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Posts tagged Workers' Compensation Attorney
Construction Workers, Health Risk Behaviors And COVID-19

A three-year study shows 6 health risk behaviors that are more common among construction workers.

Originally published by the Journal of Occupational and Environmental Medicine, the Powell Law Group ran across research the CDC recently shared that made us think about many of our clients.

Of the 6 common health risk behaviors that construction workers across 32 states were proven to be more likely to have, smoking is the one that really caught our attention.

6 Common Behavior Risks Common Across Construction Workers in 32 States:

  • Smoking

  • Smokeless tobacco use

  • Binge drinking

  • No leisure-time physical activity

  • Not always using a seatbelt

We were pleased to see that construction workers seem to be getting seven or more hours of sleep a day compared to the general workforce, on the plus side.

But with physically demanding jobs and many construction workers being exposed to chemicals and workplace hazards, there is no question that many people lean on smoking cigarettes as a cost effective stress management option.

With COVID-19 directly impacting the lungs, smoking ups your chances at being for risk:

Smoking any kind of tobacco reduces lung capacity and increases the risk of many respiratory infections and can increase the severity of respiratory diseases. COVID-19 is an infectious disease that primarily attacks the lungs. Smoking impairs lung function making it harder for the body to fight off coronaviruses and other respiratory diseases.  Available research suggests that smokers are at higher risk of developing severe COVID-19 outcomes and death.   - World Health Organization

While falls remain the most common cause of work-related deaths and traumatic brain injuries in construction, the research emphasizes targeted interventions and health programs can help.

During this unprecedented time of disease across the nation, and with many states categorizing construction as an industry that can continue working, even while other industries are in mandatory shutdown, we want all the construction workers out there to be extra cautious.

Wearing a mask while near coworkers or indoors is a smart first step.

Watch the World Health Organization’s video about proper mask wearing.


If you are in Virginia and have experienced an injury, on the job or have any questions about a job related illness, don’t hesitate to call us.

We offer FREE consultations to learn more about your case, your needs and YOU.

CONTACT POWELL LAW GROUP

804.794.4030

We are ready to help you!
Powell Law Group | Wayne Powell | Bilingual Paralegal | Bilingual Attorney

Wayne Powell and his staff of professionals are ready to assist you with all of your Workers’ Compensation or Personal Injury needs.

Not only has this bilingual attorney and staff won millions for their clients, but their ongoing dedication to individuals who are hurt and deserve justice shines daily in their dedication to each and every client’s ongoing support, from initial medical needs to extensive case research and providing ongoing guardian conservator services.

Powell Law group appreciates being recognized as one of Richmond’s Best Workers’ Compensation attorneys.


If you or someone you love thinks they have been victim of an injury due to poorly kept working facilities or processes on the job, call today for your FREE consultation.

(804) 794.4030


Expertise Award: Best Workers’ Compensation Attorney

Powell Law Group listed as one of Richmond’s Best Workers’ Compensation Attorneys by Expertise.com

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For over two decades Powell Law Group has fought for the rights of workers injured on the job in Virginia, helping them obtain just compensation as is their right under the laws of the Commonwealth. 

Expertise.com recognizes our firm as a top practice in Richmond for worker’s compensation law based on a number of important factors including: 

  • An excellent reputation of satisfied customers recommending our work to friends and family

  • Established experience and mastery in Worker’s Compensation Law

  • Responsive and approachable customer service 

  • Dedication to professionalism and quality representation

Wayne Powell, of Powell Law Group in Virginia, has been helping workers win legal cases after being injured on the job for almost four decades. His passion for justice and belief in the working class come from his upbringing with a father who was a welder.

If you or someone you love thinks they have been victim of an injury due to poorly kept working facilities or processes on the job, call today for your FREE consultation.

(804) 794.4030

Wayne Powell's Call To Help The People

Finding a Personal Injury Lawyer or Workers’ Compensation Lawyer that understands what has happened to you, deeply cares about your health and wellbeing, and has experience bringing justice to people case after case can be confusing and hard.

The founder of Powell Law Group, Wayne Powell, is unique in his personal history, future vision and all around dedication to helping people find justice, so they can live better lives.


My parents always taught me that hard work and helping others would lead to a good life, core values that I carried with me through the challenges that I faced growing up. I watched my mother and father suffer through poverty, never having adequate healthcare all while being the pillars of character without whom I could not be the man I am today.

 I also saw the injustices that they faced, not because they weren’t smart, not because they weren’t hard working, but because they were poor.  This instilled in me a desire to help people like my parents in any way I could.
— E. Wayne Powll

This deeply rooted philosophy has informed Wayne Powell’s entire professional life. Wayne’s three decades of service as an Army intelligence officer along with his ongoing fight for justice as a personal injury and workers’ compensation lawyer in Virginia create a strong mix of skills that will be hard to find in any other Personal Injury or Workers’ Compensation Attorney.

Wayne has advocated for justice for women soldiers as their numbers grew and they faced harassment and adversity in the U.S. Army. He has upheld the rights of immigrants in the United States as they navigate their way through our complex legal system, offering free legal services to families separated at the border.

Wayne’s extensive public school volunteer work over the years introduced him to educational inequity and the need to ensure that every teacher and school counselor has the right resources.

Wayne Powell not only believes in justice for all Virginians, he built a business around being a voice for justice under the law.

He and his wife, Katherine, live in Chesterfield with their two dogs. He is a proud father of two and grandfather of four.

Wayne understands families, complex and simple, believes in the right of justice for every human and will continue helping Virginians find the legal support they need for years to come.


If you are in Virginia and have experienced an injury, either on the job or just living your life, don’t hesitate to call us. We offer free consultations to learn more about your case, your needs and YOU.

contact powell law group

804.794.4030

How can mediation help resolve disputes in court?

In my almost 40 years of practice, I have found that I agree with Abraham Lincoln who once said,

“Discourage litigation. Persuade your neighbors to compromise whenever you can.” 

Powell Law Group | Mediation In Legal Cases

In the case of a recent Product Liability Lawsuit, which our firm obtained on April 17th, 2019, I associated counsel in Ohio to collect the default judgment in the Ohio court. During an appearance in court on September 3, 2019, counsel for the defendant accepted a previous offer to mediate the judgement instead of litigation in the Virginia and Ohio courts regarding issues raised by the defendant’s attorneys, all the parties decided “to talk about it in litigation.”

As in most cases with any significant upside or downside, mediation can be an effective answer.

Mediation is an area of practice with which I have been engaged since the mid 80’s when, as a Deputy Commissioner at the Virginia Workers’ Compensation Commission, I joined the joint committee of the Virginia State Bar and the Virginia Bar Association regarding Alternative Dispute Resolution.

Primarily, among the alternatives to litigation in court, is mediation.  Mediation is the most widely used and most successful way for the parties themselves to come to terms with the case with regard to both issues and compensation.

The mediator is less a “judge” and more a facilitator who helps both sides compromise while looking at common interests which can get litigants past the obstacles which can cause lengthy litigation. I have been a long-time advocate of mediation as a tool to avoid litigation for the past 35 years. 

In the recent Product Liability Lawsuit, as in the majority of the other cases which I have tried or settled in the past 40 years, mediation may very well be the tool that is needed for the Ohio company and its counsel, the local Virginia counsel, and the defendant’s liability insurance company, and my injured worker to resolve this case, without undue time spent and without the needless expense of litigation. 

I will keep those who view my website fully informed on the outcome of our attempts to mediate the issues, which have risen in this case since we obtained the judgment on April of 2019.  

E. Wayne Powell, P.C.

CONTACT US TODAY

Our attorneys persistently pursue maximum compensation for your injuries, medical bills, lost wages, pain and suffering, and other losses.

Call today to arrange your FREE initial consultation.

 804-794-4030 or contact us online

Can Undocumented Workers Get Workers’ Compensation In Virginia?
Undocumented Worker and Workers' Compensation | Powell Law Group | Richmond VA

If you are an undocumented worker and get hurt in Virginia, you may be wondering what benefits you may be entitled to from the Virginia Workers’ Compensation Commission.

As long as the case arises out of and in the course of employment, undocumented workers are entitled to medical benefits, wage loss benefits while completely disabled from work, and awards for permanency. An undocumented worker can still settle his case or receive lifelong medical treatment for an accident that happened on the job. 

The only palpable difference for undocumented workers in regards to Workers’ Compensation is that they are not entitled to wage loss benefits while released to light duty work. This means that wages will only be paid while the injured worker has been taken completely out of work. As soon as the worker is released to some form of light duty, wage loss benefits terminate regardless of whether the worker is marketing his residual capacity.

Undocumented workers should file claims with the Workers’ Compensation Commission so that they can receive medical and wage loss benefits.

If you or someone you know has been injured on the job, or if you want to learn more about benefits you may be entitled to and how to make your Workers’ Compensation case its strongest, call us here at the Powell Law Group.



CONTACT US TODAY

Our attorneys persistently pursue maximum compensation for your injuries, medical bills, lost wages, pain and suffering, and other losses.

Call today to arrange your FREE initial consultation.

 804-794-4030 or contact us online

Tuesday TED Talk: "My Wish: Manufactured Landscapes And Green Education" By Edward Burtynsky

This weeks TED Talk Tuesday is brought to you by Edward Burtynsky a photographer dedicating his pieces to exposing humanity’s impact on the earth, and inspiring the conversation and movement towards sustainable living. Mr. Burtynsky has won multiple awards for his work, such as the 2016 Governor General’s Award in Arts and Media and the 2005 TED Prize. These images are meant as metaphors to the tragedy and the beauty of our modern existence, and it shows the dilemma at how the world is suffering at the hand of human successes.

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TED Talk Tuesday | Powell Law Group | Edward Burtynsky 2.png
  • “Be challenged by the photos -- to say, ‘Wow, this is beautiful,’ on one level, but on the other level, "This is scary. I shouldn't be enjoying it."”

  • “There's something that we're not seeing there. And it's a scary thing as well. Because when we start looking at the collective appetite for our lifestyles, and what we're doing to that landscape -- that, to me, is something that is a very sobering moment for me to contemplate.”

  • “This is a need for power, and they're willing to go through this massive transformation, on this scale, to get that power.”

  • “I photographed this woman in China- she’s been through Mao, and she's been through the Great Leap Forward, and the Cultural Revolution, and now she's sitting on her porch with this e-waste beside her. It's quite something. This is a road where it's been shored up by computer boards in one of the biggest towns, and recycling is nonexistent.”

  • “I want to use my images to persuade millions of people to join in the global conversation on sustainability. And it is through communications today that I believe that that is not an unreal idea.”


Wayne Powell is a passionate advocate for the environment as well. From investing in clean energy, reducing our dependence on oil, and reducing our carbon footprint, there is no end to the list of ways to adapt to sustainable living. If you live in Virginia, check out Virginia Energy Sense sponsored by the State Corporation Commission.

I have represented a few Workers’ Compensation cases where those individuals worked in coal mines or mining jobs. As a business owner, I value advances in technology and innovation, and I understand the need to adapt to modernization. I believe we must never take the individual workers for granted, and recognize that when we talk about renewable energy, the men and women who work to build and maintain our energy structure in the Commonwealth are the human stakeholders alongside business and the environment. I hope we continue to think of advances in technology and energy that move away from conditions that hurt individuals and that hurt our environment.
— Wayne Powell

Check out some Edward Burtynsky’s website for his projects, photography portfolio, films, and books. And if you or someone you love has been injured on the job, contact the Powell Law Group to learn how our experience in helping people get justice might be right for you.


Helping Clients Get Workers' Compensation Benefits They Are Entitled To
Powell Law Group | Workers' Compensation | Insurance Management | Richmond VA

Our Workers’ Compensation client, Scott, came to us after having worked with his employer’s insurance company’s nurse case manager until the compensation benefits he was receiving were terminated. Unsure of what else he may be entitled to and his only point of contact being a nurse case manager that was not answering his many questions, Scott decided to retain the Powell Law Group’s services to help navigate his workers’ compensation case and find a solution to the ongoing management of his painful injury.

Since retaining services nine months ago, Powell Law Group has been able to get an official award in place for this Workers’ Compensation client reflecting his entitlement to benefits for his right shoulder injury, Attorney Joseph McNally Jr. along with the paralegal and workers’ compensation team, were able to coordinate with his physicians to obtain a permanency award based on the damage done to his shoulder, and gain authorization for pain management and psychological therapy.

The Powell Law Group knows that managing treatment and expenses through an employer’s insurance company is confusing, timely and often unsuccessful. It was our goal for this client to live as comfortably as possible, both physically and mentally. Our office successfully settled Scott’s case for an amount that will allow him to independently manage his treatment and expenses and be free of the insurance company.

We enjoyed working with Scott and helping him obtain what he was entitled to under Virginia compensation law.  The Powell Law Group is pleased to have been able to obtain so much for him in such a short amount of time, and be an advocate for his pain on his road to recovery.


5 Trial Tips I Learned from my Years as a Deputy Commissioner at the Virginia Workers' Compensation Commission
Wayne Powell

Wayne Powell

I spent from March 1985 until March of 1991 as a Deputy Commissioner of the Virginia Workers Compensation Commission (VWCC).  I was selected for this judicial post by the three commissioners of the VWCC who were elected by the legislature of Virginia. I left the Commission in 1991 to pursue opportunities in the private sector.  

1. Objectivity

Before my appointment to the VWCC, I had been practicing for approximately five years, three years of which as an Assistant Attorney General. During that time, I was fortunate to learn from a series of challenging trials in state and federal courts.  As an advocate for state defendants, I would become so focused on my clients’ side of the case, that I would fail to adequately consider for the weaknesses that created in my own case. This affected my perspective on the case which sometimes created obstacles for me at trial. As a Deputy Commissioner, I was required to approach every worker’s compensation case objectively without any sort of bias. I had to remain open to consider the evidence from both sides of every claim. This included weighing the evidence and considering the credibility of the testimony as well as the arguments of opposing lawyers in order to give a fair hearing to the litigants. During my time as a Deputy Commissioner, I attended the National Judicial College in Nevada where I took courses to further develop my skills in areas such as judicial writing. This helped me better express my objective reasoning in deciding cases. By opening my mind to both the claimant and defense perspectives, the cases were much easier to resolve. It also became easier to evaluate all the documentation submitted as evidence in each case as well as the oral testimony. I would say that applying objectivity as a judge for six years is a skill that I have carried from the VWCC.  In fact, in my subsequent practice as a defense lawyer and as a plaintiff lawyer, it was easier to place myself in the position of either party in order to better my case. Objectivity is a valuable asset for any trial lawyer in order to more adequately represent his or her client.

2. Thoroughness

During my five years of trial experience before beginning work as a Deputy Commissioner at the VWCC, I had several paralegals and secretaries assigned to assist me in preparing for depositions, motions practice, and trial. At the Commission I had one secretary and was also assigned a bailiff to drive to jurisdictions. and I was expected to issue my opinion where I presided in my circuit within eight weeks of the hearing date. On average, I presided over cases for several days in different jurisdictions, so there was a limited time within which to prepare and formulate my opinion. My territory spanned from Richmond, Fredericksburg, Winchester, on to Harrisburg, Staunton, Charlottesville, and sometimes to Clifton Forge. Essentially, I was on the bench 11 days of a 20-workday month. This required that I needed to be very thorough in how I ruled on evidentiary issues at the hearings, and I needed to be thorough in reviewing all the records submitted by both sides. After a hearing, I would have to review the medical reports submitted by both sides in the hearing and I would have to consider opinions rendered by the opposing doctors and healthcare practitioners as well as the doctor’s treatment notes taken in the emergency room.

I developed a technique to preserve the significant evidence presented at the hearings. While everything that I had heard was fresh I dictated a summary of the evidence presented at the hearing and some of the conclusions that were reached. This included a summary of the medical documents cited in the hearing as well as a summary of the various testimonies of the witnesses. If the issue was straightforward and easily resolvable by this summary, then I'd sometimes sketch my findings, but they were always subject to my review. If the cases were complex, I would review a typed transcript of the testimony that I "recalled" after the hearing. In the late 1980s and early 1990s when I served at the Commission, it was not routine to request a transcript of the hearing, although all hearings were on the record. So, requesting a transcript was unusual, hence the taking of thorough and copious notes was essential as a Deputy Commissioner. 

3. Respect

Since I began practicing law in 1980, I have consistently felt that respecting your opponents, their counsel, and the presiding judicial officer, as well as the process itself, was essential to obtain justice. My experience at the VWCC confirmed my belief in the basic need for respect for the process, the rule of law, and the judicial system. As a Deputy Commissioner, regardless of how a lawyer acted, I never engaged in emotional exchanges with lawyers, parties, or witnesses, or in any other behavior which might express my dissatisfaction in the conduct of a lawyer or witness. I maintained a calm and professional demeanor, regardless of what my ruling might be for any particular motion or for any litigant while in court. In a trial context, there is a certain solemnity and a natural tendency for restraint and respect. However, in my experience, as a judge, one realizes that both sides are looking at the person who is supposed to be making independent judgments based on the facts and evidence without emotion in the case. That respect for not only the litigants, their representatives, and the process, is something that has reinforced my prior belief and has helped me maintain a high level of dedication to the rule of law and the respect that I have for other lawyers. With few exceptions, I found the respect to be reciprocal. 

4. Professionalism

Professionalism is the foundation of any career. My prior experience as a military officer before going to law school prepared me for the type of conduct which I felt was appropriate in my legal career; this was further buttressed by my experience as a judicial officer. The professionalism of a judge has to permeate the court and the location where the hearing is held. The judge must establish that atmosphere of professionalism that inspires not only fellow deputy judges to act professionally themselves, but the attorneys, parties, and the witnesses.  This is based on the solemnity of the occasion when parties are in court, and the way in which the litigants are expected to act when they are present. In the now 38 years I have been practicing, I have noticed in recent years a lack of professionalism on the part of some of the younger members of the bar. Perhaps my view of this is the result of my own experience in the military. Regardless of the reason, my experience led me to conclude that professionalism is essential to exhibit not only to the judge when you're in court, but the lawyers, witnesses, and other litigants when you're out of court as well. It has often been said that a person’s ethics can be judged by how one conducts himself when no one is looking. I've always remembered that adage, and I've always tried to act that way whether I was in court or simply on a telephone call with an opposing counsel. Professionalism will permit a more objective consideration of all the evidence adduced at the hearing over which I presided. 

It is essential that all participants show themselves to be professional at all times in the litigation process. 

5. Curiosity and Creativity

Creativity is closely aligned with curiosity. In my profession, one has to be curious about the law and take a creative approach to obtain justice. Curiosity and creativity are essential to properly consider how the facts lend themselves to interpretation by certain precedent, and how they fit into a legal context.  One of the things that I was always fascinated by as a Deputy Commissioner was the fact that every case that you thought had a certain fact pattern which would fit in a certain case precedent, did not always fit in that precedent.  In fact, there are always unique aspects of every case -- either by medical report, or by a factual anomaly that would make the case not fit into one category, but perhaps fit in another category.  In order to determine which category a case would fall into, it would take research skills, and it would take thinking of or defining the issues such that you could look up other precedents, which might change the way you viewed a certain case or a certain fact pattern.  Because of curiosity and the creativity that comes with it, frequently when I was faced with a certain fact pattern that appeared to fall into a certain category of cases, but by the time I considered all the facts, medical records, and the law, I came up with a different decision than I started out with.  This frequently happens in appellate cases as well. I participated by designation in a few appeals at the WCC when a Commissioner was unavailable, and I have been in various continuing legal education seminars in which the appellate judges frequently will talk about how a case comes in and appears to fall into a certain category, but after due consideration, the disposition of the case changes. I also have found that in the many appeals I’ve filed anticipation of adverse ruling have helped preserve unlikely issues at final that we effective in everything adverse rulings below on appeal. 

Curiosity and creativity apply in active practice. I have engaged in cases which other lawyers have refused to take on. In one case, I received more than $1M in settlement brought about by an inexplicable exploding multi-part wheel of a commercial vehicle. My curiosity led me to research multi-part wheels developed for commercial vehicles. The average driver is only familiar with the one-piece wheels on their vehicle. As it turned out in that case, not only did I find out that there were multi-part wheels still in the market from the early 20th century, but I was able to find a lawyer who won a settlement when an identical wheel exploded in a similar accident in Tennessee.  He gave me the name of the experts I needed in order to develop a large liability case while representing my brain-injured client in the claim related to the defective multi-part wheel which exploded under high pressure.  In that case, curiosity was a very valuable asset, to the client and his family, but also to my legal expertise and my firm. I opened a new specialty area in my current firm and I continue to win cases such as these based on the skills that I have developed from years of applying curiosity and creativity to problems or obstacles that come up in cases.  

Workers' Compensation: $854,000

In 2014 attorney Wayne Powell was able to resolve a claim regarding a client who fell three stories from a manufacturing machine at the factory where he worked, causing him permanent brain damage which required continuing care for him.

SIGNIFICANCE:  This is another case where Mr. Powell and the firm arranged for a lump sum and annuity payments for 20 years which included repatriation by the client to his home country and arrangements made by Mr. Powell  through the client’s embassy to receive adequate housing and continuing treatment upon repatriation.

WORKERS’ COMPENSATION | TEMPORARY PARTIAL DISABILITY | PERMANENT PARTIAL DISABILITY



Workers' Compensation: $940,000
Personal Injury | Fall from Roof

In 2013, attorney Wayne Powell resolved a workers' compensation claim in which the client fell two stories from a roof, suffering a serious brain and spinal injury, which caused hemiplegia. The settlement amount combined a lump sum payment and annuity payment to the client and his family, which would pay his cost for treatment and living expenses for 20 years.  

SIGNIFICANCE:  The calculation of the settlement was based on the cost of living in the client’s home country.  Resolution of this case is significant, since Mr. Powell arranged for the client to be able to return to his home country, through the client’s country’s embassy.  In addition, the Powell Law Group was able to assist in obtaining a suitable retrofit of his house in his home country before repatriation, and also resulted in the appointment of a guardian and conservator to assist in the client’s repatriation.

 WORKERS’ COMPENSATION | TEMPORARY PARTIAL DISABILITY | PERMANENT PARTIAL DISABILITY