Randall Thibodeaux petitions for review of an order of the Department of Labor Benefits Review Board (“Board”) denying him benefits under the Longshore and Harbor Workers’ Compensation Act (“LHWCA”), 33 U.S.C. § 901, et seq. (2000). Thibodeaux sought compensation under the LHWCA after injuring himself while working on a fixed oil production platform in the territorial waters of Louisiana. An administrative law judge held that Thibodeaux’s injury was covered by the LHWCA. The Board reversed, holding that the platform was not a covered situs under 33 U.S.C. § 903(a). We have jurisdiction pursuant to 33 U.S.C. § 921(c), and we deny the petition for review of the Board’s order.
I.
During the relevant period, Thibodeaux worked for Grasso Production Management Inc. as a pumper/gauger on Garden Island Bay platform No. 276, a fixed oil and gas production platform. As part of his duties, Thibodeaux monitored gauges both on the platform and on nearby wells. He reached the wells by using a 17-foot skiff. In addition to the skiff, Thibodeaux also piloted a 24-foot vessel, the MTV KA *488 TIE ELIZABETH, which was used to transport employees from Venice, Louisiana, to the platform along with their personal supplies and, on occasion, equipment used for production. The platform where Thibodeaux spent the majority of his working hours rests on wooden pilings driven into a small bank next to a canal; the platform extends over marsh and water, but is accessible only by vessel. There are docking areas for the two water craft noted above.
Thibodeaux injured himself after observing that a discharge line located five feet below the deck of the platform was leaking oil. Upon determining that he could better inspect the line from a small wooden platform below the deck and adjacent to the line, he first lowered himself over the edge and then jumped the two to three remaining feet down onto the wooden platform. The wood gave way, and Thibo-deaux plunged into the marsh below where a nail pierced his hand. The accident did not occur on the portion of the platform used to dock the two vessels.
Thibodeaux filed a claim against Grasso and Signal Mutual Indemnity under the LHWCA. An ALJ held Thibodeaux was covered by the LHWCA as he was a maritime employee and his injury occurred on a pier, a situs enumerated in § 903(a). Grasso and Signal appealed to the Board. The Board reversed the ALJ, reasoning that the oil production platform was not a “pier” within the meaning of the statute. It did not reach the issue of status.
II.
We review Board decisions for errors of law and to ensure the Board does not exceed its statutory authority to review whether an ALJ’s findings of fact are supported by substantial evidence and consistent with the law.
Cooper/T. Smith Stevedoring Co. v. Liuzza,
This court has previously adopted a functional approach to construing the par
*489
enthetically enumerated structures in § 903(a).
Jacksonville Shipyards, Inc. v. Perdue,
In
Hurston,
the employee worked as a pile driver on a fixed oil production platform built on pilings extending from land to sea.
Id.
at 1548. Unlike the structure in this case, the platform at issue in
Hur-ston
was accessible from land.
Id.
at 1554 (quoting findings of fact made by the ALJ) (Alarcon, J., dissenting). In the course of holding that an oil production platform was a pier and therefore a covered situs, the Ninth Circuit eschewed the functional approach of
Jacksonville Shipyards,
instead holding that appearance wholly determined identity: “if it appears to be a pier, if it is built like a pier and adjoins navigable waters, it’s a pier.”
Id.
at 1549. The court rested its decision mainly on the fact that a close reading of § 903(a) reveals the enumerated term “pier” is not qualified by the phrase “customarily used by an employer in loading, unloading, repairing, dismantling, or building a vessel” as is the phrase “other adjoining area.”
Id.
It reasoned that had Congress wanted to limit the meaning of the enumerated structures to its maritime connotation, it would have supplied a comma between “other adjoining area” and “customarily used,” or otherwise explicitly stated its intention.
Id.
at 1549-50. Since Congress did not, the
Hurston
court assumed Congress must have intended “pier” to have its broadest meaning — any structure “built on pilings extending from land to navigable water.”
Id.
at 1553. The Supreme Court, this circuit and the Eleventh Circuit have all expressly declined to resolve whether an enumerated structure such as a pier or a wharf need also be “customarily uáed by an employer in loading, unloading, repairing, dismantling, or building a vessel.”
*490
Northeast Marine Terminal Co. v. Caputo,
Even assuming the Hurston court is correct in its grammatical reading of § 903(a), its conclusion does not follow from its premise. To hold as a matter of grammar and punctuation that the phrase beginning “customarily used” does not modify “pier” is quite different from holding as a matter of law that the term “pier” derives no meaning from its context in a maritime statute, and that the term’s statutory meaning extends to the outer limits of its meaning in ordinary language.
The Board in the present case aptly described Hurston’s error in this regard:
While the Board acknowledged in Hur-ston that the sites enumerated in Section 3(a) need not be shown to be customarily used for loading, unloading, building or repairing vessels, in contrast to the general “other adjoining areas” covered by the Act, it does not follow that such a site is covered based solely on appearance where it clearly lacks a maritime purpose. The sites enumerated in Section 3(a) are all land-based structures or areas which adjoin navigable waters and are typically used in maritime activities. An enumerated site, like a pier or dry dock, is thus covered without the need for specific proof that the site in fact has a maritime use. Where, however, the record does contain evidence that a site does not serve a maritime function, the fact that it may look similar to a pier cannot control.... The mere fact that the platform is located over water cannot alter the fact that its use as a drilling facility is a non-maritime use.
Thibodeaux v. Grasso Prod. Mgmt., Inc., No. 02-0260 at 6-7 (BRB Dec. 17, 2002).
We agree with the Board that we need not read the phrase “customarily used” as modifying “pier” in order to arrive at the conclusion that the term “pier” in § 903(a) does not include every conceivable structure built on pilings over land and water, but rather only those serving some maritime purpose.
The maritime nature of the LHWCA imparts a meaning to § 903(a)’s enumerat
*491
ed terms that goes beyond their use in ordinary language. Congress enacted the LHWCA pursuant to its maritime jurisdiction, having been twice rebuffed by the Supreme Court in its initial attempts to use state workers’ compensation laws to cover injuries occurring in navigable waters.
Calbeck v. Travelers Ins. Co.,
Moreover, the terms enumerated in § 903(a) which accompany pier — wharf, dry dock, terminal, building way, and marine railway — connote maritime commerce.
Hurston,
It is contrary to sound statutory construction to impute an intent to Congress that “pier” be defined in such a way as to include structures having no connection to maritime activity, where the term is contained in a statute enacted pursuant to Congress’s maritime jurisdiction and for the benefit of maritime employees, and is placed in a list of structures with obvious maritime connotations.
*492 The Hurston court attempted to buoy its definition of “pier” by sinking into the long history of the LHWCA. The court concluded:
Since 1972, the LHWCA has emphasized status over situs to avoid the anomaly of a worker walking in and out of coverage. It would be counter to the history of the statute now to restrict the situs requirement to only those piers with “maritime use”: a maritime employee injured on a pier which is not used for a maritime purpose would continually “walk in and out” of coverage, as did all longshoremen before 1972.
The Board’s decision is further strengthened by the fact that the Supreme Court has twice considered fixed oil production platforms to be islands.
Herb’s Welding,
In
Herb’s Welding,
the Supreme Court reviewed a decision by this court affirming benefits under the LHWCA for an employee injured while welding on a fixed oil production platform in Louisiana waters.
Herb’s Welding v. Gray,
Nor should a court rely more heavily on the requirement of status to circumscribe the outer limits of coverage under the LHWCA where an enumerated situs is at play. Situs and status play equal, coordinate roles in determining coverage. As then-judge Kennedy wrote:
Situs and status must coincide before coverage will attach. Each test acts as a control upon the other so as to diminish the potential for undue expansion of coverage.... [B]y operating coordinately, the status and situs tests fix coverage within somewhat more certain bounds than would be the case under either test alone.
Brady-Hamilton Stevedore Co. v. Herron,
III.
Having resolved to require that in order to be a pier within the meaning of the LHWCA a structure must have some maritime purpose, we conclude that the oil production platform where Thibodeaux worked does not meet that standard. Both this court and the Supreme Court have expressed the opinion that work commonly performed on oil production platforms is not maritime in nature.
Munguia v. Chevron U.S.A. Inc.,
Munguia
involved a case quite similar to the present one, though we ultimately resolved it on the basis of status. The employee in
Munguia
was also a pumper/gauger working on fixed oil production platforms built over marsh and water and accessible only by water.
rv.
Finally, the Board also determined that Thibodeaux’s injury did not occur on an “other adjoining area customarily used by an employer in loading, unloading, repairing, dismantling, or building a vessel.” 33 U.S.C. § 903(a). We assume that the area of injury — a platform and marsh a short distance away from navigable water — qualifies as an “adjoining area.” However, an adjoining area must be “customarily used for significant maritime activity.”
Texports Stevedore Co. v. Winchester,
V.
For the foregoing reasons, we deny the petition for review of the Board’s decision holding Thibodeaux has not met the situs requirement of 33 U.S.C. § 903(a).
Notes
. Section 902(3) defines a covered employee, with some exceptions, as "any person engaged in maritime employment, including any longshoreman or other person engaged in longshoring operations, and any harbor-worker including a ship repairman, shipbuilder, and ship-breaker.” 33 U.S.C. § 902(3).
. The ALJ and Board apparently disagreed whether a portion of the platform was driven into dry land as opposed to marsh. Thibodeaux v. Grasso Prod. Mgmt., Inc., No. 02-0260 at 6 (BRB Dec. 17, 2002). Because we adhere to a functional approach to defining "pier,” it is unnecessary for us to decide whether the platform was in fact secured to dry land or marsh, a determination that would likely change with the tide.
. Despite its troubled history, Jaclcsonville Shipyards remains controlling law on this proposition.
. In
Winchester,
this court noted possible tension between
Caputo
and
Jacksonville Shipyards:
"[t]he [Jacksonville Shipyards] panel indicated that all sites must be customarily used for maritime purposes, but the Supreme Court has expressed doubt over whether the 'customarily used’ language applies to the seven specific sites as well as the general one.”
. Additionally, we note that in context the word “other” in the phrase "or other adjoining area customarily used by an employer in loading [or] unloading” (emphasis added) means something to the effect of “additional,” and necessarily refers back to the enumerated structures, indicating that what follows will have some resemblance to what preceded. It is reasonable to surmise that Congress intended for the additional unspecified “adjoining areas” to have qualities similar to those possessed by the enumerated structures, such as being used for a maritime purpose. Thus the similarity between the enumerated structures and any qualifying structure in the catch-all “other adjoining area” category is that structures in both categories customarily are used for a maritime purpose such as loading and unloading vessels.
. Though not discussed in the Fifth Circuit’s decision in
Herb’s Welding, Rodrigue
likened production platforms to piers as well as wharves.
. The platforms at issue in
Munguia
were actually serviced by a fleet much larger than the one here.
