Cooper/T. Smith Stevedoring Company, Incorporated (Cooper/T.Smith), petitions for review of a final order of the Benefits Review Board (BRB) issued January 10, 2000, and a final order of the BRB issued June 29, 2001, affirming a decision and order on remand by an administrative law *744 judge (ALJ) awarding disability and death benefits pursuant to the Longshore and Harbor Workers’ Compensation Act (LHWCA), 33 U.S.C. § 901 et seq. (1994). In its petition, Cooper/T. Smith raises an issue of first impression: whether 33 U.S.C. § 914(j) entitles an employer to a credit or offset against a widow’s death benefits for the overpayment of disability benefits erroneously awarded by the ALJ. Cooper/T. Smith also argues that the BRB erred in finding substantial evidence demonstrating that the employee’s lung disease was causally related to his employment with Cooper/T. Smith and that Cooper/T. Smith was the last responsible employer. Finding no error, we deny the petition for review.
I. BACKGROUND
Jake Liuzza, now deceased, worked as a longshoreman for numerous employers between 1947 and 1984. During this time period it is alleged that he was exposed to asbestos. He voluntarily retired in 1984. In May 1993, he was diagnosed as having squamous cell carcinoma, a malignant lung cancer. Later that month, a left upper pulmonary lobectomy was performed. The cancer reappeared in August of 1994, and a second resection was performed. He died on September 30, 1994. Subsequently, Liuzza’s widow, Rosemary Liuzza (widow), filed a claim under the LHWCA, seeking death benefits as well as disability benefits on behalf of the decedent.
The ALJ found that the widow had established a causal relationship between Liuzza’s employment and his lung cancer. The ALJ also determined that Liuzza had been totally disabled from May 18, 1993 through the date of his death on September 30, 1994. Accordingly, the ALJ awarded permanent partial disability compensation based upon a one hundred percent impairment for the relevant time period pursuant to 33 U.S.C. § 908(e)(23), death benefits pursuant to § 909, and funeral expenses.
Cooper/T. Smith appealed, arguing that the ALJ erred in concluding that it was the responsible employer, that the widow had established a causal relationship between the employment and the lung cancer, and that Liuzza had been totally disabled. The BRB vacated the finding with respect to the extent of Liuzza’s disability prior to his death and remanded the case for reconsideration of the extent of impairment pursuant to the American Medical Association Guides to the Evaluation of Permanent Impairment (4th ed.1993). The BRB affirmed the decision in all other respects.
On remand, the ALJ found that the decedent was not entitled to any permanent partial disability benefits from June 1, 1993, through July 27, 1994, but was entitled to compensation benefits based on a fifty-one percent impairment rating from May 18, 1993, to May 31, 1993, and from July 28, 1994, until his death. The ALJ rejected Cooper/T. Smith’s claim that it was entitled to an offset of overpayment of disability benefits already paid against death benefits it owed the widow. The BRB affirmed the ALJ’s decision and order on remand. Cooper/T. Smith now petitions this Court for review of the BRB’s decisions.
II. ANALYSIS
A. Standard of Review
We review statutory interpretation by the BRB
de novo. Equitable Equip. Co. v. Dir., OWCP,
B. Denial of Offset for Overpayment under 33 U.S.C. § 914(j)
As previously set forth, Cooper/T. Smith paid disability benefits erroneously awarded by the ALJ’s initial decision and order. Relying on 33 U.S.C. § 914(j), Cooper/T. Smith challenges the ALJ’s denial of its request to offset against the death benefits due to the widow any overpayment of the employee’s disability benefits. This appears to be a question df first impression.
Like other workers’ compensation programs, the LHWCA “represents a compromise between the interests of injured workers, who receive a certain and immediate recovery, and the interests of employers and insurers, who in turn receive definite and lower limits on potential liability than would have been applicable in common-law tort actions for damages.”
Ceres Gulf v. Cooper,
In answering any statutory question, we begin with the language of the statute itself.
United States v. Ron Pair Enterprises,
In denying Cooper/T. Smith’s request for offset of the overpayment, the ALJ cited our decision in
Ceres Gulf,
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On the other hand, the Director of the Office of Workers’ Compensation Programs, U.S. Department of Labor (Director), relying on circuit precedent, has filed a brief arguing that § 914(j) does not provide a basis for Cooper/T. Smith to be reimbursed for its overpayment of Liuzza’s disability payments by collecting out of unpaid installments of the widow’s death benefits. We afford deference to the Director’s interpretations of the LHWCA and the amount of deference depends upon the “thoroughness evident in its consideration, the validity of its reasoning, its consistency with earlier and later pronouncements, and all those factors which give it power to persuade, if lacking power to control.”
Pool Co.,
The Director propounds two principal arguments in support of its position. First, it argues that the plain language of § 914(j) forecloses reimbursement. Second, the Director argues that interpreting § 914® to be claim specific is consistent with caselaw interpreting the LHWCA.
With respect to the former argument, the Director asserts that the overpay-ments of compensation for which Cooper/T. Smith seeks reimbursement were made in satisfaction of a compensation order issued by the ALJ, thereby not in “advance” of that order as indicated by the language of § 914(j). 3 Section 914(j), however, does not specify the event to which the payments are made in advance. Additionally, the Director states that neither the LHWCA nor the regulations define the phrase “advance payments of compensation.”
“The canons of statutory construction dictate that when construing a statute, the court should give words their ordinary meaning and should not render as meaningless the language of the statute.”
White v. Black,
If “advance” payments included payments made after an award was ordered, that would appear to render the term “advance” nearly meaningless. In other grords, virtually all payments of compensation would be “advance” if we included payments made after an award was ordered. Such an interpretation would contravene the canon of statutory construction that “a statute must, if possible, be construed in such fashion that every word has some operative effect.”
4
Further, such an interpretation would not be consistent with a fundamental tenet of the LHWCA, “ ‘the expectation that employers
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will pay compensation promptly and directly, without the necessity of a formal award.’ ”
Temporary Employment Services v. Trinity Marine Group, Inc.,
We are mindful that § 914(j), a provision for reimbursement, is an incentive for employers to promptly make payments for injuries. Once an employer has been ordered to pay an award, the need for incentive pursuant to § 914(j) disappears. Indeed, the statute has another provision that applies if payment is not made pursuant to an award. Section 914(f) provides that if any compensation ordered pursuant to an award is not paid within ten days after it is due, “there shall be added to such unpaid compensation an amount equal to 20 per centum thereof.” Under these circumstances, we are persuaded that “advance” refers to a time prior to the award. Here, Cooper/T. Smith did not pay compensation until the award was ordered, and thus, the payments should not be deemed “advance'payments of compensation” under § 914.
Further, although we have discovered no controlling case, our precedent informs our decision. In
Oceanic Butler, Inc. v. Nordahl,
The employer and insurer then sought to withdraw from the settlement agreement, and in the alternative, argued they were entitled to offset the settlement payment for the employee’s disability benefits against its liability for the widow’s death benefits claims to avoid a “double recovery.” With respect to the withdrawal determination, we held the employer’s/insurer’s promise to pay disability benefits valid and binding when made, thus rejecting the request to withdraw from the settlement agreement. With respect to the double recovery argument, the employer/insurer did not rely on § 914(j), and we characterized the request as an “extrastatutory” offset. We recognized that if the settlement had been approved prior to the employee’s death, there could have been no “extra-statutory” offset. Thus, we framed the question to be “whether a submitted but unapproved settlement is closer to an approved application or an entirely unsettled claim.”
Nordahl,
Cooper/T. Smith argues that because the instant award for both the disability
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and death benefits were made payable to the widow, the award is one payment. This Court has recognized that disability and death benefits are “two distinct statutory benefits.”
Nordahl,
[The] settlement of [the employee’s] disputed disability claims has no effect whatsoever upon her widow’s benefits, because she does not seek the disability settlement. While it is reasonable to assume that Mrs. Nordahl will take at least some portion of her childless husband’s estate, it is equally plausible that the entire $75,000 will go to a home for destitute longshoremen; the point is that her right to death benefits is unaffected by potential payment from pro-, ceeds of her husband’s claim. No inquiry into the disposition of the estate is necessary or even appropriate in evaluating the existence of her right, though administrative determination of the level of death benefits payable, if any, will consider her other sources of support, including the size of the estate.
Nordahl,
In the instant case, there is no contention that the widow prosecuted the disability claim in anything other than a proper capacity, i.e., legal representative of the decedent’s estate. As such, we are riot persuaded that the ALJ’s order to pay the widow the decedent’s compensation somehow changed the nature of the statutory benefit. Thus, we reject the invitation to deem these two claims as one.
Cooper/T. Smith’s final argument with respect to reimbursement is that the principles of equity and fairness require that it receive a credit against any further death benefits owed to the widow. This Court has previously rejected the opportunity to weigh the equities in the context of a request for reimbursement pursuant to § 914(j).
'See Guidry v. Booker Drilling Co.,
In conclusion, we are satisfied that, in view of the language of § 914 and congressional intent, our precedent addressing similar issues, and the deference owed the Director’s interpretation, the BRB properly concluded that § 914(j) does not provide a basis for Cooper/T. Smith to be reimbursed for its overpayment of a deceased employee’s disability payments by collecting out of unpaid installments of the widow’s death benefits.
C. Substantial Evidence
Cooper/T. Smith argues that the widow failed to bring forth substantial evidence that Liuzza’s illness or death was caused by asbestos. Essentially, Cooper/T. *749 Smith faults the ALJ for crediting the opinion of Liuzza’s expert rather than its experts’ opinions. Liuzza’s expert, Dr. Gerald E. Liuzza, 7 is Board Certified in anatomic and clinical pathology, with a certified subspecialty in forensic pathology. Unlike Cooper/T. Smith’s experts, Dr. Liuzza did not subscribe to the theory that because the employee was not diagnosed with the disease asbestosis, the exposure to asbestos could not have contributed to his illness. Instead, Dr. Liuzza testified that the exposure to asbestos, combined with the employee’s cigarette consumption, caused the lung cancer. The ALJ found that such a position was supported by the medical literature submitted by the widow. Additionally, although one of Cooper/T. Smith’s experts, Dr. Cagle, did not believe that the exposure to asbestos caused the disease, he admitted that the finding of two asbestos bodies on iron stained sections of the employee’s lung indicated an above background level of exposure to asbestos.
More specifically, Cooper/T. Smith contends that the employee’s expert relied solely on undocumented history provided to him by widow’s counsel. In its decision and order awarding benefits, the ALJ recognized that the employee’s expert stated that his opinion was contingent on a “documented significant exposure to asbestos and that [his opinion] is based on probabilities.” The ALJ expressly found that the exposure to asbestos was significant and that the varying accounts of the employee’s history of smoking did not change the fact that the “amount was significant.” The ALJ concluded that although the employee’s expert “testified that his conclusions were based on some assumptions regarding Decedent’s history, these assumptions proved to be accurate.” We have determined that there is substantial evidence to support this finding.
Cooper/T. Smith also challenges the ALJ’s finding that the employee’s last exposure to asbestos had been during his employment with Cooper/T. Smith. It is well established that under the LHWCA the last employer “is responsible for payment of the full amount of benefits awarded as compensation to claimants for occupational diseases.”
Avondale Industries, Inc., v. Director, OWCP,
Congress intended that the employer during the last employment in which the claimant was exposed to injurious stimuli, prior to the date upon which the claimant became aware of the fact that he was suffering from an occupational disease arising out of his employment, should be liable for the full amount of the award.
Id.
(quoting
Travelers Insurance Co. v. Cardillo,
In the instant case, the employee’s son and wife testified that he was exposed to asbestos during his employment with Cooper/T. Smith. As set forth above, we have rejected the argument that exposure
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to asbestos did not cause the harm. Cooper/T. Smith also argues that Liuzza failed to bring forth “any reliable evidence to establish ... that the decedent was employed by Cooper/T. Smith at the time of his last injurious exposure.” Cooper/T. Smith misunderstands the burden-shifting framework that underlies the last employer rule. Under this rule, the employee does not have to prove that the employer is liable.
Avondale,
For the above reasons, the petition for review is DENIED.
Notes
. The LHWCA contains only two other provisions for recovery of overpayment from the employee, §§ 908(j) and 922.
Ceres Gulf,
. Cooper/T. Smith does cite a BRB decision.
Hawkins v. Harbert International, Inc.,
33
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BRBS 198 (1999). However, because the BRB is not a policy-making agency, we owe its decisions no deference.
Pool Co.,
. As previously quoted, § 914(j) provides as follows: “If the employer has made advance payments of compensation, he shall be entitled to be reimbursed out of any unpaid installment or installments of compensation due.” (emphasis added).
.
United States v. Nordic Village, Inc.,
. Congress was aware of the ' shipbuilders’ position against allowing offsets against only future benefits pursuant to the proposed § 914(j) for fear of losing an opportunity to recover overpayments.
Lennon v. Waterfront Transport,
. In
Nordahl,
immediately after the above-quoted language, we continued discussing a decision by an ALJ in another case in which the ALJ allowed disability payments to offset a widow’s death benefits.
. Dr. Liuzza is of no relation to the employee or the widow.
