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BUREAU ANNOUNCES AGENDA 06
TO IMPROVE OPERATIONS
Increased value and fairness are expected to improve
bottom line by $424 million in 2006
(COLUMBUS) The Ohio Bureau of Workers Compensation
(BWC) unveiled Agenda 06 to the Workers Compensation
Oversight Commission today as part of an initiative to improve the
efficiency and effectiveness of the agencys operations.
Bill Mabe, Administrator/CEO of BWC, said that a focus on fairness
along with enhancements in how the bureau does business could generate
as much as $424 million in improvements to the bureaus bottom
line in 2006. More than $530 million in savings will be generated once
all strategies are successfully implemented.
Our plan was created by all BWC employees and will significantly
improve Ohios workers compensation system by making it
more competitive on a national scale, Mabe said. This initiative
is not about change for the sake of change. Rather, its about
doing the right thing and moving in the right direction for the benefit
of the employers and injured workers who use and depend on the system.
A large part of the savings will be in the form of increased revenue.
The investments department is expected to generate an additional $100
million, as profits will increase operational cash flow. Additionally,
BWC will improve its underwriting capabilities by focusing on employer
compliance, auditing, and collections of outstanding debt to ensure
each business is responsible only for its liabilities.
Also, BWC will aggressively try to reduce expenses, primarily through
better control of health care costs. The agency has already revised
its hospital fee schedule and is currently reviewing other payment
methodologies to determine whether lower-cost alternatives are more
appropriate. The bureau will work to better coordinate services to
reduce the hassle-factor for providers, which will also reduce expenses.
Legislatively, the bureau continues to support Senate Bill 7, which
is currently in the Ohio House of Representatives. If enacted in its
current form, it would generate more than $100 million in savings annually
while making Ohio more competitive on a national scale.
Lastly, BWC will move forward with implementing a comprehensive Control
Environment that will include a focus on integrity and ethics,
among other things. Additionally, the bureau will use Sarbanes-Oxley
as a guideline to establish the overall design of internal control
mechanisms to safeguard the assets of the State Insurance Fund.
The entire report can be found at ohiobwc.com.
Media Contact Jeremy Jackson, Ohio Bureau of Workers Compensation,
at (614) 752-7558
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