23rd Senatorial District Local Act-1.
SB 173 creates a presumption that hypertension is compensable for covered public safety personnel when BP exceeds 140/90 and meds used for 90 days, easing proof of work-related ons
SB 173 creates a presumption that hypertension is compensable for covered public safety personnel when BP exceeds 140/90 and meds used for 90 days, easing proof of work-related ons
Status (selected): Hearing scheduled Feb 25, 2025 at 1:00 p.m. | Introduced January 2025 (first reading in early Jan) | Effective date (if enacted): October 1, 2025
SB 173 expands Maryland’s workers’ compensation occupational‑disease presumption for certain public safety personnel by clarifying when an individual is deemed to have “disablement” and therefore is entitled to a presumption of compensable hypertension. The intent is to reduce evidentiary hurdles for covered firefighters and related personnel to obtain workers’ compensation benefits for hypertension.
Applies the occupational‑disease presumption for hypertension to:
Establishes objective criteria for demonstrating “disablement” and being deemed to have hypertension under the presumption:
Continues interplay with general workers’ compensation law: a covered employee who obtains a presumption is entitled to compensation; presumptions historically are treated as rebuttable (courts have interpreted similar language as rebuttable).
Compiled from official sources — confirm details with the bill’s official record.
Sign in to ask a question.