AFTER REMAND
Riley, J.In this appeal, this Court is asked to clarify when an employer has an obligation to pay worker’s compensation to an employee who is injured while traveling to work under the “going and coming” provision, MCL 418.301(3); MSA 17.237(301)(3), of the Worker’s Disability Compensation Act. We hold that under subsection 301(3) of the act, an employee does not suffer an injury that occurred in the course of his employment while traveling to work, when he was injured on a public street, not maintained by the employer, as he was walking from a private parking lot to the worksite. In the instant case, plaintiff drove to a parking lot provided by General Motors, traveled to a private parking lot, and then was injured while walking across a public street from the private parking lot on her way to the General Motors plant. We vacate the Court of Appeals decision to reverse the *706grant of worker’s compensation benefits and remand to the Worker’s Compensation Appellate Commission to enable it to determine whether the injury occurred in the course of her employment consistent with the standards articulated in this opinion.
PACTS AND PROCEEDINGS
The parties stipulated the facts of the case. Because the parties dispute what reasonable inferences may be drawn from the stipulation, we provide the full text of the stipulation:
Elizabeth A. Simkins is an employee of the Fisher Body Flint Plant of General Motors Corporation. She worked on the first shift, which started at 6:18 A.M.
At some time before 6:00 a.m. on September 4, 1984, Mrs. Simkins drove her car to the Fisher Body Flint Plant and parked on the Fisher Body premises North parking lot. She exited her car and, after an unknown period, got into the car of a fellow employee, Perry Mitra. They drove onto Saginaw Street, a public street bordering the east side of the Fisher Plant, headed south to Hemphill and turned right, or west, onto Hemphill. Hemphill is a public street bordering the Fisher Plant on the south side. It has four lanes, two each for west and east bound traffic.
Mr. Mitra drove his car into a privately owned parking lot on the south side of Hemphill and parked. He and Mrs. Simkins alighted and, after paying the parking attendant, started across Hemphill to the Plant Gate at Post 11. The lot in which Mr. Mitra parked was located almost directly across the street from the Plant Gate and about in the middle of the block.
At about 5:58 A.M., twenty minutes before her shift was to start, Mrs. Simkins was struck by an automobile driven by Tonya D. Anderson. At the moment that she was struck, Mrs. Simkins was going north across Hemphill and was in the east bound inside lane near the double yellow center line.
*707Mrs. Simkins has been unable to perform her job since September 4, 1984.
The parties agree that this Court must rely on this stipulation alone in order to resolve whether plaintiffs injury arose out of and in the course of her employment.
On August 21, 1985, plaintiff, through her guardian Thomas Simkins, filed an amended petition seeking worker’s compensation under § 301 of the WDCA against defendants General Motors and the Second Injury Fund.1 There is no dispute that plaintiff suffered severe, permanent injuries, including a closed-head injury, that resulted in weakness in her arms and legs. She cannot walk without the aid of a walker or wheelchair. In an opinion dated April 11, 1986, the hearing referee concluded that plaintiff was eligible for worker’s compensation:
[Plaintiff] had entered the “premises” [of General Motors] when she entered the company-owned parking lot. The mere fact that she was given a ride to a closer, non-company lot, did not remove her from the scope of her employment. The injury sustained when crossing the street to the plant gate is compensable.[2]
*708On May 7, 1987, General Motors filed an appeal of the decision with the Worker’s Compensation Appeal Board. Plaintiff’s no-fault insurance carrier, Valley Forge Insurance Company, moved to intervene as a plaintiff on July 19, 1988, alleging that it had paid more than $400,050 in medical and health care expenses on plaintiff’s behalf. It sought reimbursements from General Motors for these costs.3
In an opinion filed on June 26, 1991, the wcab, in a two-to-one decision, affirmed the referee’s ruling to award plaintiff worker’s compensation benefits:
We find that plaintiffs slight deviation in her route from one parking lot controlled by defendant to another not controlled by defendant, but directly across the street from the plant entrance, kept plaintiff within the zone, environment, and hazards of her employment. [1991 WCABO 1399, 1412. ][4]
*709The dissent concluded otherwise:
I find that defendant’s provision for an on-premises parking lot which was not shown by plaintiff to deny any reasonable safe access to its plant, with her leaving those premises to park in an undesignated private lot and to cross a street not shown to be under defendant’s control or the protection against street traffic presumably provided by defendant’s parking lot, placed plaintiff beyond the “zone, environment and hazards” of defendant’s premises, thus depriving her of the presumption afforded by Section 30[1](3) of the Act. [Id. at 1409.]
General Motors appealed in the Court of Appeals, which denied leave.5 On September 9, 1992, this Court denied General Motors application for leave.6 On reconsideration, this Court remanded the case to the Court of Appeals as on leave granted.7
On remand, the Court of Appeals reversed the wcab and ruled that plaintiff was not eligible for worker’s compensation. The Court reasoned that previous Michigan cases only allow compensation for employees injured while traveling to work from a parking area maintained by the employer, not from a private parking area. 208 Mich App 453, 457; 528 NW2d- 775 (1995). The Court concluded:
In this case, there was no employer connection with plaintiff’s accident. She was injured while crossing a public *710street from a private parking lot and was not yet on the employer’s premises. We recognize that, had she been injured while crossing from the parking lot that the employer did provide, she would be entitled to compensation benefits under the case law, but, as Justice Levin recognized in a concurring opinion “a line must be drawn at some point.” McClure v General Motors Corp (On Rehearing), 408 Mich 191, 226; 289 NW2d 631 (1980). The decisions we have analyzed draw the line at some employer connection other than the mere fact that the employee was traveling to work but had not arrived yet on the employer’s premises. [Id. at 458-459.]
Plaintiff filed an application for leave, which this Court granted.8
ANALYSIS
A
Under the worker’s compensation act,
[a]n employee, who receives a personal injury arising out of and in the course of employment by an employer who is subject to this act at the time of the injury, shall be paid compensation as provided in this act. [MCL 418.301(1); MSA 17.237(301)(1).]
It is well settled that an employee who seeks worker’s compensation must show by competent evidence not only the fact of an injury, but also that the injury occurred in connection with his employment, arising out of and in the course of that employment. Hills v Blair, 182 Mich 20, 26; 148 NW 243 (1914). As remedial legislation, this Court construes the act liberally *711to grant rather than deny benefits. Bower v Whitehall Leather Co, 412 Mich 172, 191; 312 NW2d 640 (1981).
The primary purpose of the worker’s compensation act is to provide benefits to the victims of work-related injuries by allocating the burden of these payments to the employer, and, therefore, ultimately, to consumers.9 An employee who suffers an injury arising out of and in the course of his employment will be eligible for compensation regardless of whether the employer was at fault.10 In return, the employer is immunized from tort liability because the worker’s compensation act, under MCL 418.131(1); MSA 17.237(131)(l),[11] provides that this compensation is the exclusive remedy for a personal injury, except for an injury resulting from an intentional tort. Travis v Dreis & Krump Mfg Co, 453 Mich 149, 161; 551 NW2d 132 (1996) (Boyle, J., lead opinion).12 Thus, as the *712Court of Appeals described, the act’s purpose is to “ ‘provide . . . not only for employees a remedy which is both expeditious and independent of proof of fault, but also for employers a liability which is limited and determinate.’ ”13
As a general rule, an employee who is injured while going to or coming from work cannot recover worker’s compensation. Bush v Parmenter, Forsythe, Rude & Dethmers, 413 Mich 444, 451; 320 NW2d 858 (1982). The statute’s going-and-coming provision furnishes an exception to the general rule:
An employee going to or from his or her work, while on the premises where the employee’s work is to be performed, and within a reasonable time before and after his or her working hours, is presumed to be in the course of his or her employment. Notwithstanding this presumption, an injury incurred in the pursuit of an activity the major purpose of which is social or recreational is not covered under this act. Any cause of action brought for such an injury is not subject to section 131. [MCL 418.301(3); MSA 17.237(301)(3).]
This exception only creates a presumption that the injury was “in the course of [the employee’s] employment,” not that it “aros[e] out of” his employment under subsection 301(1).14 We, therefore, will only *713examine whether plaintiff’s injury occurred in the course of her employment.
B
Despite the apparent clarity of the statute requiring that the injury occur “on the premises where the employee’s work is to be performed,” this Court has traditionally construed this phrase in a way that would allow recovery under the appropriate circumstances even where the injury occurred on property that was not owned, leased, or maintained by the employer.
The first sentence of the going-and-coming provision was first enacted in 195415 to ensure that the worker’s compensation act would provide protections for an employee for a “reasonable time and space for the employee to approach and leave the locality or zone of his work.” Dyer v Sears, Roebuck & Co, 350 Mich 92, 95; 85 NW2d 152 (1957) (Black, J., plurality opinion).16 In other words, an employee’s course of employment is not limited to the performance of the very job itself:
*714“The employment is not limited by the exact time when the workman reaches the scene of his labor and begins it, nor when he ceases, but includes a reasonable time, space, and opportunity before and after, while he is at or near his place of employment. . . .
“The protection of the law extends to a reasonable time and space for the employee to leave the locality or zone of his work and while he is in proximity, approaching or leaving his place of employment by the only means of access thereto.” [Id. at 96-97, quoting Brink v JW Wells Lumber Co, 229 Mich 35, 37-38; 201 NW 222 (1924).][17]
The substance and wording of the subsection’s first sentence were taken from Brink, supra, and, by adopting its language, the Legislature intended to restore the state of the law as interpreted by the Court in Brink. Dyer, supra at 95-96 (Black, J.). The Legislature wished to remedy the situation from Daniel v Murray Corp of America, 326 Mich 1, 3; 39 NW2d 229 (1949), in which this Court had denied relief to an employee who suffered an injury in the employer’s parking lot because he was no longer actually performing his job but rather was leaving for the day.18 Freiborg v Chrysler Corp, 350 Mich 104, *715107; 85 NW2d 145 (1957) (Dethmers, C.J., lead opinion).19 See also Dyer, supra at 96.20
Following Freiborg and Dyer, this Court, in Lasiewicki v Tasco Products Co, 372 Mich 125, 131; 125 NW2d 479 (1963), examined a case in which an employee slipped and fell when she was leaving for lunch while she was walking on the unpaved portion of a public right of way, which was used by employees for parking cars near the plant worksite. This Court applied the going-and-coming provision under 1948 CL 412.1, the predecessor of subsections 301(1), (3), and explained that an employee need not strictly be on the employer’s “premises” in order to be presumed to be in the course of his employment:
“One of the tests sometimes applied is whether the workman is still on the premises of his employer. This, while often a helpful consideration, is by no means conclusive. A workman might be on the premises of another than his employer, or in a public place, and yet be so close to the scene of his labor, within its zone, environments, and hazards, as to be in effect at the place and under the protection of the act.
*716* * *
“It is not a sufficient test that the workman should be on the premises of the employer; but it may be sufficient that he is in such a state of proximity as may be treated as a reasonable margin in point of space.” [Lasiewicki, supra at 131, quoting Hills, supra at 27-28 (emphasis added).]
From this reasoning, in Lasiewicki, supra at 127, 129-131, this Court held that the employee could recover, even though the parking area was a public right of way, because the parking area was “used and maintained” by her employer and therefore she was on the “premises of [the] employer [ ] within the meaning of the statute . . . .’’Id. at 131. In this way, the Court expanded the meaning of “premises” under the statute to include more than merely the employer’s property.
In 1980, the Legislature enacted several reforms of the worker’s compensation act under 1980 PA 357, including an amendment of subsection 301(3), previously subsection 301(2), by adding its second and third sentences prohibiting recovery under worker’s compensation for an injury that occurs during the pursuit of a recreational activity in order to eliminate certain “abuses” in the law. Senate Analysis Section, SB 1044, adopted as 1980 PA 357, January 7, 1981. Through these 1980 amendments, the Legislature intended to narrow and restrict the eligibility qualifications for injured workers under worker’s compensation. Dean v Chrysler Corp, 434 Mich 655, 667; 455 NW2d 699 (1990).
Nevertheless, relying on the phrase “zone, environments, and hazards” quoted in Lasiewicki, the Court of Appeals has ruled that an employee may recover *717for an injury that occurred on property not owned, leased, or maintained by the employer if the employee was traveling to or from work.21 In other cases, however, the Court of Appeals has been unwilling to allow recovery for an employee who is injured while traveling to or from work when that injury did not occur on property owned, leased, or maintained by the employer.22
c
Plaintiff argues that this Court’s most recent examination of a worker’s injury that occurred while the *718employee was traveling away from work is not relevant, McClure v General Motors Corp (On Rehearing), supra, overruling 402 Mich 392; 262 NW2d 829 (1978), because in McClure the injured employee was leaving during his lunch period on personal business. The employee was walking across a public street to a restaurant when he was struck and injured by an automobile.23 On rehearing, this Court overruled its first decision and affirmed the wcab’s decision to deny the employee relief under the worker’s compensation act. Id. at 209 (Ryan, J., plurality opinion) and 231 (Levin, J., concurring).
In writing for the plurality, Justice Ryan did not apply the going-and-coming provision of § 301, but rather distinguished Howard v Detroit, 377 Mich 102; 139 NW2d 677 (1966),24 which had served as the basis for the holding in the first McClure decision. Justice Ryan reasoned that, unlike Howard, McClure did not *719involve “an employer-directed deviation” from a normal schedule and that “the Legislature has not yet seen fit to provide compensation for injuries suffered by workers during off-premises lunch-hour activity of a purely personal character.” McClure, supra at 207. Yet, in concluding that Howard did not apply, the plurality opinion is silent about whether the going-and-coming provision governs the case’s resolution.25
In his concurrence, Justice LEVIN specifically did not rely on the going-and-coming provision to resolve the question. See id. at 218, n 18. Rather, he noted that there is an argument that an employee could recover for a lunchtime motor vehicle accident for an “off-premises injur[y]” under the logic of Haller v Lansing, 195 Mich 753, 761; 162 NW 335 (1917).26 *720McClure, supra at 226. Nevertheless, he concluded that there should not be recovery because of the allocation of the costs envisioned by the Legislature in creating the no-fault act:27
A decision in favor of coverage for such injuries, then, would cause § 3109(1)[28] of the no-fault act to work a reallocation of the cost of insurance reparations for lunchtime motor vehicle accidents, one probably not anticipated by the Legislature when § 3109 was enacted. This Court should not disturb the allocation of the burden of providing such reparations struck by the Legislature when it enacted the no-fault act. [Id. at 229.]
Even though this Court did not examine McClure as a case governed by the going-and-coming provision of subsection 301(3), the plain language of the statute indicates that it applies because when an employee returns from lunch or leaves for it, he is “going to or from his or her work . . . .” There is no requirement that he must be going to work at the beginning of his work day or leaving from work at the end of the work day. Moreover, this Court has applied the going-and-*721coming provision in the other two seminal lunchtime injury cases relevant for this appeal.29 Furthermore, Professor Larson, a recognized authority in this area, expressly includes the subject of injuries that occur during lunchtime in his section on “going to and from work.” See 1 Larson, Workmen’s Compensation, § 15, p 4-3. He argues that there is no analytical difference between the character of (1) an employee’s travel to work before he begins his day or from work after he finishes his day, and (2) his travel to work after lunch or when he leaves from work before lunch. See § 15.12(b), pp 4-17 to 4-21, § 15.51, p 4-157.30 Thus, the Court’s resolution of McClure is relevant for this case because the going-and-coming provision governs the resolution of lunchtime travel cases. With these principles in mind, we now review the Court of Appeals resolution of the instant case.
D
In holding that plaintiff did not suffer an injury that was compensable under worker’s compensation, the Court of Appeals examined Michigan case law on the “going to work” parking lot cases and concluded that *722an employee may recover only where there is “at least some slight employer connection to the employee’s injury . . . Simkins, supra at 457. It distilled these two principles from the Court of Appeals case law:
Cases allowing compensation for employees injured while going to work involved travel from a parking area owned, leased, or maintained by the employer. . . [31] Compensation has been denied, however, when the injury occurred off the employer’s premises, including private parking areas . . . ,[32] [Id.]
This analysis accords with Professor Larson’s examination of state case law for the United States for an injury that occurs between an employer’s parking lot and the employer’s worksite:
[M]ost courts, but by no means all, hold that an injury in a public street or other off-premises place between the plant and the parking lot is in the course of employment, being on a necessary route between the two portions of the premises. But if the parking lot is a purely private one, the principle of passage between two parts of the premises is not available, and an employee crossimg a public street to get to the parking lot is not protected. [1 Larson, Workmen’s Compensation, § 15.14(b), pp 4-60 to 4-70 (emphasis added).]
This analysis is also consistent with the result in McClure (the employee was injured while crossing a public street when he was traveling from work to a restaurant).
*723We adopt the standard articulated by the Court of Appeals and hold that, when an employee is going to work or coming from work, an injury that occurs on property not owned, leased, or maintained by his employer is in the course of employment only if the employee is traveling in a reasonably direct route33 between the parking area owned, leased, or maintained by the employer and the worksite itself, unless the injury falls into one of the recognized exceptions.34 In such circumstances, the place of the injury, although not on property owned, leased, or maintained by the employer, is deemed to be on the employer’s “premises” for the purposes of the statute. See Lasiewicki, supra at 131 (property maintained, but not owned or leased, by an employer is the employer’s “premises” under the statute).35 However, we hold that there is no recovery for an employee who is injured on a public street or other property not owned, leased, or maintained by the employer while traveling to or from a nonemployer parking lot because this injury is not in the course of employment.
*724This rule conforms to the original purpose underlying the going-and-coming provision, i.e., to protect employees while they were still on the employer’s premises but no longer actually performing their jobs. See Freiborg, supra at 107 (Dethmers, C.J.). We recognize that the statute does not, according to the past rulings of this Court, strictly require that the employee be on the employer’s property, but merely requires that the employee be “ ‘at or near his place of employment.’ ”36 Consequently, the rule allows recovery for injuries that occur on property not owned, leased, or maintained by the employer, but limits the principle to a situation in which the employer has some control or responsibility over the area.37 The employer has some control or responsibility over an area when it anticipates that employees will travel between the worksite and the parking lot it provided, because it has implicitly created or designed a path for its employees. This distinction does not introduce the question of fault in determining whether an injured employee is eligible for recovery under the statute, e.g., by requiring implicitly that the employer’s negligence be the cause of the injury. Rather, for injuries that occur on property not owned, leased, or maintained by the employer, the rule requires that the injury be during the course of *725employment, i.e., that the injury be work related, by ensuring that there is a more substantial relationship between the injury and the injured person’s employment beyond the mere fact that the employee was traveling to or from work.38
The Court of Appeals noted that this analysis may conflict with Fischer v Lincoln Tool & Die Co, 37 Mich App 198; 194 NW2d 476 (1971), but this case has been previously questioned. See Tedford v Stouffer’s Northland Inn, 106 Mich App 493, 501-502; 308 NW2d 254 (1981), citing 1 Larson, Workmen’s Compensation Law, § 15.12, p 4-10. We do not address the validity of this case.
E
In the instant case, the Court of Appeals reversed the wcab and denied plaintiff worker’s compensation benefits.
Plaintiff argues that the Court of Appeals decision cannot be reconciled with the earlier Court of Appeals decision to reverse the wcab’s denial of grant in Smith v Greenville Products Co, 185 Mich App 512; 462 NW2d 789 (1990). In Smith, an employee was struck by a car on a public street while walking from the employer-provided parking lot to his worksite. The Court noted that the employee could recover *726worker’s compensation even though there was “another route to defendant’s plant which would not require him to cross the street . . . Id. at 516. Under the rule articulated by this opinion, this is the proper result because the employee was traveling to work from his employer’s parking lot to the worksite. Although there was at least one other route available to him,39 the Court of Appeals concluded that the plaintiff was not engaged “in an activity of a personal character when he was crossing the street” to travel to his worksite. Id. Therefore, the plaintiff was presumably traveling in a reasonably direct path for an employee to take to go to work.40
In the instant case, Simkins originally drove to a parking lot maintained by General Motors, left this lot, and traveled to a private lot with a coemployee before she traveled to her worksite. The stipulation is silent regarding her reason for traveling to this private lot, and the stipulation also does not explain whether this was a reasonably direct route from the employer-provided lot to her worksite. Rather than resolve these factual questions on appeal, we remand this matter to the WCAC for further proceedings. We also direct the commission to provide the parties a full opportunity to present additional facts regarding these issues to ensure a proper resolution of the matter.
*727conclusion
We conclude that under the going-and-coming provision of § 301 of the worker’s compensation act, an employee is injured in the course of his employment while traveling to or from work when either (1) the injury occurred on property owned, leased, or maintained by the employer, or (2) the injury occurred while the employee was traveling on a reasonably direct path between the worksite and an employee parking lot owned, leased, or maintained by the employer. This framework is consistent with the way this Court has interpreted the going-and-coming provision, fulfills the statute’s purposes, generally fits Michigan case law, and reflects the general rule articulated by Professor Larson. We vacate the Court of Appeals decision reversing the wcab’s decision to uphold the hearing referee’s grant of worker’s compensation benefits and remand to the wcac for further proceedings.
Brickley, C.J., and Levin, Cavanagh, Boyle, and Mat,lett, JJ., concurred with Riley, J.The Second Injury Fund is a state insurance fund created by the Legislature under MCL 418.501 et seq.; MSA 17.237(501) et seq., financed by annual assessments on insurance carriers and self-insured employers. McAvoy v H B Sherman Co, 401 Mich 419, 450; 258 NW2d 414 (1977). Under MCL 418.521(2); MSA 17.237(521)(2), an employee who has a permanent and total disability is eligible to receive differential benefits from the Second Injury Fund, i.e., he is eligible to receive the difference between what he would receive from his employer under law at the time the injury occurred and the benefits the employee would receive as now provided under current law for such a disability.
The hearing referee also concluded that General Motors would be responsible for continuing medical expenses if they were not paid by plaintiffs no-fault automobile insurer, Valley Forge Insurance Company:
*708Ancillary to compensability is the claim for nursing services. Medical testimony and plaintiff’s own testimony show a continuing need of such care as is being presently provided by the automobile insurance carrier. This remains the responsibility of the employer!,] and General Motors Corporation is ordered to ascertain that such care continues to be provided, and, if it is not paid for by the other insurance, to pay for said care until further order of the bureau. [Emphasis added.]
Thus, it appears that according to this ruling General Motors would only be responsible for plaintiffs medical expenses if Valley Forge did not pay for them.
The parties resolved by agreement the nature of the Second Injury Fund's legal obligation:
The parties agree that plaintiff is totally and permanently disabled. In the event that a final appellate determination is made that the disability is work-related, the Second Injury Fund will voluntarily pay differential benefits in accordance with the [worker’s compensation] act on a [total and permanent] date of October 18, 1989.
The WCAB apparently did, however, modify the hearing referee’s decision in part by concluding that plaintiff had sustained her burden of dem*709onstrating that she was entitled to the cost of all medical, hospitalization, and nursing care services that were being provided by her no-fault insurer, Valley Forge, from defendants General Motors and Second Injury Fund.
However, the Court of Appeals remanded, in part, to allow the WCAB to consider the request of Valley Forge that it be reimbursed for medical and health care benefits paid on behalf of plaintiff.
440 Mich 909 (1992).
442 Mich 851 (1993).
450 Mich 1002 (1996).
See MoAvoy v H B Sherman Co, n 1 supra at 436-437, quoting 1 Larson, Workmen’s Compensation, § 2.20.
See Nemeth v Michigan Building Components, 390 Mich 734, 737; 213 NW2d 144 (1973) (“ ‘Fault has nothing to do with whether or not compensation is payable’ ”), quoting Whetro v Awkerman, 383 Mich 235, 242; 174 NW2d 783 (1970) (T. G. Kavanagh, J., plurality opinion).
Subsection 131(1) provides in pertinent part:
The right to the recovery of benefits as provided in this act shall be the employee’s exclusive remedy against the employer for a personal ii\jury or occupational disease. The only exception to this exclusive remedy is an intentional tort.
See also Husted v Consumers Power Co, 376 Mich 41, 52-53; 135 NW2d 370 (1965), in which this Court stated:
When the workmen’s compensation law was studied and legislatively considered, prior to and during the year of enactment (1912), it would seem that the primordial intent of all participants was that the quo to be received by the employer in return for his quid would be outright and absolute immunity from liability (except as provided in the act) stemming from each compensable injury.
See Maiuri v Sinacola Construction Co, 12 Mich App 22, 27; 162 NW2d 344 (1968), aff’d 382 Mich 391; 170 NW2d 27 (1969), quoting Justice Brandéis from Bradford Electric Light Co, Inc v Clapper, 286 US 145, 159; 52 S Ct 571; 76 L Ed 1026 (1932).
Under the old rule in Michigan, there were two separate tests to determine whether an injury (1) arose out of and (2) in the course of the injured employee’s employment: “out of” related to the cause or source of the accident, whereas “in the course of” related to time, place, and circumstances. See Appleford v Kimmel, 297 Mich 8, 12; 296 NW 861 (1941). However, in Whetro, n 10 supra at 242, a plurality of this Court concluded that Michigan “no longer requires the establishment of a proximately *713causal connection between the employment and the injury . . . .” This Court has more recently stated that this analysis from Whetro was not precedential. See Dean v Chrysler Corp, 434 Mich 655, 660-661; 455 NW2d 699 (1990). Regardless, Michigan cases have not employed this distinction and have generally used the entire phrase to refer to the connection between the injury and employment. Welch, Worker’s Compensation in Michigan: Law & Practice (3d ed), § 4.1, pp 4-1 to 4-2. We do not address this question regarding whether the two phrases require a separate test.
The Legislature enacted 1954 PA 175, which amended 1948 CL 412.1 of the worker’s compensation act, the predecessor statute to MCL 418.301(1), (3); MSA 17.237(301)(1), (3).
In Dyer, supra at 93, 96-97, the employee was able to recover for an injury she suffered during her lunch break while she was walking downstairs in the employer’s building as she was leaving the building to run an errand. Chief Justice Dethmers concurred. Id. at 103.
In Brink, supra at 36, the employee was leaving his employer’s factory compound when he fell and was injured near the warehouse within the compound, before he left using one of the gates to the fence enclosure. This Court concluded that this injury was compensable under the worker’s compensation act. Id. at 38.
In Mack v Reo Motors, Inc, 345 Mich 268, 289; 76 NW2d 35 (1956), this Court had categorized Daniel among the “intermission” cases where an employee was not eligible for worker’s compensation, regardless of whether his injury occurred on his employer’s premises, if he was not “actively or actually engaged in doing work or performing any service for his employer, but was on a mission solely his own, personal to himself, during which time he was not performing any service for his employer.”
In Freiborg, supra at 105, the employee was able to recover for his injury when he was struck by a fellow employee’s car while he was walking in the employer’s parking lot on his way to work. Justice Smith: wrote a brief concurrence, signed by Justices Black, Edwards, and Voelker, stating that he agreed with the result for the reasons Justice Black had given in Dyer. Freiborg, supra at 112.
The plurality in Dyer, supra at 96, wished to overrule not only Daniel, supra, but also Mack, n 18 supra at 273-274 (an employee could not recover for an injury that occurred while she was walking to the cafeteria on the employer’s paved driveway during her lunch period), and Salmon v Bagley Laundry Co, 344 Mich 471, 472-473; 74 NW2d 1 (1955) (an employee could not recover for an injury she suffered on the front steps of her employer’s laundry facility during her coffee break while returning from a nearby restaurant). These cases, Daniel, Mack, and Salmon, were effectively overruled by Dyer and Freiborg.
See Smith v Greenville Products Co, 185 Mich App 512, 514; 462 NW2d 789 (1990) (an employee, traveling to work, could recover for an injury he suffered while walking across a public street from the employer’s parking lot en route to the employer’s plant), citing, inter alia, Fischer v Lincoln Tool & Die Co, 37 Mich App 198, 202-203; 194 NW2d 476 (1971) (an employee who was traveling to work could recover for the injury he suffered when he slipped and fell on a public sidewalk after parking on a public street near his worksite). See also Hicks v General Motors Corp, 66 Mich App 38; 238 NW2d 194 (1975) (an employee could recover for the injury he suffered, while leaving work, when his vehicle lost its muffler in the employer’s parking lot and he was hit by a car in a public street attempting to retrieve it); Adair v Metropolitan Building Co, 38 Mich App 393, 398; 196 NW2d 335 (1972) (an employee could recover for his injuries when he slipped and fell on a driveway, not owned or maintained by his employer, while walking from work to a parking area that was maintained by his employer); Jean v Chrysler Corp, 2 Mich App 564, 569; 140 NW2d 756 (1966) (an employee who was leaving work could recover when he was injured crossing a public street while walking from the employer’s plant to the area designated by the employer for parking).
See Denny v Kostadinovski, 117 Mich App 517; 324 NW2d 19 (1981) (the employee was denied recovery when she was leaving work and slipped and fell in a public alley, ten to twenty feet away from work, while walking home); Beneteau v Detroit Free Press, 117 Mich App 253; 323 NW2d 498 (1982) (the employee was denied recovery when she slipped and fell crossing a public street while walking to work after parking her car in a parking garage not owned or maintained by her employer); Tedford v Stouffer’s Northland Inn, 106 Mich App 493; 308 NW2d 254 (1981) (the employee was denied recovery when she fell and injured herself en route to work after crossing a parking lot that was not owned or maintained by her employer).
In the companion case, Krolczyk v Wolverine Moving & Storage Co, 408 Mich 191; 289 NW2d 631 (1980), an employee had left her employer’s budding for lunch by car and was injured on the way to a restaurant when the car struck a rut and crashed.
In Howard, this Court vacated the WCAB’s denial of benefits for an employee who was injured while returning from lunch in an automobile accident because the irregular pattern of his work schedule (working from 7:00 A.M. to 8:45 A.M. and then from 1:28 P.M. to 7:54 P.M.) required him to travel for lunch as a circumstance of his employment. Id. at 109 (O’Hara, J., plurality opinion), 111 (T. M. Kavanagh, J., concurring). Professor Larson categorizes this case as a special-errand exception to the going-and-coming rule:
When an employee, having identifiable time and space limits on his employment, makes an off-premises journey which would normally not be covered under the usual going-and-coming rule, the journey may be brought within the course of employment by the fact that the trouble and time of making the journey, or the special inconvenience, hazard, or urgency of making it in the particular circumstances, is itself sufficiently substantial to be viewed as an integral part of the service itself. [1 Larson, Workmen’s Compensation, § 16.11, p 4-204.]
*719We do not address the merit of the Howard Court’s application of the rule to its particular facts.
The plurality did state that this Court should cease its own judicial “reform” of the eligibility requirement of the worker’s compensation act:
We decline to continue the ongoing dilution of the legislative requirement that, as a condition of compensability, an employee’s injury must be suffered “out of and in the course of his employment” by first equating “circumstance of employment” with “out of and in the course of employment,” and finally substituting the newly created judicial standard for the longstanding legislative norm. [let at 204.]
In Haller, supra at 755-756, the employee was injured during his lunch break in the toolhouse when he lit a pipe and was killed in an explosion. This Court held that Haller’s wife could collect worker’s compensation:
From an examination of cases cited by defendant, and others we have examined in which it has been held that an employee injured on the premises of his employer during the noon hour or other temporary suspension of work was not under the act, we think it manifest that the controlling reason for denying an award in those cases rests upon the proven facts that the employee broke the so-called nexus between workman and employer by some manifestly reckless and unreasonable hazard, amounting to intentional and *720wilful misconduct, or by disregarding, or disobeying, some warning of danger at the place of iry'ury or prohibition relating to the thing being done, either addressed to the workman or promulgated as a general rule of conduct while on the premises. [Id. at 761.]
MCL 500.3101 et seq.; MSA 24.13101 et seq.
MCL 500.3109(1); MSA 24.13109(1) provides in full:
Benefits provided or required to be provided under the laws of any state or the federal government shall be subtracted from the personal protection insurance benefits otherwise payable for the injury.
The no-fault insurer may reduce its no-fault payments by the injured party’s worker’s compensation benefits under subsection 3109(1). Mathis v Interstate Freight, 408 Mich 164, 176; 289 NW2d 708 (1980).
See Lasiewioki, supra at 127 (the employee was injured while walking toward a food center on her lunch hour), and Dyer, supra at 93, 95 (the employee was injured when she fell on the stairs leaving work during her lunch hour’).
At § 15.12(b), p 4-20, Larson argues “[tjhere [i]s no logical way to distinguish the lunchtime trip and the going-and-coming trip in the morning and at night.” Moreover, at § 15.51, p 4-157, he states:
[Wjhen the employee has a definite place and time of work, and the time of work does not include the lunch hour, the trip away from and back to the premises for the purpose of getting lunch is indistinguishable in principle from the trip at the beginning and end of the work day, and should be governed by the same rules and exceptions.
Citing Lasiewicki-, Smith-, Upton v Geneml Motors Co-rp, 124 Mich App 61; 3,33 NW2d 384 (1983); Jean, n 21 supra.
Citing Beneteau, Denny, and Tedford, n 22 supra.
We define a “reasonably direct route” as a path that the employer, in designating an area for parking, could reasonably anticipate that an employee would take.
See, e.g., Howard, supra (employer-directed deviation, i.e., special errand); and Wilhelm v Angelí, Wilhelm & Shreve, 252 Mich 648, 654; 234 NW 433 (1931) (special hazard: “jhjis injury can be traced to this risk or hazard to which he as an employee was exposed in a special degree by reason of his employment”). Justice Levin, in his concurrence in McClure, supra at 230, n 47, also identifies two other recognized exceptions: Burchett v Delton-Kellogg School, 378 Mich 231; 144 NW2d 337 (1966) (dual-purpose trip), and Levchuk v Krug Cement Products Co, 246 Mich 589; 225 NW 559 (1929) (travel in employer-supplied vehicles).
See also Fidelity & Casualty Co of New York v DeShone, 384 Mich 686, 692; 187 NW2d 215 (1971).
Dyer, supra at 96 (Black, J.), quoting Brink, supra at 37 (emphasis added); see also Lasiewicki, supra at 131.
The Court of Appeals in Tedford, n 22 supra at 503, similarly explained:
[The employer] had no control over or responsibility for the route taken by plaintiff or the condition of the parking lot [where the injury occurred]. There is no logical justification for expanding the premises concept to this situation.
In describing the underlying basis for the exceptions to the premises rule, Professor Larson explains:
[W]hen a court has satisfied itself that there is a distinct “arising out of” or causal connection between the conditions under which claimant must approach and leave the premises and the occurrence of the iryury, it may hold that the [“]course of employment]”] extends as far as those conditions extend. [1 Larson, Workmen’s Compensation, § 15.15, p 4-73 (emphasis added).]
The dissent in Smith, supra at 520, indicated that there were "two alternative routes available to him which did not involve crossing a public street.”
We presume that an employee who travels on a path from an employer-provided parking structure to his worksite for work-related reasons has traveled on a reasonably direct path to work. The employer carries the burden of showing otherwise.