ALASKA WORKERS' COMPENSATION BOARD
ALASKA WORKERS' COMPENSATION BOARD
P.O. Box 25512 Juneau, Alaska 99802-5512
| |) | |
|GLORIA J. ALDERDICE, |) | |
|Employee, |) |FINAL |
|Petitioner |) |DECISION AND ORDER |
| |) | |
|v. |) |AWCB Case No. 200015166 |
| |) | |
|STATE OF ALASKA, DEPARTMENT of |) |AWCB Decision No. 01- 0060 |
|ADMINISTRATION |) | |
|(Self-insured) |) |Filed with AWCB Anchorage, Alaska |
|Employer, |) |on April 4, 2001 |
|Respondent. |) | |
| |) | |
| |) | |
| |) | |
| |) | |
| |) | |
On March 6, 2001, in Anchorage, Alaska we heard the employee’s appeal of the Reemployment Benefits Administrator’s (RBA’s) decision that the employee was ineligible for reemployment benefits. The employee was represented by her attorney, Chancy Croft. Assistant Attorney General Patricia Shake represented the self-insured employer. We closed the record at the conclusion of the hearing.
ISSUE
Did the RBA abuse his discretion by finding the employee ineligible for reemployment benefits?
SUMMARY OF THE EVIDENCE
On August 14, 2000, the employee filed a report of injury claiming she injured her lower back and right hip while working as custodial worker at the Anchorage Pioneer Home for the employer. The employee went to Charles Shannon, M.D. on August 22, 2000 for medical care. An MRI scan, taken on August 28, 2000, of the employee’s lower spine showed severe spinal stenosis at L3-4 and L4-5, and severe foraminal stenosis on the left at L3-4. Since Dr. Shannon is a gastroenterologist, he referred the employee to an orthopedist. The employee saw Thomas Vasileff, M.D., an orthopedist, on September 19, 2000. In his report, Dr. Vasileff determined that the employee has severe spinal stenosis at two levels, L3-4 and L4-5, with some lateral recess stenosis. He recommended aggressive physical therapy for a month and continued use of anti-inflammatories. He also suggested the employee seek another type of employment due to her severe spinal stenosis. On October 24, 2000 after a month of physical therapy, the employee reported continued low back pain. Due the employee’s unchanged condition, Dr. Vasileff referred her to J. Michael James, M.D., of Rehabilitation Medicine Associates.
The employee saw Dr. James on November 8, 2000. Dr. James reported the employee was suffering from severe spinal stenosis at L3-4 and L4-5, and right S1 radiculopathy. He recommended Neurontin for a month with an expanding dose and a follow up visit in a month. Dr. James also recommended the employee retrain to light duty because she could not return to work as a custodian.
The employee requested an eligibility evaluation for reemployment benefits on September 21, 2000. The employee later provided the Workers’ Compensation Technician with a copy of Dr. Vasileff’s medical report on October 17, 2000. The Worker’s Compensation Technician assigned rehabilitation specialist Linda Lau to complete the evaluation on November 17, 2000. On December 22, 2000, Ms. Lau requested an extension of time to complete the evaluation report because she was waiting for a response from Dr. James.
Ms. Lau provided job descriptions for hospital cleaner and radio dispatcher to Dr. James based on the employee’s previous work history. The physical demands for radio dispatcher require sedentary work, while the physical demands for hospital cleaner require medium work. Dr. James reviewed the job descriptions for hospital cleaner and radio dispatcher and approved the job of radio dispatcher for the employee. The employer indicated that no permanent alternative or light work as a hospital cleaner is available for the employee. Ms. Lau completed her report on January 5, 2001 and recommended that the employee be found ineligible for reemployment benefits based on her prior work experience from 1982 to 1987 as a radio dispatch supervisor for the Anchorage International Airport.
Soon after, on January 31, 2001, the Reemployment Benefits Administrator (RBA), Douglas Saltzman, determined that the employee was ineligible for reemployment benefits. The RBA found that 1) the employee’s attending physician, Dr. James, approved the job of radio dispatcher as within the employee’s physical capacities, 2) the employee had previously worked long enough as a radio dispatcher to meet the specific vocational preparation level as found in the Selected Characteristics of Occupations Defined in the Revised Dictionary of Occupational Titles (SCODRDOT), and 3) the market survey information showed that radio dispatcher jobs existed with reasonable job openings. The employee appealed the RBA’s decision and we heard this appeal on March 6, 2001.
At the hearing, the employer noted that the employee provided testimony, in a deposition on February 28, 2001, that she never worked as a radio dispatch supervisor as described in the eligibility evaluation report but instead performed clerical job duties. The employer consulted with Terry Tafs the current radio dispatch supervisor for Alaska’s Department of Transportation. According to the employer, Mr. Tafs confirmed that ten years ago the radio dispatch supervisor position was primarily clerical in its job duties and that the position today now requires experience in sending, receiving, and evaluating information about public safety, police and fire activity, as well as possessing supervisory skills.
Based on the new evidence, the employer argued that the RBA’s decision is incorrect and the employee’s eligibility evaluation on which the RBA based his decision is also incorrect. The parties stipulated to the fact that Ms. Alderdice had not worked long enough at any dispatching job within the 10 years of injury to meet the specific vocational preparation code of radio dispatcher. The parties also stipulated to have the board vacate the RBA decision of January 31, 2001 and remand the matter to the RBA for further action. The parties agree this new evidence may change the RBA’s opinion concerning whether the employee is ineligible for reemployment benefits.
FINDINGS OF FACT AND CONCLUSIONS OF LAW
I. Late-Produced Evidence
8 AAC 45.070(b)(1)(A) provides, in part:
[F]or review of an administrator’s decision issued under AS 23.30.041(d), a party must file a claim or petition asking for review . . . . In reviewing the administrator’s decision, the board will not consider evidence that was not available to the administrator at the time of the administrator’s decision, unless the board determines the evidence is newly discovered and could not with due diligence have been produced for the administrator’s consideration. . . .
The task of determining whether an abuse of discretion has taken place is aided by our practice of allowing additional evidence into the record at the review hearing. The practice is based on the rationale expressed in several superior court opinions addressing that issue on appeal of our decisions following the review hearings. See, e.g., Kelley v. Sonic Cable Television, 3AN 89-6531 CIV (Alaska Ct. of Appeals, February 2, 1991); Quirk v. Anchorage School District, 3AN-90-4509 CIV (Alaska Ct. of Appeals, August 21, 1991).
Nevertheless, under 8 AAC 45.070(b)(1)(A), we are precluded from considering additional evidence in the appeal of an RBA determination of eligibility under AS 23.30.041(d) if the party offering that evidence has failed to exercise reasonable diligence in developing and presenting that evidence. See Snell v. Interstate Brands Corp., AWCB Decision No. 99-0110 (May 12, 1999); Kin v. Norcon, AWCB Decision No. 99-0041 (March 1, 1999); Lemire v. B&R Construction, AWCB Decision No. 99-0019 (January 28, 1999); Buxton v. Cameron Corporation, AWCB Decision No. 99-0005 (January 8, 1999).
In this case, new evidence concerning the employee's actual duties as a radio dispatch supervisor was provided by the employer, in the form of the employee’s deposition testimony given on February 28, 2001, a week before the hearing. Given that this new opinion was first available after the RBA determination, under 8 AAC 45.070(b)(1)(A), we find the employee presented a sufficient reason why this evidence was not developed for the RBA to consider in his decision. Accordingly, we conclude we are permitted to consider the new evidence.
II. Standard of Review
Under AS 23.30.041(d), we must uphold a decision of the RBA absent “an abuse of
Discretion on the administrator’s part.” Several definitions of the phrase “abuse of discretion” appear in the laws of Alaska, although none occur in the Alaska Workers’ Compensation Act. The Alaska Supreme Court has stated abuse of discretion consists of “issuing a decision which is arbitrary, capricious, manifestly unreasonable, or which stems from an improper motive.” Sheehan v. University of Alaska, 700 P.2d 1295, 1297 (Alaska 1985); Tobeluk v. Lind, 589 P.2d 873,878 (Alaska 1979) (footnote omitted). An agency’s failure to properly apply the controlling law may also be considered an abuse of discretion.
Binder v. Fairbanks Historical Preservation Foundation, AWCB Decision No. 91-0392 (December 11, 1991).
In the Administrative Procedure Act the legislature has provided another definition to be used by the courts in considering appeals of administrative agency decisions. It contains terms similar to those reproduced above, but also expressly includes reference to a substantial evidence standard:
Abuse of descretion is established if the agency has not proceeded in a manner required by law, the order or decision is not supported by the finding, or the findings are not supported by the evidence…If it is claimed that the findings are not supported by the evidence, abuse of discretion is established if the court determines that the findings are not supported by (1) the weight of the evidence; or (2) substantial evidence in the light of the whole record.
AS 44.62.570.
On appeal to the courts, our decision reviewing the RBA”s determination is subject to reversal under the abuse of discretion standard of AS 44.62.570, incorporating the substantial evidence test. Concern with meeting that standard on appeal leads us to apply a substantial evidence standard in our review of RBA determinations.
Applying a substantial evidence standard, a “[reviewer] may not reweigh the evidence or draw its own inferences from the evidence. If, in light of the record as a whole, there is such relevant evidence as a reasonable mind might accept as adequate to support a conclusion, then the order… must be upheld.” Miller v. ITT Arctic Services, 577 P.2d 1044, 1049 (Alaska 1978) (footnotes omitted).
Eligibility for Reemployment Benefits under AS 23.30.041
AS 23.30.041 provides, in part:
e) An employee shall be eligible for benefits under this section upon the employee’s written request and by having a physician predict that the employee will have permanent physical capacities that are less than the physical demands of the employee’s job as described in the 1993 edition of the United States Department of Labor’s “Selected Characteristics of Occupations Defined in the Revised Dictionary of Occupational Titles” for
1) the employee’s job at the time of injury; or
2) other jobs that exist in the labor market that the employee has held or received training for within 10 years before the injury or that the employee has held following the injury for a period long enough to obtain the skills to compete in the labor market, according to specific vocational preparation codes as described in the 1993 edition of the United States Department of Labor’s “Selected Characteristics of Occupations Defined in the Revised Dictionary of Occupational Titles.”
f) An employee is not eligible for reemployment benefits if
1) the employer offers employment within the employee’s predicted post-injury physical capacities at a way equivalent to at least the state minimum wage under AS 23.10.065 or 75 percent of the worker’s gross hourly wages at the time of jury, whichever is greater, and the employment prepares the employee to be employable in other jobs that exist in the labor market;…
We find that the SCODRDOT job description for a radio dispatcher is not the proper SCODRDOT job classification for the clerical job duties the employee performed as a radio dispatch supervisor from 1982 to 1987. We find that, based on the new evidence presented at the hearing, the employee did not truly have work experience as a radio dispatch supervisor to match the requirements of the SCODROT job description, or make her competitive in the current labor market for radio dispatch supervisor jobs. In reviewing the record as a whole and the stipulation facts between the parties, we find the record does not contain substantial evidence to support the finding the employee is able to work as a radio dispatcher. Since the employee’s eligibility report erroneously concluded the employee had the experience and skills to work as a radio dispatch supervisor, we find the RBA abused his discretion by determining the employee is ineligible for reemployment benefits on the basis of her prior work as a radio dispatch supervisor. Accordingly, we will reverse and remand the determination to the RBA for redetermination.
ORDER
The RBA’s January 31, 2001 decision, finding the employee ineligible for reemployment benefits, is reversed and remanded to the RBA for redetermination under AS 23.30.41(e).
Dated at Anchorage, Alaska this 4th day of April, 2001.
ALASKA WORKERS' COMPENSATION BOARD
____________________________________
Cecilia LaCara, Designated Chairman
____________________________________
Harriet Lawlor, Member
____________________________________
Steve Hagedorn, Member
APPEAL PROCEDURES
This compensation order is a final decision. It becomes effective when filed in the office of the Board unless proceedings to appeal it are instituted. Proceedings to appeal must be instituted in Superior Court within 30 days of the filing of this decision and be brought by a party in interest against the Board and all other parties to the proceedings before the Board, as provided in the Rules of Appellate Procedure of the State of Alaska.
RECONSIDERATION
A party may ask the Board to reconsider this decision by filing a petition for reconsideration under AS 44.62.540 and in accordance with 8 AAC 45.050. The petition requesting reconsideration must be filed with the Board within 15 days after delivery or mailing of this decision.
MODIFICATION
Within one year after the rejection of a claim or within one year after the last payment of benefits under AS 23.30.180, 23.30.185, 23.30.190, 23.30.200 or 23.30.215 a party may ask the Board to modify this decision under AS 23.30.130 by filing a petition in accordance with 8 AAC 45.150 and 8 AAC 45.050.
CERTIFICATION
I hereby certify that the foregoing is a full, true and correct copy of the Final Decision and Order in the matter of GLORIA J. ALDERDICE employee / petitioner; v. STATE OF ALASKA, DEPARTMENT of ADMINISTRATION (Self-insured), employer/ respondent; Case No. 200015166; dated and filed in the office of the Alaska Workers' Compensation Board in Anchorage, Alaska, this 4th day of April, 2001.
_________________________________
Shirley A. DeBose , Clerk
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