Time Frame Guidelines
About Time Frames
A time frame is a schedule for the presentation of evidence by all parties to the litigation of a protest before the Office of Judges. The allotted time frame changes according to the type of protest in litigation. Some time frames are concurrent - the parties develop their evidence at the same time. Some time frames are consecutive - parties develop their evidence one at a time. A time frame order may be amended or extended by the Office of Judges at the request of one or more of the parties for good cause shown.
Below is a list of time frames typically allotted to the various protest types.
Protest Type |
Time Frame in Days |
Rejected by Self-Insured |
45 |
Compensability/rejection |
90 |
OP non-medical |
180 |
|
|
Permanent Total Disability |
|
Application Threshold |
60 |
I.E.B. Impairment Determination |
120 |
PTD Onset date |
45 |
PTD Entitlement |
180/360* |
PTD Termination |
180 |
|
|
Rehabilitation |
180 |
Reopening |
60 |
Temporary Total Disability |
90 |
Treatment (claimant's protest) |
45 |
Treatment (employer's protest) |
90 |
Dependent's Benefits (104 weeks) |
60 |
Death benefits/Fatals |
120/240* |
Permanent Partial Disability |
150/300* |
*Consecutive Time Frame: protesting party has first deadline; responding party has second deadline. |