(1) An employer shall maintain accident insurance, self-insure, or participate in a self-insurance pool or a multiple employer health trust in order to provide the benefits specified in this section for its firefighters.
In addition, an employer may provide equivalent benefits for volunteer firefighters.
(2) An employer shall provide the following minimum benefits:
(a) (I) A four-thousand-dollar-lump-sum payment if a medical examination reveals that a firefighter has a heart and circulatory malfunction; and
(II) A one-thousand-five-hundred-dollar payment per week, up to a maximum of seven weeks, if a firefighter made an emergency room visit and was hospitalized for up to forty-eight hours for a heart and circulatory malfunction;
(b) (I) A two-thousand-dollar payment per week, up to a maximum of twenty-five weeks, if a firefighter made an emergency room visit and was hospitalized for more than fortyeight hours for a heart and circulatory malfunction; or
(II) A two-thousand-five-hundred-dollar payment, up to a maximum of eighty weeks, if a firefighter has a heart and circulatory malfunction that prohibits the firefighter from returning to employment to a position that the firefighter is trained for or reasonably could be trained to perform;
A payment of up to twenty-five thousand dollars for rehabilitative employment services relating to a heart and circulatory malfunction;
A ten-thousand-dollar payment if a firefighter incurs cosmetic disfigurement resulting from a heart and circulatory malfunction; and
If the covered heart and circulatory malfunction is diagnosed as terminal, the firefighter will receive a lump sum payment of twenty-five thousand dollars as an accelerated payment toward the benefits due in paragraphs (a) and (b) of this subsection (2).
The receipt of a payment pursuant to subparagraph (II) of paragraph (a) or subparagraph (I) of paragraph (b) of subsection (2) of this section does not prohibit the firefighter from receiving an additional benefit.
If a firefighter returns to the same position of employment after a heart and circulatory malfunction, the firefighter is entitled to the benefits in subsection (2) of this section for any subsequent heart and circulatory malfunction.
The maximum amount that may be paid to a firefighter for each heart and circulatorymalfunction is two hundred fifty thousand dollars.
The benefits and maximum payment amount in subsection (2) of this section areincreased by the same percentage and at the same time as any fire and police pension association increase in the pension benefit paid to its members pursuant to section 31-31-407, C.R.S.
(a) The benefits paid pursuant to this section must be offset by any payments made:
(I) Under the "Workers' Compensation Act of Colorado", articles 40 to 47 of title 8,
C.R.S.;
By the fire and police pension association;
Pursuant to social security or a retirement plan; or
As part of any other employer-paid income benefit that is made as a result of a heartand circulatory malfunction.
(b) The offsets specified in paragraph (a) of this subsection (7) apply only from the date of the determination of entitlement for the payments and do not require the repayment of any money received prior to the determination.
The benefits in this section are reduced by twenty-five percent if a firefighter smokeda tobacco product within five years immediately preceding the work event.
In order for a firefighter to be eligible for the benefits in subsection (2) of this section, the following conditions must be met:
Prior to the work event that results in a heart and circulatory malfunction and afterthe firefighter became employed by an employer, the firefighter had a medical examination that would reasonably have found an illness or injury that could have caused the heart and circulatory malfunction and no illness or injury was found at the most recent medical examination;
The firefighter has at least five years of continuous, full-time employment with anemployer, except a volunteer firefighter must have five years of continuous service with the same employer; and
The heart and circulatory malfunction occurred during or within forty-eight hoursafter a work event.
For the purpose of employer policies and benefits, a heart and circulatory malfunction is treated as an on-the-job injury or illness. This subsection (10) does not affect any determination as to whether the heart and circulatory malfunction is covered under the "Workers' Compensation Act of Colorado", articles 40 to 47 of title 8, C.R.S.
(a) There is hereby created in the state treasury the firefighter benefits cash fund. The fund consists of moneys appropriated from the general fund by the general assembly. The moneys in the fund are subject to annual appropriation by the general assembly to the department of local affairs for the purpose of reimbursing employers for the direct costs of maintaining accident insurance, self-insurance, or participation in a self-insurance pool or multiple employer health trust as required by this part 3.
(b) The department of local affairs shall reimburse employers for the direct costs of maintaining accident insurance, self-insurance, or participation in a self-insurance pool or multiple employer health trust as required by this part 3.
(12) If, at any time, the funding provided for the benefit required by this section is insufficient to cover the cost of the benefit, then the requirements of this section to maintain the benefit shall become optional pursuant to section 29-1-304.5.
Source: L. 2014: Entire part added, (SB 14-172), ch. 325, p. 1425, § 1, effective January 1, 2015.