Portner & Shure, P.A. — Workers' Compensation Team

Workers' Comp 101
Valuing a Claim

An onboarding walkthrough — how we think about value, settlement, and strategy in a Virginia workers' comp case.
The big picture

Every claim's value = three buckets

When we value a workers' comp case, the number is built from three pieces:

BUCKET 1

Medical Expenses

Past + future treatment.

BUCKET 2

Wage Loss

Time out of work — "TTD."

BUCKET 3

Permanency

Value of the injury — "PPD."

No pain & suffering. Unlike personal injury, pain & suffering is not part of a workers' comp claim. (We can use a client's hardship to argue for higher permanency, but it isn't its own bucket.)
Why it works this way

Workers' comp is a no-fault system

Willful misconduct bars a claim. If you were told not to enter a room, you go in anyway and break your hand — it's denied.
Bucket 1

Medical expenses — past & future

Treatment continues until the doctor declares MMI — Maximum Medical Improvement. That's the trigger to ask: what's the right resolution?
Bucket 2

Wage loss — "TTD"

Light duty & "marketing." If a client is on light duty and the employer can't accommodate, they can't just sit at home — they must make a good-faith effort to find another job ("marketing") to earn TTD.
Bucket 3

Permanency — "PPD"

PPD = Body-part weeks × Impairment % × Comp rate Comp rate = Average Weekly Wage × ⅔

Example: Arm (200 wks) × 15% = 30 weeks. AWW $1,000 → comp rate $660. 30 × $660 ≈ $19,800 for that injury.

Cheat-sheet

The acronyms (WC loves them)

AcronymMeansIn plain English
TTDTemporary Total DisabilityWage-loss pay while out of work (⅔ of wage)
PPDPermanent Partial DisabilityValue of the lasting injury (Bucket 3)
PTDPermanent Total DisabilityTotally disabled (rare)
MMIMaximum Medical ImprovementDoctor says treatment is done
IMEIndependent Medical EvaluationA non-treating doctor's exam/rating
AWWAverage Weekly WageComp rate = AWW × ⅔
The rating problem

To win PPD at a hearing, you need a rating

This is a big reason most cases settle instead of going to a hearing on PPD.
The strategy

Why we settle "full & final"

Win-win: the client gets more money (and can treat through their own insurance later), and the case is resolved. Exception: a client who likely needs future surgery and has no insurance of their own — don't leave them exposed.
Drafting

Building a demand

Worked example

A real demand, bucket by bucket

BucketWhat's in itValue
Medical~$4k outstanding + possible surgery~$15,000
Wage loss (TTD)Unpaid time out + ongoing pre-surgery~$20,000
PPD — left arm200 wks × 10% × $1,054 comp rate~$21,000
PPD — right armLess severe~$10,000
Estimated case value~$66,000
Jordan pushed the PPD and future-medical estimates up (this client likely needs another surgery), and we sent the demand at $200,000 to open negotiations. Judgment matters — the math is the floor, not the ceiling.
Case review

At every hearing, ask: "Why are we here?"

We love mediation — non-binding, shows what they'll offer, everybody can win (and defense likes it because they can bill).
Watch out

Claim-killers & the golden rule of injury description

Repetitive use is a claim-killer in Virginia. "I hammered all day and my arm hurt by evening" is not compensable.
The golden rule: a compensable injury must point to a definite time and a specific action. "How did it happen, and when?" Clients often want to list every time it hurt — that's the worst thing for their case. Prep them before any deposition.
Depositions

Depos: don't shoot yourself in the foot — move the ball

Lifecycle

Soup to nuts — how a case flows

  1. Case comes in → file the claim form on WebFile, enter our appearance, send the client a welcome letter.
  2. Client picks a panel doctor → treats (medicals paid; maybe TTD).
  3. Doctor reaches MMI → we ask: what's the right resolution?
  4. Value the three buckets → send a demand (~1.5–2×) → negotiate / mediate.
  5. Resolve full & final (closes future medicals). Settlement process ≈ 30–45 days.
Want to see one end-to-end? Ask Herless — he's very organized and can walk you through the filing process. (You don't need to know all the "sausage making," but it helps.)
Remember this

Key takeaways

Internal training · Portner & Shure, P.A. · Workers' Compensation Team · Source: WC valuation walkthrough, June 2026