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Code · Hawaii · Chapter 386

3. Provisions Common to Benefits for Disability and Death

655 words·~3 min read·/hi/chapter-386/3

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3. Provisions Common to Benefits for Disability and Death
§386-51 Computation of average weekly wages. Average weekly wages shall be computed in a manner that the resulting amount represents most fairly, in the light of the employee's employment pattern and the duration of the employee's disability, the injured employee's average weekly wages from all covered employment at the time of the personal injury. In no event, however, shall an employee's average weekly wages be computed to be less than the employee's hourly rate of pay multiplied by thirty-five; provided that where the employee holds part-time employment of fewer than thirty-five hours per week, the employee's average weekly wages shall be the hourly rate at the place of employment where the injury occurred multiplied by the average hours worked in the fifty-two weeks (or portions thereof) preceding the week in which the injury occurred, for the calculation of temporary partial disability and temporary total disability benefits only.
Other benefits including permanent partial disability, permanent total disability, and death shall be calculated as if the employee had been a full-time employee.
(1)Where appropriate and feasible, computation shall be made on the basis of the injured employee's earnings from covered employment during the twelve months preceding the employee's personal injury; but if during that period, the employee, because of sickness or similar personal circumstances was unable to engage in employment for one or more weeks then the number of those weeks shall not be included in the computation of the average weekly wage.
(2)Where an employee at the time of the injury was employed at higher wages than during any other period of the preceding twelve months then the employee's average weekly wages shall be computed exclusively on the basis of the higher wages.
(3)Where, by reason of the shortness of the time during which the employee has been in the employment or the casual nature or terms of the employment, it is not feasible to compute the average weekly wages on the basis of the injured employee's own earnings from that employment, regard may be had to the average weekly wages which during the twelve months preceding the injury was being earned by an employee in comparable employment.
(4)Except as otherwise provided, the total average weekly wages of any employee shall be computed at a lower amount than the average weekly wages earned at the time of the injury by an employee in comparable employment engaged as a full-time employee on an annual basis in the type of employment in which the injury occurred.
(5)If an employee, while under twenty-five years of age, sustains a work injury causing permanent disability or death, the employee's average weekly wages shall be computed on the basis of the wages which the employee would have earned in the employee's employment had the employee been twenty-five years of age.
(6)The director may issue rules for the determination of the average weekly wages in particular classes of cases, consistent with the principles laid down in the first paragraph of this section. [L 1963, c 116, pt of §1; Supp, §97-50; am L 1967, c 139, §1; HRS §386-51; am L 1970, c 53, §1; gen ch 1985; am L 1995, c 234, §11]
Cross References
Rulemaking, see chapter 91.
Volunteer emergency medical disaster response personnel, see §321-23.3.
Law Journals and Reviews
Paragraph
(5)not applicable to injuries sustained before its effective date. Haw. Supp, 6 HBJ, no. 1 at 23 (1969).
Case Notes
Section limited by last paragraph of §386-42 applying to aliens. 27 H. 431 (1923).
Overtime included as wages. 33 H. 412 (1935).
"Earnings" defined. 37 H. 517 (1947).
English rule to be used. 43 H. 173 (1959).
Par. (5): Where there is injury causing permanent disability or death, use of hypothetical earnings at age twenty-five is proper to compute benefits for both the permanent and temporary disabilities. 52 H. 577, 482 P.2d 151 (1971).
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