A Missouri fund for disabled workers is about $25 million in the hole, with no means to dig out of its troubles unless lawmakers raise fees on businesses, pare benefits or put an end to future claims, the state auditor said Friday.
The report by auditor Tom Schweich marks the latest in a series of recent warnings about the financial health of Missouri's Second Injury Fund, which was created 70 years ago to compensate disabled workers who suffer additional job-related injuries.
"It needs a lot of money," Schweich said. "Either find a way to fund it at these very high levels or just eliminate it."
So far, lawmakers have done nothing to address the fund's financial woes. But Republican legislative leaders have made it a priority for the annual session, which began Wednesday.
Schweich said the fund had a balance of $3.2 million at the end of 2012, with unpaid obligations of $28.1 million, leaving a deficit of about $25 million.
Created in 1943, the Second Injury Fund was intended as an incentive for businesses to hire people with disabilities. If someone with an existing disability suffers a new work-related injury, the fund pays the additional benefits due to that person instead of billing the entire cost to the employer's workers' compensation insurance.
The fund is financed by businesses through a surcharge on their workers' compensation insurance premiums. Auditors have traced the fund's financial problems to a 2005 law passed by the Republican-led General Assembly that capped the surcharges at 3 percent of employers' workers' compensation premiums, instead of allowing the rate to fluctuate based on the fund's annual expenses.
In 2005, the fund had $25 million in reserves. Since the surcharge was capped, the fund's annual expenses have almost always exceeded its revenues.
The attorney general's office has tried to stretch the fund's limited money. In 2009, it stopped offering cash settlements to workers with certain types of injuries, forcing them to instead go through a lengthier hearing process that decreased the immediate pressure for payments. In 2011, the state started delaying payments to people awarded new judgments. That has led to lawsuits from injured workers.
The auditor's office estimated Friday that the surcharge would need to be raised to 7 percent -- generating $98 million -- for one year, then be set at 5 percent in future years to pay the outstanding obligations, meet its ongoing benefit payments and resume making cash settlements.
In addition to the current deficit, the audit said the attorney general's office estimates there are more than 30,000 pending cases with a potential liability against the fund of over $100 million.