eLaws of Florida

  SECTION 112.1816. Firefighters; cancer diagnosis.  


Latest version.
  • 1(1) 2As used in this section, the term:
    9(a) 10“Cancer” includes:
    121. 13Bladder cancer.
    152. 16Brain cancer.
    183. 19Breast cancer.
    214. 22Cervical cancer.
    245. 25Colon cancer.
    276. 28Esophageal cancer.
    307. 31Invasive skin cancer.
    348. 35Kidney cancer.
    379. 38Large intestinal cancer.
    4110. 42Lung cancer.
    4411. 45Malignant melanoma.
    4712. 48Mesothelioma.
    4913. 50Multiple myeloma.
    5214. 53Non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma.
    5515. 56Oral cavity and pharynx cancer.
    6116. 62Ovarian cancer.
    6417. 65Prostate cancer.
    6718. 68Rectal cancer.
    7019. 71Stomach cancer.
    7320. 74Testicular cancer.
    7621. 77Thyroid cancer.
    79(b) 80“Employer” has the same meaning as in s. 88112.19189.
    90(c) 91“Firefighter” means an individual employed as a full-time firefighter within the fire department or public safety department of an employer whose primary responsibilities are the prevention and extinguishing of fires; the protection of life and property; and the enforcement of municipal, county, and state fire prevention codes and laws pertaining to the prevention and control of fires.
    148(2) 149Upon a diagnosis of cancer, a firefighter is entitled to the following benefits, as an alternative to pursuing workers’ compensation benefits under chapter 440, if the firefighter has been employed by his or her employer for at least 5 continuous years, has not used tobacco products for at least the preceding 5 years, and has not been employed in any other position in the preceding 5 years which is proven to create a higher risk for any cancer:
    227(a) 228Cancer treatment covered within an employer-sponsored health plan or through a group health insurance trust fund. The employer must timely reimburse the firefighter for any out-of-pocket deductible, copayment, or coinsurance costs incurred due to the treatment of cancer.
    266(b) 267A one-time cash payout of $25,000, upon the firefighter’s initial diagnosis of cancer.

    281If the firefighter elects to continue coverage in the employer-sponsored health plan or group health insurance trust fund after he or she terminates employment, the benefits specified in paragraphs (a) and (b) must be made available by the former employer of a firefighter for 10 years following the date on which the firefighter terminates employment so long as the firefighter otherwise met the criteria specified in this subsection when he or she terminated employment and was not subsequently employed as a firefighter following that date. For purposes of determining leave time and employee retention policies, the employer must consider a firefighter’s cancer diagnosis as an injury or illness incurred in the line of duty.

    395(3)(a) 396If the firefighter participates in an employer-sponsored retirement plan, the retirement plan must consider the firefighter totally and permanently disabled in the line of duty if he or she meets the retirement plan’s definition of totally and permanently disabled due to the diagnosis of cancer or circumstances that arise out of the treatment of cancer.
    451(b) 452If the firefighter does not participate in an employer-sponsored retirement plan, the employer must provide a disability retirement plan that provides the firefighter with at least 42 percent of his or her annual salary, at no cost to the firefighter, until the firefighter’s death, as coverage for total and permanent disabilities attributable to the diagnosis of cancer which arise out of the treatment of cancer.
    517(4)(a) 518If the firefighter participated in an employer-sponsored retirement plan, the retirement plan must consider the firefighter to have died in the line of duty if he or she dies as a result of cancer or circumstances that arise out of the treatment of cancer.
    562(b) 563If the firefighter did not participate in an employer-sponsored retirement plan, the employer must provide a death benefit to the firefighter’s beneficiary, at no cost to the firefighter or his or her beneficiary, totaling at least 42 percent of the firefighter’s most recent annual salary for at least 10 years following the firefighter’s death as a result of cancer or circumstances that arise out of the treatment of cancer.
    632(c) 633Firefighters who die as a result of cancer or circumstances that arise out of the treatment of cancer are considered to have died in the manner as described in s. 663112.191(2)(a), 664and all of the benefits arising out of such death are available to the deceased firefighter’s beneficiary.
    681(5)(a) 682The costs to provide the reimbursements and lump sum payments under subsection (2) and the costs to provide disability retirement benefits under paragraph (3)(b) and the line-of-duty death benefits under paragraph (4)(b) must be borne solely by the employer.
    721(b) 722The employer or employers participating in a retirement plan or system are solely responsible for the payment of the contributions necessary to fund the increased actuarial costs associated with the implementation of the presumptions under paragraphs (3)(a) and (4)(a), respectively, that cancer has, or the circumstances that arise out of the treatment of cancer have, either rendered the firefighter totally and permanently disabled or resulted in the death of the firefighter in the line of duty.
    798(c) 799An employer may not increase employee contributions required to participate in a retirement plan or system to fund the costs associated with enhanced benefits provided in subsections (3) and (4).
    829(6) 830The Division of State Fire Marshal within the Department of Financial Services shall adopt rules to establish employer cancer prevention best practices as it relates to personal protective equipment, decontamination, fire suppression apparatus, and fire stations.
History.-s. 1, ch. 2019-21.

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