This case comes to us from a decision by the Benefits Review Board upholding the Administrative Law Judge’s (ALJ) award of attorneys’ fees to Larry Furrow, who filed a workers’ compensation claim against his employer, Jeffboat, LLC, that was settled shortly before trial was scheduled. On appeal, Jeffboat argues that Furrow’s counsel never established that the hourly rate that she requested was in line with the prevailing market rate for legal services in Indiana, where Furrow brought this case. Jeffboat also argues that the Administrative Law Judge improperly resorted to discretionary factors, in particular the quality of representation from Furrow’s counsel, when he made the award. Jeffboat claims that such factors are only appropriate once the ALJ has made a proper determination about the applicable market rate.
For the following reasons, we affirm the decision of the Benefits Review Board.
I. Background
Larry Furrow, an employee of Jeffboat, LLC in Jeffersonville, Indiana, suffered from hearing loss and filed a workers’ compensation claim under the Longshoreman and Harbor Workers’ Compensation Act, 33 U.S.C. § 901 et seq. The Office of Workers’ Compensation Programs originally approved the petition but, when Jeff-boat continued to contest it, referred the matter for a formal hearing before Administrative Law Judge Donald W. Mosser in the summer of 2006. Approximately six days before the hearing, at a pre-trial conference, the parties reached an agreement *489 on the amount of compensation that Jeff-boat would pay to Furrow; the only issue the parties did not settle at the conference was Jeffboat’s liability for any attorneys’ fees.
Furrow filed a petition for attorneys’ fees on August 31, 2006, attaching an affidavit claiming $1,689.66 in attorneys’ fees from his case. As an appendix, he attached a previous case, Decker v. Jeffboat, decided in the same locality by ALJ Rudolf Jansen, approving attorneys’ fees ranging from $250 to $261 per hour. His appendix also included citations to the Connecticut Laiv Tribune, The National Law Journal, the 1994 Survey of Law Firm Economics by Altman Weil, and other sources, establishing that billing rates for partners in Connecticut, where Furrow’s attorney was based, usually ranged from $199 to $420 per hour. Jeffboat filed its objection to the claim for attorneys’ fees on November 21, 2006, including appendices. The appendices included a case from nearby Cov-ington, Kentucky in 1999 establishing the rate for a Longshore Act case at $150 per hour, and three reported cases from Indiana which, while not involving the Longshore Act, found reasonable attorneys’ fees in a range from $136 to $175 per hour.
On January 10, 2007, Judge Mosser granted Furrow’s petition for attorneys’ fees in the amount Furrow requested. In approving the petition, Judge Mosser cited Decker v. Jeffboat and 20 C.F.R. 702.132, which provides that an ALJ can consider the quality of an attorney’s representation when making an award of attorneys’ fees. Judge Mosser concluded that, “Ms. Olson’s excellent representation of her client produced successful results for which she should be compensated with the reasonable amount requested.” App. 2. Jeffboat appealed the award to the Benefits Review Board, which upheld the award. Jeffboat then appealed to this court.
II. Discussion
This court reviews the ALJ’s award of attorneys’ fees for an abuse of discretion.
Zeigler Coal Co. v. Director, OWCP,
Jeffboat argues that the attorneys’ fee award was improper in this case because Furrow’s attorney established that the hourly rate she requested ($261 per hour) was the prevailing market rate in Connecticut, where Furrow’s attorney is based, but did not establish that it was in line with the prevailing market rate in Indiana, where the case was litigated. In support of its contention that the attorney must show that her request for a reasonable attorneys’ fee is in line with local market rates, Jeffboat cites the Supreme Court’s decision in
Blum v. Stenson,
Jeffboat concedes that this circuit has allowed the party seeking attorneys’ fees to create a presumption that an hour
*490
ly rate is reasonable where the attorney demonstrates that the hourly rate she has requested is in line with what she charges other clients for similar work.
Mathur,
Jeffboat then argues that the attorneys’ fees requested in this case were unreasonable. Their supporting evidence comes from the four cases that they brought before the ALJ establishing that the market rate for attorneys’ fees in southern Indiana is considerably less than the $261 per hour that the ALJ awarded. Only one of these cases,
James E. Huff v. Mike Fink Restaurant, Benson’s Inc.,
33 BRBS 179 (Nov. 22, 1999), involved the Longshore Act, and that case was decided in 1999. Of the other three cases,
Franklin College v. Turner,
Jeffboat appears to be reading extra requirements into both the Supreme Court’s case law and this circuit’s case law. The precedents on this issue require the attorneys’ fee to be reasonable within the “community.”
See Blum,
Nor is Jeffboat correct that
Mathur
requires proof that a plaintiff first attempted to find local counsel before hiring an out-of-area attorney.
Mathur
held that “if an out of town attorney has a higher hourly rate than local practitioners, district courts should defer to the out-of-town attorney’s rate when calculating the lodestar amount....”
Mathur,
Nor is Jeffboat correct in asserting that Furrow had not established that his attorney’s hourly rate was in line with the *491 attorneys’ fees requested in this case. The petition for attorneys’ fees, while acknowledging that Furrow’s attorney did not bill by the hour, established a baseline hourly rate of $250 to $340 per hour, and substantiated this rate with evidence that it was consistent with market rates for specialized legal services in Connecticut. Given our preference for awarding attorneys’ fees that are commensurate with what an attorney would otherwise have earned from paying clients, the ALJ did not abuse his discretion by using $261 per hour as a reasonable hourly rate for purposes of the lodestar calculation. Nor did he abuse his discretion by not adjusting this rate downward in light of Jeffboat’s evidence about market rates in Indiana; as we explained above, Jeffboat’s cases were not especially relevant to this case. At any rate, whether or not a given matter could have been handled just as competently by a local attorney is a discretionary issue left to the judge making the attorneys’ fee award, and the ALJ was entitled to find that Furrow would need to seek counsel outside of southern Indiana. We note, however, that the hourly rate used in this case is apparently not out of line for Longshore Act cases in the same locality. Decker v. Jeffboat established that an ALJ in the same jurisdiction had previously awarded similar legal fees for similar work. Jeff-boat only challenges the relevance of Decker by claiming that they did not dispute the attorneys’ fee award in that case. Nothing in the case law requires that a party show that the hourly rate they have requested has previously been disputed and upheld, however. Indeed, a previous attorneys’ fee award is useful for establishing a reasonable market rate for similar work whether it is disputed or not.
As the award was in line with the reasonable market rate, the ALJ obviously did not make an upward adjustment to the market rate when considering the factors cited in 20 C.F.R. 702.132. Rather, that section of the regulations instructs administrative law judges to calculate an award of attorneys’ fees based on a reasonable hourly rate multiplied by the number of hours worked, and to consider among other factors the quality of an attorney’s representation when making the award. As the decision in the present case was a reasonable one, the quality of Furrow’s attorney is just an additional factor supporting the award.
We thus conclude that the ALJ did not abuse his discretion by determining that the hourly rate requested by Furrow’s attorney was reasonable and in line with the hourly rate for lawyers of similar ability and experience in the community.
III. Conclusion
For the foregoing reasons, we AffiRM the decision of the Benefits Review Board upholding the ALJ’s award of attorneys’ fees.
