. Stat. Forever Floors is a Florida corporation. The Division of Corporations’ “Sunbiz” website indicates that Forever Floors was first incorporated on February 4, 2012, and remained active as of the date of the hearing. Forever Floors’s principal office is at 8205 Oak Bluff Road, Saint Augustine, Florida 32092. Forever Floors is solely owned and operated by Christopher Bohren. Mr. Bohren is the president and sole officer of the corporation. Forever Floors was actively engaged in performing tile installation during the two-year audit period from April 3, 2013, through April 2, 2015. John C. Brown is a government operations consultant for the Department. During the period relevant to this proceeding, Mr. Brown was a Department compliance investigator assigned to Duval County. Mr. Brown’s job included conducting random compliance investigations and investigating referrals made to his office by members of the public. Mr. Brown testified that as an investigator, he would enter worksites and observe the workers and the types of work they were doing. On April 2, 2015, Mr. Brown visited a worksite at 3714 McGirts Boulevard in Jacksonville. He observed two workers installing tile in a shower in an older single-family residence that was undergoing renovations. Mr. Brown identified himself to the two workers and then inquired as to their identities and employment. Mr. Bohren replied that he was the company officer and that his company had an exemption from the requirement to provide workers’ compensation insurance coverage. Mr. Bohren identified the other worker as Dustin Elliott and stated that Mr. Elliott had worked for Forever Floors for about eight months. Mr. Bohren told Mr. Brown that he paid Mr. Elliott sometimes by check and sometimes with cash. After speaking with Mr. Bohren, Mr. Brown returned to his vehicle to perform computer research on Forever Floors. He consulted the Sunbiz website for information about the company and its officers. His search confirmed that Forever Floors was an active Florida corporation and that Christopher Bohren was listed as its registered agent, and as president of the corporation. No other corporate officers were listed. Mr. Brown also checked the Department's Coverage and Compliance Automated System ("CCAS") database to determine whether Forever Floors had secured the payment of workers' compensation insurance coverage or had obtained an exemption from the requirements of chapter 440. CCAS is a database that Department investigators routinely consult during their investigations to check for compliance, exemptions, and other workers' compensation related items. CCAS revealed that Forever Floors had no active workers' compensation insurance coverage for its employees and that no insurance had ever been reported to the state for Forever Floors. There was no evidence that Forever Floors used an employee leasing service. Mr. Bohren had an active exemption as an officer of the corporation pursuant to section 440.05 and Florida Administrative Code Rule 69L-6.012, effective September 24, 2013, through September 24, 2015. There was no exemption noted for Dustin Elliott. Based on his jobsite interviews with the employees and Mr. Bohren, and his Sunbiz and CCAS computer searches, Mr. Brown concluded that as of April 2, 2015, Forever Floors had an exemption for Mr. Bohren but had failed to procure workers’ compensation coverage for its employee, Dustin Elliott, in violation of chapter 440. Mr. Brown consequently issued a Stop- Work Order that he personally served on Mr. Bohren on April 2, 2015. Also on April 2, 2015, Mr. Brown served Forever Floors with a Request for Production of Business Records for Penalty Assessment Calculation, asking for documents pertaining to the identification of the employer, the employer's payroll, business accounts, disbursements, workers' compensation insurance coverage records, professional employer organization records, temporary labor service records, documentation of exemptions, documents relating to subcontractors, documents of subcontractors' workers’ compensation insurance coverage, and other business records, to enable the Department to determine the appropriate penalty owed by Forever Floors. Mr. Brown testified, and Mr. Bohren confirmed, that Mr. Bohren provided no records in response to the Request for Production. The case file was assigned to a penalty calculator, who reviews the records and calculates the penalty imposed on the business. Mr. Brown did not state the name of the person assigned to calculate the penalty in this case. Anita Proano, penalty audit supervisor for the Department, later performed her own calculation of the penalty as a check on the work of the penalty calculator. Ms. Proano testified as to the process of penalty calculation. Penalties for workers' compensation insurance violations are based on doubling the amount of evaded insurance premiums over the two- year period preceding the Stop-Work Order, which in this case was the period from April 3, 2013, through April 2, 2015. § 440.107(7)(d), Fla. Stat. Because Mr. Bohren had no payroll records for himself or Mr. Elliott on April 2, 2015, the penalty calculator lacked sufficient business records to determine the company’s actual gross payroll on that date. Section 440.107(7)(e) provides that where an employer fails to provide business records sufficient to enable the Department to determine the employer’s actual payroll for the penalty period, the Department will impute the weekly payroll at the statewide average weekly wage as defined in section 440.12(2), multiplied by two.1/ In the penalty assessment calculation, the Department consulted the classification codes and definitions set forth in the SCOPES of Basic Manual Classifications (“Scopes Manual”) published by the National Council on Compensation Insurance (“NCCI”). The Scopes Manual has been adopted by reference in rule 69L-6.021. Classification codes are four-digit codes assigned to occupations by the NCCI to assist in the calculation of workers' compensation insurance premiums. Rule 69L- 6.028(3)(d) provides that "[t]he imputed weekly payroll for each employee . . . shall be assigned to the highest rated workers' compensation classification code for an employee based upon records or the investigator's physical observation of that employee's activities." Ms. Proano testified that the penalty calculator correctly applied NCCI Class Code 5348, titled “Ceramic Tile, Indoor Stone, Marble, or Mosaic Work,” which “applies to specialist contractors who perform tile, stone, mosaic, or marble work.” The corresponding rule provision is rule 69L- 6.021(2)(aa). The penalty calculator used the approved manual rates corresponding to Class Code 5348 for the periods of non- compliance to calculate the penalty. On May 22, 2015, the Department issued an Amended Order of Penalty Assessment in the amount of $23,538.34, based on Mr. Bohren’s imputed wages for the periods not covered by his exemption and the imputed wages for Mr. Elliott for the entire penalty period. Mr. Bohren was served with the Amended Order of Penalty Assessment on June 8, 2015. The evidence produced at the hearing established that Ms. Proano utilized the correct class codes, average weekly wages, and manual rates in her calculation of the Amended Order of Penalty Assessment. The Department has demonstrated by clear and convincing evidence that Forever Floors was in violation of the workers' compensation coverage requirements of chapter 440. Dustin Elliott was an employee of Forever Floors on April 2, 2015, performing services in the construction industry without valid workers' compensation insurance coverage. The Department has also demonstrated by clear and convincing evidence that the penalty was correctly calculated through the use of the approved manual rates and the penalty calculation worksheet adopted by the Department in rule 69L-6.027. Ms. Proano’s recalculation of the penalty confirmed the correctness of the penalty calculator’s work. Forever Floors could point to no exemption, insurance policy, or employee leasing arrangement that would operate to lessen or extinguish the assessed penalty. At the hearing, Christopher Bohren testified that he is the sole proprietor of Forever Floors and that Mr. Elliott had only worked for him for six-to-eight months, mostly on a part-time basis, as of April 2, 2015. He stated that the penalty assessed in this case is more than he has made from his start-up business. After his discussion with Mr. Brown, he immediately procured workers’ compensation insurance coverage for Mr. Elliott and intends to stay within the ambit of the law in the future. Mr. Bohren testified that he was unable to access his business records because they were with his ex-wife, from whom he had an apparently acrimonious departure. Mr. Bohren’s testimony elicited sympathy, but the equitable considerations that he raised have no effect on the operation of chapter 440 or the imposition of the penalty assessed pursuant thereto.
Recommendation Having considered the foregoing Findings of Fact, Conclusions of Law, the evidence of record, the candor and demeanor of the witnesses, and the pleadings and arguments of the parties, it is, therefore, RECOMMENDED that a final order be entered by the Department of Financial Services, Division of Workers' Compensation, assessing a penalty of $23,538.34 against Forever Floors and More, Inc. DONE AND ENTERED this 28th day of October, 2015, in Tallahassee, Leon County, Florida. S LAWRENCE P. STEVENSON Administrative Law Judge Division of Administrative Hearings The DeSoto Building 1230 Apalachee Parkway Tallahassee, Florida 32399-3060 (850) 488-9675 SUNCOM 278-9675 Fax Filing (850) 921-6847 www.doah.state.fl.us Filed with the Clerk of the Division of Administrative Hearings this 28th day of October, 2015.
The Issue The issue to be determined is whether Respondent, Wilby’s Home Repairs, LLC, failed to secure the payment of workers’ compensation coverage for its employees, and if so, what penalty is owed.
Findings Of Fact The Department of Financial Services, Division of Workers’ Compensation, is the state agency charged with the enforcement of the requirement in chapter 440, Florida Statutes, that employers in Florida secure workers’ compensation coverage for their employees as required by section 440.107(3). At all times relevant to this case, Respondent was a company engaged in the construction industry. Its principal office was located at 2641 University Boulevard North, H115, Jacksonville, Florida 32211. On or about October 2, 2014, Ann Johnson, a compliance investigator for the Division, observed two people doing patch/repair work using a ladder on the outside of a home at 2322 Myra Street in Jacksonville, Florida. She approached and spoke to both men, who identified themselves as Michael Wilbur and Robert Nelson and stated that they worked for Wilby’s Home Repairs. When Ms. Johnson asked for proof of workers’ compensation coverage, Mr. Wilbur could not provide it but thought both gentlemen had exemptions. Mr. Wilbur thought that his accountant who had prepared the paperwork for filing with the Division of Corporations for his company had also completed the applications for exemptions for workers’ compensation coverage. However, no applications for exemptions had been filed. Investigator Johnson consulted the Division of Corporations website to determine the identity of Respondent’s corporate officers and found that Mr. Wilbur and Mr. Nelson were the listed officers. She then consulted the Division’s Coverage and Compliance Automated System (“CCAS”) for proof of workers’ compensation coverage and for any exemptions associated with Respondent. Investigator Johnson’s research revealed that Respondent did not have a workers’ compensation policy or an employee-leasing policy, and further, there were no exemptions for its corporate officers on file. Based on this information, Investigator Johnson consulted with her supervisor, who provided authorization for the issuance of a Stop-Work Order. She then issued a Stop-Work Order and personally served it on Mr. Wilbur on October 2, 2014. At the same time, she issued and served a Request for Production of Business Records for Penalty Assessment Calculation (BRR). The requested documents were for the purpose of determining Respondent’s payroll from May 16, 2014 (the date the company was formed according to the Division of Corporations website) to October 2, 2014 (the date of the random inspection). They consisted of payroll documents, such as time sheets or cards, attendance records, check stubs, and payroll summaries; account documents, such as check journals and statements; disbursements records; workers’ compensation coverage documents, such as copies of policies, declaration pages, and certificates of workers’ compensation; documents related to any exemptions held; documents reflecting the identity of each subcontractor and the relationship thereto, including any and all payments to subcontractors; and documentation of subcontractors’ workers’ compensation coverage. On October 3, 2014, Mr. Wilbur came into the Division office in Jacksonville and filled out the applications for exemptions, and those were processed. Mr. Wilbur submitted a cashier’s check for $1,000 and Respondent was released from the Stop-Work Order. He also brought in some records in response to the BRR. Those records consisted of letters, notations, and copies of checks made out to Robert Nelson or Mike Wilbur from Grant-Dooley Rental. The records were scanned and provided to the penalty auditing team to calculate an appropriate penalty according to the statutory formula. Penalty audit supervisor Anita Proano reviewed the business records provided by Respondent, but could not, from those records, properly identify the amount of gross payroll paid to Respondent’s employees on which workers’ compensation premiums had not been paid. Ms. Proano determined that Respondent had not been in compliance with coverage requirements from May 16, 2014, to October 2, 2014. The business records provided by Respondent were not sufficient for the Department to calculate a penalty for Respondent’s period of noncompliance with the coverage requirements of chapter 440. The auditor assigned to the case then calculated a penalty based upon imputed payroll pursuant to the procedures required by section 440.107(7)(e) and Florida Administrative Code Rule 69L-6.208. Had the documents submitted by Respondent been adequate, then the Division would have used those documents to calculate Respondent’s payroll. The checks provided by Respondent to the Division consisted of checks made out to Robert Nelson and Michael Wilbur, individually, spanning from approximately May 9, 2014, through October 2014, from Grant- Dooley Rental. Mr. Wilbur testified that the only job Respondent handled during this period was the family home on Myra Street, and he and Mr. Nelson were paid directly by the homeowner rather than having payments made to Wilby’s Home Repair as an entity. Unfortunately, these direct payments are not the type of records contemplated by the Division’s rules regarding appropriate documentation of payroll. On October 17, 2014, the Division issued an Amended Order of Penalty Assessment to Respondent, which was served on Respondent on October 20, 2014. The penalty assessed for noncompliance was $21,583.48. The penalty assessment calculation is based upon the classification codes listed in the Scopes® Manual, which have been adopted through the rulemaking process through rules 68L- 6.021 and 69L-6.031. Classification codes are codes assigned to different occupations by the National Council on Compensation Insurance, Inc. (NCCI), to assist in the calculation of workers’ compensation insurance premiums. Auditor Proano used classification code 5645 (carpentry) for both employees. Code 5645 is the correct code for the type of work observed by Ms. Johnson during her inspection. Using this classification code, Ms. Proano used the corresponding approved manual rates for that classification and the period of non-compliance. The average weekly wage as established by the Department of Economic Opportunity for the relevant period is $827.08. Ms. Proano used that amount and multiplied it by 2 for the number of days of noncompliance. Based on that calculation, she came up with a gross payroll amount of $66,166.40, which she divided by 100. Ms. Proano then multiplied that amount by the manual approved rate ($16.31), times two to reach the amount of penalty to be imposed. All of the penalty calculations are in accordance with the Division’s Penalty Calculation Worksheet. The Department has demonstrated by clear and convincing evidence that Respondent employed Robert Nelson and Michael Wilbur on October 2, 2014, and that Respondent was engaged in the construction business for the period of May 16, 2014, through October 2, 2014, without proper workers’ compensation coverage for that period. The Department also demonstrated by clear and convincing evidence that the documents submitted by Respondent, which may indeed be all of the documentation Respondent possessed, were not sufficient to establish Respondent’s payroll, thus necessitating imputation of payroll. Finally, the Department proved by clear and convincing evidence that the required penalty for the period of noncompliance is $21,583.48.
Recommendation Based on the foregoing Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law, it is RECOMMENDED that the Department of Financial Services, Division of Workers’ Compensation enter a final order finding that Wilby’s Home Repairs, LLC, failed to secure the payment of workers’ compensation insurance coverage for its employees with respect to Robert Nelson and Michael Wilbur, in violation of section 440.107, Florida Statutes, and imposing a penalty of $21,583.48. DONE AND ENTERED this 10th day of June, 2015, in Tallahassee, Leon County, Florida. S LISA SHEARER NELSON Administrative Law Judge Division of Administrative Hearings The DeSoto Building 1230 Apalachee Parkway Tallahassee, Florida 32399-3060 (850) 488-9675 Fax Filing (850) 921-6847 www.doah.state.fl.us Filed with the Clerk of the Division of Administrative Hearings this 10th day of June, 2015. COPIES FURNISHED: Trevor S. Suter, Esquire Department of Financial Services 200 East Gaines Street Tallahassee, Florida 32399-4229 (eServed) Mike Wilbur 5376 Shirley Avenue Jacksonville, Florida 32210 Julie Jones, CP, FRP, Agency Clerk Division of Legal Services Department of Financial Services 200 East Gaines Street Tallahassee, Florida 32399-0390 (eServed)
The Issue The issues in this case are whether Respondent, Raul A. Correa, M.D. (Dr. Correa), failed to provide workers' compensation coverage, and if so, what penalty should be imposed.
Findings Of Fact The Department is the state agency responsible for enforcing section 440.107, Florida Statutes (2013). That section mandates, in relevant part, that employers in Florida secure workers’ compensation insurance coverage for their employees. § 440.107(3), Fla. Stat. At all times relevant, Dr. Correa was a Florida small business engaged in the practice of medicine, with his principal office located at 2505 Manatee Avenue West, Bradenton, Florida. Dr. Correa is not incorporated. On February 12, 2014, Ms. Green conducted an on-site workers’ compensation compliance investigation (compliance investigation) of Dr. Correa’s office. After identifying herself to the receptionist, Ms. Green met Dr. Correa and explained the reason for her presence, a compliance investigation. Dr. Correa telephoned his wife who handles his office management from their residence. Mrs. Correa immediately faxed a copy of the liability insurance policy to the office. However, that liability policy did not include workers’ compensation coverage. After a telephonic consultation with her supervisor, Ms. Green served a Request for Production of Business Records (Request) on Dr. Correa at 11:50 a.m. on February 12, 2014. This Request encompassed records from October 1, 2013, through February 12, 2014, for all of Dr. Correa’s payroll documents, account documents, disbursements, and workers’ compensation coverage policies. Ms. Green consulted the Department’s Coverage and Compliance Automated System (CCAS) database to determine whether Dr. Correa had secured workers’ compensation coverage or an exemption from the requirements for coverage for his employees. CCAS is a database Ms. Green consults during the course of her investigations. Ms. Green determined from CCAS that Dr. Correa did not have any current workers’ compensation coverage for his employees and he did not have an exemption from such coverage from the Department. The records reflected that Dr. Correa’s last active workers’ compensation coverage was in 2004. Dr. Correa obtained workers’ compensation coverage on February 20, 2014. Approximately one month later, Ms. Green served a Request for Production of Business Records for Penalty Assessment Calculation on Dr. Correa. Dr. Correa produced the requested records. These records were given to Lynne Murcia, one of the Department’s penalty auditors, to calculate the penalty. Ms. Murcia determined that the appropriate classification code for Dr. Correa’s employees was 8832, which incorporates physicians and clerical workers. This code was derived from the Scopes Manual, which lists all of the various jobs that may be performed in the context of workers’ compensation. The manual is produced by the National Council on Compensation Insurance, Inc., the nation’s most authoritative data collecting and disseminating organization for workers’ compensation. Dr. Correa listed seven employees on the Florida Department of Revenue Unemployment Compensation Tax (UCT-6) form for the time period of the non-compliance. The UCT-6 form lists those employees who are subject to Florida’s Unemployment Compensation Law. Ms. Murcia reasonably relied upon the UCT-6 filings for the relevant time period to calculate Dr. Correa’s gross payroll in Florida. Using Dr. Correa’s payroll chart, the UCT reports, and the classification codes for each employee, Ms. Murcia calculated the penalty assessment for the three-year penalty period preceding the investigation. This three-year period is the allocated time for reviewing coverage for those who do not have the appropriate workers’ compensation coverage. On April 9, 2014, Ms. Murcia determined the penalty to be $4,287.12. However, upon receipt of additional information regarding a former employee of Dr. Correa, an Amended Order of Penalty Assessment of $3,898.77 was issued on July 28, 2014. Dr. Correa’s position is that his practice is a small “mom and pop” operation. He employs members of his family to run the business side of his practice. His daughter, Antonia, works as Dr. Correa’s “doctor’s assistant.” She works at the various nursing homes that Dr. Correa services. Antonia believed that the nursing homes’ liability insurance would cover her, and she was not subject to workers’ compensation coverage. However, she was, in fact, paid by Dr. Correa. Dr. Correa’s daughter-in-law, Valeria, works from her home computer completing the medical billing for her father-in- law. She has been working in this capacity for approximately 14- 16 years, and it never occurred to her that she needed workers’ compensation coverage. She was paid by Dr. Correa. Dr. Correa’s brother-in-law, Mr. Collado, runs all the errands for the practice. He may go to the bank, take care of car maintenance, buy office supplies or fix things, all in support of Dr. Correa’s practice. Mr. Collado receives regular pay checks from Dr. Correa. Dr. Correa testified that his wife is his office manager and has been since he opened the practice in 1978. Mrs. Correa works from their home, in a small home office. She does all the paper work related to the practice. Dr. Correa firmly believed that he did not require workers’ compensation coverage because some of his employees were “independent contractors” or never worked in his office, but at other locations (individual homes, nursing homes, or just outside the office). Dr. Correa believed his insurance agent who did not think Dr. Correa needed the workers’ compensation coverage. Based upon the testimony and exhibits, the amended penalty assessment in the amount of $3,898.77 is accurate.
Recommendation Based on the foregoing Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law, it is RECOMMENDED that the Department of Financial Services, Division of Workers’ Compensation, issue a final order upholding the Amended Order of Penalty Assessment, and assessing a penalty in the amount of $3,898.77. DONE AND ENTERED this 24th day of September, 2014, in Tallahassee, Leon County, Florida. S LYNNE A. QUIMBY-PENNOCK Administrative Law Judge Division of Administrative Hearings The DeSoto Building 1230 Apalachee Parkway Tallahassee, Florida 32399-3060 (850) 488-9675 Fax Filing (850) 921-6847 www.doah.state.fl.us Filed with the Clerk of the Division of Administrative Hearings this 24th day of September, 2014.
The Issue The issues in this case are whether Respondent violated chapter 440, Florida Statutes (2014),1/ by failing to secure the payment of workers' compensation coverage as alleged in the Stop-work Order and 2nd Amended Order of Penalty Assessment, and if so, the amount of the penalty that should be assessed.
Findings Of Fact The Parties Petitioner, Department of Financial Services, Division of Workers' Compensation, is the state agency responsible for enforcing the requirement in chapter 440 that employers in the state of Florida secure the payment of workers' compensation insurance covering their employees. Respondent, Bargain Bob's Carpets, Inc., is a corporation registered to do business in Florida. Its principal business address is 3954 Byron Drive, Riviera Beach, Florida. The Compliance Investigation As the result of an anonymous referral, Petitioner's compliance investigator, Peter Sileo, investigated Respondent to determine whether it had secured workers' compensation coverage for its employees as required by chapter 440. Before Sileo visited Respondent's business location, he checked the State of Florida Coverage and Compliance Automated System ("CCAS") computer database, which contains information regarding workers' compensation insurance policies that have been obtained by employers. The CCAS database showed no record of any workers' compensation policies covering Respondent's employees having been issued. On Sileo's first visit to Respondent's business location, he observed a man loading carpeting into a van. Upon being questioned, the man identified himself as Gary Persad. He told Sileo that he was a carpet installation subcontractor for Respondent. Sileo checked CCAS and determined that Persad was covered by workers' compensation insurance. On January 23, 2015, Sileo again visited Respondent's business location, which is a warehouse housing large rolls of carpeting and other flooring materials. There, Sileo met John Charles, an owner and corporate officer of Respondent. Charles claimed that he did not know that Respondent was required to have workers' compensation coverage for its employees. Charles told Sileo that Respondent sold flooring but did not install it and that all installation was performed by subcontractors. At the time of the inspection, Sileo determined that Respondent employed five employees: Charles and Calideen, each of whom own more than ten percent of Respondent's business; Alex Stark; Peter Phelps; and Anthony Frenchak. Sileo served a Stop-work Order, ordering Respondent to cease all business operations in the state pending demonstrating compliance with the workers' compensation coverage requirement. Sileo also served a Request for Production of Business Records for Penalty Assessment Calculation. Respondent subsequently demonstrated compliance with the workers' compensation coverage requirement, and Petitioner lifted the Stop-work Order.2/ Respondent also produced business records consisting of spreadsheets showing quarterly payroll, transaction listings, affidavits, insurance coverage documents, and other records. The Penalty Assessment Eric Ruzzo, a penalty auditor with Petitioner, used these records to calculate the penalty to be assessed against Respondent. The $31,061.68 penalty is reflected in the 2nd Amended Order of Penalty Assessment, issued April 23, 2015, that is the subject of this proceeding. To calculate the applicable penalty, Petitioner determines the employer's gross payroll for the two-year period preceding the noncompliance determination——the so-called "penalty period"——from a review of the employer's business records. For days during the penalty period for which records are not provided, Petitioner imputes the gross payroll based on the average weekly wage for the state of Florida. Here, the penalty period commenced on January 24, 2013, and ended on January 23, 2015, the day on which the compliance inspection was conducted, and Respondent was determined to not be in compliance with the workers' compensation coverage requirement. Initially, Respondent produced payroll records that did not identify the subcontractors Respondent hired to install the carpeting. Ruzzo identified the subcontractors using Respondent's transaction records. Respondent subsequently provided information, including affidavits and certificates of exemption regarding the subcontractors it had hired during the penalty period. At all times during the penalty period, Respondent employed four or more non-construction employees, including Charles and Calideen.3/ Based on the business records produced, Ruzzo compiled a list of the persons, including the subcontractors and non-construction employees who were on Respondent's payroll, but not covered by workers' compensation insurance during the penalty period. This list of employees and the penalty computation for each is set forth on the Penalty Calculation Worksheet attached to the 2nd Amended Order of Penalty Assessment. Using the National Council on Compensation Insurance ("NCCI") workers' compensation insurance occupation class codes set forth in the NCCI Scopes Manual, Ruzzo determined the occupation class code applicable to each employee listed on the Penalty Calculation Worksheet. Respondent's subcontractors were classified in NCCI class code 5478, which is the class code for the flooring installation industry. This is consistent with Florida's construction industry class code rule, Florida Administrative Code Rule 69L-6.021(2)(kk), which identifies the installation of carpet and other floor covering as NCCI class code 5478. Alex Stark, Amber Krembs, Jacquelyn Skwarek, and Monica Stahl were classified in NCCI class code 8018, which applies to workers engaged in selling merchandise, including carpeting and linoleum, at the wholesale level. Calideen, Frenchak, and Phelps were classified in NCCI class code 8742, which applies to outside salespersons primarily engaged in sales off of the employer's premises. Charles was classified in NCCI class code 8810, which applies to clerical office employees. Ruzzo then determined the period of Respondent's noncompliance for each employee listed on the Penalty Calculation Worksheet. For each of these employees, Ruzzo determined the gross payroll paid to that employee for the period during which Respondent was noncompliant, divided the employee's gross payroll by 100 pursuant to Petitioner's calculation methodology, then multiplied that amount by the numeric rate set by NCCI for that employee's specific occupation class code. This calculation yielded the workers' compensation coverage premium for that specific employee for which Respondent was noncompliant during the penalty period. The premium amount then was multiplied by two, as required by statute, to yield the penalty to be imposed for failure to provide workers' compensation coverage for that specific employee. Respondent did not provide records covering Charles, Calideen, Stark, Frenchak, or Phelps for the period between January 1, 2015, and January 23, 2015. For this period, Ruzzo imputed the gross payroll for each of these employees using the statewide average weekly wage as defined in section 440.12(2),4/ multiplied by two. Ruzzo then performed the same computations discussed above to determine the penalty amount to be imposed for Respondent's failure to provide workers' compensation for those employees during this time period. Ruzzo added the penalty determined for each employee using actual gross payroll and imputed payroll, as applicable, to arrive at the total penalty assessment amount of $31,061.68. Respondent's Defense Respondent is engaged in the retail sale of various types of flooring, such as carpeting, and hires subcontractors to install the flooring. The evidence did not establish that Respondent engaged in wholesale sales of flooring. Charles testified that Respondent had attempted to operate its business as a "cash and carry" operation in which Respondent would sell the flooring to retail customers, who would take the purchased flooring from Respondent's premises and would be solely responsible for securing their own installation services. In Charles' words, "[t]hat didn't work. The public demanded that we provide them, as part of the sale, installers—— I might be saying it wrong legally, but they demanded that it all be done in one shot." Thus, Respondent began hiring subcontractors to do the installation work. Charles explained that Respondent makes retail sales of flooring to customers, either on Respondent's premises or at the customer's premises through its outside sales people. The flooring is then cut from the roll on Respondent's premises and placed in the installer's vehicle. The installer transports the purchased flooring to, and installs it at, the customer's premises. Charles estimated that Respondent currently does approximately five percent of its business as "cash and carry" sales, and the remaining 95 percent consists of sales requiring installation. Charles testified that he and Calideen, as corporate officers of Respondent, previously had obtained exemptions from the workers' compensation coverage requirements for themselves; however, they were unaware that the exemptions had to be renewed, so their exemptions had expired. As of the date of the 2nd Amended Order of Penalty Assessment, neither Charles nor Calideen possessed valid certificates of exemption from the workers' compensation coverage requirement. Charles testified that Respondent always had tried to operate in compliance with the law. He was of the view that because he and Calideen were exempt from the worker's compensation coverage requirement, Respondent effectively employed only three employees——one fewer than the workers' compensation coverage requirement threshold of four employees applicable to non-construction industry businesses. Charles and Calideen testified that when Respondent initially hired subcontractors, they required copies of their insurance policies, including proof of workers' compensation coverage or exemption therefrom. Calideen testified that thereafter, he and Charles assumed that the subcontractors were in compliance with the workers' compensation laws, and they did not know that they needed to obtain updated certificates of workers' compensation exemption or coverage from the subcontractors. On that basis, Charles asserted that Respondent should not be required to "babysit" its subcontractors to ensure that they are in compliance with the workers' compensation law. Respondent thus asserts that it should not be responsible for securing workers' compensation coverage for subcontractors whose workers' compensation policies or exemptions had expired during the penalty period. The undisputed evidence establishes that Charles' employment entails clerical work. Calideen testified, credibly, that Stark's employment duties entail selling flooring on Respondent's business premises, and that he does not engage in sales off the premises. Calideen testified, credibly, that Frenchak and Phelps primarily are engaged in outside sales off of Respondent's premises. Calideen testified, credibly, that he performs clerical duties rather than sales duties. Calideen and Charles both testified, credibly, that employees Krembs, Skwarek, and Stahl performed computer-related duties for Respondent, such as entering business information into Respondent's computer databases, and that they did not work on Respondent's business premises. Calideen testified, credibly, that subcontractor Mike Smith was hired on a one-time basis to paint parking place stripes at the newly-repaved parking lot behind Respondent's business premises. Findings of Ultimate Fact The credible, persuasive evidence establishes that Respondent is engaged in the retail sale of carpeting and other flooring materials and that Respondent itself does not install the flooring. The credible, persuasive evidence establishes, and the parties stipulated, that Respondent is not a member of the construction industry. The credible, persuasive evidence establishes that at all times during the penalty period, Respondent employed more than four employees who were engaged in non-construction employment. Accordingly, Respondent was required to secure workers' compensation coverage for its employees, including Charles and Calideen, whose previously-issued certificates of exemption had expired and were not in effect during the penalty period. The undisputed evidence establishes that at certain times during the penalty period, Respondent employed subcontractors who performed floor installation. The evidence clearly establishes that the subcontractors, in installing the flooring, perform a service that is integral to Respondent's business and that they work specifically at Respondent's direction for each particular installation job. Even though Respondent is not classified as a member of the construction industry, it nonetheless is a "statutory employer" of its subcontractors, who are members of the construction industry. Thus, Respondent is responsible for securing workers' compensation coverage for its subcontractors who failed to secure an exemption or coverage for themselves.5/ The credible, persuasive evidence establishes that Petitioner correctly calculated the penalty attributable to flooring installation subcontractors for which Respondent was noncompliant during the penalty period. However, the unrebutted evidence establishes that subcontractor Mike Smith was hired on a one-time basis to paint parking lot stripes in Respondent's parking lot. Thus, Petitioner's classification of Smith in NCCI class code 5478—— which is a construction industry code that applies to workers engaged in flooring installation——obviously is incorrect, and no evidence was presented showing the correct NCCI class code in which Smith should be classified. Accordingly, Smith should not be included in Petitioner's calculation of the penalty to be assessed against Respondent. The credible, persuasive evidence establishes that Petitioner correctly calculated the penalty attributable to Respondent's noncompliance with respect to Charles, Frenchak, and Phelps during the penalty period. The credible, persuasive evidence establishes that Stark is engaged in retail sales on Respondent's business premises. However, in calculating the penalty, Petitioner classified Stark in NCCI class code 8018, which applies to salespersons engaged in selling merchandise at the wholesale level, rather than at the retail level. Thus, Petitioner incorrectly classified Stark in NCCI class code 8018. There is no evidence in the record identifying the correct NCCI class code in which Stark should be classified. Accordingly, Stark should not be included in Petitioner's calculation of the penalty to be assessed against Respondent. The credible, persuasive evidence establishes that Calideen performs clerical employment duties and does not perform sales duties, so he should be classified in NCCI class code 8810, rather than in class code 8742. Accordingly, Petitioner should recalculate the portion of the penalty attributable to Respondent's noncompliance for Calideen using NCCI class code 8810. The credible, persuasive evidence establishes that Krembs, Skwarek, and Stahl are not employed as salespersons at the wholesale level. Thus, Petitioner incorrectly classified these employees in NCCI class code 8018. In its Proposed Recommended Order, Petitioner contends that because Respondent disputes the classification of these employees in class code 8018, Respondent is responsible for identifying the correct applicable class code, which it has not done. This position disregards that in this proceeding, Petitioner bears the burden of proof, by clear and convincing evidence, to show that its proposed penalty assessment against Respondent is accurate. Thus, Petitioner——not Respondent——is responsible for correctly identifying the NCCI class codes applicable to Respondent's employees. Here, the credible, persuasive evidence establishes that in calculating the penalty, Petitioner incorrectly classified Krembs, Skwarek, and Stahl in class code 8018,6/ and no evidence was presented showing the correct NCCI class code applicable to these employees. Accordingly, Krembs, Skwarek, and Stahl should not be included in Petitioner's calculation of the penalty to be assessed against Respondent.
Recommendation Based on the foregoing Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law, it is RECOMMENDED that Petitioner, Department of Financial Services, Division of Workers' Compensation, issue a final order amending the penalty to be assessed against Respondent as follows: Subtracting the penalty assessed for subcontractor Mike Smith, as shown on the Penalty Calculation Worksheet; and Subtracting the penalties assessed for Respondent's alleged noncompliance with respect to employees Amber Krembs, Jacquelyn Skwarek, and Monica Stahl, as shown on the Penalty Calculation Worksheet; and Reclassifying employee Andy Calideen in NCCI class code 8810 and recalculating the portion of the penalty attributable to Respondent's noncompliance for Calideen using this class code; and Reclassifying employee Alexander Stark in NCCI class code 5784 and recalculating the portion of the penalty attributable to Respondent's noncompliance for Stark using this class code. DONE AND ENTERED this 22 day of January, 2016, in Tallahassee, Leon County, Florida. S CATHY M. SELLERS Administrative Law Judge Division of Administrative Hearings The DeSoto Building 1230 Apalachee Parkway Tallahassee, Florida 32399-3060 (850) 488-9675 Fax Filing (850) 921-6847 www.doah.state.fl.us Filed with the Clerk of the Division of Administrative Hearings this 22 day of January, 2016.
The Issue The issue in this case is whether Respondent had a sufficient amount of workers’ compensation coverage during the time period in question; and, if not, what penalty should be imposed.
Findings Of Fact The Division is the state agency responsible for enforcing the requirement in chapter 440, Florida Statutes (2015),1/ that employers in Florida secure workers’ compensation coverage for their employees. While an exemption can be obtained for up to three corporate officers, any employer in the construction industry with at least one employee must have workers’ compensation coverage. § 440.02(15), Fla. Stat. Kent Howe works for the Division as a compliance investigator based in Orlando, Florida. As part of his job responsibilities, Mr. Howe visits construction sites in order to verify that employers in the construction industry have obtained workers’ compensation coverage for their employees. Mr. Kehr was the owner and sole corporate officer of JNK. Mr. Howe visited a construction site in Port Orange, Florida, on the morning of December 10, 2015, and saw Mr. Kehr and two other men building the interior walls/frames of a house. Mr. Howe talked to the two men (James Hicks and James Garthwait) working with Mr. Kehr, and they reported that Mr. Kehr was paying them approximately $8.00 an hour. Mr. Kehr told Mr. Howe that Messrs. Hicks and Garthwait had been working for him for approximately two hours that morning. Mr. Kehr also stated that he had not obtained workers’ compensation coverage for Messrs. Hicks and Garthwait. Following those conversations, Mr. Howe returned to his car and accessed the Division’s Coverage and Compliance Automated System (“CCAS”) and learned that JNK had no workers’ compensation coverage. Mr. Howe also determined from CCAS that Mr. Kehr had obtained an exemption from workers’ compensation coverage that had been in effect from November 18, 2014, through November of 2016.2/ After relaying that information to his supervisor, Mr. Howe received authorization to serve Mr. Kehr with a Stop- Work Order, and he did so on December 10, 2015. That Stop-Work Order required JNK to “cease all business operations for all worksites in the State” based on the Division’s determination that JNK had failed to obtain workers’ compensation coverage. In addition, the Stop-Work Order stated that JNK would be penalized an amount “[e]qual to 2 times the amount [JNK] would have paid in premium when applying approved manual rates to the employer’s payroll during periods for which it [had] failed to secure the payment of compensation within the preceding 2-year period.” Along with the Stop-Work Order, Mr. Howe also served a “Request for Production of Business Records for Penalty Assessment Calculation” (“the BRR”) on Mr. Kehr. In order to ascertain JNK’s payroll disbursements during the relevant time period and the resulting penalty for JNK’s failure to obtain workers’ compensation coverage, the BRR requested that JNK remit several different types of business records covering the period from November 10, 2014, through December 10, 2015. Mr. Howe explained during the final hearing that the Division usually reviews business records pertaining to the two years preceding the Stop Work Order.3/ Because JNK came into existence on November 10, 2014, the Division’s review was limited to examining the period between November 10, 2014, and December 10, 2015. The business records sought by the Division included items such as time sheets, payroll summaries, check journals, certificates of exemption, and evidence that any JNK subcontractors had obtained workers’ compensation coverage. Section 440.107(7)(e) provides that if an employer fails to provide business records sufficient to enable the Department to ascertain the employer’s actual payroll for the time period in question, then the Division will estimate the employer’s actual payroll for that time period by imputing the employer’s payroll based on the statewide average weekly wage. The Division then multiplies that amount by two. JNK did not provide business records typically sought by the Division. Instead, JNK responded to the BRR by producing a written statement from Mr. Kehr indicating that he founded JNK in November of 2014, but did no work until July of 2015. That initial job involved fixing a set of stairs for $200. Afterwards, Mr. Kehr performed three separate small jobs between July and November of 2015, earning approximately $550. Because the Division could not ascertain JNK’s actual payroll from the documentation provided by JNK, the Division imputed JNK’s payroll for the time period in question and issued an Amended Order of Penalty Assessment on January 19, 2016, seeking to impose a penalty of $61,424.04. Phillip Sley calculated the aforementioned penalty amount by filling out a worksheet that has been adopted by the Division through Florida Administrative Code Rule 69L-6.027. The first step in completing the worksheet required Mr. Sley to assign a classification code to the type of work that Mr. Howe witnessed Messrs. Kehr, Hicks and Garthwait performing at the Port Orange worksite on December 10, 2015. Classification codes come from the Scopes® Manual, which has been adopted by the Department through rule 69L-6.021. Each code within the Scopes® Manual pertains to an occupation or type of work, and each code has an approved manual rate used by insurance companies to assist in the calculation of workers’ compensation insurance premiums. The imputed weekly payroll for each employee and corporate officer “shall be assigned to the highest rated workers’ compensation classification code for an employee based upon records or the investigator’s physical observation of that employee’s activities.” See Fla. Admin. Code. R. 69L-6.028(3)(d). In the instant case, Mr. Sley determined “5645” was the appropriate classification code. According to the Scopes Manual, [w]hen all of the carpentry work in connection with the construction of residential dwellings not exceeding three stories in height is performed by employees of the same carpentry contractor or general contractor responsible for the entire dwelling construction project, the work is assigned to Code 5645. This includes the construction of the sill, rough framework, rough floor, wood or light-gauge steel studs, wood or lighted-gauge steel joists, rafters, roof deck, all types of roofing materials, sidewall sheathing, siding, doors, wallboard installation, lathing, windows, stairs, finished flooring, cabinet installation, fencing, detached structures, and all interior wood trim. Mr. Sley’s next step in calculating the penalty amount was to determine the period of non-compliance. With regard to Mr. Kehr, the Department asserted that JNK failed to have workers’ compensation coverage between the date of JNK’s inception (November 10, 2014) and the date that Mr. Kehr received an exemption from the workers’ compensation coverage requirement (November 18, 2014). Despite having no evidence that Messrs. Hicks and Garthwait worked for JNK on any day other than December 10, 2015, the Division’s penalty calculation was based on an assumption that Messrs. Hicks and Garthwait worked for JNK from November 10, 2014, through December 10, 2015. Mr. Sley’s next step was to calculate JNK’s gross payroll for the time period in question. Because JNK did not provide the Division with business records that would have enabled the Division to calculate JNK’s actual payroll, Mr. Sley based JNK’s payroll on the statewide average weekly wage determined by the Department of Economic Opportunity for the time period in question.4/ Mr. Sley then multiplied that amount by two.5/ After converting the payroll numbers into a percentage, Mr. Sley multiplied the payroll amounts by the approved manual rate. As noted above, every classification code is associated with a particular manual rate determined by the Office of Insurance Regulation, and a manual rate corresponds to the risk associated with a particular occupation or type of work. Manual rates associated with potentially dangerous activities will have higher manual rates than activities with little or no potential danger. Mr. Sley’s next step was to calculate a premium for obtaining workers compensation coverage for Messrs. Kehr, Hicks, and Garthwait. Mr. Sley then multiplied that premium by two in order to calculate the individual penalties resulting from JNK not having workers’ compensation coverage for Messrs. Kehr, Hicks, and Garthwait. The sum of those amounts was $61,424.04. The evidence produced at the final hearing established that Mr. Sley utilized the correct class code, average weekly wage, and manual rates in his calculation of the penalty set forth in the Amended Order of Penalty Assessment. The Division has demonstrated by clear and convincing evidence that JNK was in violation of the workers’ compensation coverage requirements of chapter 440. In particular, the Division proved by clear and convincing evidence that Mr. Kehr had no workers’ compensation coverage for himself and no exemption from November 10, 2014, through November 17, 2014. However, the Division did not demonstrate by clear and convincing evidence that Messrs. Hicks and Garthwait were employees of JNK on any day other than December 10, 2015. Mr. Kehr testified during the final hearing that Messrs. Hicks and Garthwait were working for him on December 10, 2015. He also testified that he was paying them at a rate of $8.00 an hour. However, Mr. Kehr persuasively testified that Messrs. Hicks and Garthwait had not worked for him at any other time between November 10, 2014, and December 10, 2015. The undersigned finds Mr. Kehr’s testimony on this point to be credible. Messrs. Hicks and Garthwait did not testify during the final hearing in this matter. There is no evidence that Messrs. Hicks and Garthwait worked for JNK at any time other than December 10, 2015. Because there is no evidence indicating that Messrs. Hicks and Garthwait were employees of JNK at any time other than December 10, 2015, during the time period in question, the undersigned finds that the Department failed to carry its burden of proving that $61,424.04 is the appropriate penalty. Based on the above findings, the undersigned finds that the correct penalty resulting from Mr. Kehr’s lack of coverage is $627.48. The worksheet completed by Mr. Sley indicates that is the amount of the $61,424.04 penalty associated with Mr. Kehr’s lack of coverage. As for the penalties associated with the lack of coverage for Messrs. Hicks and Garthwait on December 10, 2015, the undersigned multiplied the average weekly wage utilized by the Division ($841.57) by two. That results in a weekly gross payroll amount of $1,683.14. Dividing $1,683.14 by five results in a daily gross payroll amount of $336.63. Dividing $336.63 by 100 and then multiplying the result by 15.91 (the approved manual rate utilized by the Division for the period from January 1, 2015, through December 10, 2015) yields a daily premium of $53.62. Multiplying $53.62 by two results in a penalty of $107.23. Multiplying $107.23 by two yields $214.46, JNK’s penalty for not having workers’ compensation coverage for Messrs. Hicks and Garthwait on December 10, 2015. JNK’s total penalty is $841.94. Because section 440.107(7)(d)1. mandates a minimum penalty of $1,000, the undersigned finds that $1,000 is the correct penalty for the instant case.
Recommendation Based on the foregoing Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law, it is RECOMMENDED that the Department of Financial Services, Division of Workers’ Compensation enter a final order imposing impose a $1,000 penalty on Donald Kehr, d/b/a JNK Framing Inc., a Dissolved Florida Corporation. DONE AND ENTERED this 10th day of August, 2016, in Tallahassee, Leon County, Florida. S G. W. CHISENHALL Administrative Law Judge Division of Administrative Hearings The DeSoto Building 1230 Apalachee Parkway Tallahassee, Florida 32399-3060 (850) 488-9675 Fax Filing (850) 921-6847 www.doah.state.fl.us Filed with the Clerk of the Division of Administrative Hearings this 10th day of August, 2016.
The Issue The issue in this case is whether Respondent, Ocala Exterior Solutions, Inc., failed to properly maintain workers' compensation insurance coverage for its employees, and, if so, what penalty should be assessed.
Findings Of Fact The Department is the state agency responsible for ensuring that all employers maintain workers' compensation insurance for themselves and their employees. It is the duty of the Department to make random inspections of job sites and to answer complaints concerning potential violations of workers' compensation rules. This case arose as a result of a random inspection. Respondent is a business created by Johnny Busciglio on or about October 16, 2012. At all times relevant hereto, Respondent was duly licensed to do business in the State of Florida. Its business address is 140 Southwest 74th Lane, Ocala, Florida 34476. On May 22, 2015, the Department’s investigator, William Pangrass, made a random site visit to a construction site located at a residence at 9189 Southwest 60th Terrace Road, Ocala, Florida. He saw two men installing soffit as part of the construction which was going on. Pangrass remembers the men identifying themselves as Derek McVey and Frank Deil. When Pangrass inquired as to their employer, the two men were initially not certain for whom they were working. One of the men made a telephone call and then told Pangrass they were employees of Sauer & Sons. Interestingly, Respondent said the two men on-site that day were McVey and a man named James Van Brunt. Pangrass contacted Sauer & Sons and were told that neither McVey nor Deil (or Van Brunt) were employees of that company. He was told by a representative of Sauer & Sons that the men were in fact employees of Respondent. Pangrass then verified that Respondent was a current, viable company and checked whether the company had workers’ compensation insurance coverage for its employees. He found that Respondent had a workers’ compensation insurance policy for a short time in 2014. Two of Respondent’s employees, however, did have exemptions from coverage. Those two were Johnny Busciglio and Anthony Wayne. Based on his findings, Pangrass issued a SWO which he posted at the work site he had visited. He posted the SWO on the permit board in front of the job site on May 26, 2015. On May 29, he served a Request for Production of Business Records on Respondent, seeking information concerning Respondent’s business for purposes of calculating a penalty for failure to have workers’ compensation insurance in place. Respondent emailed the requested business records to Pangrass. The Department requested additional records and clarification concerning some of the records which had been provided. Busciglio made a good faith effort to respond to each of the Department’s requests. After review of Respondent’s business records, the Department calculated a penalty and issued an amended OPA. That amended OPA was issued on September 8 and served on Busciglio (as agent for Respondent) on October 1, 2015. The amount of the penalty in the amended OPA was $9,896.32. Within a few days after receiving the amended Order, Busciglio obtained workers’ compensation insurance for his employees, paid a down payment of $1,000 to the Department, and Respondent was released to resume its work. The penalty in the amended OPA was based upon information obtained from Busciglio concerning Respondent. Using the bank records supplied by Busciglio, the Department determined that Respondent had the following employees: Eric McVey, Frank Dorneden, Jeff Burns, Jordan Anchondo, Anthony Wayne, Nikki Smith, Johnny Busciglio, and Jason Bridge. Their wages were used by the Department to calculate the penalty. The penalty was calculated by the Department as follows: The business was assigned class code 5645, construction on residential dwellings; The period of non-compliance was set at two years; The gross payroll amount for that two-year period was established at $30,905.14; The gross payroll amount was divided by 100, resulting in the sum of $309.05; The approved manual rate, i.e., the amount the employer would have paid if insurance was in place, was assigned for each employee; The gross payroll was multiplied by the manual rate; And the penalty amount was established, taking the figure in (f), above, and multiplying by two. Busciglio established by credible testimony, unrefuted by the Department, that Nikki Smith was a person from whom he bought tools; she was never an employee of Respondent. The same was true for the person listed as Jason Bridge (although his real name may have been Jason Woolridge). As for Eric McVey, he worked for Frank Dorneden, who paid McVey directly. There were no payroll records or checks from Respondent provided to the Department which were attributable to McVey. Dorneden had begun working for Respondent on December 22, 2014. On May 22, 2015, he was asked by Busciglio to visit the work site; he found McVey working there and Deil/Van Brunt was also on the site. Neither the Department nor Respondent offered any further explanation about Deil/Van Brunt, nor did the Department attribute any penalty to Van Brunt as a putative employee. His status in this matter is a mystery. When the penalties associated with McVey, Smith, and Bride are subtracted from the calculation, the amount of the penalty would be $9,454.22.
Recommendation Based on the foregoing Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law, it is RECOMMENDED that a final order be entered by the Department of Financial Services requiring Respondent, Ocala Exterior Solutions, Inc., to pay the sum of $9,454.22. DONE AND ORDERED this 20th day of November, 2015, in Tallahassee, Leon County, Florida. S R. BRUCE MCKIBBEN Administrative Law Judge Division of Administrative Hearings The DeSoto Building 1230 Apalachee Parkway Tallahassee, Florida 32399-3060 (850) 488-9675 Fax Filing (850) 921-6847 www.doah.state.fl.us Filed with the Clerk of the Division of Administrative Hearings this 20th day of November, 2015.
The Issue The issues in this matter are whether Countrywide Siding and Windows, Inc., failed to secure workers compensation that meets the requirements of Chapter 440, Florida Statutes, and, if so was correctly assessed a penalty for violating, the workers’ compensation laws of Florida.
Findings Of Fact Petitioner is the state agency responsible for enforcing the statutory requirement that employers secure workers’ compensation for the benefit of their employees. § 440.107, Fla. Stat. (2009). Respondent is a corporation domiciled in Florida and engaged in the construction industry. On February 13, 2009, Petitioner’s investigator, Carl Woodall, stopped to spot check a house in the Cabrille Lane area of Panama City, Florida, where he saw workers installing siding. Petitioner’s investigator is the only employee for Petitioner who investigated and developed the substantive evidence in this case. Other employees, who have no direct knowledge of the underlying facts, calculated the amounts of the proposed penalties. Mr. Woodall inquired of the workers and ascertained that they worked for Respondent. The investigator then contacted the Respondent to determine whether Respondent had secured or obtained workers’ compensation insurance under Florida’s workers’ compensation law. Respondent’s representative indicated that it maintained workers’ compensation insurance through Employee Leasing Service (ELS), an employee-leasing company. There is no dispute that in February 2009, Respondent leased its workers from ELS and that under the lease agreement, ELS provided workers’ compensation coverage to Respondent and its leased workers. Other evidence suggested that in past years, Respondent had leased its workers from other employee-leasing companies. The evidence was not specific as to who those companies were. The evidence, while not specific, also suggested that Respondent paid its leased employees bonuses and sometimes loaned them money.1/ In general, employee-leasing agreements provide clerical duties to client companies including tax deduction and workers’ compensation, in exchange for a fee. Client companies’ workers who are registered with the leasing company are employees of the leasing company, not the client company. In this case, the specific contract between ELS and Respondent was not introduced into evidence. Likewise, neither the contract nor the proof of coverage between ELS and its workers’ compensation insurer was introduced into evidence and it is unknown who the actual workers’ compensation insurer was or is. Therefore, there is no credible evidence regarding the specific terms of the contract between ELS, Respondent or the workers’ compensation insurer. Importantly, there is no evidence regarding any fee arrangement between ELS and Respondent showing that workers’ compensation coverage was provided based on payroll or that direct payments to Respondent’s workers constituted payroll under the terms of the lease contract for which workers’ compensation had not been secured. Petitioner’s investigator telephoned ELS and learned from some person (purportedly Ellen Clark) that it did have an employee-leasing contract with Respondent and did maintain workers’ compensation on Respondent’s workers. The investigator was also told that ELS intended to or had cancelled its employee-leasing contract with Respondent effective either February 14 or 15, 2009. No one from ELS testified at the hearing and the substance of the above conversation, as with all the testimony about purported ELS statements, constitutes hearsay that was not corroborated by other credible evidence in the record. As such, the substance of these conversations is not found as facts, other than to establish that Petitioner’s investigator had a conversation with a person purporting to Represent ELS. However, on February 14, 2010, the investigator did not take any action against Respondent since he felt Respondent was in compliance with Florida’s workers’ compensation law. On February 17, 2009, Mr. Woodall again returned to the Cabrille Lane area and observed Respondent’s workers installing siding on a house. One of the workers, Mike Moore, revealed to Mr. Woodall that he was a subcontractor of Respondent, but that the other worker, Ryan Grantham, was Respondent’s employee. The subcontractor was in compliance with Florida’s workers’ compensation laws. In order to find out if the other worker was covered by workers’ compensation insurance, Mr. Woodall met with Ronnie Creed, Respondent’s owner and officer, who was exempt under Florida’s workers’ compensation law. Mr. Creed was unaware of Respondent’s workers’ compensation status but put Mr. Woodall in contact with his wife, India Creed, who was also exempt from Florida’s workers’ compensation law. Ms. Creed told Mr. Woodall that Respondent had received a letter from ELS that day, purportedly notifying it that ELS intended to cancel or had cancelled its employee-leasing contract with Respondent. The letter was not introduced into evidence and it is unclear whether the letter discussed the workers’ compensation insurance coverage ELS maintained on its employees that it leased to Respondent. Again, no one from ELS or its workers’ compensation insurer testified at the hearing regarding its lease or which workers were covered under the lease. The record is devoid of any evidence that these employees were no longer employed by ELS and, more importantly, not covered by ELS’s workers’ compensation coverage on February 17, 2009.2/ Mr. Woodall also checked the Department’s Coverage and Compliance Automated System (CCAS) database. CCAS is a database that maintains information on business entities in Florida and whether they have secured workers’ compensation and /or whether exemptions from workers’ compensation have been granted to eligible company officers. CCAS did not reflect that Respondent had a workers’ compensation insurance policy in place. However, the investigator did not check to see if ELS or another employee-leasing company had such a policy. Similarly, the investigator did not investigate the terms of those contracts and whether those contracts considered any bonuses or loans paid by Petitioner to its employees to be payroll, and if it was, whether any workers’ compensation coverage was dependent on such payments being reported to these companies. As such, the information in that system is hearsay which may or may not indicate a need to investigate further. Moreover, CCAS is simply a database of information reported by others and maintained by the Petitioner. Its reliability is questionable in this case given the multiple contractual entities involved in the provision of workers’ compensation to Respondent and the lack of any direct evidence from those contractual entities. Therefore, the fact that CCAS did not reflect that Respondent had workers’ compensation insurance is not given weight in this Order and is neither clear nor convincing evidence demonstrating that Respondent failed to secure workers’ compensation insurance on February 17, 2009, or for prior years. Based on his belief that Respondent had not secured workers’ compensation on its workers, Mr. Woodall issued a Stop- Work Order and Order of Penalty Assessment and a Request for Production of Business Records for Penalty Assessment Calculation to Respondent (Request) asking for Respondent’s business and financial records related to Respondent’s business and employee leasing for the last 3 years. The records were requested to construct Respondent’s alleged payroll and determine the employees of Respondent. There was no evidence that there was any inquiry into past employment leasing companies that Petitioner contracted with or the terms of those contracts. As with the contract with ELS, there was no inquiry into whether loans or bonuses or any other money paid by Respondent to its workers was considered payroll, required to be reported, or had any impact on workers’ compensation coverage that the leasing companies provided on the employees they leased to Respondent. Respondent complied with the Request and provided the requested business records to Petitioner. Mr. Woodall forwarded the financial records to Petitioner’s penalty calculator, Monica Moye. Beyond checking CCAS, Ms. Moye was not responsible for factually determining whether Respondent had properly secured workers’ compensation insurance during the period under review. Using Respondent’s financial records, Ms. Moye calculated a penalty to be assessed to Respondent based on class code 5645 for siding installation as established by the National Council on Compensation Insurance in the Scopes Manual. She also separated Respondent’s periods of alleged noncompliance based on periodically changing approved manual rates. Approved manual rates are set by the National Council on Compensation Insurance and represent the amounts employers would pay in workers’ compensation premiums for tasks performed by their employees. On March 13, 2009, Petitioner issued an Amended Order of Penalty Assessment, assessing a penalty of $159,002.46 to Respondent. Based on additional records submitted by Respondent, Petitioner recalculated the previously-assessed penalty and issued a 2nd Amended Order of Penalty Assessment to Respondent on June 9, 2009, reducing the assessed penalty to $130,914.99. Additionally, following the hearing, the Department revised the assessed penalty and issued a 3rd Amended Order of Penalty Assessment (3rd Amended Order) reducing the assessed penalty to $130,135.03.3/ The list of employees attached to the 3rd Amended Order of Penalty Assessment contains several incidents of imputed employment listed as “cash,” “unknown” or “Star H.” There is nothing in the record that supports a finding that these amounts were paid for employment purposes. However, the evidence did not establish that Petitioner did not secure workers’ compensation coverage and the issues regarding the correctness of the amount of penalty assessed against Respondent is not addressed in this Recommended Order. Since the evidence did not establish that Respondent failed to secure workers’ compensation, the Stop-work order should be cancelled and the 3rd Amended Order of Penalty Assessment dismissed.
Recommendation Based on the findings of fact and conclusions of law, it is RECOMMENDED that the Department of Financial Services enter a Final Order that Petitioner failed to establish by clear and convincing evidence that Petitioner failed to secure workers’ compensation to its employees and canceling the Stop Work Order and dismissing the 3rd Amended Order of Penalty Assessment. DONE AND ENTERED this 2nd day of April, 2010, in Tallahassee, Leon County, Florida. S DIANE CLEAVINGER Administrative Law Judge Division of Administrative Hearings The DeSoto Building 1230 Apalachee Parkway Tallahassee, Florida 32399-3060 (850) 488-9675 Fax Filing (850) 921-6847 www.doah.state.fl.us Filed with the Clerk of the Division of Administrative Hearings this 2nd day of April, 2010.
The Issue The issues in this enforcement proceeding are whether Respondent failed to comply with Sections 440.10, 440.05, and , Florida Statutes (2003),1 and, if so, whether Petitioner correctly assessed the penalty for said failure.
Findings Of Fact Based upon observation of the demeanor and candor of each witness while testifying; documentary materials received in evidence; evidentiary rulings made pursuant to Section 120.57, Florida Statutes (2004); and stipulations of the parties, the following relevant and material facts, arrived at impartially based solely upon testimony and information presented at the final hearing, are objectively determined: At all times material, Petitioner, Department of Financial Services, Division of Workers' Compensation (Department), is the state agency responsible for enforcement of the statutory requirements that employers secure the payment of workers' compensation coverage requirements for the benefit of their employees in compliance with the dictates of Chapter 440, Florida Statutes. Employers who failed to comply with Chapter 440, Florida Statutes, are subject to enforcement provisions, including penalty assessment, of Chapter 440, Florida Statutes. At all times material, Respondent, St. James Automotive, Inc. (St. James), is a corporation domiciled in the State of Florida and engaged in automobile repair, with known business locations in Pine Island and St. James City, Florida. Both locations are owned by Richard Conrad (Mr. Conrad). On or about August 5, 2004, a Department investigator conducted an "on-site visit" at the St. James location on Pine Island Road, Pine Island, Florida. The purpose of the on-site visit was to determine whether or not St. James was in compliance with Chapter 440, Florida Statutes, regarding workers' compensation coverage for the workers found on-site. The investigator observed four individuals working on-site in automotive repair functions. One employee, when asked whether "the workers had workers' compensation coverage in place," referred the investigator to the "owner," who, at that time, was at the second business location at 2867 Oleander Street, St. James City, Florida. The investigator verified the owner's presence at the St. James City location by telephone and met him there. Upon his arrival at the St. James City location, the investigator initiated a workers' compensation coverage check on two databases. He first checked the Coverage and Compliance Automated System (CCAS) to ascertain whether St. James had in place workers' compensation coverage. The CCAS system contained current status and proof of workers' compensation coverage, if any, and record of any exemptions from workers' compensation coverage requirements filed by St. James' corporate officers. The CCAS check revealed no workers' compensation coverage filed by any corporate officers of St. James. The second system, the National Council on Compensation Insurance (NCCI), contained data on workers' compensation coverage in effect for workers (employees) in the State of Florida. NCCI similarly revealed no workers' compensation coverage in effect for St. James' Florida employees. The investigator discussed the situation and findings from both the CCAS and NCCI with Mr. Conrad who acknowledged and admitted: (1) St. James had no workers' compensation coverage in place; (2) St. James had made inquiry and arranged for an unnamed attorney to file exemptions from workers' compensation coverage on behalf of several St. James employees, but the attorney never filed exemptions; and (3) Mr. Conrad subsequently attempted to file the exemptions himself but was unsuccessful-- "because names of exemption applicants [employees] did not match the corporate information on file for St. James, Inc., at the Division of Corporations." When offered the opportunity by the Department's investigator to produce any proof of workers' compensation coverage or exemption from coverage, Mr. Conrad was unable to do so. At the conclusion of the August 5, 2004, on-site visit, and based upon a review of the CCAS and NCCI status reports and Mr. Conrad's inability to produce proof of workers' compensation coverage or exemptions, the investigator determined that St. James was not in compliance with requirements of Chapter 440, Florida Statutes. The investigator then issued a Stop Work Order on St. James' two business locations. The Stop Work Order contained an initial assessed penalty of $1,000, subject to increase to an amount equal to 1.5 times the amount of the premium the employer would have paid during the period for which coverage was not secured or whichever is greater. Mr. Conrad acknowledged his failure to conform to the requirements of Chapter 440, Florida Statutes, stating5: I guess you could say--I first of all, I am guilty, plain and simple. In other words, I did not conform. Subsequent to issuing the August 5, 2004, Stop Work Order, the Department made a written records' request to Mr. Conrad that he should provide payroll records listing all employees by name, social security number, and gross wages paid to each listed employee.6 Mr. Conrad provided the requested employee payroll records, listing himself and his wife, Cheryl L. Conrad, not as owners, stockholders or managers, but as employees. Pursuant to Section 440.107, Florida Statutes, the Department is required to link the amount of its enforcement penalty to the amount of payroll (total) paid to each employee. The persons listed on St. James' payroll records received remuneration for the performance of their work on behalf of St. James and are "employees" as defined in Subsection 440.02(15), Florida Statutes. Review of the payroll records by the Department's investigator revealed the listed employees for services performed on its behalf. The employee payroll records provided by St. James were used by the Department's investigator to reassess applicable penalty and subsequent issuance of the Amended Order of Penalty Assessment in the amount of $97,260.75.7 St. James' payroll records did not list the type of work (class code or type) each employee performed during the period in question. Accordingly, the Department's investigator properly based the penalty assessment on the highest-rated class code or type of work in which St. James was engaged, automotive repair. The highest-rated class code has the most expensive insurance premium rate associated with it, indicating the most complex activity or type of work associated with St. James' business of automotive repair. The Department's methodology and reliance on the NCCI Basic Manual for purpose of penalty calculation is standardized and customarily applied in circumstances and situations as presented herein.8 Mr. Conrad, in his petition for a Chapter 120, Florida Statutes, hearing alleged the 8380 (highest premium rate) class code applied to only three of his employees: himself, Brain Green, and William Yagmin. On the basis of this alleged penalty assessment error by the Department, Mr. Conrad seeks a reduction of the Amended Order of Penalty Assessment amount of $97,260.75. Mr. Conrad presented no evidence to substantiate his allegation that the Department's investigator assigned incorrect class codes to employees based upon the employee information Mr. Conrad provided in response to the Department's record request. To the contrary, had he enrolled in workers' compensation coverage or had he applied for exemption from coverage, Mr. Conrad would have known that his premium payment rates for coverage would have been based upon the employees' class codes he would have assigned each employee in his workers' compensation coverage application. In an attempt to defend his failure to comply with the workers' compensation coverage requirement of Chapter 440, Florida Statutes, Mr. Conrad asserted that the Department's investigator took his verbal verification that certain employees were clerical, but neglected to recognize his statement that he was also clerical, having been absent from the job-site for over three years. Mr. Conrad's excuses and avoidance testimony was not internally consistent with his earlier stated position of not conforming to the statutory requirements of Chapter 440, Florida Statutes. The above testimony was not supported by other credible evidence of record. This is critical to the credibility determination since Mr. Conrad seeks to avoid paying a significant penalty. For those reasons, his testimony lacks credibility. Mr. Conrad also attempted to shift blame testifying that--"My attorney did not file exemption forms with the Department," and my "personal attempts to file St. James' exemption form failed--[B]ecause the mailing instructions contained in the Department's form were not clear." In his final defensive effort of avoidance, Mr. Conrad testified that he offered to his employees, and they agreed to accept, unspecified "increases" in their respective salaries in lieu of St. James' providing workers' compensation coverage for them. This defense suffered from a lack of corroboration from those employees who allegedly agreed (and those who did not agree) and lack of documented evidence of such agreement. The intended inference that all his employees' reported salaries included some unspecified "salary increase" is not supported by employee identification or salary specificity and is thus unacceptable to support a finding of fact. St. James failed to produce credible evidence that the Department's Stop Work Order, the Penalty Assessment, and/or the Amended Penalty Assessment were improper. St. James failed to produce any credible evidence that the Department's use of the NCCI Basic Manual, as the basis for penalty assessment calculation based upon employee information provided by St. James, was improper and/or not based upon actual employee salary information provided by St. James. Prior to this proceeding, the Department and Mr. Conrad entered into a penalty payment agreement as authorized by Subsection 440.107(7)(a), Florida Statutes.9 The penalty payment agreement required fixed monthly payments be made by Mr. Conrad and afforded Mr. Conrad the ability to continue operation of his automotive repair business that was, by order, stopped on August 5, 2004.
Recommendation Based upon the foregoing Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law, it is hereby RECOMMENDED that the Department of Financial Services, Division of Workers' Compensation, enter a final order that affirms the Stop Work Order and the Amended Order of Penalty Assessment in the amount of $97,260.75, minus any and all periodic payments of the penalty remitted by St. James, pursuant to agreed upon conditional release from the Stop Work Order dated August 5, 2004. DONE AND ENTERED this 4th day of March, 2005, in Tallahassee, Leon County, Florida. S FRED L. BUCKINE Administrative Law Judge Division of Administrative Hearings The DeSoto Building 1230 Apalachee Parkway Tallahassee, Florida 32399-3060 (850) 488-9675 SUNCOM 278-9675 Fax Filing (850) 921-6847 www.doah.state.fl.us Filed with the Clerk of the Division of Administrative Hearings this 4th day of March, 2005.