Current through Supplement No. 394, October, 2024
Section 71-05-02-02 - Determination of disability - Procedures1. Application.a. Application for disability benefits must be made within one year from the last date of covered employment on the form provided by the plan administrator. b. If the member is unable or unwilling to file an application, the member's employer or legal representative may file the member's disability application. c. The application must explain the cause of the disability, the limitations caused by the disability, the treatment being followed, and the effect of the disability on the individual's ability to be engaged in any gainful occupation for which the person is, or could become, reasonably fitted by education, training, or experience. 2.Medical examination.a. The applicant for disability retirement must provide the plan administrator with medical examination reports. b. An initial medical examination should be completed by the member's attending orfamily physician on the medical examination form provided by the plan administrator. If deemed necessary by the board's medical consultant, an additional examination must be completed by a specialist in the disability involved. Available medical or hospital reports may be accepted in lieu of a medical examination report if deemed acceptable by the medical consultant. c. The member is liable for any costs incurred by the member in undergoing medical examinations and completing and submitting the necessary medical examination reports, medical reports, and hospital reports. 3.Medical consultant.a. The board will retain a medical doctor to act as its consultant on disability retirement applications. b. The medical consultant shall review all medical information provided by the applicant. c. The medical consultant will be responsible to advise the plan administrator of the medical diagnosis and whether the condition is a permanent and total disability. 4.Decision and appeal.a. The plan administrator shall consider applications for disability benefits and shall make a written decision whether an applicant is entitled to benefits. The decision must be mailed to the applicant's address of record. b. The applicant may appeal an adverse determination to the board by providing a written notice of appeal within thirty days of the date that the plan administrator mailed the decision. c. The board shall consider all appeals at regularly scheduled board meetings. The applicant must be notified of the time and date of the meeting and may attend and be represented by legal counsel. The executive director shall provide to the board for its consideration a case history brief that includes membership history, medical examination summary, and the plan administrator's conclusions and recommendations. The board shall make the determination for eligibility at the meeting unless additional evidence or information is needed. The discussion concerning disability applications must be confidential and closed to the general public. d. If the applicant has terminated employment, the plan administrator shall notify the applicant in writing of the decision. If the applicant is determined not to be eligible for disability benefits, the plan administrator shall advise the applicant of the appeal procedure. If the applicant is determined eligible for disability benefits, benefits must be paid pursuant to subsection 5. e. If the applicant has not terminated employment, the applicant must be provided with a preliminary notification of the decision in writing. The preliminary notification remains in effect for a period not to exceed two hundred seventy days. If an applicant does not terminate employment within two hundred seventy days of the date of termination provided on the disability application, the application must be considered to be vacated but the applicant may reapply as provided in subsection 1. f. If the initial board decision is adverse to the applicant, after exhausting the administrative procedure under subdivisions b and c, the applicant may file a request for a formal hearing to be conducted under North Dakota Century Code chapter 28-32. The request for a formal hearing must be filed within thirty days after notice of the initial decision has been mailed or delivered. If an appeal is not filed within the thirty-day period the initial decision of the board is final. If a request for a formal hearing is timely filed, notice of the hearing must be served at least thirty days prior to the date set for the hearing. The board shall request appointment of an administrative law judge from the office of administrative hearings to conduct the hearing and make recommended findings of fact, conclusions of law, and order or adopt its own findings of fact, conclusions of law and order. The applicant may under North Dakota Century Code section 28-32-15 appeal the final decision resulting from this procedure to the district court. 5.Payment of annuity. If awarded, the disability annuity is payable on, or retroactive to, the first day of the month following the member's termination from covered employment, minus any early retirement benefits that have been paid. 6.Redetermination and recertification.a. A disabled annuitant's eligibility must be recertified eighteen months after the date the first check is issued and thereafter as specified by the medical consultant. The plan administrator may waive the necessity for a recertification based on the recommendation of the medical consultant. b. The plan administrator will send a recertification form and request for a statement of annual earnings by certified mail with return receipt to the disabled annuitant to be completed and sent back to the office. If completed recertification has not been received by the recertification date set in the recertification request, benefits will be suspended effective the first of the month following that date. Benefits will be reinstated the first of the month following recertification by the medical consultant. The regular accrued disability benefits will commence with a lump sum equal to the amount of missed payments, without interest, retroactive to the first of the month that benefits were suspended, unless otherwise approved by the North Dakota public employees retirement system board. c. The medical consultant may require the disabled annuitant to be reexamined by a doctor. The submission of medical reports by the annuitant, and the review of those reports by the board's medical consultant, may satisfy the reexamination requirement. Upon recertification, the disabled annuitant must be reimbursed up to four hundred dollars for the cost of the required reexamination if deemed necessary by the medical consultant and the plan administrator. d. The medical consultant will make the recertification decision. The executive director may require additional recertifications. The decision may be appealed to the board within ninety days of receiving the written recertification decision. e. Benefit payments must be suspended immediately upon notice received from the medical consultant that the annuitant does not meet recertification requirements. The plan administrator shall notify the annuitant of the suspension of benefits by certified mail and shall reinstate benefits back to the date of suspension if the annuitant is subsequently found to meet recertification requirements. f. If it is determined that the disability annuitant was not eligible for benefits during any time period when benefits were provided, the executive director may do all things necessary to recover the erroneously paid benefits. N.D. Admin Code 71-05-02-02
Effective November 1, 1990; amended effective June 1, 1992; June 1, 1996; May 1, 2004.General Authority: NDCC 39-03.1-06, 39-03.1-11
Law Implemented: NDCC 39-03.1-11