Pеtitioners challenge a decision of the Compensation Review Board (“the Board”) which upheld concurrent awards of temporary total disability benefits due to a back impairment and permanent partial disability benefits (“schedule awards”) based on impairments to claimant’s lеgs caused by the same work injury. We affirm, publishing this opinion primarily to disapprove a portion of the Board’s decision which may lead to error in future cases.
I. The Basic Facts
On August 19, 2002, claimant Ellavane Petway (“claimant” or “Ms. Petway”) injured her lower back while working as a housekeeper at Howard University Hospital. In a compensation order issued in 2003, an Administrative Law Judge (“ALJ”) awarded temporary total disability benefits which are still being paid. Petitioners do not challenge this order, acknowledging that the issue was adjudicated in a prior formal hearing. In 2008, however, a different ALJ awarded Ms. Petway pеrmanent partial disability benefits for a 25% impairment to each of her lower extremities (“schedule awards” 1 ), to be paid concurrently with the ongoing temporary total disability benefits for the impairment to her back.
Petitioners make a spirited challenge to this new award, arguing (1) that Ms. Pet-wаy is not entitled to benefits for a scheduled loss when she did not injure a scheduled member; (2) that the statute does not permit concurrent awards of temporary total disability benefits and permanent partial disability benefits; and (3) that the ALJ’s finding that Ms. Petway has “separate and distinct disabilities” is not supported by substantial evidence. These arguments have significant logical force, but they are either foreclosed by our prior decisions, attack agency interpretations of the statute to which we must defer, or are contradicted by the record. It may be, as petitioners urge, thаt the workers’ compensation system is ripe for reform, but that is a task to be undertaken by the Department of Employment Services and the legislature, not by this court.
II. The Schedule Awards
Petitioners argue that claimant was not entitled to schedule awards for the impairments to her legs because she injured her back, not her legs, and the back itself is not listed under the schedule provisions. Acknowledging that there are precedents upholding schedule awards of this nature, they ask us to disapprove a seminal decision by the Director of the Department of Employment Services which held that a сlaimant may be entitled to a schedule award when an injury to a non-scheduled part of the body affects a scheduled body part.
Kovac v. Avis Leasing Corp.,
H & AS No. 84-177 (Director’s Decision, July 17, 1986) (approving a schedule award for permanent partial disability in worker’s right leg, although he had injured his back, not his leg, at work). In
Kovac
the Director decided that “it is not the situs of the injury which determines whether a schedule award is payable; it is the situs
We defer to an agency’s interpretation of a statute it administers unless the “interpretation is unreasonable or in contravention of the languаge or legislative history of the statute.... ”
Watergate East Comm. Against Hotel Conversion v. District of Columbia Zoning Comm’n,
Petitioners’ argument must fail because we have prеviously considered the
Kovac
decision and “conclude[d] that it is a reasonable interpretation [of the Workers’ Compensation Act] and certainly not contrary to law.”
Washington Metropolitan Area Transit Authority v. District of Columbia Dep’t of Employment Servs. (Chang),
III. Concurrent Benefits
Petitioners also argue that it is illogical to award concurrent benefits for both temporary total disability and permanent partial disability. How, they ask, is it possible to be both totally disabled and partially disabled at the same time? How can a worker be, at one time, both temporarily and permanently disabled? They also assert that “[a] claimant cannot be more than 100%, or totally, disabled whether that total disability be temporаry or permanent.” These arguments based on policy and logic must confront the language of the statutory provision for schedule awards, which states:
In case of disability partial in character but permanent in quality, the compensation shall be 66 2/3% of the employee’s averаge weekly wages which shall be in addition to compensation for temporary total disability pr temporary partial disability paid in accordance with paragraph (2) or (4)[ 3 ] of this subsection respectively, and shall be paid to the employee, as follows: [listing the scheduled parts of the body],
D.C.Codе § 32-1508(3) (emphasis added). Petitioners respond that “in addition to” does not necessarily mean “concurrently,” as opposed to sequentially. We agree, but neither does this language forbid concurrent benefits, and petitioners have not cited any legislative history or persuasive precedent to demonstrate that the Board’s interpretation of the statute is unreasonable.
In the recent
Ambrose
decision, this court considered whether the Act authorizes concurrent benefits for
permanent
total disability and permanent partial disability.
4
Although “entertaining] consid
On
remand, after a thorough discussion of the statutory language and existing precedent, the Board “held that an injured worker is not entitled to receive permanent partial disability benefits (a ‘schedule award’) pursuant to D.C. Official Code § 32-1508(3) concurrently with permanent total disability benefits pursuant to D.C. Official Code § 32-1508(1).”
Tommie Ambrose v. Howard University,
CRB No. 06-23(R),
When it first reviewed this case, before the Ambrose decisions were issued, the Board noted that “the question of whether concurrent schedule and wage loss benefits can be awarded has been resolved by this Board previously,” and it readily affirmed “the ALJ’s determination that an award of concurrent temporary total disability benefits and schedule loss benefits is allowable under the Act....” The Board remanded “for further findings of fact concerning whether the non-schedule impairment is a cause or contributing factor of the ongoing wage loss.”
When the matter returned, after remand, the Board noted that petitioners again raised the question, “in light of Am-brose, whether the concurrеnt disability awards are consistent with the statutory scheme and permissible under current law.” Without extended discussion, the Board remarked: “The Ambrose decision of the Court, as further refined in the Board’s Ambrose decision on Remand, supports the Respondent’s position in the instant matter.” It held that the compensation order was “fully in accordance with the law to the extent that the current case law does not constrain the ALJ from awarding concurrent wage loss and schedule loss benefits.”
Petitioners rightly point out that the award of concurrent benefits may give the injured employee a financial incentive to stay at home rather than return to work, and perhaps the legislature meant something different when it used the words “in addition to.” Recognizing, however, that D.C.Code § 32-1508(3) expressly authorizes a schedule award “in addition to compensation for temporary total disability or temporary partial disability[,]” we cannot say that the Board’s interpretation of the statute is unreasonable.
IV. Separate and Distinguishable Disabilities
Finally, we reach petitioners’ third argument, and the reason for publishing this opinion. Petitioners assert that the ALJ erred in finding that the injuries to
When it reviewed the present case in 2008, the Board affirmed “the ALJ’s determination that an award of concurrent temporary total disability benefits and schedule loss benefits is allоwable under the Act,” but, referring to Sullivan, 5 its own gloss on Morrison, it remanded “for further findings of fact concerning whether the non-schedule impairment is a cause or contributing factor of the ongoing wage loss.” ALJ McCoy found on remand that “Claimant’s back injury, independent of her lower extremities, makes her unable to return to hеr pre-injury job, [and] allows her to also recover for the wage loss attributable to that non-schedule anatomical work injury.” In other words, Ms. Pet-way’s “continuing entitlement to wage loss benefits is based on the work injury to her back, a non-schedule body part.”
When it reviewed this case once more, the Board affirmed, noting that “the ALJ provided a thorough and appropriate response to the Board’s directive,” and “that the Compensation Order on Remand ... is correct in concluding that Respondent’s non-schedule low back condition remains an independent causе of her wage loss....” Moreover, the Board concluded, “the current case law does not constrain the ALJ from awarding concurrent wage loss and schedule loss benefits.”
We will uphold the agency’s factual findings if they are supported by substantial evidence, meaning ‘“such relevant evidеnce as a reasonable mind might accept as adequate to support a conclusion.’ ”
King v. District of Columbia Dep’t of Employment Servs.,
We are puzzled by one portion of the Board’s Decision and Order, however. After discussing our decision in
Ambrose
and its own decision on remand in
Ambrose,
the Board stated that “the ALJ’s analysis, while appropriate, was rendered unnecessary by the
Ambrose
decisions of the Court and the Board. Those decisions support the determination that entitlement to concurrent awards no lоnger requires analysis of the separateness or distinctiveness of the situs of the injuries.”
6
Peti
Nothing in our decision in
Ambrose
purports to overrule
Morrison,
and a panel of this court could not do so, even if it wanted to.
M.A.P. v. Ryan,
Although we disapprove the Board’s comments, they do not invalidate its decision. The Board mistakenly thought that the ALJ’s analysis “was rendered unnecessary by the Ambrose decisions of the Court and the Boardf,]” but it nevertheless analyzed the record and concluded that “there is substantial record evidence to support the [ALJ’s] finding that Respondent has separate and distinguishable schedule and non-schedule disabilities such as would warrant concurrent awards, as well as the conclusion that her low back injury is separate, distinct, and independent of the lower extremities, such that the back injury resulted in an independent wage loss.” We agree.
V. Conclusion
Because it is supported by substantial evidence, and is not contrary to law, the decision of the Board is hereby
Affirmed.
Notes
. "A 'schedule award' refers to the formula for compensating permanent partial disability described in D.C.Code § 32 — 1508(3)(A)—(S) (2001 & Supp.2008), which lists certain parts of the body. If one of these parts is permanently disabled, the worker is entitled to disability payments based on the number of weeks' compensation listed for that body part.”
Washington Metropolitan Area Transit Authority v. District of Columbia Dep't of Employment Servs. (Boyd),
. The Director did not decide in Kovac whether concurrent benefits could be paid. Id. at 7.
. We have explained that "[t]he reference to paragraph (4) is a mistake; it is readily apparent ... that the phrase should read ‘in accordance with paragraph (2) or (5)....'"
Smith v. District of Columbia Dep't of Employment Servs.,
.We said in
Ambrose
that “the claimant may be entitled to compensation for permanent partial disability concurrently with benefits
.
Sullivan v. Boatman & Magnani,
CRB No. 03-74,
. Before making this statement, the Board also said that, "when the issue is entitlement to
permanent
total disability concurrently with schedule awards, consideration of whether there is a separate and distinct functional incapacity between two disabling anatomic areas is immaterial.” (Emphasis in original.)
