Martha Ramsay has been an NCAJ member for more than three decades and served in leadership roles – all while developing a thriving workers’ comp practice at two firms. Later this month, she’ll unite her law practice and her NCAJ commitment at the 31st Annual Workers' Comp Round Table CLE. In this episode, Martha sits down with host Amber Nimocks to look ahead at the CLE, where she’ll participate in a roundtable, and look back on her path to workers’ comp law and to the NCAJ.
The Workers' Comp Round Table CLE will be held at NCAJ headquarters in Raleigh on April 10. Members of the Workers' Comp Section can learn more and register here. Martha encourages attendees to “bring your questions, bring your problem cases.”
🎙️ Featured Guest 🎙️
Name: Martha Ramsay | LinkedIn
Connect: Ramsay Law Firm on LinkedIn | Facebook | X and Dewey, Ramsay & Hunt on LinkedIn | Facebook | X | Instagram
💡 Episode Highlights 💡
[02:09] NCAJ from Day One: Martha traces her NCAJ membership to her first job, working for a founding member who instilled in her that lawyers must learn from other lawyers — not just the letter of the law, but how to get things done in the courtroom and the legislature.
[09:29] Why Workers' Comp:After trying family law, business law, criminal law, and personal injury, Martha felt that she could truly change outcomes for people through workers' comp.
[14:52] High-Value CLE: What makes the 31st Annual Workers' Comp Round Table CLE uniquely valuable? As Martha explains, it is members only, focused on frank discussion of real cases and trends, and gives attendees access to experienced practitioners and younger lawyers with boots on the ground.
[18:07] Paying It Forward: Martha recalls the time when she was “just the little nobody” and stuck on a workers’ comp issue. She was encouraged to reach out to a well-known, respected lawyer who took the time to help her own. Today, she and everyone at NCAJ embrace that spirit of paying it forward.
[21:26] Don’t Go It Alone: “Why would you go it alone?” Martha asks. With NCAJ, you don’t have to. She promotes membership as a way for lawyers to get access to resources, including other lawyers dealing with the same problems as well as practical gems from CLEs.
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Voices of NCAJ features members of the North Carolina Advocates for Justice talking about what it means to be a trial lawyer, what it takes to be great at the practice of law and how being a part of NCAJ enriches their lives and their careers.
Members of NCAJ belong to a nonprofit, nonpartisan association of legal professionals dedicated to empowering a strong community of trial lawyers to protect people, prevent injustice and promote fairness. Membership affords many benefits and we’re proud to offer discounts and opportunities thanks to our tremendous community of sponsors and partners. Join today!
Welcome to Voices of NCAJ.
Speaker:We're talking to members of the North
Carolina Advocates for Justice about what
Speaker:it means to be a trial lawyer, what it
takes to be great at the practice of law,
Speaker:and how being a part of NCAJ
enriches their lives and careers.
Speaker:Produced and powered by LawPods.
Speaker:Welcome everyone to Voices of NCAJ,
Speaker:the podcast for the North Carolina
Advocates for Justice. I am Amber Nimocks,
Speaker:your host and director of External
Affairs. Before we get started,
Speaker:I'd like to thank our circle of leadership
gemstone level members for supporting
Speaker:NCAJ's mission and this podcast.
If you're watching on YouTube,
Speaker:you can see a list of circle of leadership
firms at the end of the podcast.
Speaker:To find out how your firm can join
the circle, go to nCAJ.com/circle.
Speaker:My guest today is Martha Ramsey.
Speaker:She is the founder of Ramsey Law Firm
where she specializes in workers'
Speaker:compensation and managing partner
of the personal injury firm, Dewey,
Speaker:Ramsey & Hunt, PA in Charlotte.
Speaker:She is a board certified specialist in
workers' compensation law and the author
Speaker:of North Carolina
Workers' Compensation Law,
Speaker:a practical guide to success at every
stage of a claim chapter on rehabilitation
Speaker:professionals. Martha has been an NCAJ
member for 33 years and has served in a
Speaker:variety of leadership roles and presented
at innumerable workers' comp CLEs.
Speaker:Later this month,
Speaker:she will participate in the 31st
annual workers' comp round table CLE.
Speaker:As part of the panel, who are you
going to call? Doctors for every issue.
Speaker:If you'd like to register for that
CLE, you can go to nCAJ.com/events.
Speaker:It will be held at NCAJ
headquarters in Raleigh on April 10,
Speaker:and it is open to members of NCAJ's
workers' comp section only. Martha,
Speaker:welcome to the podcast.
Speaker:Thank you very much, Amber. I appreciate
the opportunity to talk to you.
Speaker:So you have been a member, I
went back and counted for you.
Speaker:You've been a member of NCAJ
for more than three decades.
Speaker:How did you first come to get
involved in the organization?
Speaker:Oh, I've actually been an NCAJ member
ever since I was really a lawyer.
Speaker:I started work for Alan Bailey's
law firm. Allen A or AA,
Speaker:as those of us who work
for him used to know,
Speaker:was a founding member of the NCAJ.
Speaker:And I remember the trips he would
make driving from Charlotte to
Speaker:Raleigh on a regular basis.
Speaker:That telephone conference calls weren't
always done and they didn't have Zoom or
Speaker:anything like that. So Alan put in
the miles to go to Raleigh for NCAJi.
Speaker:And what I found that Alan instilled
in us was it was crucial for
Speaker:lawyers to learn from other lawyers,
Speaker:not just the letter of the law, but
how to actually get things done,
Speaker:how to get things done in the courtroom,
Speaker:how to get things done in the legislature.
Speaker:And that was why he was
so devoted to NCAJA.
Speaker:And he passed that along to many,
many, many of us across the state,
Speaker:and I'm one of them.
Speaker:Awesome. So yeah,
Speaker:I noted on your member record
that I think you have been an
Speaker:NCAJ member for about one month less
than you have been a practicing attorney.
Speaker:So what was it like to go
to work for Alan Bailey?
Speaker:That was your first job out of law school?
Speaker:Yeah, yeah.
Speaker:Alan knew tons of people across the
state and would always be able to
Speaker:give me, if I didn't know
the answer to a question,
Speaker:be able to give me a
resource. But I'll tell you,
Speaker:on my first day as a new lawyer,
Speaker:I walked in and no one else
really knew I was coming.
Speaker:And Alan walked me down to an office and
there was a stack of paper files on it.
Speaker:And Alan said, "Read through those and
tell me what you think. " Then I was off.
Speaker:So that was my training at the law
firm to be able to be ready for being a
Speaker:new lawyer.
Speaker:Yeah. As I was saying
before we got on the call,
Speaker:I started my professional career out of
undergrad as a journalist at the same
Speaker:time that you were graduating from
law school. It was a different era.
Speaker:That was very much like my first
day in my first job. They're like-.
Speaker:Where it's just like,
good luck. Here it is.
Speaker:Yep. There it is.
Speaker:Your story's due at 3:15 because my
editor had a tea time that he intended to
Speaker:keep every day at four.
Speaker:And so the workplace looked a
little differently for that for our
Speaker:generations when we started out.
Speaker:For sure.
Speaker:And this was one of the things kind of
Alan's sort of idea about NCAJ was really
Speaker:reproduced in the firm was
obviously there was a law library.
Speaker:Remember that back when we
had law libraries and you
walked into law libraries
Speaker:and pulled books down,
Speaker:there was the law library that you
could figure out the letter of law,
Speaker:but we were a pretty big firm. We
actually had, I think, seven attorneys,
Speaker:eight attorneys at one point. And so
each lawyer sort of had their specialty.
Speaker:So I could go around to sort of any
of the lawyers and be like, "Hey,
Speaker:you got a minute? Here's my question.
Speaker:And as long as you were
prepared with enough facts,
Speaker:they would give you a hand and give you
some instruction on what was going to go
Speaker:on.
Speaker:" So there wasn't a formal training
method or program that you went through,
Speaker:but there were plenty of resources and
you just had to step up and start to use
Speaker:them. I don't know if your journalism
was the same way where there were
Speaker:resources for you.
Speaker:Oh yeah. I started my
career in a bureau office,
Speaker:so it was just a couple of us in there.
Speaker:But when I moved to the main newsroom
that the Fayetteville Observer,
Speaker:it was just,
Speaker:you learned from just sitting because it
was a big open room just full of people
Speaker:on the phone.
Speaker:And there were some reporters there who
were just so good at interviewing and
Speaker:you just listen to them on the
phone and you would be like, "Huh,
Speaker:that's how it's done." Almost everybody
was willing to help you and give you
Speaker:advice. And I think
that it's so important,
Speaker:especially I read a lot about new grads
entering the workforce today and how
Speaker:it's like pulling eye teeth for some of
them to get them into the office space.
Speaker:And I'm like, that's invaluable.
Speaker:If you're new in a field or even
new to a firm or to a company,
Speaker:I don't know what I would do if I couldn't
have gone in there and just learned
Speaker:and watched other people at work.
Speaker:And absolutely, that's one of the things
the attorneys enjoy at our office.
Speaker:I mean, we have some
accessibility to work remotely,
Speaker:but the attorneys enjoy coming in because
sometimes you just have a chance to
Speaker:walk down the hall and say, "I got
this problem. What do you think?
Speaker:" And somebody can take four minutes
and just give you some feedback.
Speaker:It's really very helpful.
Speaker:So when was it that you decided that
you were going to become a lawyer?
Speaker:Oh, I never had a grand
plan to be a lawyer.
Speaker:I was never a person who was
like, "Oh, when I was six,
Speaker:I was going to be a lawyer." I thought
I might've almost more likely been a
Speaker:journalist maybe because I
think that was very interesting.
Speaker:I was an econ major and who didn't want
to work in the bank and liked theater.
Speaker:So I got into law school, went
to the University of Buffalo,
Speaker:and I had a great experience doing MOOT
court. Shout out to my MOOT court folks,
Speaker:Rob Sardinia, Mike Joint
for helping me along.
Speaker:But we had a great opportunity
for Moot Court there.
Speaker:And that was what I think really sort
of convinced me that this lawyer rang
Speaker:stuff could be fun, be
something that is intriguing,
Speaker:that is challenging, that is changing,
Speaker:but also that you can influence.
Speaker:I didn't ever feel that as an econ major
going into banks or bank regulations,
Speaker:I would be able to influence anything
or change anything. And that's what's
Speaker:really enjoyable about being in the law.
Speaker:And how did you wind up in the workers'
comp as your focus, as your specialty?
Speaker:I stumbled in it.
Speaker:I don't know how many folks say I want
to be a work comp lawyer when they go to
Speaker:law school either, maybe or some,
Speaker:but I did a variety of work at Allen's
law firm. So I did some family law,
Speaker:I did business law, I
did some criminal law.
Speaker:Obviously we did a ton of
personal injury cases as well,
Speaker:but workers' comp lets you really
change outcomes for people.
Speaker:A lot of my clients are very
happy at the end of their case.
Speaker:So I would have family law clients
who were just miserable because
Speaker:something they loved was ending
or there was some kind of spite.
Speaker:The corporate clients would be like,
"Whatever you did what I paid you to do,
Speaker:okay." The criminal law, hardly any of
the criminal folks walk out being like,
Speaker:"Yay,
Speaker:that was a great experience me and
the criminal law." But the work comp
Speaker:folks,
Speaker:I could actually change things for
people that could see a difference and
Speaker:they were usually happy at the end.
So I really enjoy that area of it.
Speaker:Cool. And so as I said in the intro,
Speaker:you've had a variety of leadership roles.
Speaker:You were in NCHA and other organizations,
Speaker:but you did a turn on the board
of governors. Is that right?
Speaker:I haven't served on the board of
governors yet, and now you voted for.
Speaker:So how did I find my way into leadership?
Speaker:NCAJ just has this amazing group of
people who volunteer hours and hours of
Speaker:their time. And I would go and kind
of see it, advantage of it. I mean,
Speaker:I would see these people putting
in time for making great CLEs.
Speaker:I would see people working
hard at the legislature.
Speaker:I served on the education committee and
membership committee for a number of
Speaker:years and knew that someday
it would be my turn.
Speaker:I knew that all these other people had
done this work and they had been passing
Speaker:the work down to sort of the next group
that would come along and take the heavy
Speaker:workload. So Neil Kamock and
Frank Riccio called me and said,
Speaker:"Would you be the chair,
Speaker:get in line to be the chair for the work
comp section?" And I gave them probably
Speaker:a million qualifiers about how I was
going to be limited in this and I wasn't
Speaker:sure that I could do that and how
much would actually be expected of me
Speaker:because I was just really concerned about
meeting the standards of all the other
Speaker:lawyers that I'd seen. But you know
what? The group had me. I mean,
Speaker:you just would not even believe the
work comp section folks. They're like,
Speaker:"We got you, Martha." Kevin Bond
doing legislatives, Zach Derkery,
Speaker:Stewart, Puicon, Bob Bollinger,
Speaker:a lot of folks just picking me up.
Sheila Chavis, incredibly helpful,
Speaker:picking me up and giving me
instructions and giving me guidance.
Speaker:And you know what? It turned out,
Amber, it was a ton of fun. I mean,
Speaker:it was cool. I got to see
the legislative stuff,
Speaker:which you don't always
see as a section member.
Speaker:I got to see the other lawyer stuff,
Speaker:and I got to develop a good relationship
with the NCAJ staff who were just
Speaker:delightful, patient, thank goodness,
and delightful to work with.
Speaker:So I would encourage anyone who has
any interest in kind of returning back
Speaker:to service,
Speaker:giving back to all the lawyers who've
given to them who've gone ahead,
Speaker:put some time in. It's not going to be
as bad as you think it's going to be,
Speaker:and it's going to be a lot of fun.
Speaker:So don't be afraid to step
into some leadership roles.
Speaker:Awesome. All right.
Speaker:We're going to definitely going to clip
that and use it for recruitment for
Speaker:section leadership next year. Absolutely.
Speaker:The workers' comp round table has
been up and running for almost
Speaker:as long as you and I have been
professional working adults.
Speaker:This humming addition is its
31st workers' comp round table.
Speaker:I don't know too many other
programs that can claim that kind of
Speaker:longevity.
Speaker:Workplace towards in December is
the one is going to match that.
Speaker:Yeah. So what is it that makes this
program and workplace towards ...
Speaker:But I guess specifically this
one, since we're leading up to it,
Speaker:what makes this one so valuable
to members of the section?
Speaker:Yeah,
Speaker:so there are two sort of completely
different ideas about these two CLLEs that
Speaker:the work comp section
runs. And so the first,
Speaker:this round table is really
important because it's members only.
Speaker:It's an opportunity for us
to talk very frankly about
Speaker:what we see going on in the
workers' compensation section.
Speaker:So we can talk about
cases that are problems.
Speaker:We can talk about how we're seeing
different medical providers respond to
Speaker:things, kind of trends we're
seeing in our own practice.
Speaker:We can bring specific issues. I mean,
Speaker:it just gives you access to
an incredible brain trust of
Speaker:attorneys. First of all,
Speaker:experienced attorneys who've
been out there for a long time,
Speaker:but also younger attorneys who are
just running with the cases and
Speaker:having to really see what's actually
going out, boots on the ground.
Speaker:So a chance to hear from
kind of experienced folks,
Speaker:but also folks with boots on the ground
who are every day running through these
Speaker:problems.
And how do you get feedback on that?
Speaker:How do you understand what's going on
in a broader picture to help figure out
Speaker:your problems with your
cases? It's really unusual.
Speaker:Yeah. And this time you're going to ...
Speaker:I don't know if this is always the format,
Speaker:but there's going to be more breakouts
where you work in smaller groups
Speaker:around different issues. Is that right?
Speaker:So the round table traditionally has
always kept more space open for just
Speaker:those general kind of unscripted
discussions between the attorneys.
Speaker:So usually, and Jesse,
Speaker:Shapiro and Mike Vertiks have done a great
job of putting something forward this
Speaker:year to help for trial prep,
Speaker:like more of a basic how to run a case.
Speaker:So we're going to start with sort
of who do you call pre-lit issues
Speaker:and how do we deal with
doctors and getting evidence?
Speaker:And then there's a really great group
that's going to talk about getting ready
Speaker:for a hearing and a group that's going
to talk about post-hearing issues.
Speaker:And then there's breakout sessions
after those. So bring your questions,
Speaker:bring your problem cases.
That's really what this is.
Speaker:Let's do some more detailed,
hard work on these issues.
Speaker:So very hands-on.
Speaker:Very hands-on.
Speaker:You're not going to get a smarter group
of attorneys to get feedback from on
Speaker:your specific problems with
your cases. So come and join us.
Speaker:It's always fun too.
They always make it fun.
Speaker:Yeah. The workers' comp
section has such a sprita core.
Speaker:You guys really hang very
tough and very tight.
Speaker:It's always nice to be at your CLEs
or your section events and see that.
Speaker:I don't know if there's something about
the practice or if it's just it's a
Speaker:terrific group of lawyers or I don't
know what the magical ingredient is.
Speaker:I don't know exactly.
Speaker:I think we fight all the same battles
and so many people in this section had
Speaker:attorneys give to them, and so they're
willing to give back. I mean, again,
Speaker:I remember I was stuck on an
issue in a workers' comp case.
Speaker:And in the way back day,
and Allen Bailey said,
Speaker:"Call this guy." And it was Hank Patterson
doing legislative work and like a
Speaker:well-known respected attorney.
And I'm just this little nobody.
Speaker:And I called Hank because no one in my
firm could answer the question. I called,
Speaker:Hank gave me 10 minutes and great
suggestions. And I'll never forget that,
Speaker:that he was willing to take
that time to help me out.
Speaker:And I've done that for lots of lawyers
who've called me and I'm willing to do
Speaker:that. That's how we kind of keep
it going, how we pay it forward.
Speaker:What has being an NCAJ member meant
to you personally and professionally?
Speaker:It gave me an education I wouldn't
have gotten anywhere else.
Speaker:How to run a law firm.
Speaker:I know that's not exactly
on the NCHA agenda,
Speaker:but we talk about it.
Speaker:It gives you an opportunity to
meet people and talk about it.
Speaker:I will say the marketing summit
that the NCAJ has put on has been
Speaker:outstanding, has been outstanding.
Speaker:The speakers that you guys get to come
in who can actually talk about the
Speaker:mechanics of marketing and how to
track cases and how to keep your
Speaker:business afloat, how to look at
your new term I learned, the KPIs,
Speaker:the key proposals, indicators,
Speaker:which I was never taught in law school
and didn't go to business school.
Speaker:So right, Amber, like KPIs don't roll
off your tongue, I don't imagine.
Speaker:No, no,
Speaker:that's one of those acronyms that I
view with suspicion at first because
Speaker:I remember when I heard the first
time I heard the term KPI, I was like,
Speaker:"Is this going to be applied to me?
Speaker:How am I supposed to fulfill this if I
don't understand what it is? " So yeah,
Speaker:we have had really,
Speaker:really great response from Strategy Summit
and that's definitely part of it is,
Speaker:gosh, because the business of law,
Speaker:like every other field is changing
so much and trying to keep
Speaker:up with the pace of artificial
intelligence being part of the mix.
Speaker:And just from a marketing standpoint
that it's just everything's changing,
Speaker:the speed of the algorithms are changing
or it's just ... So that's great.
Speaker:We were really gratified at how well
received a strategy summit has been.
Speaker:Yeah. And so also, I mean,
why would you go it alone?
Speaker:Why would you be like, "I don't need NCAJ.
Speaker:I don't need to have access to the
smartest lawyers in the state who are also
Speaker:running their own law firms and dealing
with my same problems." I'm just going
Speaker:to do it on my own because
that's how I roll. I mean,
Speaker:I don't know why you would eliminate
your resources in that way,
Speaker:especially when it's so accessible with
the Listserv and with being able to
Speaker:reach out to other attorneys how
much help you can get. I mean,
Speaker:just things like dealing
with difficult clients,
Speaker:things like securing evidence and
laying a foundation to get it admitted.
Speaker:He's passed now, but Joe Roberts, one
of the attorneys in the state, his son,
Speaker:Scott's a great attorney. I
was out of CLE and he was like,
Speaker:"Here's how I work to get evidence
from my doctors. Here's how I do my
Speaker:affidavit.
Speaker:Here's how I approach their assistant
to see the best way to get it
Speaker:signed. Here's how I presented
to the defense attorney.
Speaker:Here's the foundation I laid to get
it admitted into evidence." I mean,
Speaker:I was like, "Okay,
Speaker:a whole bunch of notes." And some
practices you're like, "Yeah,
Speaker:I don't need that.
Speaker:I'll throw that away." But you can just
pick up these gems that are so helpful
Speaker:to everyday things in your practice.
Speaker:Right, right. Tricks of the trade that
somebody else has already figured out.
Speaker:Yeah, that's invaluable. It really
is. I mean, any field, I think,
Speaker:but certainly for this specific
practice area, definitely.
Speaker:So you are a very busy woman.
You're running two law firms now?
Speaker:I am, yeah. We run two law firms.
Speaker:So Ramsey does the work comp
and the catastrophic PI,
Speaker:and Doonie Ramsey Hunt does more
soft tissue chiropractic cases.
Speaker:It's fun to run too.
Speaker:And you are, as I mentioned,
involved in a number, not just NCAJ,
Speaker:you're involved in a number of
organizations that serve workers' comp and
Speaker:the practice that you do.
Speaker:So how do you stay recharged
and stay up for the fight?
Speaker:Yeah. So let me give a shout
out to my softball team,
Speaker:Mojo's co-ed softball team
still playing after 30
Speaker:something years together,
some of us have been.
Speaker:That is amazing.
Speaker:Yeah. We have our softball
night, which is always good.
Speaker:So that certainly keeps me
going. The other thing, Amber,
Speaker:is I've been real fortunate to be able
to represent professional athletes.
Speaker:So I'm on the NFLPA, the
Professional Players Association,
Speaker:that represents the players in the
collective bargaining agreement.
Speaker:And I've been able to represent some
professional athletes in workers'
Speaker:compensation cases. So some Carolina
Panthers, some Charlotte football clubs,
Speaker:some hurricanes players, and honest
ton of minor league baseball, lacrosse.
Speaker:And I don't think, I didn't
know this till recently.
Speaker:We have professional rugby
here in North Carolina.
Speaker:Oh yeah. I think I did read
that some. I was like, "What?
Speaker:That's amazing." Wow.
Speaker:We used to have professional
or semi-pro cricket as well.
Speaker:My gosh, I did not.
Speaker:Know that. In Carey, Morrisville,
I think in Morrisville,
Speaker:there's a big Southeast
Asian population. And so
Speaker:their franchise may not have been renewed,
Speaker:but for a while there was
professional cricket as well.
Speaker:So those cases can get
complex. Jurisdictional issues,
Speaker:hired here, injured here, living here,
Speaker:getting treatment all across the country,
Speaker:having to figure out how your
knee injury client who is
Speaker:injured with the Panthers,
now he's living in Texas.
Speaker:Where in Sugar Land are you able to get
an orthopedic doctor who will take North
Speaker:Carolina workers' comp to treat them?
Speaker:Interaction with a collective
bargaining agreement. Are there credits?
Speaker:Are there injury protection,
injury grievances?
Speaker:How do they interact with the
workers' compensation statute? I mean,
Speaker:all of that can be very
complex and challenging,
Speaker:not to mention that the players
often have multiple injuries.
Speaker:So not uncommon for us to have
one player who has four or
Speaker:five different injuries,
different injury dates,
Speaker:different dates in and out
of work, different providers
for medical treatments.
Speaker:So just juggling all those balls,
keeping them all in the air,
Speaker:seeing how they interact with each
other and how they change is sort of an
Speaker:ever-changing thing.
And that keeps you engaged.
Speaker:So it's kind of like watching
my son play video games.
Speaker:He keeps leveling up and it keeps
getting harder and that keeps him going.
Speaker:Yeah, it keeps him engaged.
Speaker:He has to add one from what
he knew in the first level,
Speaker:but now he has to add
these four other moves.
Speaker:Not that I'm a video
game expert in any way.
Speaker:No, no. I never really mastered
the whole joystick thing,
Speaker:which is another thing that, well,
Speaker:that is different for
this generation than ours.
Speaker:I'm good at some things,
Speaker:but my kids completely laugh because when
they were playing Minecraft and I was
Speaker:like, "I could do this. This is
like putting things together.
Speaker:That's exciting." I dug a
hole and couldn't hop out.
And so they were just like,
Speaker:"Okay, mom, you're.
Speaker:Done." I tried to play Minecraft with
my son during the pandemic and I kept
Speaker:drowning. I could not
get out of the water.
Speaker:It was hopeless. Get.
Speaker:Out of the water and you're like,
"I'm trying to get out of the water.".
Speaker:It was entertaining for
a minute. Well, Martha,
Speaker:thank you so much for being on
the podcast today and for all
Speaker:that you give to NCHA and being
involved in sharing your knowledge
Speaker:and of all the different
levels that you're at.
Speaker:It's been really fun to chat
with you, Amber. I appreciate it.
Speaker:Thanks. If you would like to register
for the CLE Workers' Comp Roundtable,
Speaker:if you are a member of
the workers' comp section,
Speaker:you can go to NCAJ.com/events.
Speaker:It will be at NCAA headquarters
in Raleigh on April 10,
Speaker:and it is in- person only,
no virtual. Got to be there.
Speaker:Thanks everyone for listening.
And if you're watching on YouTube,
Speaker:don't forget to subscribe to this channel.
Speaker:Thank you for joining us on
this episode of Voices of NCAJ.
Speaker:For more information on the North Carolina
Advocates for Justice and how to join
Speaker:or support NCAJ,
Speaker:please visit our website at www.ncaj.com.