Office of Workers' Compensation Programs, Labor.
Final rule.
This final rule contains regulations implementing amendments to the Longshore and Harbor Workers' Compensation Act (LHWCA) by the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009 (ARRA), relating to the exclusion of certain recreational-vessel workers from the LHWCA's definition of “employee.” These regulations clarify both the definition of “recreational vessel” and those circumstances under which workers are excluded from LHWCA coverage when working on those vessels. The final rule also withdraws a proposed rule that would have codified current case law and the Department's longstanding view that employees are covered under the LHWCA so long as some of their work constitutes “maritime employment” within the meaning of the statute.
This rule is effective January 30, 2012.
Gary A. Steinberg, Acting Director, Division of Longshore and Harbor Workers' Compensation, Office of Workers' Compensation Programs, U.S. Department of Labor, Room S–3524, 200 Constitution Avenue NW., Washington, DC 20210. Telephone: (202) 693–0031 (this is not a toll-free number). TTY/TDD callers may dial toll free 1–(800) 889–5627 for further information.
On August 17, 2010, the Department issued a Notice of Proposed Rulemaking (NPRM) under the LHWCA, 33 U.S.C. 901
As explained in the NPRM, 75 FR 50718–19, LHWCA section 2(3) defines “employee” to mean “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 section then lists eight categories of workers who are excluded from the definition of “employee” and therefore excluded from LHWCA coverage. 33 U.S.C. 902(3)(A)–(H). Section 2(3)(F) in particular excluded from coverage “individuals employed to build, repair, or dismantle any recreational vessel under sixty-five feet in length,” provided that such individuals were “subject to coverage under a State workers' compensation law.” 33 U.S.C. 902(3)(F).
Section 803 of Title IX of the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009, Public Law 111–5, 123 Stat. 115, 127 (2009), amended the section 2(3)(F) exclusion. That provision now excludes “individuals employed to build any recreational vessel under sixty-five feet in length,
The Department's proposed rules were intended to implement amended section 2(3)(F) and clarify its application in several respects. The proposed rules set standards for when the amendment applied, refined the definition of “recreational vessel,” clarified what types of recreational-vessel work may result in an individual being excluded from the definition “employee,” and revised the current regulatory definition of how recreational-vessel length is measured. The proposal also codified the Department's longstanding view that employees are covered under the LHWCA so long as some of their work constitutes “maritime employment” within the meaning of the statute. Finally, the Department included a summary of its initial regulatory flexibility analysis.
The Department received many written comments in response to the NPRM from a variety of sources connected to the recreational-vessel community. The commenters included Longshore claimant and employee groups, recreational vessel manufacturers, marina owners and operators, repair shop owners, insurance-industry members, members of Congress, and the Small Business Administration's Office of Advocacy. The Department has found these comments very helpful and, in several important respects, has revised the final rule in response.
As an initial matter, the Department notes that several comments responding to the NPRM appear to be based on the fundamental misunderstanding that these rules eliminate the LHWCA's “situs” requirement. For example, one commenter uses a hypothetical landlocked vessel manufacturing facility to illustrate how in its view the proposed rules would be unworkable. Similarly, several landlocked vessel manufacturers commented that the proposed rules would add to their costs of doing business, potentially resulting in a loss of jobs.
Neither the proposed nor the final rules eliminate the LHWCA's situs requirement for recreational-vessel workers. As explained in the NPRM, 75 FR 50723–24 (Aug. 17, 2010), the LHWCA imposes both a “situs” and a “status” requirement.
Because the ARRA amendment revised the definition of “employee,” the proposed rules chiefly pertain to the status test. But the regulations in no way eliminate the situs requirement. Thus, workers at completely landlocked recreational vessel manufacturing facilities, repair shops, boat dealers and the like (
A significant number of marinas and a marina trade association submitted comments in response to the NPRM. Most of these commenters expressed concern that the proposed rules would require marinas to purchase LHWCA insurance in addition to state workers' compensation insurance. The Department notes, however, that the LHWCA excludes from the term “employee” those “individuals employed by a marina and who are not engaged in construction, replacement, or expansion of such marina (except for routine maintenance),” provided the worker is subject to a state compensation law. 33 U.S.C. 902(3)(C).
The Department received many comments addressing the proposed “recreational vessel” definition and has made several important changes to the final rule. The proposed definition incorporated the Coast Guard's standards for categorizing vessels as recreational and non-recreational. While the Department has retained those standards, the final rule contains two additional provisions designed to make the definition easier to apply. First, the final rule provides that manufacturers and builders may determine whether a vessel is recreational by the nature of the vessel's design rather than the end use of the vessel. And second, the rule includes within the definition of recreational vessels non-military vessels that are recreational by design and owned or chartered by federal, state or municipal governments. Both of these changes are explained in detail below. The Department believes that these changes answer many of the concerns raised by the commenters.
The Department has decided to withdraw proposed § 701.303. This rule codified both the Director's longstanding position and controlling case law that the LHWCA covers a maritime employee if he or she regularly performs at least some duties that come within the ambit of the statute as part of his or her overall employment (
The Department received many comments on the proposed regulation. A great number of these commenters saw proposed § 701.303 as an unwarranted expansion of the LHWCA's coverage and expressed great concern over the additional costs employers would incur if required to carry LHWCA insurance. Most of these comments focused on the nature of the facility (
The comments misconstrue both the section 2(3)(F) exclusion and the import of proposed § 701.303. Some of the exclusions from the definition of “employee” in LHWCA section 2(3) focus on the nature of the employer. For instance, section 2(3)(B) excludes “individuals
Moreover, as noted, proposed § 701.303 was not intended to expand LHWCA coverage. Rather, the rule codified the Supreme Court's interpretation of the LHWCA. The Department stands by its analysis of the governing case law. Thus, even in the absence of a regulation, a worker who regularly performs at least some duties that come within the ambit of the LHWCA as part of his or her overall employment is covered under the LHWCA, even if the injury occurs while the worker was not performing qualifying maritime duties.
Nevertheless, the Department has elected to withdraw the proposed rule. The Department appreciates the difficulties recreational-vessel employers and facilities face in determining whether their workers are performing LHWCA-covered activities in order to purchase the appropriate insurance. Further investigation into the industry's needs is warranted. Moreover, even though this rule would have an impact on the entire longshoring industry, the Department received only a few comments from individuals or groups with interests extending beyond the recreational-vessel segment of that industry. This result is not surprising because the NPRM chiefly involved implementation of the section 2(3)(F) exclusion for recreational-vessel workers. Given the rule's broad application, however, the Department is reluctant to promulgate the rule without input from the greater longshoring community.
In response to a number of persuasive comments, the final rule makes several changes and one addition to proposed § 701.504. This rule sets out standards for determining the date of injury, which governs whether the section 2(3)(F) amendment applies. The final rule makes the date of harmful or causative workplace exposure—rather than the date of death or manifestation—the date of injury for determining whether the amendment applies in cases of occupational disease, hearing loss, and death. The rule also adds a new section addressing date of injury for cumulative trauma, which fixes the date of injury as any date on which a workplace trauma worsened the individual's condition.
The Department proposed only technical revisions to this section to accommodate other substantive additions. In particular, the Department moved this section's lengthy definition of “employee” into a new § 701.302. No comments were received, and the rule is promulgated as proposed.
Proposed paragraph (c)(6) updated the paragraph in the definition of “employee” pertaining to the recreational vessel exclusion, which currently appears at § 701.301(a)(12)(i)(F), to incorporate the amended section 2(3)(F) language and cross-reference new §§ 701.501–701.505. No comments were received, and the rule is promulgated as proposed.
As discussed above, the Department has decided to withdraw this proposed regulation.
(a) The Department proposed an updated and refined definition of “recreational vessel.” The Department explained that the current regulations, promulgated in 1984, adopted the definition of recreational vessel from a statute administered by the Coast Guard. 75 FR 50721 (Aug. 17, 2010). That statute, and the Department's current regulations, define “recreational vessel” as a vessel “manufactured or operated primarily for pleasure, or rented, leased or chartered by another for the latter's pleasure.” 20 CFR 701.301(a)(12)(iii)(F) (2009).
To accomplish these goals, the Department proposed using Coast Guard vessel categories to define a “recreational vessel.” Essentially, the Coast Guard deems the following to be recreational: Any unchartered passenger vessel used for pleasure and carrying no passengers-for-hire (
The Department noted that these categories were used in boating safety and environmental contexts, and thus would be generally known to the recreational boating community.
(b) Many comments state that the proposed “recreational vessel” definition is ambiguous. Some of the more specific criticisms state that the proposed definition would be difficult to apply in cases where a boat has multiple uses or is in-between uses, and where, over the course of its operations, the boat falls within different Coast Guard inspection categories. Some believe that the Coast Guard definitions are unfamiliar to boat builders and repairers.
The Department has revised the rule to clarify that the time for evaluating the vessel's use is when the vessel is being built, repaired or dismantled. But the final rule continues to use the Coast Guard classifications to identify recreational vessels. In general, the comments did not offer any constructive alternatives to using the Coast Guard classifications except to leave the “recreational vessel” definition unchanged. As set forth in the NPRM, the Department believes that the definition needs greater clarity so that employers and employees may properly evaluate both their obligations and their rights under the LHWCA.
The Coast Guard categories set a bright-line rule for determining whether any particular vessel is recreational. Presumably, a vessel's owner or operator is familiar with its use and whether the vessel is inspected or uninspected under the Coast Guard standards. An employer's simple inquiry may be all that is necessary to resolve the question. Further, as noted in the NPRM, some outward indicia point to a vessel's non-recreational status. For instance, passenger vessels and small passenger vessels must display certificates of inspection, and uninspected passenger vessels are subject to certain safety requirements and must have a licensed operator. These indicia of non-recreational status will make it easier for employers and employees to recognize vessels that should not be considered “recreational vessels” for purposes of the section 2(3)(F) exclusion.
(c) One commenter suggests simplifying the rule by describing the vessel categories excluded from the definition of “recreational vessel” rather than cross-referencing the Coast Guard statutes. The Department has not adopted this suggestion. Outside of the manufacturing and building context, a vessel's use at the time the repair or dismantling led to the compensable injury determines its recreational status. Using the general Coast Guard categories will allow the definition of “recreational vessel” to remain current and consistent with the term as used in the recreational boating industry. The Department has made a technical revision to the language in proposed § 701.501(c) to simplify it. No change in meaning is intended by this revision.
(d) Many comments state the proposed definition would unduly burden employers by requiring them to investigate their customers' vessel usage in order to determine whether the boat is recreational. Another comment urges a rule that uses the intent of the owner in buying a vessel instead of its actual use. Others question the feasibility and fairness of holding employers to account
The Department does not believe a change in this requirement is necessary. Since 1984, the regulatory “recreational vessel” definition has required employers to determine whether a vessel is “manufactured or operated primarily for pleasure.” 20 CFR 701.301(a)(12)(iii)(F) (2009). To the Department's knowledge, making this inquiry has not proved to be problematic. In fact, two commenters stated that for insurance purposes, they track how much work they do on commercial vessels and how much on recreational vessels. That would only be possible by evaluating whether the vessels they service are used for pleasure. Moreover, using a standard other than usage could lead to the improper exclusion of workers from LHWCA coverage. As one commenter pointed out, vessels manufactured to recreational-vessel standards may in fact be used entirely for commercial purposes.
(e) Several comments from recreational-vessel manufacturers object to defining a recreational vessel by the vessel's end use because a manufacturer typically does not know it. Instead, manufacturers usually build to recreational-vessel standards established by the Coast Guard and market their products through retail sales channels. These commenters ask the Department to adopt a specific rule defining recreational vessels for manufacturers building new vessels or doing warranty work along the following lines: “recreational vessel * * * means a vessel which by design and construction is intended by the manufacturer to be operated primarily for pleasure * * * (rather than for commercial or military purposes).” In a related vein, one comment urges the Department to hold the manufacturer responsible for producing evidence regarding the relevant percentage of end-user purposes to establish that its purported intent is legitimate.
The Department has revised the final rule to accommodate the manufacturers' concerns. A recreational-vessel manufacturer or builder is usually in a different position than entities that service, repair and dismantle vessels while in use because the manufacturer may not know either the purchaser's identity or the vessel's actual use. Thus, the final rule provides that a vessel being manufactured or built (including warranty service) is a recreational vessel when intended, based on design and construction, to be for ultimate recreational use. The final rule also places the burden on the manufacturer or builder to prove that the vessel or vessels under construction are built in accordance with applicable recreational-vessel standards. Because recreational-vessel manufacturing facilities are typically landlocked, the Department does not expect this change in the final rule to have a significant impact on the number of employees covered by the LHWCA.
(f) Some commenters urge the Department to base the recreational-vessel definition on a vessel's design or construction for repairers as well as for manufacturers, because repair work on vessels that are recreational by design is less hazardous than other maritime work covered by the LHWCA. The statutory language does not support this result. In setting forth section 2(3)(F), Congress described the vessels subject to its exclusion simply as “recreational,” a term which naturally denotes a form of usage. Manufacturers receive the benefit of a different definition solely because of the impracticality of a usage-based definition. Indeed, the statute from which the current regulatory definition is derived, 46 U.S.C. 2101(25), offers a bifurcated approach under which some vessels may be recreational if they are “manufactured” for pleasure, and others if they are “operated” for pleasure, thus suggesting that the definition might vary depending on the setting. In a repair setting, where a vessel's operations are ascertainable, usage is the more appropriate approach.
(g) One comment states that paragraphs (a) and (b) of the proposed definition are in tension because a vessel used “primarily for pleasure” may still have incidental use as a passenger vessel or other commercial purpose that renders the vessel non-recreational under the Coast Guard categories set forth in paragraph (b). This commenter suggests that the regulation be rewritten so that incidental non-recreational use does not make the boat non-recreational for purposes of the section 2(3)(F) exclusion. While agreeing that a bright line may be necessary to determine recreational status, the commenter suggests looking to Coast Guard registration or state registration, whether a vessel is routinely engaged in various forms of commercial activity, and whether it falls within the Coast Guard definition of a non-recreational vessel less than 20% of the time. Other commenters echo this incidental use concern.
The Department agrees that occasional non-recreational use does not alter the vessel's core recreational purpose and should not take a vessel outside of the “recreational vessel” definition. To clarify this point and to resolve the tension the commenter notes between paragraphs (a) and (b), the final rule provides that a vessel remains recreational unless it falls within the designated Coast Guard vessel categories on a more than infrequent basis during the time the vessel is in operation.
(h) A few comments note that some repairers work on a small number of government-operated boats which resemble recreational vessels in design aspects. Examples given of government-owned vessels serviced include fish and wildlife enforcement boats, public-safety boats, and recreational vessels used by police in undercover operations. The commenters observe that they would have to discontinue this work (which they often perform at a discounted rate as a service to their communities) if repairing this small number of vessels would bring them under LHWCA coverage.
The Department agrees that servicing publicly owned or bareboat-chartered vessels that would otherwise be considered recreational generally should not be considered commercial work subject to LHWCA coverage. The final rule changes the definition of “recreational vessel” to accommodate this approach.
The final rule reflects a framework used in maritime and environmental statutes to define public vessels.
To identify the governmental entity that must own or operate a vessel in order for it to be eligible for “public vessel” status, the final rule uses the phrase “the United States, or by a State or political subdivision thereof.” The Department intends this phrase to be construed broadly, and to include entities such as a State's municipalities that meet the well-established factor-based inquiry for determining whether a public entity is a subdivision.
(a) The Department proposed this rule to clarify what types of recreational-vessel work were covered both before and after the ARRA amendment. 75 FR 50721–22. The rule also made clear that the amendment did not have retroactive effect and that its application was based on the worker's date of injury. The section further defined the terms “length,” “repair” and “dismantle.” Finally, the rule cross-referenced § 701.303 and provided that workers who engaged in both excluded recreational vessel work and qualifying maritime work were covered by the LHWCA.
(b) Proposed paragraph (a) established that with respect to injuries before the amendment's effective date, February 17, 2009, a worker employed to repair, build, or dismantle any recreational vessel less than sixty-five feet in length is not an “employee” under the LHWCA, provided he or she is covered under a state workers' compensation law for such work. 75 FR 50729. On or after the amendment's effective date, a worker employed to build any recreational vessel under sixty-five feet in length, or repair or dismantle for repair any recreational vessel of any length is not an “employee” under the LHWCA, again provided he or she is covered under a state workers' compensation law.
No comments found fault with this section, and several offered approval of some aspects of it, including the non-retroactivity of the amendment, the state workers' compensation proviso, and the treatment of dismantling of vessels. Accordingly, paragraph (a) is promulgated as proposed.
(c) Proposed paragraph (b)(1) defined vessel “length,” notably excluding bow sprits, bumpkins, rudders, outboard motor brackets, handles and other similar fittings, attachments and extensions from the vessel-length measurement. It also defined “repair” and “dismantle”. 75 FR 50729. In establishing these definitions, the Department relied on common-sense and industry-familiar definitions to make these concepts clearer and more objective, with the goal of avoiding future litigation. 75 FR 50722.
Several comments supported the changes to the definition of length. There were no comments critical of these definitions. Thus, the final rule is promulgated as proposed.
(d) The Department has made a technical change to the final definition of “dismantle” in paragraph (b)(3). As explained in the NPRM, 75 FR 50721–22, section 2(3)(F) originally excluded workers employed to “dismantle” recreational vessels less than sixty-five feet in length. This unqualified term would have excluded workers who dismantled a vessel at the end of the vessel's life. The amended statute, however, excludes only those workers who dismantle recreational vessels “in connection with the repair of such vessel.” Given this express limitation, the Department concluded that workers governed by the amended statute would not be excluded from LHWCA coverage when employed to dismantle obsolete recreational vessels. Although § 701.502(a)(1) and (2) make this distinction clear, proposed paragraph (b)(3)'s definition of “dismantle” does not. Accordingly, the Department has added the language “if the date of injury is on or after February 17, 2009” to paragraph (b)(3)'s last phrase.
(e) Proposed paragraph (c) essentially reiterated the walking-in-and-out rule that was set forth more fully in proposed § 701.303,
This proposed rule reiterated the basic thrust of the amendment—to amend the recreational vessel exclusion—and set forth the amendment's effective date based on congressional intent and governing principles of statutory construction. No negative comments were received on the proposed rule, and it remains unchanged in the final regulation.
(a) In the NPRM, the Department defined what date constitutes the “date of injury” for different kinds of claims. 75 FR 50720, 50729–30 (Aug. 17, 2010). The date of injury is the date at which a legally recognized harm occurs to a worker, giving rise to a compensation claim. It is the relevant point in time for determining whether the section 2(3)(F) amendment applies to a given claim: If the date of injury is on or after the amendment's effective date, February 17, 2009, then the amendment's provisions apply to a claim; otherwise, the pre-amendment statute governs. The NPRM set forth different rules for traumatic injury, occupational disease, hearing loss and death claims.
(b)
(c)
While a few comments offered general support for the proposed rule with respect to occupational disease, other comments strongly questioned the proposed rule's approach. Several comments pointed out that linking the date of injury to disease manifestation inappropriately borrows from statute-of-limitations contexts and is otherwise unfair and contrary to the position taken by the Department in the past. Instead, one comment urged using a rule that makes the date of exposure to harmful stimuli the relevant date for determining the ARRA amendment's applicability.
The Department agrees with these comments and the final rule makes the
Using an exposure date is far less arbitrary than using a manifestation date for occupational diseases. The causative physiological harm occurs when an employee is exposed to the noxious substance, even though the deleterious effects might not be felt until years later; in addition, the date the disease's symptoms manifest may vary greatly among individuals. Indeed, under a rule that makes manifestation the date of injury, similarly-situated employees may be treated differently: An employee who was both exposed and developed symptoms before the amendment would be accorded pre-amendment coverage, while one who was exposed pre-amendment but happened to develop symptoms after the amendment's effective date would not.
And, as the comments allude to, using the exposure date as the date of injury affords workers, insurers, and employers the benefit of their legal expectations. Employees going to work on vessels that were covered pre-amendment did so with the expectation that they would benefit from LHWCA coverage for harmful on-the-job exposures, regardless of when those exposures manifested themselves in the form of a debilitating disease. Concomitantly, employers paid for insurance coverage in the event of harm to an employee caused by on-the-job exposure—whether harm from the exposure was realized immediately or in the long-run.
As the comments also note, the Department has previously recognized the fundamental fairness of a rule that makes the date of exposure determinative for gauging the effective date of an amendment. Analyzing whether the District of Columbia Workmen's Compensation Act of 1928, D.C. Code 36–501
Based on this analysis, the Department has reconsidered the reasoning it gave in the NPRM to support adopting a manifestation rule in occupational disease claims. Although cases the Department cited have applied the manifestation rule to determine the applicability of the 1972 amendments to the LHWCA, which expanded the categories of workers covered by the LHWCA, those cases relied on congressional intent specific to those amendments. In
The ARRA amendments present a different scenario. Under the ARRA amendment, a manifestation rule could result in fewer LHWCA-covered employees. But there is no evidence that Congress intended to exclude the largest number of workers possible from LHWCA coverage. Rather, by expanding the recreational-vessel exclusion via the ARRA amendment, Congress primarily sought to relieve businesses from paying for duplicative state workers' compensation and LHWCA insurance coverage for recreational-vessel workers.
In the NPRM, the Department cited other provisions of the LHWCA making manifestation the date of injury in a statute of limitations context. 75 FR 50720.
One comment questioned how the last-employer rule would operate under the proposed manifestation-date rule.
Although some comments offer general support for the proposed rule, other comments raise compelling questions similar to those raised concerning the date of injury for occupational disease cases. One commenter questions the fairness of an audiogram-date rule for hearing loss claims. For the same reasons the Department has now adopted an exposure rule in occupational disease cases, the Department also adopts an exposure rule for hearing loss cases as well. Such a rule is less arbitrary, recognizes that the genesis of the injury is when the exposure occurs, and is fair to all parties by giving them the benefit of an insurance contract that covers injuries based on when the exposure occurred.
The comments suggest, and the Department agrees, that the reasoning set forth in the NPRM for using an audiogram rule is unpersuasive. There, the Department posited that an audiogram date was a better measure than an exposure rule for determining the ARRA amendment's applicability because of the difficulty in determining a precise date of harmful exposure. However, although exposure in hearing-loss claims typically occurs over an extended period of time, determining a single precise date is not necessary to administration of an exposure rule, and current law provides ample tools for handling claims involving exposure over periods of time. If some or all exposures occurred prior to February 17, 2009, the amendment would simply not apply with respect to a disability resulting from those exposures. And a worker would be eligible for full benefits if any of the exposure occurring during LHWCA-covered employment resulted in a hearing loss.
(c)
Although some comments expressed general support for the proposed rule, others urged the Department to use the date of the harmful workplace exposure or event that ultimately led to death as the date of injury, arguing that such a rule was more equitable. For essentially the same reasons stated above in the discussion of occupational disease cases, the Department agrees. Notably, as one comment suggests, in death cases, businesses have already paid and insurers have received the appropriate premiums to cover the death based on a causative workplace event that occurred while a worker was in covered employment.
In the proposal, the Department relied on
(d)
(e) Proposed paragraph (b) and (c) set out the consequences of applying the date-of-injury to the ARRA amendment's effective date. If that date occurs before February 17, 2009, ARRA's effective date, then the pre-amendment section 2(3)(F) exclusion applies; if that date occurs on or after February 17, 2009, the post-amendment exclusion applies. The Department received no specific comments on these rules and they are promulgated without substantive change. To make these two paragraphs consistent, however, the Department has made a technical change to paragraph (c). The Department has replaced the phrase “employee's eligibility,” which appeared in the proposed rule, with the phrase “individual's entitlement” in the final rule.
The proposed rule provided that an employer may not stop paying compensation for an injury awarded prior to February 17, 2009, the ARRA amendment's effective date, even if that employee's work is excluded from coverage by the amendment. The Department proposed this paragraph in accordance with basic principles of finality and the presumption against retroactivity. The Department has received no specific comments on this section but has received some generally positive remarks on its interpretation of the non-retroactive character of the ARRA amendment. Thus, the proposed rule remains unchanged in the final regulation.
Section 39(a) of the LHWCA (33 U.S.C. 939(a)) authorizes the Secretary of Labor to prescribe rules and regulations necessary for the administration and enforcement of the LHWCA and its extensions.
The final rule imposes no new collections of information.
This rule has been drafted and reviewed in accordance with Executive Order 12866, section 1(b), entitled “The Principles of Regulation.” The Department has determined that the rule is not a “significant regulatory action” under Executive Order 12866, section 3(f). Accordingly, it does not require an assessment of potential costs and benefits under section 6(a)(3) of that order. Moreover, because it is not a
As required by Congress under the Small Business Regulatory Enforcement Fairness Act of 1996, enacted as Title II of Public Law 104–121 §§ 201–253, 110 Stat. 847, 857 (1996), the Department will report promulgation of this final rule to both Houses of the Congress and to the Comptroller General prior to its effective date. The report will state that the Department has concluded that the rule is not a “major rule” as defined under 5 U.S.C. 804(2).
Title II of the Unfunded Mandates Reform Act of 1995 (2 U.S.C. 1531
The Regulatory Flexibility Act of 1980, as amended (5 U.S.C. 601
The Department believes that the LHWCA itself accounts for most, if not all, of the costs imposed on the industry, and that this final rule does not directly add to those costs. The primary cost of the LHWCA lies in purchasing commercial insurance or qualifying as a self-insurer to insure covered workers. This requirement is imposed by statute. 33 U.S.C. 904, 932. By expanding the number of recreational vessel workers who will be excluded from coverage, the section 2(3)(F) amendment will generally reduce the recreational vessel industry's costs for purchasing workers' compensation insurance or, in the case of a self-insurer, providing compensation. This final rule simply seeks to make the potentially ambiguous language of the ARRA amendment clearer and more easily applied, and it does not deliberately seek to expand or contract businesses' eligibility for the recreational vessel exclusion. Moreover, to the extent comments have raised concerns that the proposed rule might be improved by making its provisions more easily workable for businesses without compromising the rule's underlying objective, the final rule, as discussed below, has accommodated such comments.
Nonetheless, because the recreational-vessel building and repair industries include many small firms, and because the comments raise issues concerning how the Department might maximize benefits to small businesses via rulemaking, the Department has evaluated how the ARRA amendment, as implemented in this final rule, might affect small businesses. The Department prepared an initial regulatory flexibility analysis (IRFA) before proposing this rule and included a summary of that analysis in the NPRM. 75 FR 50725–28 (Aug. 17, 2010). The Department incorporates those documents by reference into this final regulatory flexibility analysis.
The primary goal of this rule is to provide a clear, workable definition of “recreational vessel.” Because the ARRA amendment to section 2(3)(F) removed the sixty-five-foot limitation on what constitutes a recreational vessel for all purposes but construction, the amended exclusion presents more opportunities for confusion among vessel-repair enterprises and their workers about whether the boats they work on are “recreational vessels” within the meaning of the LHWCA. The Department determined that the current regulatory definition of “recreational vessel” does not provide adequate guidance to the industry and its employees, and therefore adopts this rule to more clearly define the term.
This definition, in turn, serves several purposes. It gives entities that build or repair vessels guidance regarding the classification of vessels their employees are working on so that they may insure themselves under the appropriate workers' compensation scheme (
The Director, Office of Workers' Compensation Programs, has the legal authority to issue this final rule. The LHWCA empowers the Secretary of Labor “to make such rules and regulations * * * as may be necessary” to administer the statute. 33 U.S.C. 939(a). The Secretary has delegated her authority to the Director, Office of Workers' Compensation Programs. Secretary's Order 10–2009 (Nov. 6, 2009). In addition, the Department, like any other administrative agency, possesses the inherent authority to promulgate regulations in order to fill gaps in the legislation that it is responsible for administering.
(a) Comments from the Small Business Administration's Office of Advocacy (SBA) and the National Marine Manufacturers Association (NMMA) raise questions as to whether the IRFA utilized correct data to estimate the number of small businesses affected by this rule. The Department has fully addressed these comments in the following section regarding the estimate of the number of small entities to which the final rule will apply.
(b) Some commenters, including the SBA, assert that using the Coast Guard standards for classifying recreational vessels will expand the number of small businesses covered by the LHWCA, thereby increasing their costs. Because the term “recreational vessel” has been only generally defined in the past, it is impossible to ascertain the extent to which the revised definition will alter the exclusion's scope and thereby affect small entities. Moreover, the final rule retools the definition so that it involves significantly less verification effort, and to make the definition's scope clear so that businesses can avoid purchasing LHWCA insurance on a precautionary basis.
(c) Addressing proposed § 701.501, the NMMA comments that the definition of recreational vessel and its use of the Coast Guard standards is ambiguous and will impose additional costs on small businesses that may not be able to determine whether a vessel meets the definition and, as a result, may turn away important work rather than incur the costs associated with LHWCA insurance. The NMMA also posits that insurance firms will be less apt to write LHWCA policies on these businesses, again increasing costs. The NMMA further encourages the Department to adopt a different recreational-vessel definition for boat manufacturers that focuses on the manufacturer's intent in building the vessel rather than on its end use. The SBA similarly states that the Department should consider this regulatory alternative. In addition, a few small repair businesses note that under the proposed definition, they would have to turn away public-vessel work if performing such work made purchasing LHWCA insurance necessary.
The Department has set forth its full response to these and other comments pertaining to the recreational-vessel definition in the section-by-section analysis for § 701.501 above. The Department has made two important changes to the final recreational-vessel definition in response to these comments. These changes will help small businesses identify recreational vessels within the meaning of the section 2(3)(F) exclusion and make informed decisions regarding their need to obtain LHWCA insurance. First, the Department has promulgated an alternative definition for manufacturers and builders, which allows them to assess a vessel's recreational nature based on design and construction data reasonably available to them. Second, the final rule carves out an exception for public-purpose vessels so that businesses that repair these vessels in addition to other recreational vessels will not have to purchase LHWCA insurance.
(d) Addressing proposed § 701.303, many comments expressed the view that the Department should have considered alternative measures for determining coverage for workers who perform both qualifying maritime duties and non-qualifying work (walking-in-and-out of qualifying coverage). The commenters believed the rule would force businesses to secure expensive LHWCA insurance for their workers, instead of less expensive state workers' compensation insurance. In this regard, several commenters rejected the Department's suggestion that businesses could minimize the cost implications of the proposed rule by segmenting their workplaces into recreational and non-recreational vessel operations. 75 FR 50728. These commenters (mostly small businesses) noted that their staffs were too small to segregate in this fashion. Most commenters proposed an 80%–20% split as an alternative: So long as less than 20% of a facility's or employer's work was on commercial vessels and the remainder on recreational vessels, all work at the facility would be excluded from LHWCA coverage. The SBA also suggested that the Department adopt this alternative.
The Department has set forth its full response to these comments in subsection D of the General Response to Significant Comments and Explanation of Major Changes section above. For the reasons explained there, the Department is withdrawing proposed § 701.303 and has not promulgated it in this final rule.
(a) In the IRFA, the Department looked to available data to estimate the number of small entities that might be affected by the proposed rule. 75 FR 50725–27. The IRFA estimated that, in 2007, there were 1,102 recreational vessel building establishments, employing 53,466 workers, generating $11.1 billion in shipments, and with a payroll of $1.9 billion; and 1,837 recreational boat repair establishments, employing 12,203 workers, generating $1.6 billion in revenue, and with $436 million in annual payroll. These entities were predominantly estimated to be small businesses.
In reaching its conclusions, the IRFA recognized difficulties in finding well-tailored NAICS categories to capture the affected small businesses. The Department relied chiefly on two NAICS industry categories: (1) NAICS industry 336612 (Boat Building); and(2) NAICS industry 811490 (Other Personal and Household Goods Repair and Maintenance). The NAICS system is described in detail in the IRFA. 75 FR 50726.
(b) Several commenters, notably the NMMA and the SBA, state that the universe of affected small entities is larger than estimated in the IRFA. These commenters note that the IRFA did not look to several relevant NAICS categories in developing its profile of the small entities affected: NAICS industry 713930 (Marinas), NAICS industry 441222 (Boat Dealers), and NAICS industry 441221 (Personal Watercraft Dealers). These commenters also suggest that NAICS industry 811490 (Other Personal and Household Goods Repair and Maintenance) may be too broad to be useful in assessing the number of small recreational vessel repairers. The commenters assert that businesses falling into these categories are mostly small under the Small Business Association's size standards.
While there is data suggesting that the additional categories pointed to by the commenters consist mostly of small businesses, it is analytically impossible to determine a precise number that actually perform work on recreational vessels. Some dealers may simply sell boats without performing repairs, while some marinas may simply offer docking space, but not repair services. This difficulty is compounded by the fact that, as noted in the IRFA, 75 FR 50726 n.1, some marinas' workers are excluded from LHWCA coverage by section 2(3)(C) of the statute. Nonetheless, although these categories pose analytical difficulties, the Department notes that they likely include affected small businesses.
Based on industry surveys, the NMMA and the SBA state that in 2008, there were approximately 33,000 retail/repair businesses employing 217,788 individuals; and 5,284 marine manufacturers employing 135,900 individuals. The vast majority of these are claimed to be small businesses. However, this data does not distinguish businesses that solely conduct retail sales versus those that repair recreational vessels. The data also does not consider whether some portion of the manufacturers are landlocked—the comments made clear that some portion of this industry is not located on navigable waterways-and thus does not meet the LHWCA's situs requirement.
(c) The Department fully acknowledges the data put forward by comments, including the industry surveys and the additional NAICS categories. However, it is impossible to state, in this informational vacuum, the accuracy of this data relative to the Department's conclusions in the IRFA. In any event, assuming the larger number of affected small businesses suggested by the commenters is correct, this final rule maximizes, to the extent consistent with sound administration of the LHWCA, the benefit of the recreational vessel exemption for small businesses by adopting several alternative proposals raised by, or on behalf of, small businesses. Because the final rule addresses these substantive concerns and ensures that small business can take maximum advantage of the section 2(3)(F) recreational vessel exclusion, while nevertheless protecting those employees whose duties are
The final rule does not directly impose any reporting or recordkeeping requirements on any entities, regardless of size. Nor do the rules impose other significant costs beyond those imposed by the LHWCA itself. The statute requires employers whose employees are covered by the LHWCA to secure the payment of compensation either by purchasing commercial insurance or qualifying as a Department-approved self-insurer. 33 U.S.C. 904, 932. The ARRA amendment to section 2(3)(F) significantly expanded the exclusion for recreational vessel workers, thereby reducing the number of workers considered employees for LHWCA coverage purposes. Thus, both small and large businesses that repair recreational vessels sixty-five feet or greater in length who had previously been required to purchase LHWCA insurance may be relieved of that obligation. Instead, these employers generally will only be required to purchase lower-cost state insurance for their workers who repair recreational vessels.
In preparing the IRFA, the Department surveyed the cost of purchasing LHWCA insurance and compared it to the cost of various states' workers' compensation insurance. On average, LHWCA insurance is 50–100 percent more expensive than state workers' compensation insurance. This range is based on data collected by the National Council on Compensation Insurance (NCCI), which discloses the premium or load that states impose on businesses that carry LHWCA insurance. Because the premium for both LHWCA and state workers' compensation coverage is calculated as a percentage of the employer's payroll, regardless of payroll size, the cost for both small establishments and larger employers is the same in relative terms.
One insurance broker who commented agreed with the Department's cost estimate. But the SBA's comment suggests that the increase in insurance costs will be higher than the Department's estimate, and individual comments suggest a wide range of potential cost increases. In positing that costs in the Maryland-Delaware-Virginia region will increase 200 to 300 percent, the SBA states that an increase from $20,000 to $53,000 would be a 265 percent change. By the Department's calculations, such a change would only be a 165 percent increase. Further, the state of Virginia imposes a 1.77 factor on each sector of the marine industry subject to the Longshore Act, while the state of Maryland imposes a 1.55 factor. Thus, the cost of LHWCA insurance in these regions is 55 to 77 percent greater than the cost of state workers' compensation insurance.
The comments, including SBA's, present anecdotal and geographically specific assertions on cost differences for LHWCA coverage. The Department acknowledges the possibility of such differences, including higher cost premiums, in different locations. However, the higher cost of LHWCA coverage, whatever it may be, is made less of a factor by the final rule's revisions to the proposal; as noted above, these revisions clarify the need for some businesses to carry LHWCA coverage and maximize the effect of the recreational vessel exemption to the extent feasible and permissible under the statute.
Several comments raise the prospect of a compliance-related burden, in that businesses will have to determine and document the nature of vessels they work on. But it is the statute itself that implicitly imposes this burden if employers wish to claim their workers are excluded from LHWCA coverage under section 2(3)(F). Moreover, the burden is a modest and unavoidable one. The stronger point made by some comments is that the proposed rule would make it more cumbersome to investigate and determine a vessel's status as recreational. The revisions made to the final recreational vessel definition should make this determination less burdensome to businesses.
The exemption for recreational-vessel workers is a creature of statute. All businesses, small or otherwise, must make determinations regarding their need to procure LHWCA or state workers' compensation insurance. The Department has fully explained the factual, policy and legal reasons for adopting the final rule—as well as its reasons for rejecting other significant alternatives—in the sections above titled General Response to Significant Comments and Explanation of Major Changes and Section-by-Section Analysis. As already explained, the Department adopted several alternatives suggested by the commenters that will serve to minimize the economic impact on small entities.
Longshore and harbor workers, Organization and functions (government agencies), Workers' compensation.
For the reasons set forth in the preamble, the Department of Labor amends 20 CFR part 701 as follows:
5 U.S.C. 301 and 8171
The revisions read as follows:
(a)
(1) Any longshore worker or other person engaged in longshoring operations;
(2) Any harbor worker, including a ship repairer, shipbuilder and shipbreaker; and
(3) Any other individual to whom an injury may be the basis for a compensation claim under the LHWCA as amended, or any of its extensions;
(b) The term does not include:
(1) A master or member of a crew of any vessel; or
(2) Any person engaged by a master to load or unload or repair any small vessel under eighteen tons net.
(c) Nor does this term include the following individuals (whether or not the injury occurs over the navigable waters of the United States) where it is first determined that they are covered by a state workers' compensation act:
(1) Individuals employed exclusively to perform office clerical, secretarial, security, or data processing work (but not longshore cargo checkers and cargo clerks);
(2) Individuals employed by a club (meaning a social or fraternal organization whether profit or nonprofit), camp, recreational operation (meaning any recreational activity, including but not limited to scuba diving, commercial rafting, canoeing or boating activities operated for pleasure of owners, members of a club or organization, or renting, leasing or chartering equipment to another for the latter's pleasure), restaurant, museum or retail outlet;
(3) Individuals employed by a marina, provided they are not engaged in its construction, replacement or expansion, except for routine maintenance such as cleaning, painting, trash removal, housekeeping and small repairs;
(4) Employees of suppliers, vendors and transporters temporarily doing business on the premises of a covered employer, provided they are not performing work normally performed by employees of the covered employer;
(5) Aquaculture workers, meaning those employed by commercial enterprises involved in the controlled cultivation and harvest of aquatic plants and animals, including the cleaning, processing or canning of fish and fish products, the cultivation and harvesting of shellfish, and the controlled growing and harvesting of other aquatic species; or
(6) Individuals employed to build any recreational vessel under sixty-five feet in length, or individuals employed to repair any recreational vessel, or to dismantle any part of a recreational vessel in connection with the repair of such vessel. For purposes of this paragraph, the special rules set forth at §§ 701.501 through 701.505 apply.
(a)
(1) Being manufactured or operated primarily for pleasure; or
(2) Leased, rented, or chartered to another for the latter's pleasure.
(b) In applying the definition in paragraph (a) of this section, the following rules apply:
(1) A vessel being
(2) A vessel being
(A) “Passenger vessel” as defined by 46 U.S.C. 2101(22);
(B) “Small passenger vessel” as defined by 46 U.S.C. 2101(35);
(C) “Uninspected passenger vessel” as defined by 46 U.S.C. 2101(42);
(D) Vessel routinely engaged in “commercial service” as defined by 46 U.S.C. 2101(5); or
(E) Vessel that routinely carries “passengers for hire” as defined by 46 U.S.C. 2101(21a).
(3) Notwithstanding paragraph (b)(2) of this section, a vessel will be deemed recreational if it is a
(c) All subsequent amendments to the statutes referenced in paragraph (b)(2) of this section and the regulations implementing those provisions in Title 46 of the Code of Federal Regulations will apply when determining whether a vessel is recreational.
(a) An individual who works on recreational vessels may be excluded from the definition of “employee” when:
(1) The individual's date of injury is before February 17, 2009, the injury is covered under a State workers' compensation law, and the individual is employed to:
(i) Build any recreational vessel under sixty-five feet in length; or
(ii) Repair any recreational vessel under sixty-five feet in length; or
(iii) Dismantle any recreational vessel under sixty-five feet in length.
(2) The individual's date of injury is on or after February 17, 2009, the injury is covered under a State workers' compensation law, and the individual is employed to:
(i) Build any recreational vessel under sixty-five feet in length; or
(ii) Repair any recreational vessel; or
(iii) Dismantle any recreational vessel to repair it.
(b) In applying paragraph (a) of this section, the following principles apply:
(1) “Length” means a straight line measurement of the overall length from the foremost part of the vessel to the aftmost part of the vessel, measured parallel to the center line. The measurement must be from end to end over the deck, excluding sheer. Bow sprits, bumpkins, rudders, outboard motor brackets, handles, and other similar fittings, attachments, and extensions are not included in the measurement.
(2) “Repair” means any repair of a vessel including installations, painting and maintenance work. Repair does not include alterations or conversions that render the vessel a non-recreational vessel under § 701.501. For example, a worker who installs equipment on a private yacht to convert it to a passenger-carrying whale-watching vessel is not employed to “repair” a recreational vessel. Repair also does not include alterations or conversions that render a non-recreational vessel recreational under § 701.501.
(3) “Dismantle” means dismantling any part of a vessel to complete a repair but does not include dismantling any part of a vessel to complete alterations or conversions that render the vessel a non-recreational vessel under § 701.501, or render the vessel recreational under § 701.501, or, if the date of injury is on or after February 17, 2009, to scrap or dispose of the vessel at the end of the vessel's life.
Yes. The amended exclusion was effective February 17, 2009, the effective date of the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009.
(a)
(1)
(2)
(3)
(4)
(5)
(b) If the date of injury is before February 17, 2009, the individual's entitlement is governed by section 2(3)(F) as it existed prior to the 2009 amendment.
(c) If the date of injury is on or after February 17, 2009, the individual's entitlement is governed by the 2009 amendment to section 2(3)(F).
No. If an individual was awarded compensation for an injury occurring before February 17, 2009, the employer must still pay all benefits awarded, including disability compensation and medical benefits, even if the employee would be excluded from coverage under the amended exclusion.