Injured in a vehicle accident while working in Erie or Erie County? Manufacturing workers, I-90 truckers, UPMC Hamot employees - you may have TWO claims.
(215) 206-9068TENS OF MILLIONS RECOVERED | FREE CONSULTATION - NO FEE UNLESS WE WINErie is Pennsylvania's only Great Lakes port city and a major manufacturing and healthcare hub. From I-90 truckers to plastics industry workers to UPMC Hamot staff, thousands of workers drive as part of their jobs. If you were injured in a work-related vehicle accident, you deserve specialized legal help.
Erie's plastics and manufacturing industries employ thousands. Truck drivers delivering materials, sales reps visiting customers, and workers traveling between facilities face daily road hazards.
I-90 connects Erie to Cleveland and Buffalo, making it a major trucking route. Commercial drivers injured on these highways while working have rights to both workers' comp and potential third-party claims.
UPMC Hamot, Saint Vincent Hospital, and numerous healthcare facilities employ workers who drive daily - from home health aides to medical transport staff.
We handle your workers' comp claim while our Personal Injury colleagues pursue the at-fault driver. Two experts, maximum recovery.
I-90, I-79, Route 19, and the Bayfront Highway see heavy traffic. Lake-effect snow makes winter driving especially hazardous for workers on the road.
If you were hurt in a vehicle crash while working in Erie, you may be entitled to pursue two separate claims at the same time. Understanding both is the difference between recovering only part of your losses and recovering everything you are owed.
Because you were injured in the course of your job, your employer's workers' compensation insurance should cover 100% of your reasonable and necessary medical treatment and roughly two-thirds of your lost wages while you recover. Workers' comp is "no-fault," so it applies even if the crash was partly your fault. What it does not pay for is pain and suffering or the remaining third of your wages.
If another driver caused your Erie crash, you can also bring a personal injury claim against that at-fault driver. This is where pain and suffering, full wage loss, and other damages are recovered. Workers' comp does not allow these damages, which is why pursuing the third-party case is so important.
How we work: Attorney Michael Cardamone is a Certified Workers' Compensation Specialist who handles your comp claim directly, and we coordinate with our heavyweight Personal Injury colleagues on the third-party case so the two claims work together to maximize your total recovery.
Yes. If you were working when the crash happened in Erie and another driver was at fault, Pennsylvania law generally lets you collect workers' compensation through your employer and file a separate third-party claim against the at-fault driver. The two claims together recover far more than workers' comp alone.
You can still receive workers' compensation, because it is a no-fault system. Your right to comp benefits does not depend on who caused the accident, so even an at-fault worker injured on the job in Erie is typically covered for medical bills and wage loss.
Nothing upfront. We work on a contingency fee, which means there is no fee unless we win your case, and your consultation is always free. Call (215) 206-9068 to speak with us today.
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