OPINION
Antoinette Y. Etheridge brought this action against Norfolk & Western Railway Company (N & W) under the Federal Employers’ Liability Act (FELA), 45 U.S.C.A. §§ 51-60 (West 1986), alleging that she was injured while employed by N & W as a result of the railroad’s negligence. The district court granted N & Ws motion to dismiss, reasoning that Etheridge’s exclusive remedy was found in the Longshore and Harbor Workers’ Compensation Act (LHWCA), 33 U.S.C.A. §§ 901-50 (West 1986). We affirm.
I.
The pertinent facts underlying this appeal are undisputed. Etheridge was employed as a brakeperson at N & W’s Lambert’s Point terminal, located adjacent to the Elizabeth River in Norfolk, Virginia, where coal is loaded from railroad cars onto ships on navigable waters. The Lambert’s Point terminal receives, processes, and stores railroad cars filled with coal until ships are ready to be loaded. In order for coal to be loaded aboard ships, the railroad cars are moved from storage facilities to a location called the Barney Yard, which adjoins the piers. The railroad tracks in the Barney Yard are sloped toward the pier to facilitate loading of *1089 the ships. As a result, a brakeperson must set the brakes on railroad cars moved into the Barney Yard to prevent them from rolling toward the pier prior to loading. When it is time for a particular car to be loaded, a brakeperson releases the brake, and typically, because of the slope of the tracks, the ear will move toward the pier unassisted. However, if the car does not roll freely, a brakep-erson must use a “pinch bar” or “teaser” to prod it along. After the car begins its descent, it passes over scales and through a thawing shed. It is then pushed up an incline by a mechanical device to mechanical arms that hoist the car into the air and turn it upside down, dumping the coal onto a conveyer belt. This belt then transports the coal into the hold of the ship, and the empty railroad car is returned to a storage facility.
On August 12,1990, Etheridge was using a “pinch bar” to prod a railroad car toward the pier. She claims that the bar slipped on some excess grease on the track, causing injury to her wrist. Although Etheridge began receiving benefits under the LHWCA shortly thereafter, on December 27, 1990 she filed this FELA action, claiming that N & W had been negligent in permitting the grease to remain on the track. The district court granted N & Ws motion to dismiss Ether-idge’s complaint on the basis that the LHWCA provides her exclusive remedy. Etheridge appeals.
II.
Congress enacted the LHWCA to provide compensation for maritime workers injured on navigable waters in order “to fill the void created by the inability of the States to remedy injuries on navigable waters.”
Northeast Marine Terminal Co. v. Caputo,
The LHWCA does not define what constitutes maritime employment. However, in
Northeast Marine Terminal Co.,
the Supreme Court held that, aside from specific occupations identified in the LHWCA, land-based activity is considered maritime employment only if it is an integral or essential part of loading or unloading a vessel.
See Northeast Marine Terminal Co.,
To us the nub of the [Northeast Marine Terminal Co.] decision is that an employee who is not engaged in “an integral part of the unloading process” will not fall within the coverage of the Act unless his occupation is of a traditional maritime nature....
It is clear that in the cases before us the occupations of the plaintiffs were not of a traditionally maritime nature, but on the contrary were those traditionally associated with railroading. Their tasks and responsibilities with respect to the unloading of the coal from the hopper cars would have been the same at an inland terminal as they were at Lambert’s Point, and the sophisticated automation of the facilities at the latter terminal should not obscure the basic fact that the plaintiffs were engaged in unloading a coal train, not loading a vessel.
Id. at 895 (emphasis added). Undoubtedly, if Conti remains controlling authority, this panel is bound to conclude that Etheridge was not engaged in maritime employment.
After
Conti
was decided, however, the Supreme Court in
Chesapeake & Ohio Railway Co. v. Schwalb,
The
Schwalb
Court instructed that the proper inquiry to determine whether employment is maritime employment within the meaning of § 902(3) is whether it is essential to the loading process.
Id.
at 45-48,
A decision of a panel of this court becomes the law of the circuit and is binding on other panels unless it is overruled by a subsequent en banc opinion of this court or “a superseding contrary decision of the Supreme Court.”
Busby v. Crown Supply, Inc.,
III.
Etheridge’s employment required her to initiate the loading process and, therefore, as Schwalb makes plain, was essential to the loading process. Consequently, Etheridge was engaged in maritime employment within the meaning of § 902(3) and, in light of her concessions that the other requirements have been met, her exclusive remedy is under the LHWCA. Thus, we hold that the district court properly dismissed Etheridge’s claim under FELA.
AFFIRMED.
Notes
This court recently addressed the question of "maritime employment" and held that an employee was engaged in maritime employment because his work in fastening down cargo to flatbed railroad cars was the completion of the unloading process and was, therefore, integral to the unloading process.
Hayes
v.
CSX Transp., Inc.,
Appellant also seeks support from [Conti ] in which our court found that three brakemen working for [N & W] at its Lambert's Point terminal were not covered by the LHWCA because their occupation was not of a traditional maritime nature, but was traditionally associated with railroading. As we explained [previously], the employees in Conti were not engaged in an integral part of the loading or unloading process. They were engaged in moving the train.... Therefore, Conti is not applicable to the facts presently in this appeal.
Id. at 142. Because the type of employment at issue in Hayes was distinguishable from that at issue in Conti, a decision that Conti is no longer a correct statement of the law was unnecessary. We note, however, that our conclusion that Eth-eridge was engaged in maritime employment is consistent with our decision in Hayes.
