Prohibition Times are Coming to an End in Pennsylvania

We’ve entered a new era in Pennsylvania. Yesterday, Governor Tom Wolf signed legislation into law that allows wine sales in licensed private establishments in the Commonwealth. Under the law grocery stores, restaurants, hotels, and takeout beer licensees are permitted to sell up to four bottles of takeout wine per customer. This is exciting news for Pennsylvanians as the sale of wine in grocery stores has not been permitted since before Prohibition.

The law also permits wine wholesalers to ship wine directly to consumers in Pennsylvania. The Commonwealth’s Wine & Spirits Stores can expand their hours of operation on Sundays and holidays, and are given more freedom in setting prices. Casinos will also be able to apply to sell alcohol 24 hours a day, 7 days a week. The law goes into effect in August, and is estimated to bring in $150 million to the Commonwealth in the first year.

New licensing procedures will be established by the Pennsylvania Liquor Control Board (PLCB) in response to the legislation. Existing licensees, and businesses seeking new licenses, should prepare for licensing changes related to the sale of wine, direct shipment of wine, and casinos that wish to sell wine around the clock.

This is a big win for anyone who sells wine or lives in Pennsylvania. The law opens a whole new market for businesses to expand their sales and brings needed convenience to Pennsylvania residents.

Take Note: Social Security and Medicare Benefits Changing in 2016

Claiming Social Security Twice is Eliminated

Prior to 2016, some married individuals who were 62 or older had claimed Social Security retirement benefits twice. Previously, a person whose spouse was at full retirement age and was herself or himself at an early retirement age, age 62 to 65, could claim spousal payments and then switch to payments based on their own work, which would then be higher because they were claiming it at an older age.

As of this year, however, workers who turn 62 in 2016 or later will not be able to claim both types of payments, but instead one or the other. However, the younger spouse can still claim spousal benefits when he or she turns 66, and those individuals will continue to contribute to their own Social Security Retirement benefit until age 70, thereby receiving a higher benefit when they begin to receive their full retirement benefits 4 years later.

Stricter Rules for Suspended Payment of Benefits

In May 2016, the rules have changed for suspending your Social Security Retirement benefits until a later date when they would be higher, and this process will no longer be permitted. Previously, spouses and dependent children could claim payments based on your work record while your benefits were suspended and continued to grow.

This option is no longer available, however, as of May 2016. You will no longer be allowed to “file and suspend.” If the retired worker’s benefits are suspended, spousal and dependent benefits will not be paid.

Higher Medicare Part B Premiums for some Social Security Recipients

Most Social Security recipients will pay the same Medicare Part B premium in 2016, as they did in 2015. That amount is $104.90 per month. Increases in Medicare Part B premiums are tied to increases in Social Security benefits due to cost-of-living adjustments which did not occur this year. However, those individuals who are enrolling for the first time in Medicare Part B this year will pay a higher premium of $121.80 per month.

Drug Shortages are Forcing Treatments to be Rationed

A NY Times article published on January 29, 2016 addressed the increasingly problematic issue of drug shortages. According to the article authored by Sheri Fink, in recent years, shortages of all sorts of drugs “have become the new normal in American medicine.” Ms. Fink notes that The American Society of Health-System Pharmacists currently lists inadequate supplies of more than 150 drugs and therapeutics. The reasons for the shortages are varied: there may be manufacturing shortages, federal safety crackdowns, or the abandonment by pharmaceutical companies of low-profit products. Although pharmacists and physicians are acutely aware of the problem, the public is not.

The article observes that there are no satisfactory nationwide guidelines to determine who does and does not receive drugs, and what the pecking order is for distribution of scarce drugs to patients who need them. Pharmaceutical companies often sell their products to healthcare providers—doctors, hospitals, and other institutions—on a first come, first served basis, leaving the final decision of who gets what up to the doctors, pharmacists, and hospitals themselves.

Read More about Drug Shortages are Forcing Treatments to be Rationed

Philadelphia Trial Court Rules Family Practitioner Cannot Testify

The Honorable Karen Shreeves-Johns of the Court of Common Pleas of Philadelphia recently ruled that a primary care physician cannot be qualified to testify as an expert on laser spine surgery. The case involved a motor vehicle accident in which the plaintiffs sought to have a Family Practitioner testify with regard to the necessity for laser spine surgeries performed after the accident. The plaintiffs had sued Comcast of Philadelphia and one of its employees.

The jury found that the defendants were not the factual cause to one of the plaintiffs. For the other plaintiff, although the negligence did cause injuries, they were awarded a de minimus $5,000. The plaintiffs then appealed Judge Shreeves-Johns’ ruling, which precluded their proffered expert, family physician Dr. Gregory Temple, from offering opinions on the reasonableness and necessity of the spine surgeries at issue.

Judge Shreeves-Johns said, “While medical witnesses may have expertise in overlapping areas and some doctors may be more qualified than others to testify on certain medical practices, a medical witness must have some familiarity with the particular technique or surgery at issue.” She went on to add, “Simply put, an expert must demonstrate some knowledge of the specific subject matter upon which he promises to express an opinion.” The plaintiffs relied on a 1965 opinion, Comm. v. Morris and a 1974 opinion, Ragan v. Steen.

Judge Shreeves-Johns felt that plaintiffs’ counsel was creatively “stretching and manipulating the court’s decision in Ragan,” wherein the court determined that Pennsylvania ought to join other states which had since recognized the absurdity of permitting witnesses to testify as experts simply by virtue of their licenses or degrees, without any professional experience to the actual matter with which they were testifying. Although Judge Shreeves-Johns felt that Dr. Temple’s medical school training familiarized him with basic parameters of medicine, his general practice did not mean he was a specialist in an area of medicine at issue—in this case, laser spine surgery.

This case certainly falls in line with many other jurisdictions, including New Jersey, which continue to compel that any expert opining a breach of a standard of care must have similar qualifications to the defendant in question. Additionally, these experts who opine specialized procedures for the plaintiff(s) must be physicians or medical professionals who perform those same procedures regularly as part of their own practice. Currently, the decision by Judge Shreeves-Johns is being appealed by the plaintiff.

Shareholder Appointed as New Board of Governors Member for PAJustice

Stark & Stark congratulates Shareholder Carin A. O’Donnell, who was recently elected onto the Board of Governors for the Pennsylvania Association for Justice (PAJustice).

PAJustice began in 1968, originally called the Pennsylvania Trial Lawyers Association. The goal was to create “cohesive and effective statewide organization to uphold and defend the Pennsylvania legal system, including trial by jury.” Since then, PAJustice has become a nationwide leader amongst trial lawyer associations, aggressively protecting citizens’ rights while providing members with a wealth of resources and education.

At Stark & Stark, Ms. O’Donnell is a Shareholder and member of the Accident & Personal Injury Group, and she is a frequent contributor to the Pennsylvania Law Monitor.

Another BRC Expert Barred From Testifying

Readers of this blog are familiar with my efforts to bar defense biomechanical engineers and accident reconstruction “experts” from providing invalid biomechanical testimony that people cannot be injured in low-impact collisions. Recently, I served as amicus counsel for ATLA-NJ before the New Jersey Supreme Court.

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