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DEPARTMENT OF FINANCIAL SERVICES, DIVISION OF WORKERS' COMPENSATION vs ALELUYA ROOFING PLUS CONSTRUCTION, INC., 15-002801 (2015)
Division of Administrative Hearings, Florida Filed:Miles City, Florida May 20, 2015 Number: 15-002801 Latest Update: Mar. 02, 2016

The Issue The issues are whether Petitioner has proved that Respondent failed to secure workers' compensation insurance, as required by section 440.10, Florida Statutes, and, if so, the amount of the penalty, pursuant to section 440.107.

Findings Of Fact On September 18, 2013, the owner and Jesus Rodriguez, representing Respondent, signed a permit application for reroofing of a single-family residence located at 4311 Southwest 15th Street, Miami. An official of the Miami-Dade County Department of Regulatory and Economic Resources approved the plans on September 27, 2013. The record does not disclose when work commenced. However, at about 9:00 a.m. on September 25, 2013, an investigator of the Division of Workers' Compensation was randomly canvassing the area, noticed roofing work at the subject address, and conducted an inspection. The investigator observed three persons on the roof engaged in roofing work. When the investigator asked the three workers for whom they worked, one of them replied, "Oval Construction," and added that it was owned by Pedro Alfaro and Jesus R. Rodriguez (Mr. J. Rodriguez). When asked for a phone number for the owners, the worker gave the investigator a cell number for Mr. Alfaro. Prior to calling Mr. Alfaro, while still at the work site, the investigator researched Oval Construction and learned that it was an active corporation with two corporate officers: Mr. Alfaro and Mr. J. Rodriguez. The investigator learned that the corporation showed no workers' compensation exemptions for the officers or any workers' compensation coverage. While still at the worksite, the investigator then called Mr. Alfaro and asked him if Oval Construction had workers' compensation insurance. Mr. Alfaro said that Mr. J. Rodriguez handled such matters, so the investigator told Mr. Alfaro to have Mr. J. Rodriguez call the investigator immediately. Mr. J. Rodriguez did so and informed the investigator that the three workers worked for him, but not under Oval Construction; they worked for Respondent, and Respondent had workers' compensation insurance. Mr. J. Rodriguez stated that he did not have the insurance information at the moment, but would call back with the information. In the meantime, the investigator researched Respondent and learned that it was an active corporation with two officers: Mr. J. Rodriguez and Mr. Alberto Rodriguez (Mr. A. Rodriguez), who were not related. (Mr. J. Rodriguez is deceased.) Both officers had current workers' compensation exemptions, and the database indicated that Respondent leased its employees from South East Personnel Leasing Company. The investigator contacted South East Personnel Leasing and learned that the leasing contract had terminated on July 24, 2013, and Respondent had no current workers' compensation coverage through South East Personnel Leasing. At this point, the investigator called Mr. J. Rodriguez, who repeated that the workers were employed by Respondent, not Oval Construction. Subsequently, the investigator tried unsuccessfully several times to speak to Mr. J. Rodriguez. A few days after the inspection, Mr. A. Rodriguez called the investigator and arranged for a meeting between the investigator and Mr. J. Rodriguez for October 1, 2013. On October 1, 2013, the investigator and Mr. J. Rodriguez met, and the investigator served on him, in the name of Respondent, a Request for Production of Business Records for Penalty Assessment Calculation for the three-year period ending on September 25, 2013. Respondent never produced any business records to Petitioner. On October 2, 2013, Mr. J. Rodriguez caused the transfer of the building permit for the roofing work from Respondent to Blue Panther Roofing. On October 1, 2013, Mr. J. Rodriguez signed a Hold Harmless agreement holding Miami-Dade County harmless and assuming responsibility for any work already performed under the building permit issued to Respondent. Mr. A. Rodriguez testified that he knew nothing about the subject job. But Mr. J. Rodriguez was the qualifying general contractor of Respondent, was an officer of Respondent, and owned 20% of Respondent. In fact, Mr. J. Rodriguez was the only licensed or certified contractor employed by Respondent and was the sole person who could obtain building permits for work to be performed by Respondent. Mr. A. Rodriguez's lack of knowledge of the subject job is therefore not dispositive because Mr. J. Rodriguez had the authority to, and did, apply for the building permit in the name of Respondent, and he had the authority to, and did, obligate Respondent to do the subject reroofing work. During the above-described three-year period, according to Petitioner Exhibit 6, page 20, Respondent had workers' compensation insurance from October 4, 2010, through January 1, 2013. Additionally, according to Petitioner Exhibit 6, page 23, Respondent had workers' compensation insurance through South East Personnel Leasing from October 18, 2012, through February 20, 2013, and March 7, 2013, through July 24, 2013. This is borne out by the testimony of the investigator. (Tr., pp. 99-101.) Respondent thus did not have workers' compensation coverage for a total of 85 days during the three years at issue, during which time Respondent actively performed construction work in Florida. The three periods of noncoverage during the three years at issue are September 26 through October 3, 2010, for a total of 8 days; February 21, 2013, through March 6, 2013, for a total of 14 days; and July 25, 2013, through September 25, 2013, for a total of 63 days. A conflict in the evidence prevented Petitioner from proving by clear and convincing evidence a fourth period of noncoverage: October 4 through 17, 2012. Additionally, Mr. J. Rodriguez was listed as secretary of Respondent and exempt from workers' compensation insurance from March 1, 2013, through March 1, 2015, so he would be counted as an employee during the noncoverage periods of September 26, through October 3, 2010, and February 21, 2013, through February 28, 2013. Mr. A. Rodriguez was listed as president of Respondent and exempt from workers' compensation insurance from October 22, 2012, through October 22, 2014, so he would be counted as an employee during the noncoverage period of September 26, 2010, through October 3, 2010. Mr. A. Rodriguez's wife, Yubanis Ibarra, was also a corporate officer and was not exempt during one week of one noncoverage period: September 26 to October 3, 2010. On October 30, 2013, Petitioner issued an Amended Order of Penalty Assessment assessing a penalty of $15,594.34 pursuant to section 440.107(7)(d). The Amended Order of Penalty Assessment is supported by a Penalty Calculation Worksheet, which based the penalty on the three employees found on the job on the day of the inspection as employees during all periods of noncoverage and the three above-identified corporate officers during their respective periods of nonexemption that occurred while they served as officers. Subject to two exceptions, the Amended Order of Penalty Assessment correctly calculates the gross payroll based on the statewide average weekly wage multiplied by 1.5, applies the correct manual rates to the gross payroll, determines the correct evaded premium, and determines the correct penalty based on the premium multiplied by 1.5. The first exception is that Petitioner failed to prove by clear and convincing evidence a lack of coverage for the above-described 13 days in October 2012. This failure of proof noted in the preceding paragraph concerns four employees who generated total penalties of $2510.88, so the corrected total penalty would be $13,084.46. The second exception concerns the proof of the duration of employment of the three employees working on the roof at the time of the inspection on September 25, 2013. Petitioner has proved by clear and convincing evidence their employment only during the noncoverage period of July 24, 2013, through September 25, 2013, as discussed in the Conclusions of Law. For the two other noncoverage periods--three, if the period noted in paragraph 15 already had not been rejected--the penalty of $3220.05 has not been established, leaving a net penalty of $9864.41.

Recommendation It is RECOMMENDED that the Department of Financial Services, Division of Workers' Compensation, enter a final order finding Respondent guilty of not securing workers' compensation and imposing a penalty of $9864.41. DONE AND ENTERED this 13th day of November, 2015, in Tallahassee, Leon County, Florida. S ROBERT E. MEALE 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 13th day of November, 2015. COPIES FURNISHED: Leon Melnicoff, Qualified Representative Thomas Nemecek, Esquire Department of Financial Services 200 East Gaines Street Tallahassee, Florida 32399-4229 (eServed) Mariem Josefina Paez, Esquire The Law Offices of Mariem J. Paez, PLLC 300 Sevilla Avenue, Suite 304 Coral Gables, Florida 33134 (eServed) Julie Jones, CP, FRP, Agency Clerk Division of Legal Services Department of Financial Services 200 East Gaines Street Tallahassee, Florida 32399-0390 (eServed)

Florida Laws (5) 120.68440.02440.10440.107440.12 Florida Administrative Code (1) 69L-6.028
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DEPARTMENT OF FINANCIAL SERVICES, DIVISION OF WORKERS' COMPENSATION vs MAD DOG MARKETING GROUP, INC., 13-003217 (2013)
Division of Administrative Hearings, Florida Filed:Tangerine, Florida Aug. 22, 2013 Number: 13-003217 Latest Update: Mar. 19, 2015

The Issue The issue is whether the Stop-Work Order and the Third Amended Order of Penalty Assessment entered by Petitioner on July 25, 2013, and August 13, 2013, respectively, should be upheld.

Findings Of Fact The Department is the state agency tasked with the responsibility of enforcing the requirement of section 440.107(3), Florida Statutes, that employers in Florida secure the payment of workers' compensation for their employees. Respondent, Mad Dog Marketing Group, Inc., is a corporation organized under chapter 607, Florida Statutes, and was registered with the Florida Department of State, Division of Corporations, throughout the period of July 26, 2010, to July 25, 2013. At all times relevant to this proceeding, Respondent was engaged in the operation of a hardware store business with three locations in Florida. On July 25, 2013, based upon an anonymous referral, Tracey Gilbert, the Department's compliance investigator, commenced a workers' compensation compliance investigation of Respondent by visiting the job site, an appliance parts store at 730 West Brandon Boulevard, Brandon, Florida, and interviewing Sharon Belcher. According to Ms. Gilbert, Ms. Belcher informed her that she had 11 employees at the time of the site visit and that she did not have workers' compensation coverage for them. Ms. Belcher showed Ms. Gilbert an application for workers' compensation insurance and said she had not taken action with it since the company wanted a $10,000 premium. She also showed Ms. Gilbert some OSHA and workplace posters, but not the typical "broken arm poster" that describes workers' compensation coverage for a place of business. Ms. Belcher then gave Ms. Gilbert a list of Respondent's 11 current employees. On her laptop computer, Ms. Gilbert consulted the Department's Coverage and Compliance Automated System (CCAS) database to determine whether Respondent had secured workers' compensation coverage or an exemption from the requirements for coverage for its employees. CCAS is the database Ms. Gilbert routinely consults during the course of her investigations. She determined from CCAS that Respondent neither had workers' compensation coverage for her employees nor had received an exemption from such coverage from the Department. Ms. Belcher's recollection of her meeting with Ms. Gilbert differs from Ms. Gilbert's. Ms. Belcher recalled that she had applied for insurance with ADP on July 11, 2013, received the "broken arm poster," and believed she was covered at the time Ms. Belcher conducted her investigation. She offered an exhibit showing photographs of posters (but not the "broken arm poster") on the office bulletin board. She also offered an exhibit she testified was the UPS label from the tube containing the "broken arm poster." No photograph of the "broken arm poster" was produced as an exhibit. Ms. Gilbert did not contact ADP to verify whether Respondent had coverage on the date of her site visit to the Brandon store. Ms. Gilbert issued a Stop-Work Order to Respondent and a concurrent Request for Production of Business Records for Penalty Assessment Calculation at 11:20 a.m. on July 25, 2013. Ms. Belcher first submitted an application for workers' compensation coverage on July 11, 2013, but coverage was not bound on that date. Ms. Belcher submitted the paperwork to bind her insurance coverage on the afternoon of July 25, 2013, according to Mark Cristillo, an employee of ADP Insurance. Mr. Cristillo testified that he had made several attempts during the month of July 2013 to obtain the signed documents from Ms. Belcher, including an attempt as late as July 23, 2013, at 11:45 a.m. Ms. Belcher told Mr. Cristillo at that time that she had not reviewed the quote package. At 11:20 a.m., the time Ms. Gilbert's issued the Stop-Work Order on July 25, 2013, Ms. Belcher had not bound her insurance coverage. When she submitted the payment with the signed documents to ADP later that afternoon, the coverage was bound effective 12:01 a.m. on July 25, 2013. The records produced by Ms. Belcher were given to Chad Mason, one of the Department's penalty auditors, to calculate the penalty. He reviewed the records and determined the amount of gross payroll paid to Respondent's employees during the three- year penalty period preceding the investigation during which Respondent was not in compliance with the workers' compensation coverage requirements. Using Respondent's bi-weekly payroll chart, Respondent's Florida Department of Revenue UCT-6 reports, and the classification codes for each employee, Mr. Mason calculated a Third Amended Order of Penalty Assessment of $42,251.43, based upon what Respondent would have paid in workers' compensation premiums had it been in compliance with Florida's Workers' Compensation Law. The order was issued on October 24, 2013. Mr. Mason determined that the appropriate codes for Respondent's employees were 8010 and 8810, which are hardware store employees and general clerical employees, respectively. These codes were 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 NCCI, the National Council on Compensation Insurance, Inc., the nation's most authoritative data collecting and disseminating organization for workers' compensation. The parties stipulated prior to hearing that all of the individuals listed on the penalty worksheet of the Amended Order of Penalty Assessment were "employees" in the state of Florida of Respondent during the periods of non-compliance listed on the penalty worksheets. However, Respondent claimed that some of the employees were out-of-state and not subject to Florida law. Ms. Belcher testified that, as of July 25, 2013, three of its employees, Fred Hasselman, Douglas Strickland, and Josh Hyers, were employees of the Tennessee store and not subject to a Florida penalty. Mr. Hyers was a Florida employee prior to July 1, according to Ms. Belcher. However, all three of the employees were listed on the Florida Department of Revenue's 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. Mr. Mason reasonably relied upon the UCT-6 filings for the relevant time period to calculate Respondent's gross payroll in Florida. No evidence was produced to show them listed as Tennessee employees on that state's comparable tax form or any official document from outside Florida. The logical assumption is that they are Florida employees under the law. Accepting all the employees disclosed by Respondent as Florida employees led Mr. Mason to make his calculations of the penalty assessment using the appropriate codes from the Scopes Manual for hardware store and general clerical workers, 8010 and 8810. All the named employees on the Third Amended Order of Penalty Assessment were paid by Respondent in the amounts indicated on the penalty worksheet that accompanies that assessment during the penalty period of July 26, 2010, through July 25, 2013. Even though small discrepancies came up at the hearing regarding the classifications of some of Respondent's employees, the parties had stipulated to the accuracy of the classifications of those employees so those numbers will be accepted for purposes of this decision. Based upon the testimony at the hearing and the pre-hearing stipulations of the parties, the penalty assessment in the amount of $42,251.43 is accurate. Mr. Mason correctly applied the methodology for determining the amount of coverage required, determining that the appropriate premium for the three- year period would have been $28,167.50. When multiplied by the factor used to calculate the penalty, 1.5 times the premium, the total amount due is $42,251.43. The Department has proven by clear and convincing evidence that at the time the Stop-Work Order was issued and served on Respondent on the morning of July 25, 2013, Respondent had not secured workers' compensation coverage for its employees as required by chapter 440. On two occasions, August 2 and August 21, 2013, Ms. Gilbert returned to Respondent's Brandon location after the Stop-Work Order had been issued. The first was to serve the Amended Order of Penalty Assessment and the second was to serve the Second Amended Order of Penalty Assessment. On both occasions, the business was open in violation of the Stop-Work Order. A business under a Stop-Work Order may elect to enter into a payment plan after a ten percent down payment to keep the business open while a challenge to DOAH is under way. Respondent had not entered into such a plan. Therefore, the Department seeks $1,000 penalty for each of the days Ms. Gilbert visited the Brandon store and saw it open for business. This total additional penalty of $2,000 could have been greater had the Department further investigated whether the business remained open on other days after the Stop-Work Order had been imposed.

Recommendation Based on the foregoing Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law, it is RECOMMENDED that the Department issue a final order upholding the Stop-Work Order and Third Amended Order of Penalty Assessment, and assess a penalty in the amount of $42,251.43. It is further RECOMMENDED that the Department fine Respondent an additional $1,000 per day for the two days Respondent did not comply with the Stop-Work Order, resulting in a total penalty of $44,251.43. DONE AND ENTERED this 20th day of December, 2013, in Tallahassee, Leon County, Florida. S ROBERT S. COHEN 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 December, 2013. COPIES FURNISHED: Trevor S. Suter, Esquire Department of Financial Services 200 East Gaines Street Tallahassee, Florida 32399 Kristian Eiler Dunn, Esquire Dickens and Dunn, P.L. 517 East College Avenue Tallahassee, Florida 32301 Julie Jones, CP, FRP, Agency Clerk Division of Legal Services Department of Financial Services 200 East Gaines Street Tallahassee, Florida 32399-0390

Florida Laws (9) 120.569120.57120.68440.02440.05440.10440.107440.3857.105 Florida Administrative Code (1) 28-106.2015
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DEPARTMENT OF FINANCIAL SERVICES, DIVISION OF WORKERS' COMPENSATION vs DONALD KEHR, D/B/A JNK FRAMING, INC., A DISSOLVED FLORIDA CORPORATION, 16-001986 (2016)
Division of Administrative Hearings, Florida Filed:Daytona Beach, Florida Apr. 12, 2016 Number: 16-001986 Latest Update: Dec. 19, 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.

Florida Laws (9) 120.569120.57120.68440.02440.10440.107440.12440.38683.14 Florida Administrative Code (1) 69L-6.028
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DEPARTMENT OF FINANCIAL SERVICES, DIVISION OF WORKERS' COMPENSATION vs FOREVER FLOORS AND MOORE, INC., 15-003944 (2015)
Division of Administrative Hearings, Florida Filed:Jacksonville, Florida Jul. 15, 2015 Number: 15-003944 Latest Update: Jul. 29, 2016

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.

Florida Laws (9) 120.569120.68440.02440.05440.10440.107440.12440.38538.34
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DEPARTMENT OF FINANCIAL SERVICES, DIVISION OF WORKERS' COMPENSATION vs SHRIJI KRUPA, INC., 14-003093 (2014)
Division of Administrative Hearings, Florida Filed:Port St. Lucie, Florida Jul. 02, 2014 Number: 14-003093 Latest Update: Jan. 29, 2015

The Issue The issue in this case is whether Respondent violated the provisions of chapter 440, Florida Statutes, by failing to secure the payment of workers' compensation, as alleged in the Stop-Work Order and 3rd Amended Order of Penalty Assessment, and, if so, what penalty is appropriate.

Findings Of Fact Petitioner, Department of Financial Services, Division of Workers' Compensation, is the state agency responsible for enforcing the requirement that employers in the State of Florida secure the payment of workers' compensation for their employees and corporate officers. Respondent, Shriji Krupa, Inc., is a Florida corporation engaged in business operations as a gas station (self-service and convenience-retail) in the State of Florida. Mr. Hemant Parikh, one of Respondent's corporate officers, testified that, on November 20, 2012, Respondent was inspected by Petitioner's Compliance Investigator, Mike Fuller. Mr. Fuller advised Mr. Parikh that Respondent needed to close the store. According to Mr. Hemant Parikh, at the time of inspection, Respondent had two corporate officers and four additional employees. Mr. Parikh explained that, at the time of inspection, Respondent had two store locations with three employees working at each locale. Mr. Shrikant Parikh, another corporate officer, testified that, at the time of inspection, Respondent was operating under the mistaken belief that its corporate officers were exempt from workers' compensation coverage. Pursuant to the record evidence, on November 28, 2012, Mr. Fuller served a Stop-Work Order and Order of Penalty Assessment on Respondent. Pursuant to the Stop-Work Order, Respondent was ordered to cease all business operations for all worksites in the state based on the following: Failure to secure the payment of workers' compensation in violation of sections 440.10(1), 440.38(1), and 440.107(2) F.S., by: failing to obtain coverage that meets the requirements of Chapter 440, F.S., and the Insurance Code. After receiving the Stop-Work Order, on that same date, Respondent obtained workers' compensation coverage with an effective date of November 29, 2012. Respondent has maintained appropriate coverage to date. Following the Stop-Work Order, Respondent submitted various records for Petitioner's review.2/ Petitioner's sole witness was Ms. Lynne Murcia. Ms. Murcia works in Petitioner's Bureau of Compliance wherein she calculates penalties for those employers found in violation of the workers' compensation laws. Ms. Murcia performs approximately 200 penalty calculations per year. Ms. Murcia first became involved with Respondent in January 2013, when she received an assignment to perform a penalty calculation. Ms. Murcia reviewed all records previously submitted by Respondent. From the records received, Ms. Murcia was able to determine that Respondent employed four or more employees on a regular basis. Ms. Murcia explained that "employees" include corporate officers that have not elected to be exempt from workers' compensation. After conducting a search within the Florida Division of Corporations, Ms. Murcia was able to determine that no exemptions existed for Respondent's corporate officers. Ms. Murcia further conducted a proof of coverage search via Petitioner's Coverage and Compliance Automated System ("CCAS"), which is a database that contains all insurance coverage and exemptions for each employer throughout the State of Florida. The search revealed that Respondent possessed appropriate coverage from November 29, 2012, to the present; however, no prior coverage was indicated. Ms. Murcia conducted a penalty assessment for the non- compliance period of November 29, 2009, through November 28, 2012. From the records submitted by Respondent, Ms. Murcia correctly identified Respondent's employees and gross wages paid during the penalty period. All of the individuals listed on the Penalty Worksheet of the 3rd Amended Order of Penalty Assessment, dated August 27, 2014, were "employees" (as that term is defined in section 440.02(15)(a), Florida Statutes) of Respondent during the period of noncompliance listed on the penalty worksheet. From a description of the Respondent's business operations, Ms. Murcia determined Respondent's classification code. She explained that classification codes are established by the National Council of Compensation Insurance ("NCCI"). A classification code is a four-digit code number that is assigned to a specific group of tasks, duties, and responsibilities for a specific grouping of business. Ms. Murcia further testified that the classification codes are associated with a manual rate which is the actual dollar amount of risk associated with a particular code.3/ The manual rates are also established by NCCI. Class Code 8061, used on the penalty worksheet attached to the 3rd Amended Order of Penalty Assessment, and as defined by the NCCI Scopes Manual, is the correct occupational classification for Respondent. From the assigned classification code number, 8061, Ms. Murcia calculated the appropriate manual rate for the penalty period. The manual rates used on the penalty worksheet attached to the 3rd Amended Order of Penalty Assessment are the correct manual rates. The total penalty of $21,205.19 is the correct penalty for the employees listed on the penalty worksheet attached to the 3rd Amended Order of Penalty Assessment.

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 determining that Respondent Shriji Krupa, Inc., violated the requirement in chapter 440, Florida Statutes, to secure workers' compensation coverage, and imposing a total penalty assessment of $21,205.19. DONE AND ENTERED this 30th day of October, 2014, in Tallahassee, Leon County, Florida. S TODD P. RESAVAGE 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 October, 2014.

Florida Laws (6) 120.569120.57440.02440.10440.107440.16
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DEPARTMENT OF FINANCIAL SERVICES, DIVISION OF WORKERS' COMPENSATION vs LAWRENCE SIMON, 02-003379 (2002)
Division of Administrative Hearings, Florida Filed:Ocala, Florida Aug. 27, 2002 Number: 02-003379 Latest Update: Sep. 25, 2003

The Issue The issue to be determined is whether Respondent complied with coverage requirements of the workers' compensation law, Chapter 440, Florida Statutes. A determination of whether Respondent functioned as an employer is a preliminary issue to be resolved.

Findings Of Fact Petitioner is the agency of state government currently responsible for enforcing the requirement of Section 440.107, Florida Statutes, that employers secure the payment of compensation for their employees. Respondent works in the construction industry as a house framer. Petitioner's investigator received a report of a violation of the workers' compensation law on May 21, 2002. When the investigator arrived at the construction site located at 8225 Southwest 103rd Street Road, Ocala, Florida, he observed four men, including Respondent, installing trusses at a residence under construction. Respondent was identified by the other men as the person for whom they were working on the job. All four men told the investigator that they were employees of Dove Enterprises (DOVE). Upon further investigation, the owner of DOVE and also the general contractor of record, Steven Slocumb, stated to the investigator that DOVE operated as the subcontractor for Triple Crown Homes. Slocumb further stated that DOVE, through Slocumb, in turn subcontracted the work to Respondent on a piece rate or square foot basis. Respondent, according to Slocumb, in turn hired the other three men. When Petitioner's investigator returned to the construction site, the four men were gone. None of the four men had an exemption from coverage requirements of the workers' compensation law and none of them had workers' compensation insurance. Consequently, the investigator determined that Respondent was an employer both of himself and the three other workers and that all four were unprotected by workers' compensation insurance. On June 27, 2002, the investigator issued the Stop Work and Penalty Assessment Order at issue in this proceeding. The Order levied the minimum penalty under Section 440.107, Florida Statutes, of $1,100.00. Slocumb and Respondent appeared at the final hearing. Respondent's position was that he and the other three men were employees of DOVE. None of the men produced documentation of such an employment relationship. Rather, documentation presented shows that DOVE paid Respondent for equipment rental. Additionally, payments to Respondent from DOVE for the jobs in question did not include adjustments for employment taxes that would have applied had Respondent been an employee. Respondent's testimony is not credited. Slocumb confirmed the facts determined by the investigator. Slocumb's testimony was candid, direct and creditable.

Recommendation Based upon the foregoing Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law, it is RECOMMENDED that Petitioner enter a final order confirming the Stop Work and Penalty Assessment Order at issue in this proceeding. DONE AND ENTERED this 8th day of July, 2003, in Tallahassee, Leon County, Florida. S DON W. DAVIS 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 8th day of July, 2003. COPIES FURNISHED: Lawrence Simon 1683 Southeast 160th Terrace Oklawaha, Florida 33379 David C. Hawkins, Esquire Department of Financial Services Division of Workers' Compensation 200 East Gaines Street Tallahassee, Florida 32399-4229 Honorable Tom Gallagher Chief Financial Officer Department of Financial Services The Capitol, Plaza Level 11 Tallahassee, Florida 32399-0300 Mark Casteel, General Counsel Department of Financial Services The Capitol, Lower Level 11 Tallahassee, Florida 32399-0300

Florida Laws (8) 120.569120.57440.02440.10440.107440.13440.16440.38
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DEPARTMENT OF FINANCIAL SERVICES, DIVISION OF WORKERS' COMPENSATION vs ELITE RESTORATION AND CONSTRUCTION, LLC, 17-003814 (2017)
Division of Administrative Hearings, Florida Filed:Brooksville, Florida Jul. 05, 2017 Number: 17-003814 Latest Update: Jul. 27, 2018

The Issue The issue in this case is whether Elite Restoration and Construction, LLC (Respondent), violated the provisions of chapter 440, Florida Statutes,1/ by failing to secure the payment of workers’ compensation, as alleged in the Stop-Work Order and Second Amended Order of Penalty Assessment; and, if so, what is the appropriate penalty.

Findings Of Fact The Department is the state agency responsible for enforcing the statutory requirement that employers secure the payment of workers' compensation for the benefit of their employees and corporate officers. Respondent is an active Florida corporation that was formed on August 28, 2009, with a principal address of 7185 West Village Drive, Homosassa, Florida 34446. Respondent was engaged in business operations in the state of Florida during the entire period of November 2, 2014, to November 1, 2016. Brian Johnson (Respondent’s owner or Mr. Johnson) is Respondent's sole shareholder, owning 100 percent of the stock. The Department's investigator, Michael Robinson, commenced a random worksite compliance investigation on November 1, 2016, at a gas station at 970 Atlantic Boulevard, Jacksonville, Florida 32225. He observed Respondent's owner, Mr. Johnson, and three others, Tim Neeld, Derrick Windier, and James Ingash, painting a metal canopy covering the gas pumps. Mr. Johnson told the investigator that his company, Elite Restoration & Construction, LLC, was a subcontractor for Aluminum Plus of DeLand, Florida. By searching the Division's Coverage and Compliance Automated System, the investigator determined that Brian Johnson obtained a workers' compensation exemption on October 12, 2016, or 20 days prior to the investigation, and further determined that an employee leasing contract previously held by Respondent terminated on January 15, 2015, which is more than nine months prior to the investigation. Mr. Johnson confirmed that Respondent had an exemption for himself, effective October 12, 2016, but did not have any workers' compensation insurance for its employees. On November 1, 2016, after consulting with a supervisor, the Department's investigator issued the Stop-Work Order, which was posted at Respondent's worksite and personally served upon Respondent’s owner. On the same day, the investigator also personally served the Request for Production, which requested business records to determine Respondent's payroll during the two-year penalty period proscribed by section 440.107(7)(d)1., which in this case is from November 2, 2014, to November 1, 2016. The Request for Production explicitly states that the requested records must be provided within 10 business days from receipt of the request. Respondent obtained an Agreed Order of Conditional Release from the Stop-Work Order on November 8, 2016, by terminating the three workers observed during the compliance investigation who did not have workers’ compensation coverage and paying the Department a $1,000 down payment toward the penalty that would be calculated in this case. Respondent produced business records for penalty calculation on November 17, 2016, and February 28, 2017, which is beyond the 10-day time period required by the Request for Production.2/ The Department's penalty auditor, Lynne Murcia, used those records to calculate a $21,475.30 penalty for failing to comply with the workers' compensation insurance requirements of chapter 440. On April 20, 2017, when Respondent’s owner came to the Department’s Jacksonville office, he was personally served with the Amended Penalty and advised of his right to seek administrative review of the Stop-Work Order and Amended Penalty. Mr. Johnson filed a petition for hearing on behalf of Respondent on May 5, 2017, stating that the penalty calculated was wrong because it included income earned in states other than Florida. Respondent produced additional business records on May 17, August 21, and August 31, 2017, for the purpose of demonstrating that a portion of his company’s payroll was derived from work completed at worksites outside of Florida, and arguing that the out-of-state payroll should not be included in the penalty calculation. The invoices showed $182,056.78 in total income, consisting of $77,268 from 14 jobs in Florida, and $104,788.60 for 14 jobs outside of the State of Florida. Upon initial review, the Department’s auditor declined to make any adjustments because the invoices did not provide information showing earnings of specific employees for jobs outside of Florida. Thereafter, Mr. Johnson produced additional records that allowed the Department’s auditor to trace out-of-state employment to transactions in Respondent’s general ledger. The Department's auditor reviewed Respondent's additional records and removed out-of-state payroll and per diem payments. In accordance with that review, the Department issued the 2nd Amended Penalty which reduced the penalty to $16,671.14. The 2nd Amended Penalty also reduced the 2016 payroll attributed to Respondent's owner. Respondent was an "employer" in the state of Florida, as that term is defined in section 440.02(16), from November 2, 2014, to November 1, 2016. Respondent did not secure the payment of workers' compensation insurance coverage, nor have others secured the payment of workers' compensation insurance coverage for the employees listed on the penalty worksheet of the 2nd Amended Penalty during the periods of noncompliance listed on the penalty worksheet. None of the employees listed on the penalty worksheet of the 2nd Amended Penalty had a valid Florida workers' compensation coverage exemption during the periods of noncompliance listed on the penalty worksheet. In the past, Respondent had an employee leasing contract with Southeast Personnel Leasing, Inc. That contract was terminated on January 15, 2015, due to the leasing company’s concerns about out-of-state employment that would not be covered by the leasing company's workers' compensation insurance. None of the employees listed on the penalty worksheet of the 2nd Amended Penalty were "independent contractors" as that term is defined in section 440.02(15)(d)1. None of the employees listed on the penalty worksheet of the 2nd Amended Penalty were employees of a temporary labor company. Employees on the penalty worksheet of the 2nd Amended Penalty are correctly classified under Class Code 5474, painting, as defined in the "Scopes Manual" published by the National Council on Compensation Insurance, Inc. (NCCI), and adopted in Florida Administrative Code Rule 69L-6.021(2)(jj). The approved manual rates used in the penalty worksheet of the 2nd Amended Penalty, as defined by the NCCI Scopes Manual and adopted by the Office of Insurance Regulation, are the correct manual rates for the corresponding periods of noncompliance listed on the penalty worksheet. In calculating the 2nd Amended Penalty, the Department’s auditor used the worksheet required by rule 69L-6.027, along with Respondent’s bank statements, check images, general ledger, and tax returns filed with the Internal Revenue Service. The auditor capped Respondent’s owner’s pay for that portion of 2014 falling within the penalty period because his salary and dividend totaling $73,484 in 2014 exceeded the statewide average of $862.51 per week or $44,850.52 per year. She also adjusted the period of noncompliance for Mr. Johnson, pursuant to rule 69L-6.028(2), because he obtained an exemption from Florida’s Workers’ Compensation Law on October 12, 2016. The auditor explained that she used Respondent’s tax returns for 2014 and 2015 because she believed they were the most reliable indication of salaries and wages, officer compensation, and payroll for outside services and subcontractors. She further explained that she used Respondent’s tax returns and general ledger as the most accurate sources for determining payroll for 2016. The auditor’s explanation is reasonable and credited. Mr. Johnson questioned the auditor’s method of determining payroll and offered alternative methods using spreadsheets he created to identify what he called “member draws” and other summaries. The invoices provided by Respondent to the Department, however, do not match the summaries; and Respondent’s method of determining payroll, when compared to the method utilized by the Department, is not accurate or reliable. The auditor’s method reflected in the 2nd Amended Penalty appropriately applied approved manual rates corresponding to Class Code 5474, painting, to determine the evaded workers’ compensation insurance premium. Then, the evaded premium was properly multiplied by two in accordance with section 440.107(7)(d)1.

Recommendation Based upon the foregoing Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law, it is RECOMMENDED that the Department enter a final order, consistent with this Recommended Order, upholding the Stop-Work Order and imposing the penalty set forth in the 2nd Amended Order of Penalty Assessment against Elite Restoration and Construction, LLC. DONE AND ENTERED this 20th day of February, 2018, in Tallahassee, Leon County, Florida. S JAMES H. PETERSON, III 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 February, 2018.

Florida Laws (11) 120.569120.57120.6840.02440.01440.02440.10440.107440.38440.39605.0102
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DEPARTMENT OF FINANCIAL SERVICES, DIVISION OF WORKERS' COMPENSATION vs LEE ROY LAMOND SIZEMORE, D/B/A LEE'S SCREEN AND REPAIRS, 15-003983 (2015)
Division of Administrative Hearings, Florida Filed:Orlando, Florida Jul. 16, 2015 Number: 15-003983 Latest Update: Jul. 29, 2016

The Issue The issue in this case is whether the Respondent should be assessed a penalty for an alleged failure to obtain workers’ compensation, as charged in a Stop-Work Order and Amended Order of Penalty Assessment.

Findings Of Fact On March 3, 2015, Kirk Glover, an investigator employed by the Petitioner, observed two men who appeared to him to be installing soffits on a home at 8905 Dove Valley Way in the Champions Gate residential development near Davenport, Florida (the worksite). The two men were the Respondent, Lee Roy Lamond Sizemore, and his son, Chris Sizemore. The investigator asked the Respondent for the name of his company. The Respondent answered that he had not established his company, which was to be named “Lee’s Screen and Repairs.” The investigator then asked the Respondent if he had workers’ compensation coverage or an exemption or exclusion from the requirement to have coverage. The Respondent answered, no. The investigator verified this information and concluded that the Respondent was in violation. The investigator asked the Respondent to provide business records to facilitate the computation of the appropriate penalty. In response, the Respondent provided all the records he had for 2015, which consisted of bank statements on a personal account he shared with his wife, and their joint income tax returns for 2013 and 2014. The bank statements did not reflect any business activity. The 2014 tax return indicated that the Respondent was self-employed in construction but had no income for that year. The 2013 tax return indicated that the Respondent was self-employed selling and installing pool enclosures and had gross income of $6,264 that year. Based on the information provided by the Respondent, the Petitioner calculated a penalty of $11,121.16. The calculated penalty included $1,633.84 for the Respondent for the period from July 1 to December 31, 2013, based on the tax return for 2013. It also included $4,743.66 each for the Respondent and his son for the period from January 1 to March 3, 2015; those amounts were based on income imputed to them because the records provided for that period were deemed insufficient. The Respondent did not dispute the penalty calculation, assuming that workers’ compensation coverage was required and that penalties were owed. However, the evidence was not clear and convincing that coverage was required for either the Respondent or his son in 2015. The Respondent testified that he was in the process of establishing his business under the name of Lee’s Screen and Repairs on March 3, 2015. Up to and including that day, he was self-employed, but there was no clear and convincing evidence that he or his son had worked or had any income in 2015. The Respondent testified that his son had been released from prison in 2014, was not employed, and needed money. The Respondent brought his son to the worksite on March 3, 2015, hoping that the contractor on the job would hire him and his son to do soffit and fascia work. He had not yet seen the contractor when the Petitioner’s investigator arrived, and neither he nor his son had any agreement with the contractor to begin work or be paid. There was no clear and convincing evidence that there was any agreement by anyone to pay either the Respondent or his son for any work on March 3, 2015, or at any other time in 2015. The Petitioner did not contradict the Respondent’s testimony. In this case, the absence of business records for 2015 is evidence that no business was conducted that year, consistent with the Respondent’s testimony, and does not support the imputation of income and assessment of a penalty for 2015.

Recommendation Based upon 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 a penalty against the Respondent in the amount of $1,633.84 for 2013, but no penalty for 2014 or 2015. DONE AND ENTERED this 20th day of November, 2015, in Tallahassee, Leon County, Florida. S J. LAWRENCE JOHNSTON 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. COPIES FURNISHED: Trevor S. Suter, Esquire Department of Financial Services 200 East Gaines Street Tallahassee, Florida 32399 (eServed) Lee Roy Sizemore 9728 Piney Port Circle Orlando, Florida 32825 Julie Jones, CP, FRP, Agency Clerk Division of Legal Services Department of Financial Services 200 East Gaines Street Tallahassee, Florida 32399-0390 (eServed)

Florida Laws (4) 440.02440.10440.107440.38
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DEPARTMENT OF FINANCIAL SERVICES, DIVISION OF WORKERS' COMPENSATION vs GEORGE WASHINGTON BEATTY, III, 15-003653 (2015)
Division of Administrative Hearings, Florida Filed:Tallahassee, Florida Jun. 24, 2015 Number: 15-003653 Latest Update: Nov. 03, 2016

The Issue At issue in this proceeding is whether the Respondent, George Washington Beatty, III, failed to abide by the coverage requirements of the Workers' Compensation Law, chapter 440, Florida Statutes, by not obtaining workers' compensation insurance for himself and/or his 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. George Washington Beatty, III, is a sole proprietor who works as a painter and general construction handyman in the vicinity of Panama City. The types of work performed by Mr. Beatty are properly considered construction industry work. Mr. Beatty’s business is not incorporated. He has no regular employees other than himself. His Form 1099-MISC tax forms indicate that he was actively engaged in performing construction work during the two-year audit period from September 9, 2012, through September 8, 2014. Carl Woodall is a Department compliance investigator based in Panama City. On September 8, 2014, Mr. Woodall drove up to 1803 New Hampshire Avenue in Lynn Haven, a vacant house where he saw a “for sale” sign and indications of work being performed on the house: the garage door was open and contained a great deal of painting materials such as drop cloths and paint buckets. A work van and a pickup truck were parked in the driveway. Mr. Woodall testified that as he walked up to the front door, he could see someone inside on a ladder, painting the ceiling. As Mr. Woodall started to go in the front door, he was met by Mr. Beatty on his way out the door. Mr. Woodall introduced himself and gave Mr. Beatty his business card. Mr. Woodall asked him the name of his business and Mr. Beatty stated that he did not know what Mr. Woodall was talking about. Mr. Beatty then told Mr. Woodall that he worked for Brush Stroke Painting but that he was not working this job for Brush Stroke. Mr. Beatty told Mr. Woodall that he was helping out a friend. Mr. Woodall asked whether Mr. Beatty had workers’ compensation insurance coverage, and Mr. Beatty again stated that he did not know what Mr. Woodall was talking about. He was just there helping out his friend, the owner of the house. Mr. Woodall asked Mr. Beatty to give him the owner’s name and phone number. Mr. Beatty went out to his van to retrieve the information. While Mr. Beatty was out of the house, Mr. Woodall took the opportunity to speak with the three other men working in the house. The first man, whom Mr. Woodall approached, was immediately hostile. He said that he was not working for anyone, that he was just helping someone out. He walked out of the house and never returned while Mr. Woodall was there. Mr. Woodall walked into the kitchen and spoke to a man who was on a ladder, painting. The man identified himself as Dennis Deal and stated that he was working for Mr. Beatty for eight dollars an hour in cash. He told Mr. Woodall that he helped out sometimes when Mr. Beatty needed help. Before Mr. Woodall could speak to the third person, Mr. Beatty came back into the house with the owner’s contact information. Mr. Beatty continued to deny that he was paying anyone to work in the house. With Mr. Beatty present, Mr. Woodall spoke with the third man, Michael Leneave, who stated that Mr. Beatty was paying him ten dollars an hour in cash. Mr. Woodall then took Mr. Beatty over to Mr. Deal, who reiterated that Mr. Beatty was paying him eight dollars an hour. Mr. Beatty responded that he could not believe the men were saying that because he had never told them a price. Mr. Woodall asked Mr. Beatty to identify the man who left the house, and Mr. Beatty told him it was Tommy Mahone. Mr. Beatty stated that Mr. Mahone had a bad temper and probably left to get a beer. After speaking with Mr. Beatty and the other men, Mr. Woodall phoned Brian Daffin (Mr. Daffin), the owner of the house. Mr. Woodall knew Mr. Daffin as the owner of an insurance company in Panama City. Mr. Daffin told Mr. Woodall that Mr. Beatty was painting his house, but was evasive as to other matters. Mr. Woodall stated that as the owner of an insurance company, Mr. Daffin was surely familiar with workers’ compensation insurance requirements and that he needed a straight answer as to whether Mr. Daffin had hired Mr. Beatty to paint the house. Mr. Daffin stated that he did not want to get Mr. Beatty in trouble, but finally conceded that he had hired Mr. Beatty to paint the house. Of the other three men, Mr. Daffin was familiar only with Mr. Mahone. He told Mr. Woodall that he had hired Mr. Beatty alone and did not know the details of Mr. Beatty’s arrangements with the other three men. At the hearing, Mr. Beatty testified that he was asked by Mr. Daffin to help him paint his house as a favor. Mr. Beatty had met Mr. Daffin through James Daffin, Mr. Daffin’s father and Mr. Beatty’s friend. No one was ever paid for anything. Mr. Beatty stated that he took the lead in speaking to Mr. Woodall because he was the only one of the four men in the house who was sober. He told Mr. Woodall that he was in charge because Mr. Daffin had asked him to oversee the work. None of the three men alleged to have been working for Mr. Beatty testified at the hearing. Mr. Daffin did not testify. Mr. Beatty’s testimony is thus the only direct evidence of the working arrangement, if any, which obtained between Mr. Beatty and the three other men present at the house on September 8, 2014. The only evidence to the contrary was Mr. Woodall’s hearsay testimony regarding his conversations with the three men and with Mr. Daffin. Mr. Woodall checked the Department's Coverage and Compliance Automated System ("CCAS") database to determine whether Mr. Beatty 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 Mr. Beatty had no exemption or workers' compensation insurance coverage for himself or any employees. There was no evidence that Mr. Beatty used an employee leasing service. Based on his jobsite interviews with the alleged employees and Mr. Beatty, his telephone conversation with Mr. Daffin, and his CCAS computer search, Mr. Woodall concluded that as of September 8, 2014, Mr. Beatty had three employees working in the construction industry and that he had failed to procure workers’ compensation coverage for himself and these employees in violation of chapter 440. Mr. Woodall consequently issued a Stop-Work Order that he personally served on Mr. Beatty on September 8, 2014. Also on September 8, 2014, Mr. Woodall served Mr. Beatty with a Request for Production of Business Records for Penalty Assessment Calculation, asking for payroll and accounting records to enable the Department to determine Mr. Beatty’s payroll and an appropriate penalty for the period from September 9, 2012, through September 8, 2014. Mr. Beatty provided the Department with no documents in response to the Request for Production. On September 24, 2014, the Department issued an Amended Order of Penalty Assessment that assessed a total penalty of $141,790.96. The Amended Order of Penalty Assessment was served on Mr. Beatty via hand-delivery on October 16, 2014. 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 September 9, 2012, through September 8, 2014. § 440.107(7)(d), Fla. Stat. Because Mr. Beatty initially provided no payroll records for himself or the three men alleged to have worked for him on September 8, 2014, the penalty calculator lacked sufficient business records to determine an 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 Florida Administrative Code 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 5474, titled “Painting NOC & Shop Operations, Drivers,” which is defined in part as “the general painting classification. It contemplates exterior and interior painting of residential or commercial structures that are constructed of wood, concrete, stone or a combination thereof regardless of height.” The corresponding rule provision is rule 69L-6.021(2)(jj). The penalty calculator used the approved manual rates corresponding to Class Code 5474 for the periods of non-compliance to calculate the penalty. Subsequent to issuance of the Amended Order of Penalty Assessment, Mr. Beatty submitted to the Department, IRS Wage and Income Transcripts for the tax years of 2011, 2012, and 2013, but not for tax year 2014. These Transcripts consisted of Form 1099-MISC forms completed by the business entities for which Mr. Beatty had performed work during the referenced tax years. The Department used the Transcripts to calculate the penalty for the 2012 and 2013 portions of the penalty period and imputed Mr. Beatty’s gross payroll for the 2014 portion pursuant to the procedures required by section 440.107(7)(e) and rule 69L-6.028. On August 25, 2015, the Department issued a Second Amended Order of Penalty Assessment in the amount of $58,363.88, based on the mixture of actual payroll information and imputation referenced above. At the final hearing convened on November 3, 2015, Mr. Beatty stated that he now had the Wage and Income Transcript for tax year 2014 and would provide it to the Department. At the close of hearing, the undersigned suggested, and the Department agreed, that the proceeding should be stayed to give the Department an opportunity to review the new records and recalculate the proposed penalty assessment. On December 21, 2015, the Department issued a Third Amended Order of Penalty Assessment in the amount of $9,356.52. Ms. Proano herself calculated this penalty. The Third Amended Order assessed a total penalty of $9,199.98 for work performed by Mr. Beatty during the penalty period, based on the Wage and Income Transcripts that Mr. Beatty submitted. The Third Amended Order assessed a total penalty of $156.54 for work performed by Messrs. Mahone, Deal, and Leneave on September 8, 2014. This penalty was imputed and limited to the single day on which Mr. Woodall observed the men working at the house in Lynn Haven. Mr. Beatty’s records indicated no payments to any employee, during the penalty period or otherwise. 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 Third Amended Order of Penalty Assessment. The Department has demonstrated by clear and convincing evidence that Mr. Beatty was in violation of the workers' compensation coverage requirements of chapter 440. The Department has also demonstrated by clear and convincing evidence that the penalty was correctly calculated through the use of the approved manual rates, business records provided by Mr. Beatty, and the penalty calculation worksheet adopted by the Department in rule 69L-6.027. However, the Department did not demonstrate by clear and convincing evidence that Tommy Mahone, Dennis Deal, and Michael Leneave were employees of Mr. Beatty on September 8, 2014. There is direct evidence that Mr. Woodall saw the men working in the house, but the only evidence as to whether or how they were being paid are the hearsay statements of the three men as relayed by Mr. Woodall. The men were not available for cross-examination; their purported statements to Mr. Woodall could not be tested in an adversarial fashion. Mr. Beatty’s testimony that the men were not working for him and that he was merely supervising their work as a favor to Mr. Daffin is the only sworn, admissible evidence before this tribunal on that point. Mr. Beatty was adamant in maintaining that he did not hire the men, and his testimony raises sufficient ambiguity in the mind of the factfinder to preclude a finding that Messrs. Mahone, Deal, and Leneave were his employees. Mr. Beatty could point to no exemption or insurance policy that would operate to lessen or extinguish the assessed penalty as to his own work. The Department has demonstrated by clear and convincing evidence that Respondent was engaged in the construction industry in Florida during the period of September 9, 2012, through September 8, 2014, and that Respondent failed to carry workers’ compensation insurance for himself as required by Florida’s Workers’ Compensation Law from September 9, 2012, through September 8, 2014. The penalty proposed by the Third Amended Order of Penalty Assessment should be reduced to $9,199.98, the amount sought to be imposed on Mr. Beatty himself.

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 $9,199.98 against George Washington Beatty, III. DONE AND ENTERED this 6th day of July, 2016, 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 Fax Filing (850) 921-6847 www.doah.state.fl.us Filed with the Clerk of the Division of Administrative Hearings this 6th day of July, 2016.

Florida Laws (8) 120.569120.57440.02440.05440.10440.107440.12440.38
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DEPARTMENT OF FINANCIAL SERVICES, DIVISION OF WORKERS' COMPENSATION vs BEST AFFORDABLE CONTRACTORS, LLC, 20-002670 (2020)
Division of Administrative Hearings, Florida Filed:Jacksonville, Florida Jun. 11, 2020 Number: 20-002670 Latest Update: Feb. 08, 2025

The Issue Whether Petitioner, Department of Financial Services, Division of Workers’ Compensation (“Division”), properly issued a Stop-Work Order and 4th Amended Penalty Assessment against Respondent, Best Affordable Contractors, LLC (“Respondent”), for failing to obtain workers' compensation insurance that meets the requirements of chapter 440, Florida Statutes.

Findings Of Fact On July 31, 2020, the parties filed a Joint Pre-hearing Stipulation, by which the parties stipulated to the facts set forth in the following paragraphs 2 through 17. Stipulated Findings The Division is the state agency responsible for enforcing the statutory requirement that employers secure the payment of workers’ compensation for the benefit of their employees and corporate officers. Respondent was engaged in business operations in Florida during the entire period of January 4, 2017, through January 3, 2019. On January 3, 2019, the Division’s investigator, Deryck Gallegos, commenced a workers’ compensation compliance investigation at Respondent’s work site at 1203 Dancy St., Jacksonville, Florida 32205. On January 3, 2019, Respondent had a paid subcontractor, Terry Wayne Lyons, Sr., performing roofing work at 1203 Dancy St., Jacksonville, Florida 32205. On January 3, 2019, Respondent’s subcontractor, Terry Wayne Lyons, Sr., had five paid employees performing roofing work at 1203 Dancy St., Jacksonville, Florida 32205: Terry Wayne Lyons, Sr.; Jahru Li-Ly Campbell; Kevin Lee Hagan; Terry Wayne Lyons, Jr.; and Jonathan Wayne McCall. On January 3, 2019, Respondent’s subcontractor, Terry Wayne Lyons, Sr., had no workers’ compensation exemptions and no workers’ compensation insurance coverage. On January 3, 2019, Respondent had no workers’ compensation exemptions and no workers’ compensation insurance coverage. On January 3, 2019, the Division issued a Stop-Work Order for Specific Worksite Only and Order of Penalty Assessment to Respondent. The Division served the Stop-Work Order for Specific Worksite Only and Order of Penalty Assessment on Respondent by personal service on January 4, 2019. The Division served a Request for Production of Business Records for Penalty Assessment Calculation on Respondent on January 4, 2019. On February 1, 2019, the Division issued an Amended Order of Penalty Assessment to Respondent. The Division served the Amended Order of Penalty Assessment on Respondent on February 7, 2019. The Amended Order of Penalty Assessment imposed a penalty of $353,349.72. On June 3, 2020, the Division issued a 2nd Amended Order of Penalty Assessment to Respondent. The Division served the 2nd Amended Order of Penalty Assessment on Respondent on June 11, 2020. The 2nd Amended Order of Penalty Assessment imposed a penalty of $68,705.29. On July 30, 2020, the Division served a 3rd Amended Order of Penalty Assessment to Respondent. The 3rd Amended Order of Penalty Assessment imposed a penalty of $46,805.02. Throughout the penalty period, Respondent was an “employer” in the state of Florida, as that term is defined in section 440.02(16). Respondent did not obtain exemptions from workers’ compensation insurance coverage requirements for the entries listed on the penalty worksheet of the 3rd Amended Order of Penalty Assessment as “Employer’s Payroll” during the penalty period. Respondent did not secure the payment of workers’ compensation insurance coverage, nor did others secure the payment of workers’ compensation insurance coverage, for the entries listed on the penalty worksheet of the 3rd Amended Order of Penalty Assessment as “Employer’s Payroll” during the periods of non-compliance listed on the penalty worksheet. The manual rates, class codes, and gross payroll identified on the penalty worksheet of the 3rd Amended Order of Penalty Assessment are correct to the extent a penalty is due. Evidentiary Findings Based on business records received from Respondent, the Division has recalculated the assessed penalty. The proposed penalty has been reduced to $27,553.78. Respondent has paid $1,000.00 for the release of the Stop Work Order, leaving a remaining penalty of $26,553.78. In determining the penalty, the Division reviewed Respondent’s business and financial records for a period of two years, from January 4, 2017, through January 3, 2019. Respondent was cooperative and forthcoming with the Division in providing its business and financial records. Penalties are calculated first by establishing the nature of the work being performed by employees. That is done by comparing the work to descriptions provided in the National Council of Compensation Insurance (NCCI) SCOPES® Manual. As relevant to this proceeding, the work being performed by persons who were employees of Respondent was as described in SCOPES® Manual class codes 5551 (Roofing - All Kinds & Drivers); 8227 (Construction or Erection Permanent Yard); 5213 (Concrete Construction NOC); and 8810 (Clerical Office Employees NOC). Workers’ compensation insurance premium rates are established based on the risk of injury associated with a particular class code. The greater the risk of injury, the greater the premium rate to insure that risk. Work such as roofing entails a significant risk of injury, and the approved manual rate is thus very high. Office and clerical work entails a very low risk of injury, and the approved manual rate is correspondingly very low. When work is performed but it is not specifically identified, e.g., laborer, the highest rated classification code for the business being audited is assigned to the employee. In this case, the highest rated classification code applicable to Respondent is class code 5551, for roofing. The 4th Amended Order of Penalty Assessment reveals payroll for individuals engaged in work described in class codes as follows: Anthony Wright - class code 5551 Donnell Eugene Johnson - class code 5551 Edward Tipton - class code 8227 Eugene Monts - class code 5213 James Dunlap - class code 5551 James Walters - class code 5551 Jorel Golden - class code 5551 Kelvin Morrison - class code 5551 Matthew Robinson - class code 5551 Vincent Marino - class code 8810 Jahru Li-Ly Campbell - class code 5551 Kevin Lee Hagan - class code 5551 Jonathan Wayne McCall - class code 5551 Terry Lyons, Jr. - class code 5551 Terry Lyons, Sr. - class code 5551 Mr. Lyons, Sr., was retained by Respondent as a subcontractor. Mr. Lyons, Sr., previously held an exemption from workers’ compensation as an officer of his company, but it had expired on December 27, 2017. Mr. Lyons, Sr., was working at the 1203 Dancy Street worksite on January 3, 2019. The evidence was sufficient to establish that Mr. Lyons, Sr., was appropriately assigned as class code 5551. His exemption was accepted up to its date of expiration, so the period applicable to the penalty calculation for Mr. Lyons, Sr., was from December 28, 2017, to January 3, 2019. Mr. Lyons, Sr.’s employees who were working at the 1203 Dancy Street worksite on January 3, 2019, were Mr. Campbell, Mr. Hagan, Mr. McCall, and Mr. Lyons, Jr. The evidence was sufficient to establish that they were employees of Respondent’s uninsured subcontractor, and that they were appropriately assigned as class code 5551. Mr. Wright and Mr. Robinson were listed on Respondent’s Profit & Loss Detail Sheet as “subcontract labor -- roofing.” Respondent was not able to demonstrate that they were covered by workers’ compensation. The evidence was sufficient to establish that Mr. Wright and Mr. Robinson were appropriately included in the penalty calculation, and that they were appropriately assigned as class code 5551. Mr. Johnson, Mr. Dunlap, and Mr. Morrison were listed on Respondent’s Profit & Loss Detail Sheet as “subcontract labor -- laborer.” Respondent was not able to demonstrate that they were covered by workers’ compensation. The evidence was sufficient to establish that Mr. Johnson, Mr. Dunlap, and Mr. Morrison were appropriately included in the penalty calculation, and that they were appropriately assigned as the highest rated classification code applicable to Respondent, class code 5551. Mr. Tipton was listed on Respondent’s Profit & Loss Detail Sheet as “subcontract labor -- handyman, yard work/clean up, truck detail.” Mr. Monts was listed on Respondent’s Profit & Loss Detail Sheet as “subcontract labor -- laborer.” Ms. Murcia testified that Mr. Marino provided information that Mr. Monts did concrete work, rather than roofing. Respondent was not able to demonstrate that they were covered by workers’ compensation. Mr. Marino indicated that Mr. Tipton and Mr. Monts should have been identified as his personal expenses, performing work at his home. However, they were identified in Respondent’s records as subcontract labor, and the payments to them were reported on Respondent’s 2017 income tax return as business expenses. They each received multiple payments over an extended period. The evidence was sufficient to establish that Mr. Tipton and Mr. Monts were employees of Respondent. The evidence was sufficient to establish that Mr. Tipton was appropriately assigned as class code 8227, and that Mr. Monts was appropriately assigned as class code 5213. Nonetheless, payments to the two were reduced by 20 percent to account for expenditures for materials, with the remaining 80 percent constituting payroll. Fla. Admin. Code R. 69L-6.035(1)(i). Mr. Marino was not an on-site employee of Respondent, but rather performed administration and clerical functions for Respondent. Mr. Marino previously had workers’ compensation, but it had been cancelled on February 28, 2015. The evidence was sufficient to establish that Mr. Marino was appropriately assigned as class code 8810. Mr. Marino obtained an exemption from workers’ compensation as an officer of Respondent on January 4, 2019. The evidence established that James Walters performed repairs to Respondent’s truck. The evidence was not clear and convincing that Mr. Walters was an employee of Respondent. Jorel Golden was identified solely as the payee on a single check image. He did not appear on Respondent’s Profit & Loss Detail Sheet, and there was no evidence as to why Mr. Golden was being paid. The evidence was not clear and convincing that Mr. Golden was an employee of Respondent. The salaries of the employees were calculated based on Respondent’s business records. The total gross payroll amounted to $170,139.07. Except for the amount of payments to Mr. Walters and Mr. Golden, that figure is supported by clear and convincing evidence. The penalty for Respondent’s failure to maintain workers’ compensation insurance for its employees is calculated as 2.0 times the amount Respondent would have paid in premiums for the preceding two-year period. The NCCI periodically issues a schedule of workers’ compensation rates per $100 in salary, which varies based on the SCOPES® Manual classification of the business. The NCCI submits the rates to the Florida Office of Insurance Regulation, which approves the rates to be applied to the calculation of premiums in Florida. The workers’ compensation insurance premium was calculated by multiplying one percent of the gross payroll ($17,013.91) by the approved manual rate for each quarter (which varied depending on the quarterly rate), which resulted in a calculated premium of $18,369.19. Clear and convincing evidence supports a finding that the Division applied the correct rates in calculating the premium. The penalty was determined by multiplying the calculated premium by 2.0, resulting in a final penalty of $36,738.38. In recognition of Respondent’s cooperation in the investigation and the timely submission of its business records, the Division applied a 25 percent reduction in the penalty ($9,184.60), resulting in a total penalty of $27,553.78. The evidence established that the Division gave every benefit of the doubt to Respondent to reduce the penalty, and its effect on Respondent, to the extent allowed within the confines of the law and the records provided.

Recommendation Based on the Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law set forth herein, it is RECOMMENDED that the Department of Financial Services, Division of Workers’ Compensation enter a final order assessing a penalty of $27,553.78, against Respondent, Best Affordable Contractors, LLC, for its failure to secure and maintain required workers’ compensation insurance for its employees and subcontracted labor, subject to recalculation as provided herein, and subject to Respondent’s previous payment of $1,000.00. DONE AND ENTERED this 15th day of September, 2020, in Tallahassee, Leon County, Florida. S E. GARY EARLY 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 15th day of September, 2020. COPIES FURNISHED: Vincent Marino Best Affordable Contractors, LLC 1348 Clements Woods Lane Jacksonville, Florida 32211 (eServed) Leon Melnicoff, Esquire Department of Financial Services 200 East Gaines Street Tallahassee, Florida 32399-4229 (eServed) Julie Jones, CP, FRP, Agency Clerk Division of Legal Services Department of Financial Services 200 East Gaines Street Tallahassee, Florida 32399-0390 (eServed)

Florida Laws (7) 120.569120.57440.02440.10440.107440.38627.091 Florida Administrative Code (7) 69L-6.01569L-6.02169L-6.02769L-6.03169L-6.03269L-6.03569O-189.016 DOAH Case (1) 20-2670
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