
An employer statement for an injury claim should include the date, time, and location of the incident, a factual description of what happened, the names of any witnesses, the injured employee’s job title and duties, and confirmation of whether the injury occurred during work-related activity. The statement must be accurate, complete, and submitted promptly to support the workers’ compensation process.
Workplace injuries set off a chain of documentation that most employers are unprepared for. While injured workers focus on recovery, employers are legally required to create a written record that can shape the outcome of a claim for months or even years. A poorly written or incomplete employer statement does not just slow down the process — it can create disputes, trigger investigations, and leave both the business and the employee without clear answers when it matters most.
Why the Employer Statement Matters in a Workers’ Compensation Claim
The employer statement serves as the official workplace account of how an injury occurred. Insurance carriers, claims adjusters, and workers’ compensation boards in Georgia use this document to verify that the injury happened on the job and that the employee is eligible for benefits under O.C.G.A. § 34-9-1, which governs Georgia’s workers’ compensation system.
Without a clear and factual employer statement, an insurance carrier may delay the claim or request additional investigation before approving benefits. An accurate statement protects both the employer and the employee by creating a reliable record that reduces the chance of conflicting accounts later in the process.
The Core Elements Every Employer Statement Must Contain
A strong employer statement is built on specific, verifiable facts rather than general impressions. Each element of the statement serves a distinct purpose in the claims process.
The following are the core components every employer statement should include:
- Employee information – Full legal name, job title, department, date of hire, and employment status at the time of the injury.
- Date and time of the incident – The exact date and, if known, the time when the injury occurred, recorded precisely rather than estimated.
- Location of the incident – The specific area of the workplace where the injury happened, such as a warehouse floor, loading dock, or parking lot.
- Description of how the injury occurred – A factual, step-by-step account of what the employee was doing and how the injury took place, written in plain language without assumptions.
- Nature of the injury reported – What body part was affected and the type of injury the employee described, based only on what was reported at the time.
- Witness information – Names and contact details of any coworkers or supervisors who saw the incident or were present immediately after.
- Medical attention provided – Whether first aid was given on-site, and the name of any medical facility or physician the employee was referred to or visited.
- PPE and safety equipment status – Whether the employee was wearing required personal protective equipment at the time of the injury.
- Supervisor notification details – Who the employee reported the injury to, when it was reported, and how the supervisor responded.
Leaving out any of these elements gives the insurance carrier reason to question the completeness of the employer’s account, which can delay benefit payments or prompt additional scrutiny.
How to Write an Accurate Description of the Incident
The incident description is the most important part of the employer statement. It should read like a factual report, not a narrative with opinions or guesses about what caused the injury.
Stick to Observed Facts Only
Write only what was directly observed or reported by the employee at the time of the incident. Avoid adding conclusions such as “the employee was being careless” or “this was bound to happen” because these kinds of judgments are not facts and can create legal problems for the employer later.
If the employer was not present when the injury happened, the statement should clearly say so and describe only what was reported by the employee or witnesses. Labeling second-hand information accurately prevents the statement from being challenged as speculation.
Use Specific and Measurable Language
Vague language weakens the statement. Instead of writing “the employee slipped near the entrance,” write “the employee slipped on a wet floor near the north entrance of the warehouse at approximately 9:15 a.m.” Specific details give the claims adjuster clear information to work with.
Measurements, directions, times, and named locations all add credibility to the description. When the employer writes with this level of specificity, it shows the statement was completed thoughtfully and reduces the likelihood of factual disputes arising during the claims process.
Georgia-Specific Requirements for Employer Injury Reporting
Georgia law places specific obligations on employers when a workplace injury occurs. Under O.C.G.A. § 34-9-81, employers covered by workers’ compensation must report injuries to their insurance carrier promptly. Failure to report within required timeframes can result in penalties and complications with the claim.
Employers in Georgia are generally required to post notice of workers’ compensation coverage in a visible location and must direct injured employees to a panel of approved physicians. If the employer fails to maintain a posted panel of physicians as required under the Georgia State Board of Workers’ Compensation rules, the employee may choose their own doctor, which can affect how the claim is managed.
Common Mistakes Employers Make When Writing Injury Statements
Many employer statements are weakened not by bad intentions but by avoidable errors. Knowing what to watch for helps employers produce a more reliable document.
The following are the most frequent mistakes employers make in injury statements:
- Delaying the statement – Waiting days or weeks to complete the statement allows details to fade and creates gaps that the insurance carrier may question.
- Using subjective language – Including opinions, blame, or assumptions about the employee’s behavior turns a factual record into a disputed document.
- Omitting witness information – Failing to list witnesses who were present removes valuable verification that could confirm the employer’s account.
- Describing the injury rather than the incident – The statement should describe what happened, not diagnose or assess the medical severity of the injury, which is the doctor’s role.
- Leaving fields blank – Incomplete forms signal to carriers that the employer did not take the report seriously or that information is being withheld.
- Inconsistency with the employee’s account – Significant differences between what the employer writes and what the employee reports will prompt an investigation, even if both accounts contain some truth.
Reviewing the statement carefully before submission reduces the chance of these errors appearing in the official record.
What to Include About Witnesses in the Employer Statement
Witness information can be the deciding factor in a disputed claim. If a coworker saw the injury happen, their account can confirm the employee’s version of events and support the claim moving forward.
Recording Witness Details Correctly
For each witness, the employer statement should include the full name, job title, contact phone number, and a brief note about what the witness observed. The employer should record this information as soon as possible after the incident before witnesses forget specific details.
Do not paraphrase or summarize what a witness said in a way that changes the meaning of their account. If the witness described what they saw in their own words, those words are more useful than a reinterpretation written by someone else.
Handling Situations With No Witnesses
When no one else witnessed the injury, the employer should state clearly in the statement that the injury was unwitnessed and describe who was notified first and when. The absence of witnesses is not evidence that the injury did not happen.
Documenting the first report chain — who the employee told, at what time, and what was said — helps establish the timeline even without a direct witness. This documentation can carry significant weight during the review of an unwitnessed claim.
How the Employer Statement Affects the Claims Investigation
Once submitted, the employer statement becomes part of the official claim file reviewed by the workers’ compensation insurance carrier. The claims adjuster will compare it against the employee’s account, medical records, and any incident reports filed at the workplace.
If the employer’s statement matches the other documents closely, the investigation moves quickly and benefits are typically approved without significant delay. When the employer’s account conflicts with other evidence, the adjuster will investigate further, which delays payment and increases the chance that the claim is disputed or denied. A clear, complete employer statement is one of the most effective tools an employer has for keeping the claims process moving smoothly.
The Difference Between an Employer Statement and an Incident Report
These two documents are related but serve different functions. An incident report is typically completed immediately after the injury occurs and captures the raw, real-time details of what happened. The employer statement is a formal document prepared for submission to the insurance carrier as part of the workers’ compensation claim.
The incident report feeds into the employer statement but the two should not simply be carbon copies of each other. The employer statement may include additional context, employment records, and confirmation that the injury occurred during work-related duties, making it a more complete document from a claims processing standpoint. Both records should be consistent with each other, and any differences between them should be explainable and minor.
When to Seek Legal Support After a Workplace Injury Claim
Employers and employees sometimes find themselves in disagreement over the facts of an injury, and those disputes can escalate quickly. If the employer’s statement contains inaccuracies, incomplete information, or language that appears to minimize or deny the injury, the injured worker has the right to challenge that account.
If you were injured at work and believe the employer statement does not accurately reflect what happened, speaking with an attorney is an important step. Atlanta Truck Accident Law Group is available to review your case and help you understand your rights under Georgia workers’ compensation law. Call (404) 446-0847 to speak with someone about your situation.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is the employer required to provide a copy of the statement to the injured employee?
Georgia law does not automatically require employers to provide the employee with a copy of the employer’s statement, but employees can request access to their claim file documents through the Georgia State Board of Workers’ Compensation. An injured worker who believes the employer’s statement contains inaccurate information can file a dispute, and the claim file documents will typically be reviewed during that process. Working with a workers’ compensation attorney gives the employee guidance on how to request and respond to the contents of the employer’s statement.
What happens if the employer refuses to submit a statement?
If an employer fails to report a workplace injury or refuses to cooperate with the claims process, the Georgia State Board of Workers’ Compensation has authority to investigate and take action under O.C.G.A. § 34-9-18. The injured employee can still file directly with the Board and pursue benefits even without employer cooperation. Refusal to report or cooperate can expose the employer to penalties and can strengthen the employee’s position in the claim.
Can an employer change or correct a statement after it has been submitted?
An employer can submit a corrected or amended statement if a factual error is discovered after the original submission. The correction should be clearly labeled as an amendment, should identify what changed and why, and should be submitted to the insurance carrier promptly. Altering a statement to change facts for strategic reasons rather than to correct genuine errors can create serious legal problems, including allegations of fraud.
Does the employer statement affect how much compensation the employee receives?
The employer statement does not set the compensation amount directly, but it does influence whether the claim is approved and how quickly benefits begin. If the statement supports the employee’s account and confirms the injury occurred during work-related activity, benefits are more likely to be approved at the appropriate level under Georgia’s workers’ compensation schedule. A statement that creates doubt about the work-related nature of the injury can lead to delays, reduced benefits, or a denied claim that must be appealed.
How soon after the injury should the employer statement be completed?
Employers should complete the statement as soon as possible after the injury is reported, ideally within 24 to 48 hours while the facts are still fresh. Under Georgia’s workers’ compensation rules, employers are required to report injuries to their insurance carrier promptly, and delays in filing can complicate the claim. Completing the statement quickly also reduces the risk of details being forgotten or accounts becoming inconsistent over time.
Conclusion
A thorough employer statement is one of the most consequential documents in a workers’ compensation claim. It sets the record straight about what happened, confirms the employment relationship, and gives the insurance carrier the factual foundation it needs to process the claim fairly and efficiently.
If you were injured at work and have concerns about how the employer’s statement was written or whether it accurately reflects the facts of your injury, Atlanta Truck Accident Law Group can help you understand your options. Call (404) 446-0847 to speak with an attorney who handles workplace injury claims in Georgia.