Of the $1.5 billion rebates, approximately $114 million will go to local governments and around $50 million will go to public schools, the DeWine administration announced Monday.
It’ll mark the fifth time Ohio has returned money to public and private employers of $1-billion or more since 2013.
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The BWC is a state-run insurance system for employees in the public and private sector that was created more than 100 years ago. It collects premiums from employers and then pays medical expenses and lost wages for workers injured on the job.
In 2018, there were 85,000 injury claims filed with BWC. The agency insures roughly 242,000 public and private employers.
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In 2018, BWC earned $1.3 billion on its $26.9 billion invested assets portfolio.
The rebate plan will be presented to the BWC Board of Directors this week and a vote would follow at its June 28 meeting. If approved, employers would see the rebate money in September.
The BWC cut its premium rates for public employers in January by 12 percent. A 20 percent rate cut for private employers is set to begin July 1.
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