Opinion
MARLER, J.
Petitioner Don L. Stemler appeals the decision of the Workers’ Compensation Appeals Board (the WCAB). After the workers’ compensation judge entered an award for petitioner, respondents State of California, Department of Transportation (Cal Trans) and State Compensation Insurance Fund, Adjusting Agency, filed petitions for reconsideration. Upon reconsideration, the WCAB reversed the award on two issues. Petitioner contends the WCAB erred in such reversal (1) in refusing to award the petitioner future medical treatment, and (2) in failing to find that by depriving petitioner of a safety incentive bonus solely because of time lost due to petitioner’s work related injury, Cal Trans illegally discriminated against petitioner in violation of Labor Code section 132a. The WCAB’s findings and award on reconsideration are reversed in part and affirmed in part for the reasons which follow.
On June 4, 1985, while employed as a heavy equipment operator for Cal Trans, petitioner injured his back, shoulder, neck and left leg when the grader he was driving went over the embankment and down a hill. Since then he has missed work off and on due to his injuries.
Petitioner received disability advances after his injury. In April of 1987, two physicians reevaluated his medical condition. The physicians disagreed [579]*579on petitioner’s need for future medical treatment. The workers’ compensation judge awarded future medical treatment. The WCAB reversed this award on reconsideration.
The agreement between Cal Trans and the California State Employees Association, petitioner’s union, provided for a safety incentive award program for certain classes of employees, including petitioner’s class. Employees qualifying for the program received an annual cash bonus of $50.1 Petitioner received notice that due to his time-lost work injury he would not receive the bonus.2 Petitioner was not charged with a preventable vehicular accident, which would have disqualified him for the award.
Petitioner filed a petition for increased compensation under Labor Code section 132a, contending that the denial of the $50 bonus constituted discrimination prohibited by that statute. The workers’ compensation judge awarded increased compensation. The WCAB reversed the award.
[580]*580Discussion
I
II
Petitioner’s second, more complex contention is that the failure of Cal Trans to give him the $50 bonus constitutes illegal discrimination under Labor Code section 132a.
In 1972 the Legislature amended Labor Code section 132a and added the following general preamble: “It is the declared policy of this state that there should not be discrimination against workers who are injured in the course and scope of their employment.” In Judson Steel Corp. v. Workers’ Comp. Appeals Bd. (1978) 22 Cal.3d 658 [150 Cal.Rptr. 250, 586 P.2d 564] the California Supreme Court held this change in the statute indicated the Legislature’s intent to provide that the discriminatory acts prohibited by section 132a are not limited to those acts enumerated in the statute. (22 Cal.3d at p. 667.) Instead, the statute’s prohibition is broader, encompassing other acts of discrimination. (Ibid.) The court did provide some parameters to the statute’s application; the court limited the statute’s scope by excluding actions necessitated by business realities. (Id., at p. 667.) The court, however, explicitly did not exclude actions provided for in collective bargaining agreements from the scope of section 132a. “[F]or a union may no more bargain away its members’ statutory rights against discrimination under the workers’ compensation laws than it may bargain away its members’ statutory rights against, for example, sexual or racial discrimination.” (Id., at p. 665, fn. 5.)
A further limitation expressed in Judson Steel is that the discriminatory act must be predicated upon the industrial injury. (22 Cal.3d at p. 665.) This court emphasized this required connection in Leamon v. Workers’ Comp. Appeals Bd. (1987) 190 Cal.App.3d 1409, 1414-1415 [235 Cal.Rptr. 912], where it refused to find discrimination in the discharge of an employee because the evidence showed the employer had ample grounds for the discharge other than unexcused absences which were later found to be due to work injuries. Because the employer’s actions were not related to the work injuries or time missed because of such injuries, there could be no discrimination prohibited under section 132a. Here, in contrast, the employer’s action was “due to [petitioner’s] lost time injury accident,” so there is no question whether the necessary relation exists.
[581]*581Judson Steel interprets section 132a as a broad prohibition against discrimination against industrially injured employees. Respondents argue the statute is inapplicable here because the safety incentive program was not only a part of the collective bargaining agreement, but was also applied evenhandedly. They argue petitioner was not singled out for discrimination; he simply did not qualify for the bonus because of his lost work time.
The argument that a policy adversely affecting employees injured on the job was not discriminatory because all similarly situated employees were treated the same failed in County of Santa Barbara v. Workers’ Comp. Appeals Bd. (Bouslaugh) (1980) 109 Cal.App.3d 211 [167 Cal.Rptr. 65]. In Bouslaugh a deputy who was injured on the job and unable to return to •work was demoted, causing a reduction in his disability compensation. The court rejected the argument that there was no discrimination because the deputy was treated the same as other deputies, finding that the issue was not whether the deputy was discriminated against vis-a-vis other similarly situated deputies, but whether he was a victim of prohibited discrimination. (Bouslaugh, supra, 109 Cal.App.3d at p. 215.) The court found a reduction in status and pay entirely because of disability caused by a work-related injury is prohibited discrimination. (Ibid.)
Because it denies a benefit to employees who miss work due to industrial injuries, the safety incentive program at issue here arguably falls within the prohibition of Labor Code section 132a as construed in Judson Steel, supra, 22 Cal.3d at page 667. However, we need not decide whether the program might constitute unlawful discrimination under Labor Code section 132a. The program was adopted pursuant to Government Code section 19994.20.3 That section provides for the implementation of accident prevention incentive award programs whose purpose is “to reduce . . . the number of on-the-job injuries to, and the use of sick leave by, state employees.”
Government Code section 19994.20 obviously contemplates that the Department of Personnel Administration (Department) shall have discretion to negotiate an appropriate accident prevention incentive award program. We do not think the safety incentive program at issue here transgresses that [582]*582legislative grant of negotiating authority.
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Opinion
MARLER, J.
Petitioner Don L. Stemler appeals the decision of the Workers’ Compensation Appeals Board (the WCAB). After the workers’ compensation judge entered an award for petitioner, respondents State of California, Department of Transportation (Cal Trans) and State Compensation Insurance Fund, Adjusting Agency, filed petitions for reconsideration. Upon reconsideration, the WCAB reversed the award on two issues. Petitioner contends the WCAB erred in such reversal (1) in refusing to award the petitioner future medical treatment, and (2) in failing to find that by depriving petitioner of a safety incentive bonus solely because of time lost due to petitioner’s work related injury, Cal Trans illegally discriminated against petitioner in violation of Labor Code section 132a. The WCAB’s findings and award on reconsideration are reversed in part and affirmed in part for the reasons which follow.
On June 4, 1985, while employed as a heavy equipment operator for Cal Trans, petitioner injured his back, shoulder, neck and left leg when the grader he was driving went over the embankment and down a hill. Since then he has missed work off and on due to his injuries.
Petitioner received disability advances after his injury. In April of 1987, two physicians reevaluated his medical condition. The physicians disagreed [579]*579on petitioner’s need for future medical treatment. The workers’ compensation judge awarded future medical treatment. The WCAB reversed this award on reconsideration.
The agreement between Cal Trans and the California State Employees Association, petitioner’s union, provided for a safety incentive award program for certain classes of employees, including petitioner’s class. Employees qualifying for the program received an annual cash bonus of $50.1 Petitioner received notice that due to his time-lost work injury he would not receive the bonus.2 Petitioner was not charged with a preventable vehicular accident, which would have disqualified him for the award.
Petitioner filed a petition for increased compensation under Labor Code section 132a, contending that the denial of the $50 bonus constituted discrimination prohibited by that statute. The workers’ compensation judge awarded increased compensation. The WCAB reversed the award.
[580]*580Discussion
I
II
Petitioner’s second, more complex contention is that the failure of Cal Trans to give him the $50 bonus constitutes illegal discrimination under Labor Code section 132a.
In 1972 the Legislature amended Labor Code section 132a and added the following general preamble: “It is the declared policy of this state that there should not be discrimination against workers who are injured in the course and scope of their employment.” In Judson Steel Corp. v. Workers’ Comp. Appeals Bd. (1978) 22 Cal.3d 658 [150 Cal.Rptr. 250, 586 P.2d 564] the California Supreme Court held this change in the statute indicated the Legislature’s intent to provide that the discriminatory acts prohibited by section 132a are not limited to those acts enumerated in the statute. (22 Cal.3d at p. 667.) Instead, the statute’s prohibition is broader, encompassing other acts of discrimination. (Ibid.) The court did provide some parameters to the statute’s application; the court limited the statute’s scope by excluding actions necessitated by business realities. (Id., at p. 667.) The court, however, explicitly did not exclude actions provided for in collective bargaining agreements from the scope of section 132a. “[F]or a union may no more bargain away its members’ statutory rights against discrimination under the workers’ compensation laws than it may bargain away its members’ statutory rights against, for example, sexual or racial discrimination.” (Id., at p. 665, fn. 5.)
A further limitation expressed in Judson Steel is that the discriminatory act must be predicated upon the industrial injury. (22 Cal.3d at p. 665.) This court emphasized this required connection in Leamon v. Workers’ Comp. Appeals Bd. (1987) 190 Cal.App.3d 1409, 1414-1415 [235 Cal.Rptr. 912], where it refused to find discrimination in the discharge of an employee because the evidence showed the employer had ample grounds for the discharge other than unexcused absences which were later found to be due to work injuries. Because the employer’s actions were not related to the work injuries or time missed because of such injuries, there could be no discrimination prohibited under section 132a. Here, in contrast, the employer’s action was “due to [petitioner’s] lost time injury accident,” so there is no question whether the necessary relation exists.
[581]*581Judson Steel interprets section 132a as a broad prohibition against discrimination against industrially injured employees. Respondents argue the statute is inapplicable here because the safety incentive program was not only a part of the collective bargaining agreement, but was also applied evenhandedly. They argue petitioner was not singled out for discrimination; he simply did not qualify for the bonus because of his lost work time.
The argument that a policy adversely affecting employees injured on the job was not discriminatory because all similarly situated employees were treated the same failed in County of Santa Barbara v. Workers’ Comp. Appeals Bd. (Bouslaugh) (1980) 109 Cal.App.3d 211 [167 Cal.Rptr. 65]. In Bouslaugh a deputy who was injured on the job and unable to return to •work was demoted, causing a reduction in his disability compensation. The court rejected the argument that there was no discrimination because the deputy was treated the same as other deputies, finding that the issue was not whether the deputy was discriminated against vis-a-vis other similarly situated deputies, but whether he was a victim of prohibited discrimination. (Bouslaugh, supra, 109 Cal.App.3d at p. 215.) The court found a reduction in status and pay entirely because of disability caused by a work-related injury is prohibited discrimination. (Ibid.)
Because it denies a benefit to employees who miss work due to industrial injuries, the safety incentive program at issue here arguably falls within the prohibition of Labor Code section 132a as construed in Judson Steel, supra, 22 Cal.3d at page 667. However, we need not decide whether the program might constitute unlawful discrimination under Labor Code section 132a. The program was adopted pursuant to Government Code section 19994.20.3 That section provides for the implementation of accident prevention incentive award programs whose purpose is “to reduce . . . the number of on-the-job injuries to, and the use of sick leave by, state employees.”
Government Code section 19994.20 obviously contemplates that the Department of Personnel Administration (Department) shall have discretion to negotiate an appropriate accident prevention incentive award program. We do not think the safety incentive program at issue here transgresses that [582]*582legislative grant of negotiating authority. Petitioner correctly points out that employees who lose time from work on account of injury or illness are not paid the bonus even when the injury or illness is not their fault. This observation, to have relevance, must concede that denial of a bonus to industrially injured employees who are at fault is within the purview of Government Code section 19994.20 and is permissible. This would allow differential treatment not only between industrially injured employees and those not injured, but also between those employees so injured who were at fault and those who were not, and those who lost work time and those who did not. The contention must be that withholding of a bonus from an employee injured without his fault who lost work time does not further the purposes of the statute to reduce on-the-job injuries and use of sick leave and thus should be proscribed by Labor Code section 132a. However, the Department could reasonably conclude that a partial “no fault” bonus incentive program was the only feasible way of accomplishing the purposes of the program. Given the modest size of the annual bonus ($50), the Department could conclude that the costs of adjudications of “fault” for employee illness or injury (which are apparently allowed under the program where vehicle accidents are at issue) would create further lost time and expense and eliminate the efficiencies the program was designed to achieve. Put differently, the Department could conclude that adjudications over employees’ “fault” in causing injury or illness would likely eat up whatever benefits were otherwise produced by the $50 annual bonus. It follows that the incentive program is consistent with the enabling statute.
Thus, even assuming for purposes of argument the bonus incentive program violates Labor Code section 132a, upon the assumption section 132a generally prevents industrially injured employees from being treated less well than other employees, we think the program is authorized by Government Code section 19994.20. The latter statute deals only with state employees and their collective bargaining agreements and is therefore the more specific statute. It prevails in any conflict with Labor Code section 132a, because “it is . . . settled that when a special and a general statute are in conflict, the former controls. (Code Civ. Proc., § 1859.) ‘ “[T]he special act will be considered as an exception to the general statute whether it was passed before or after such general enactment.’” (In re Williamson (1954) 43 Cal.2d 651, 654 [276 P.2d 593]; accord, People v. Gilbert (1969) 1 Cal.3d 475, 479-480 [82 Cal.Rptr. 724, 462 P.2d 580], and cases cited.)” (Agricultural Labor Relations Bd. v. Superior Court (1976) 16 Cal.3d 392, 420 [128 Cal.Rptr. 183, 546 P.2d 687].)
Since the safety incentive award program instituted by Cal Trans and Bargaining Unit 12 is authorized by Government Code section 19994.20, we need not meet the issue of the validity of a program such as the one here in the absence of an enabling statute.
[583]*583Disposition
The decision of the WCAB as to the denial of future medical care is reversed, and the decision as to the safety incentive award program is affirmed. The WCAB shall issue an order consistent with this opinion.
Sims, J., concurred.
See footnote, ante, page 577.