OVERVIEW
An Administrative Law Judge denied Appellant’s request for benefits pursuant to the Longshore and Harbor Workers’ Compensation Act (LHWCA), 33 U.S.C. §§ 901-50 (1994), because he found Appellant to be an excluded “aquaculture worker.” See 33 U.S.C. § 902(3)(E). The Benefits Review Board (Board) automatically affirmed the ALJ’s decision.
Appellant’s job duties as a freezer forklift operator fall within the aquaculture worker exception. Aquaculture workers by their status are excluded from the LHWCA’s jurisdiction and coverage even if they momentarily or episodically work on the docks. Therefore, the ALJ and Board correctly concluded that Appellant’s claim does not fall within the LHWCA’s jurisdiction.
Appellant’s petition for review is denied.
BACKGROUND
Jose F. Alcala, Claimant-Appellant, sought LHWCA benefits after he injured his shoulder and back by slipping on ice and fish blood in his employer’s freezer warehouse. Appellant was employed by Pan Pacific Fisheries (PPF). PPF is a large cannery that primarily cans tuna fish, but also processes squid, mackerel and pet food.
PPF’s facility is situated beside a dock in a harbor at Long Beach, California. The fish comes to the processing plant mainly by truck and only occasionally by ship. Fish delivered by ship would be unloaded by the ship’s crew and left in bins on the dock. Only one ship delivered fish in 1991, the year of Appellant’s injury.
At the time of his injury, Appellant was a freezer forklift operator at PPF. A freezer forklift operator picks up bins of fish from an ante room, the area located next to the freezer entrance, which are left there by outside forklift operators. The operator then stacks and inventories the fish in the freezer while the fish awaits the next step in processing or canning. Appellant’s job was a critical part of PPF’s processing and canning operation.
At the administrative hearing, PPF contended that Appellant did not qualify for LHWCA benefits because he did not perform maritime work. PPF claimed Appellant performed non-maritime duties inside its freezer warehouse as evidenced by the special suit he wore at work that was designed to withstand frigid temperatures. Appellant also drove a forklift designed to stack bins of fish high in the freezer. He was paid a different wage from and belonged to a different union than PPF’s outside forklift operators.
Appellant did not dispute PPF’s contention that his duties required him to work inside the freezer. He did claim, however, that he occasionally moved bins of fish on the dock if there were too few outside drivers. This led to his assertion that some of the duties he performed were maritime in nature, and therefore, his claim was subject to LHWCA jurisdiction despite the explicit aquaculture worker exception.
The ALJ held that Appellant’s duties as a freezer forklift operator were part of PPF’s
On appeal, the Board granted automatic affirmance of the ALJ’s decision. 1 Appellant petitions this court for review.
STANDARD OF REVIEW
The Board “may not substitute its views for those of the ALJ, but instead must accept the ALJ’s findings unless they are contrary to the law, irrational, or unsupported by substantial evidence.”
King v. Director, OWCP,
DISCUSSION
A. History of the Jensen Line and the Aquaculture Exception
Since Congress enacted the LHWCA, courts have straggled to define the line between state workers’ compensation and LHWCA jurisdiction.
See Northeast Marine Terminal Co. v. Caputo,
The revised statute does not define the term “aquaculture worker.” However, the term is defined by the Code of Federal Regulations as:
those employed by commercial enterprises involved in the controlled cultivation and harvest of aquatic plants and animals, including the cleaning, processing or canningof fish and fish products, the cultivation and harvesting of shellfish, and the controlled growing and harvesting of other aquatic species.
20 C.F.R. § 701.301(a)(12)(iii)(E) (1994). The exclusion of aquaculture workers applies even if the claimant is injured over navigable waters. Id. § 701.301(a)(12)(iii).
Appellant argues the ALJ and Board erred by concluding that he was an excluded aquaculture worker and denying LHWCA jurisdiction for his claim. The outcome of his petition for review depends entirely on where Congress drew the Jensen line in relation to his duties and to the aquaculture worker exception.
B. ljubic and Maritime Duties
Appellant argues that claimants doing both aquaculture work and maritime work qualify for LHWCA coverage, because spending some time in longshoring operations is enough to confer LHWCA jurisdiction.
Caputo,
In
Ljubic,
the claimant was a maintenance supervisor and mechanic. 27 BRBS at 114. The claimant spent forty percent of his time doing maintenance work on structures and equipment used on the docks for unloading fish.
See id.
His other duties involved the repair and maintenance of his employer’s cannery.
See id.
The ALJ held the claimant was not an excluded aquaculture worker.
See id.
at 118. The ALJ reasoned that a cannery worker who regularly engaged in traditional maritime duties as an expected part of his job would be exposed to the risk of walking in and out of coverage if the exception applied.
See id.
at 117. The Board held the ALJ had properly focused on the claimant’s duties when assessing the applicability of the aquaculture exclusion.
Ljubic,
Appellant had significantly fewer maritime duties than the claimant in
Ljubic.
He was hired to move fish from the ante room to the freezer in order to freeze it as quickly as possible. All his duties, whether inside or outside, revolved around that task. Considering PPF’s expectation that Appellant would only work in the freezer and the testimony that only one ship delivered fish in 1991, it appears Appellant’s outside work was infrequent or episodic and entirely discretionary in nature. Thus, contrary to Appellant’s assertions, his additional maritime work, if any, did not confer LHWCA jurisdiction over his claim.
See Dorris v. Director, OWCP,
C. Cultivated or Harvested Fish
The ALJ held that Appellant did not have to clean, process or can cultivated or harvested fish in order to be excluded.
See
20 C.F.R. § 701.301(a)(12)(iii)(E) (discussing
We defer to the Board’s interpretation of the LHWCA so long as it is reasonable and reflects the LHWCA’s underlying purpose.
See National Steel & Shipbuilding Co. v. Dep’t of Labor,
D. Point of Rest Theory
Finally, Appellant contends the ALJ im- . properly relied on the point of rest theory, which the Supreme Court rejected in
Caputo. See Caputo,
CONCLUSION
Appellant has failed to meet his burden by establishing that LHWCA jurisdiction applies to his claim.
See Loggins,
20 BRBS at 816 (Appellant has the burden of proving he comes under the LHWCA’s jurisdiction). The ALJ could have rationally concluded Appellant’s duties were part of PPF’s fish processing and canning operation. The decision was supported by substantial evidence regarding the description and frequency of Appellant’s regular expected duties. The ALJ and the Board did not err by relying on
Notes
. Affirmance was granted pursuant to the Omnibus Consolidated Recisions and Appropriations Act of 1996(Act), Pub.L. No. 104-134, 110 Stat. 321 (codified as amended in scattered sections of 5-48 U.S.C.). The Act required automatic affirmance of all appeals over one year old. Id.
."The consensus among the committee members was to reaffirm the purposes of the 1972 jurisdictional changes, ... [and identify and exclude those workers] who, although by circumstance happened to work on or adjacent to waters, lacked a sufficient nexus to maritime navigation and commerce.” S.Rep. No. 98-81, at 24-25. The Houie of Representative Conference Report also states:
The conferees understand that, to date, the definition of maritime employment has never been interpreted to mean the cleaning, processing or canning of fish and fish products. But to foreclose any future problems of interpretation, the term 'aquaculture operations’ should be understood as including such activities.
H.R. Conf. Rep. No. 98-1027, at 23 (1984).
. The Board has interpreted the definition of "aquaculture worker” inconsistently. In
Ljubic,
the ALJ discussed the definition of "aquaculture worker” and decided it could be read to include only those workers who worked with cultivated fish
or
to include those who engaged in the processing of
any
fish. 27 BRBS at 117-18,
affd,
. At most, the fish were moved 300 yards to PPF’s own processing building when they were needed for the second step in canning or processing.
