Regulations Implementing the Byrd Amendments to the Black Lung Benefits Act: Determining Coal Miners' and Survivors' Entitlement to Benefits, 59101-59119 [2013-22874]
Download as PDF
Vol. 78
Wednesday,
No. 186
September 25, 2013
Part II
Department of Labor
TKELLEY on DSK3SPTVN1PROD with RULES2
Office of Workers’ Compensation Programs
20 CFR Parts 718 and 725
Regulations Implementing the Byrd Amendments to the Black Lung
Benefits Act: Determining Coal Miners’ and Survivors’ Entitlement to
Benefits; Final Rule
VerDate Mar<15>2010
18:04 Sep 24, 2013
Jkt 229001
PO 00000
Frm 00001
Fmt 4717
Sfmt 4717
E:\FR\FM\25SER2.SGM
25SER2
59102
Federal Register / Vol. 78, No. 186 / Wednesday, September 25, 2013 / Rules and Regulations
DEPARTMENT OF LABOR
Office of Workers’ Compensation
Programs
20 CFR Parts 718 and 725
RIN 1240–AA04
Regulations Implementing the Byrd
Amendments to the Black Lung
Benefits Act: Determining Coal Miners’
and Survivors’ Entitlement to Benefits
Office of Workers’
Compensation Programs, Labor.
ACTION: Final rule.
AGENCY:
This final rule revises the
Black Lung Benefits Act (BLBA or Act)
regulations to implement amendments
made by the Patient Protection and
Affordable Care Act (ACA). The ACA
amended the BLBA in two ways. First,
it revived a rebuttable presumption of
total disability or death due to
pneumoconiosis for certain claims.
Second, it reinstituted automatic
entitlement to benefits for certain
eligible survivors of coal miners whose
lifetime benefit claims were awarded
because they were totally disabled due
to pneumoconiosis. These regulations
clarify how the statutory presumption
may be invoked and rebutted and the
application and scope of the survivorentitlement provision. The rule also
eliminates several unnecessary or
obsolete provisions.
DATES: This rule is effective October 25,
2013.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Steven Breeskin, Director, Division of
Coal Mine Workers’ Compensation,
Office of Workers’ Compensation
Programs, U.S. Department of Labor,
200 Constitution Avenue NW., Suite C–
3520, Washington, DC 20210.
Telephone: (202) 343–5904 (this is not
a toll-free number). TTY/TDD callers
may dial toll-free 1–800–877–8339 for
further information.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
SUMMARY:
TKELLEY on DSK3SPTVN1PROD with RULES2
I. Background of This Rulemaking
On March 30, 2012, the Department
issued a Notice of Proposed Rulemaking
(NPRM) under the BLBA, 30 U.S.C.
901–944, proposing revised rules to
implement amendments to the BLBA
made by the ACA, Public Law 111–148,
1556, 124 Stat. 119, 260 (2010), and
inviting public comment. 77 FR 19456–
19478 (Mar. 30, 2012). These
amendments reinstated two BLBA
entitlement provisions—Section
411(c)(4), 30 U.S.C. 921(c)(4) (the ‘‘15year presumption’’) and Section 422(l),
30 U.S.C. 932(l) (survivors’ automatic
VerDate Mar<15>2010
18:04 Sep 24, 2013
Jkt 229001
entitlement provision)—that had been
repealed with respect to claims filed on
or after January 1, 1982. As a result of
these amendments, a miner or survivor
who files his or her claim after January
1, 2005 may now rely on the 15-year
presumption in establishing entitlement
to benefits, provided that the claim was
pending on or after March 23, 2010 and
the presumption’s requirements for
invocation are met. In addition,
survivors whose claims meet the
effective-date requirements are entitled
to benefits if the miner was awarded
disability benefits on a lifetime claim,
assuming that the survivor meets the
BLBA’s other conditions of entitlement
(such as relationship and dependency).
The Department recounted the history
of these provisions in the NPRM. 77 FR
at 19456–58. The Department also
proposed revising or ceasing publication
of several related rules that are obsolete
or unnecessary. The NPRM’s comment
period closed May 29, 2012.
II. Statutory Authority
Section 426(a) of the BLBA, 30 U.S.C.
936(a), authorizes the Secretary of Labor
to prescribe rules and regulations
necessary for the administration and
enforcement of the Act.
III. Discussion of Significant Comments
The Department received
approximately fifteen comments on the
proposed regulations. Most of these
comments focus on only a few
substantive issues. The Department’s
response to the major comments is set
forth below in the Section-by-Section
Explanation, along with an explanation
of any changes made to the proposed
rules in response. Some members of the
public applauded the Department for
eliminating outdated or unnecessary
provisions and streamlining the
regulations where possible. See
generally Executive Order 13563, 76 FR
3821 (January 18, 2011) (instructing
agencies to review ‘‘rules that may be
outmoded, ineffective, insufficient, or
excessively burdensome, and to modify,
streamline, expand, or repeal them.’’).
The public submitted no negative
comments on the revisions proposed to
§§ 718.1, 718.2, 718.3(a), 718.202(a)(3),
718.301, 718.303, 718.306, Part 718
Appendix C, 725.1, 725.2, 725.101(a)(1)
and (2), 725.201, and 725.418.
Accordingly, the Department is
promulgating these regulations as
proposed with the technical change
explained below.
The Department has made an
additional technical change and
replaced the term ‘‘shall’’ throughout
the regulatory sections revised by this
final rule. Executive Order 13563 states
PO 00000
Frm 00002
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
that regulations must be ‘‘accessible,
consistent, written in plain language,
and easy to understand.’’ 76 FR 3821.
See also E.O. 12866, 58 FR 51735 (Sept.
30, 1993) (‘‘Each agency shall draft its
regulations to be simple and easy to
understand, with the goal of minimizing
the potential for uncertainty and
litigation arising from such
uncertainty.’’). To that end, the
Department has removed the imprecise
term ‘‘shall’’ in those sections it is
amending and substituted ‘‘must,’’
‘‘must not,’’ ‘‘will,’’ or other situationappropriate terms. See generally Federal
Plain Language Guidelines, https://
www.plainlanguage.gov/howto/
guidelines; Black’s Law Dictionary 1499
(9th ed. 2009) (‘‘shall’’ can be read
either as permissive or mandatory).
Some of the Department’s rules as
proposed in the NPRM used the term
‘‘shall.’’ The final version eliminates the
term from these proposed subsections:
§§ 718.2(c), 718.202(a)(3),
718.305(b)(1)(iii), 718.305(b)(4),
718.305(d)(3), Part 718 Appendix C,
725.1(g), 725.309(c), 725.309(c)(1),
725.418(a), 725.418(a)(3), and
725.418(d). The final rule also makes
similar technical changes to the
following subsections: §§ 725.2(c),
725.101(a)(4), 725.101(a)(32)(i) through
(iv), 725.101(b), 725.309(a),
725.309(c)(2) through (4), 725.309(d),
725.418(b)–(c). (All references are to
regulations as designated in the final
rule.) Although not included in the
NPRM, the Department has revised
these additional subsections to
eliminate the term ‘‘shall’’ from all
subsections of each amended regulation.
No change in meaning is intended.
Section-by-Section Explanation
20 CFR 718.205 Death due to
pneumoconiosis
(a) Section 718.205 sets forth the
criteria for establishing that a miner’s
death was due to pneumoconiosis. The
Department proposed revising § 718.205
to: (1) Clarify that some survivors need
not prove the miner died due to
pneumoconiosis to be entitled to
benefits given the ACA’s revival of
Section 422(l); (2) expand the criteria to
include the Section 411(c)(4) 15-year
presumption of death due to
pneumoconiosis for claims governed by
the ACA amendments; and (3) eliminate
outmoded provisions. 77 FR at 19459–
60. In particular, the Department
proposed revising the ‘‘traumatic
injury’’ provision in § 718.205(c)(4) and
redesignating it as § 718.205(b)(5).
Section 718.205(c)(4) currently
precludes survivor entitlement where
the miner’s death was caused by a
E:\FR\FM\25SER2.SGM
25SER2
TKELLEY on DSK3SPTVN1PROD with RULES2
Federal Register / Vol. 78, No. 186 / Wednesday, September 25, 2013 / Rules and Regulations
traumatic injury or a medical condition
unrelated to pneumoconiosis ‘‘unless
the evidence establishes that
pneumoconiosis was a substantially
contributing cause of death.’’ 20 CFR
718.205(c)(4) (2011). To implement the
15-year presumption and clarify that
certain survivors could establish this
required causal connection by
presumption, the Department proposed
revising this last clause to read ‘‘unless
the claimant establishes (by proof or
presumption) that pneumoconiosis was
a substantially contributing cause of
death.’’ 77 FR 19460, 19475.
(b) One comment asks the Department
to adopt a blanket rule that a survivor
is not entitled to benefits when the
miner commits suicide. This commenter
argues that suicide should never be
compensable, even where the survivor
establishes that the miner suffered from
complicated pneumoconiosis and
invokes the Section 411(c)(3)
irrebuttable presumption of entitlement,
30 U.S.C. 921(c)(3). The comment states
that allowing compensation in these
circumstances is at odds with other
Federal workers’ compensation statutes
(including the Longshore and Harbor
Workers’ Compensation Act, 33 U.S.C.
901–950), most state workers’
compensation systems, and public
policy. The comment points to Benefits
Review Board and Sixth Circuit case
precedent holding that a survivor
cannot recover benefits when a miner
commits suicide.
Another comment strongly objects to
this commenter, stating that survivors
should not be deprived of benefits in
those tragic cases where the miner
commits suicide. This comment notes
that the survivors have likely nursed the
disabled miner as his physical condition
deteriorated and contends that coal
mine operators should bear
responsibility for the pain and
psychological problems
pneumoconiosis causes.
The final rule treats suicide like any
other traumatic event that ends a
miner’s life. There is no basis in the
statute or legislative history to draw a
distinction for suicide. Since 1983, the
regulations have explicitly recognized
that pneumoconiosis might be a
substantially contributing cause of a
death even when the miner’s death was
immediately caused by a traumatic
injury. When the Department first
promulgated § 718.205, the regulation
contained no provision addressing
traumatic injury or a principal cause of
death other than pneumoconiosis. But
the Department noted legislative history
demonstrating Congress’ intent ‘‘that
traditional workers’ compensation
principles such as those, for example,
VerDate Mar<15>2010
18:04 Sep 24, 2013
Jkt 229001
which permit a finding of eligibility
where the totally disabling condition
was significantly related to or
aggravated by the occupational exposure
be included within such regulations.’’
45 FR 13678, 13690 (Feb. 29, 1980)
citing S. Rep. No. 209, 95th Cong., 1st
Sess. 13–14 (1977). In 1983, the
Department extensively revised
§ 718.205 to implement the 1981
Amendments to the BLBA, which
restricted survivor eligibility by
eliminating automatic entitlement for
claims filed after 1981 and required all
survivors to prove that the miner’s death
was due to pneumoconiosis. See
generally 77 FR at 19456–57 (outlining
statutory history). Based on the
accompanying legislative history, the
Department added § 718.205(c)(4) to
clarify that a survivor could prove
entitlement by showing that
pneumoconiosis substantially
contributed to the miner’s death even
when the principal cause of death was
a traumatic injury or a medical
condition unrelated to pneumoconiosis.
48 FR 24272, 24277–78 (May 31, 1983).
Once again the Department noted
Congress’ desire to ‘‘make the federal
statute consistent with traditional
workers’ compensation principles.’’ 48
FR at 24278.
The majority of states allow workers’
compensation death benefits when an
otherwise compensable injury caused an
employee to ‘‘become dominated by a
disturbance of the mind of such severity
to override normal rational judgment’’
which resulted in the employee taking
his or her own life. 2 John L. Gelman,
Modern Workers Compensation § 115:5
(West 2013); Lex K. Larson, Larson’s
Workers Compensation Law §§ 38.01–
38.05 (Matthew Bender, Rev. Ed. 2012);
see also, e.g., Graver Tank & Mfg. Co. v.
Indus. Comm’n, 399 P.2d 664, 668 (Ariz.
1965) (‘‘where the original workconnected injuries suffered by the
employee result in his becoming devoid
of normal judgment and dominated by
a disturbance of mind directly caused
by his injury and its consequences, such
as severe pain and despair, the selfinflicted injury’’ may be compensable);
Advance Aluminum Co. v. Leslie, 869
SW.2d 39, 41 (Ky. 1994) (‘‘[A]n
employee’s suicide is compensable if (1)
the employee sustained an injury which
itself arose in the course of and resulted
from covered employment; (2) without
that injury the employee would not
have developed a mental disorder of
such a degree as to impair the
employee’s normal and rational
judgment; and (3) without that mental
disorder, the employee would not have
committed suicide.’’). Contrary to the
PO 00000
Frm 00003
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
59103
commenter’s assertion, this standard—
often called the ‘‘chain of causation
test’’—has also been applied in cases
arising under the Longshore and Harbor
Workers’ Compensation Act, a federal
workers’ compensation statute. E.g.,
Kealoha v. Director, OWCP, 713 F.3d
521, 524–25 (9th Cir. 2013) (‘‘Given the
best-reasoned modern trend of case law,
we hold that a suicide or injuries from
a suicide attempt are compensable
under the Longshore Act when there is
a direct and unbroken chain of
causation between a compensable workrelated injury and the suicide
attempt.’’). The rule is also applied in
states where suicide or attempted
suicide is still a criminal offense. See,
e.g., Kahle v. Plochman, Inc., 428 A.2d
913, 917 (N.J. 1981) (adopting the chain
of causation rule); Petty v. Associated
Transp., Inc., 173 SE.2d 321, 329 (N.C.
1970) (same). Thus, contrary to the
adverse comment, ‘‘[i]n effect, no
jurisdictions recognize suicide as an
intentional act that automatically breaks
the chain of causation to defeat a claim
for death benefits.’’ Campbell v. Young
Motor Co., 684 P.2d 1101, 1102 (Mont.
1984).
The commenter primarily relies on
the Sixth Circuit’s decision in Johnson
v. Peabody Coal Co., 26 F.3d 618 (6th
Cir. 1994), to support the view that a
miner’s suicide should always bar his
survivors’ entitlement. Johnson
considered § 718.205(c)(4) in the suicide
context. The court found the Act’s
legislative history to be silent on
whether psychological injury may
establish the causal link between
pneumoconiosis and death. In part
because the then-applicable 1981
Amendments ‘‘were designed to limit,
not expand benefits,’’ 26 F.3d at 620, the
court concluded that benefits should not
be paid to the survivors of a miner who
commits suicide. But that important
reasoning is no longer valid because the
ACA amendments repealed many of the
restrictions on benefits that were
instituted by the 1981 Amendments and
considered by the Johnson court.
Accordingly, the Department does not
view the Johnson decision as
dispositive. Instead, compensating a
miner’s survivors where the miner’s
suicide is causally linked to
pneumoconiosis is consistent with
workers’ compensation principles and
underlying Congressional intent.
The final rule also clarifies the
Department’s longstanding view that
suicide does not preclude entitlement
once the survivor invokes the Section
411(c)(3) irrebutable presumption of
entitlement by establishing that the
miner suffered from complicated
pneumoconiosis. This result is
E:\FR\FM\25SER2.SGM
25SER2
TKELLEY on DSK3SPTVN1PROD with RULES2
59104
Federal Register / Vol. 78, No. 186 / Wednesday, September 25, 2013 / Rules and Regulations
compelled by the presumption’s plain
language. The provision is simply
written: ‘‘If a miner is suffering or
suffered from a chronic dust disease of
the lung [that is described by the
statutory criteria for complicated
pneumoconiosis], then there shall be an
irrebuttable presumption that he is
totally disabled due to pneumoconiosis
or that his death was due to
pneumoconiosis, or that at the time of
his death he was totally disabled by
pneumoconiosis[,] as the case may be.’’
30 U.S.C. 921(c)(3). The language of the
presumption itself renders the cause of
the miner’s death—even a death by
suicide—irrelevant to the entitlement
inquiry. ‘‘[T]he presumption operates
conclusively to establish entitlement to
benefits.’’ Usery v. Turner Elkhorn
Mining Co., 428 U.S. 1, 11 (1976). The
Supreme Court explained in upholding
Section 411(c)(3) against constitutional
challenge that the presumption’s effect
‘‘is to grant benefits to the survivors of
any miner who during his lifetime had
complicated pneumoconiosis arising out
of employment in the mines, regardless
of whether the miner’s death was
caused by pneumoconiosis.’’ Id. at 24
(emphasis added). Although the Court
acknowledged that an unrelated death
‘‘can hardly be termed a ‘cost’ of the
operator’s business,’’ it still concluded
that the ‘‘clear’’ intent of the
presumption was not to provide benefits
‘‘simply as compensation for damages
due to the miner’s Death, but as deferred
compensation for injury suffered during
the miner’s lifetime as a result of his
illness itself.’’ Id. at 25. See also Gray v.
SLC Coal Co., 176 F.3d 382, 386–87 (6th
Cir. 1999) (agreeing with Department’s
view that § 718.205(c)(4) traumatic
injury provision does not preclude
survivor of miner who committed
suicide from pursuing benefits under
Section 411(c)(3) presumption); USX
Corp. v. Director, OWCP, 19 F.3d 1431
(4th Cir. 1994) (unpublished table
decision) (citing Usery and affirming
survivor’s benefits award under Section
411(c)(3), notwithstanding
§ 718.205(c)(4), where miner’s death
was caused by a non-work-related
tractor accident).
In sum, the final rule allows the
survivors of a miner who committed
suicide to prove death due to
pneumoconiosis by demonstrating
either that the suicide was causally
linked to pneumoconiosis or by
invoking the Section 411(c)(3)
irrebutable presumption of entitlement.
The Department believes these changes
will have little practical impact on
claim adjudications given the ACA’s
revitalization of automatic survivors’
VerDate Mar<15>2010
18:04 Sep 24, 2013
Jkt 229001
entitlement, which also makes the cause
of a miner’s death irrelevant if the miner
was entitled to lifetime benefits. If the
miner’s claim was not awarded, the
Department anticipates that his
survivors will be able to demonstrate a
link between disease and suicide only
in rare cases.
(c) No further comments on this
section were received and the
Department has promulgated the
remainder of the regulation as proposed.
20 CFR 718.305 Presumption of
pneumoconiosis
(a) Section 718.305 implements the
Section 411(c)(4) 15-year presumption.
This statutory section provides a
rebuttable presumption of total
disability or death due to
pneumoconiosis if the miner ‘‘was
employed for fifteen years or more in
one or more underground coal mines’’
or in a coal mine other than an
underground mine in conditions
‘‘substantially similar to conditions in
an underground mine’’ and suffers or
suffered from ‘‘a totally disabling
respiratory or pulmonary impairment.’’
30 U.S.C. 921(c)(4). Because current
§ 718.305 describes the presumption’s
requirements using language largely
taken verbatim from the statute and
offers little additional guidance
regarding how the presumption may be
invoked or rebutted, the Department
proposed substantial revisions to clarify
the presumption’s operation. The
proposed rule also eliminated obsolete
provisions.
(b) Invocation. Three comments object
to proposed § 718.305(b)(2), which
states that ‘‘[t]he conditions in a mine
other than an underground mine will be
considered ‘substantially similar’ to
those in an underground mine if the
miner was exposed to coal-mine dust
while working there.’’ 77 FR at 19475.
The Department explained in the
preamble that under this standard, a
claimant would not need to produce
evidence about underground mining
conditions and that it was incumbent
upon the fact finder to compare the
claimant’s non-underground mining
exposure with those conditions known
to exist in underground mines. 77 FR at
19461. The Department cited several
circuit court cases, including Director,
OWCP v. Midland Coal Co., 855 F.2d
509, 512 (7th Cir. 1988), and Benefits
Review Board cases which had adopted
this approach.
The commenters that object to this
section point out that although the
preamble states that the fact finder must
compare the miner’s non-underground
mine exposure with underground mine
conditions, the regulation itself only
PO 00000
Frm 00004
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
requires that a claimant demonstrate
some coal-mine-dust exposure in nonunderground mining. They contend this
is contrary to the statute’s plain
language because it does not require the
claimant to prove any type of similarity
between exposures in underground and
non-underground work. The comments
also state that the Department should
adopt an objective standard for proving
substantial similarity (although no
comment suggests a particular standard)
and that the test should take into
consideration certain studies showing
that non-underground miners rarely
develop disabling pneumoconiosis. One
comment notes that administrative law
judges do not necessarily have the
requisite expertise to compare an
individual non-underground miner’s
exposure to usual conditions in
underground mining. Another comment
suggests that OWCP confer with the
Mine Safety and Health Administration
and the National Institutes of Health to
develop a standard.
Two comments support proposed
§ 718.305(b)(2) and the adoption of the
Midland Coal standard. One states that
it is a common sense rule that
administrative law judges have had no
problem applying. The commenters
argue that any rule that requires a
claimant to quantify a miner’s dust
exposure would be impractical. The
commenters also note that the potential
exposure in non-underground mining is
actually greater than in underground
mining because no ventilation systems
mitigate the exposure. These comments
also disagree with the other
commenters’ representations that
certain medical studies demonstrate
non-underground miners are not at
increased risk for pneumoconiosis,
especially once silicosis is taken into
account.
The Department has revised
§ 718.305(b)(2) to clarify the standard.
The Department agrees with those
comments that noted the proposed rule
could be interpreted as allowing a
‘‘substantial similarity’’ finding when
the miner was exposed to any coal-mine
dust in non-underground coal mining.
This would not satisfy the statutory
standard and was not the Department’s
intent.
The final rule’s revised language
clarifies the Department’s intent about
how the substantial similarity analysis
should be conducted. The final rule
acknowledges, as the Seventh Circuit
recognized in Midland Coal, a
fundamental premise underlying the
BLBA, as demonstrated by the
legislative history, i.e., that
‘‘underground mines are dusty.’’
Midland Coal, 855 F.2d at 512. Given
E:\FR\FM\25SER2.SGM
25SER2
TKELLEY on DSK3SPTVN1PROD with RULES2
Federal Register / Vol. 78, No. 186 / Wednesday, September 25, 2013 / Rules and Regulations
that legislative fact, it is unnecessary for
a claimant to prove anything about dust
conditions existing at an underground
mine for purposes of invoking the 15year presumption. Instead, the claimant
need only focus on developing evidence
addressing the dust conditions
prevailing at the non-underground mine
or mines at which the miner worked.
The objective of this evidence is to show
that the miner’s duties regularly
exposed him to coal mine dust, and thus
that the miner’s work conditions
approximated those at an underground
mine. The term ‘‘regularly’’ has been
added to clarify that a demonstration of
sporadic or incidental exposure is not
sufficient to meet the claimant’s burden.
The fact-finder simply evaluates the
evidence presented, and determines
whether it credibly establishes that the
miner’s non-underground mine working
conditions regularly exposed him to
coal mine dust. If that fact is established
to the fact-finder’s satisfaction, the
claimant has met his burden of showing
substantial similarity. And if the periods
of regular exposure in non-underground
mine employment (combined with any
underground mine employment) total
15 years or more, the claimant will be
entitled to invoke the presumption if a
total respiratory or pulmonary disability
is also established. This procedure will
also alleviate one commenter’s concern
that some administrative law judges
may not be knowledgeable about
conditions in underground mines.
To the extent the comments urge the
Department to adopt technical
comparability criteria, such as requiring
a claimant to produce scientific
evidence specifically quantifying the
miner’s exposure to coal mine dust
during non-underground mining, the
Department rejects the suggestion.
Benefit claimants, who must bear the
burden of proving substantial similarity
to invoke the presumption, generally do
not control this type of technical
information about the mines in which
the miner worked. See generally Usery,
428 U.S. at 29 (noting that ‘‘showing of
the degree of dust concentration to
which a miner was exposed [is] a
historical fact difficult for the miner to
prove.’’). Instead, the coal mine
operators control dust-sampling and
similar information about their mines.
While this information is publicly
available from the Mine Safety and
Health Administration for some mines,
it may not be relevant or available in
any particular case. Dust sampling in
non-underground mines is done on a
designated-position basis (e.g.,
bulldozer operator, driller). See
generally 30 CFR 71.201 et seq. Thus,
VerDate Mar<15>2010
18:04 Sep 24, 2013
Jkt 229001
the results may not be relevant to
miners doing other jobs and certainly
would not be an adequate basis for the
Department to adopt an exposure rule
for all non-underground miners.
Instead, the Department believes the
standard should be one that may be
satisfied by lay evidence addressing the
individual miner’s experiences.
Congress enacted the Section 411(c)(4)
presumption to assist miners and their
survivors in establishing entitlement to
benefits, and also permitted certain
claimants to prove entitlement by lay
evidence. 30 U.S.C. 923(b). Putting
insurmountable hurdles in claimants’
paths does not comport with that intent.
Moreover, because a claimant’s dust
exposure evidence will be inherently
anecdotal, it would serve no purpose for
the Department to develop an objective,
and therefore dissimilar, benchmark of
underground mine conditions for
comparison purposes. The legislative
fact that underground coal mines are
dusty is fully sufficient for this purpose.
Of course, nothing would preclude a
coal mine operator from introducing
evidence—including any technical data
within its control—showing that the
particular miner was not regularly
exposed to coal mine dust during his
non-underground coal mine
employment.
The Department also does not believe
that reviewing current medical and
scientific literature on the prevalence of
pneumoconiosis in non-underground
miners would be useful in promulgating
this particular rule. By explicitly
making the presumption available to at
least some non-underground miners,
Section 411(c)(4) finds as a legislative
fact that these miners can develop
pneumoconiosis. Moreover, the statute
focuses the substantial similarity
question on a comparison of conditions
existing at the different types of mines,
not on the medical question of whether
certain exposures do or do not lead to
pneumoconiosis. See Midland Coal, 855
F.2d at 512 (‘‘Congress focused
specifically on dust conditions in
enacting the ‘substantial similarity’
provision.’’) The Department is not free
to depart from Congress’ express intent
on this issue. If the particular miner did
not, in fact, suffer from pneumoconiosis,
the coal mine operator will be able to
rebut the presumption.
(c) Rebuttal. The Department
proposed § 718.305(d) to set out the
burden of proof on the party opposing
entitlement to rebut the presumption in
both miners’ and survivors’ claims. The
proposed rebuttal standards were
modeled on language contained in both
the statutory presumption itself and
current § 718.305(d), which were used
PO 00000
Frm 00005
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
59105
in claims filed before January 1, 1982.
Applying the statutory limitations
imposed on rebuttal, proposed
§ 718.305(d) provided that the party
opposing entitlement could rebut the
presumption in only two ways: Showing
that the miner did not have
pneumoconiosis or that his disability or
death did not arise out of coal-minedust exposure. For this second method,
proposed § 718.305(d)(1)(ii) (for miners’
claims) and § 718.305(d)(2)(ii) (for
survivors’ claims) provided that the
presumption could be rebutted by proof
that the miner’s respiratory disability or
death ‘‘did not arise in whole or in part
out of dust exposure in the miner’s coal
mine employment.’’ 77 FR at 19475. The
Department explained in the preamble
that this language had been interpreted
by the courts, in both Section 411(c)(4)
and the similar 20 CFR 727.203(b)(3)
context, as requiring the party opposing
entitlement to ‘‘rule out’’ coal mine
employment as a cause of the miner’s
disabling respiratory or pulmonary
impairment. 77 FR at 19463.
One commenter argues that the
limitations on rebuttal set forth in
Section 411(c)(4) do not apply to coal
mine operators under the Usery
decision. Several comments
acknowledge that the ‘‘in whole or in
part’’ standard in the proposed rule is
the equivalent of the ‘‘rule-out’’
standard mentioned in the preamble,
but express disagreement with the ruleout standard. They note that claimants
who attempt to establish entitlement
without benefit of the presumption must
show that pneumoconiosis was a
‘‘substantially contributing cause’’ of
disability or death, and cannot recover
if pneumoconiosis was only an
insignificant or ‘‘de minimis’’ cause of
disability or death under current
§ 718.204(c)(1) and § 718.205(c)(2). They
also contend that a ‘‘rule-out’’
requirement improperly imposes a
different standard on operators because
it requires them to establish that
pneumoconiosis was not even an
insignificant or de minimis cause of
disability or death. One comment argues
that by including the ‘‘rule-out’’
standard in the preamble (rather than
the regulatory text), the Department has
violated its duty to publish its rules for
public comment. This comment
contends that if the ‘‘rule-out’’ standard
is intended to establish a party’s burden
of proof on rebuttal, it violates the
Administrative Procedure Act (APA) as
construed by the Supreme Court in
Director, OWCP v. Greenwich Collieries,
512 U.S. 267 (1994). This comment also
states that if the ‘‘rule-out’’ standard is
intended to define the legal criteria for
E:\FR\FM\25SER2.SGM
25SER2
TKELLEY on DSK3SPTVN1PROD with RULES2
59106
Federal Register / Vol. 78, No. 186 / Wednesday, September 25, 2013 / Rules and Regulations
rebuttal, it has no authoritative source
and is inconsistent with the ‘‘reasonable
medical certainty’’ standard it asserts
applies in BLBA claim adjudications.
Two comments generally support the
proposed rule. One states that the
presumption should be strong and
remarks that ensuring operators’
liability for coal-mine related lung
disease creates an incentive for
operators to comply with dust-control
standards.
The final rule adopts an approach
similar to the proposed rule. But the
Department has made several revisions
to clarify the rebuttal provisions and to
accommodate some of the concerns
expressed in the comments. We explain
those changes below.
Miners’ claims. A miner seeking
BLBA benefits is required to establish,
with direct evidence or via
presumption, four elements of
entitlement: (1) Disease: that the miner
suffers from pneumoconiosis in clinical
or legal form, or both; (2) disease
causation: that the pneumoconiosis
arose at least in part out of coal mine
employment; (3) disability: that the
miner has a pulmonary or respiratory
impairment that prevents the
performance of the miner’s usual coal
mine work; and (4) disability causation:
that the miner’s pneumoconiosis
contributes to that disability. 20 CFR
725.202(d)(2); see, e.g., Morrison v.
Tenn. Consol Coal Co., 644 F.3d 473,
478 (6th Cir. 2011); Lane v. Union
Carbide Corp., 105 F.3d 166, 170 (4th
Cir. 1997). If a miner proves the
disability element by a preponderance
of the evidence, then Section 411(c)(4)
presumes the remaining three
entitlement elements. But because the
presumption is rebuttable, the party
opposing entitlement must be given an
opportunity to show by a
preponderance of the evidence that the
three presumed elements (disease,
disease causation, and disability
causation) are not in fact present. If the
opposing party establishes that the
miner does not have a lung disease
related to coal mine employment
(elements one and two) or that the
miner’s totally disabling respiratory or
pulmonary impairment is unrelated to
his pneumoconiosis (element four), the
presumption is rebutted.
The Department has revised
§ 718.305(d) in this final rule to more
clearly reflect that all three of the
presumed elements may be rebutted.
Section 718.305(d)(1)(i) provides that
the party opposing entitlement may
rebut the presumption by proving that
the miner has neither legal nor clinical
pneumoconiosis, including where the
miner’s clinical pneumoconiosis did not
VerDate Mar<15>2010
18:04 Sep 24, 2013
Jkt 229001
arise from covered coal mine
employment (disease and disease
causation). See Barber v. Director,
OWCP, 43 F.3d 899, 901 (4th Cir. 1995)
(party rebutting Section 411(c)(4)
presumption must demonstrate absence
of both clinical and legal
pneumoconiosis); 77 FR at 19462–63
(same). Section 718.305(d)(1)(ii)
provides that rebuttal may also be
accomplished when the party opposing
the claim shows that no part of the
miner’s respiratory disability was
caused by pneumoconiosis (disability
causation). See generally Mingo Logan
Coal Co. v. Owens, ___ F.3d ___, ___,
2013 WL 3929081, *4 (4th Cir. 2013)
(outlining three elements available for
rebuttal under Section 411(c)(4)).
These revisions also should relieve
the concern expressed in the comments
that the limitations Section 411(c)(4)
places on rebuttal are not applicable to
coal mine operators. Enacted in 1972,
Section 411(c)(4) provides that ‘‘[t]he
Secretary may rebut such presumption
only by establishing that (A) such miner
does not, or did not, have
pneumoconiosis, or that (B) his
respiratory or pulmonary impairment
did not arise out of, or in connection
with, employment in a coal mine.’’ In
1976, the Supreme Court held that ‘‘the
§ 411(c)(4) limitation on rebuttal
evidence is inapplicable to operators.’’
Usery, 428 U.S. at 35. Nevertheless,
when the Department adopted § 718.305
in 1980, it listed the same two exclusive
methods of rebuttal, but did not limit
their application to the Secretary. The
explanation for the change is simple.
The 1978 amendments to the BLBA
expanded the definition of
‘‘pneumoconiosis’’ to include what is
now known as ‘‘legal pneumoconiosis,’’
i.e., any ‘‘chronic lung disease or
impairment . . . arising out of coal
mine employment.’’ 20 CFR
718.201(a)(2). This amendment
rendered proof that a miner’s disability
resulted from a lung disease caused by
coal dust exposure that was not
pneumoconiosis no longer a valid
method of rebuttal because every
disabling lung disease caused by coal
dust exposure is legal pneumoconiosis.
Thus, the scenario motivating Usery’s
discussion of the rebuttal-limiting
sentence no longer exists: The only
ways that any liable party—whether a
mine operator or the government—can
rebut the 15-year presumption are the
two set forth in the presumption, which
encompass the disease, diseasecausation, and disability-causation
entitlement elements. Authorities postdating this amendment that state the
coal mine operator is limited to the
PO 00000
Frm 00006
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
statutory rebuttal methods simply
reflect that fact. See, e.g., Rose v.
Clinchfield Coal Co., 614 F.2d 936, 939
(4th Cir. 1980).
The Department does not believe that
the comment’s discussion of Supreme
Court decisions limiting an agency’s
power to re-interpret statutes that have
been construed by the Court as
unambiguous compels the Department
to limit the proposed rebuttal standards
to the Secretary. See Nat’l Cable &
Telecomms. Ass’n v. Brand X Internet
Servs., 545 U.S. 967 (2005), United
States v. Home Concrete & Supply, Inc.,
— U.S. —, 132 S. Ct. 1836 (2012). These
cases are beside the point: Neither
forbid an agency from adopting a
regulation that conflicts with a prior
judicial decision when the new
regulation is compelled by a subsequent
amendment to the statute. Moreover, as
already discussed, there simply are no
other facts presumed under the
§ 411(c)(4) presumption that a coal mine
operator could rebut. Thus, the
Department believes that applying the
§ 718.305(d) rebuttal standards to all
parties opposing entitlement, as
proposed, will prove more helpful to the
regulated public by informing it of the
ways it can rebut the presumption.
The Department is also not persuaded
by those comments that advocate
applying the ‘‘substantially contributing
cause’’ standard for disability causation
set forth at § 718.204(c)(1) to the
§ 718.305(d) rebuttal standard. The
comments correctly state that the
proposed rules apply a different
disability-causation standard to claims
governed by the general Part 718 criteria
than those in which the miner
successfully invokes the Section
411(c)(4) presumption. But that
difference is warranted by the statutory
section’s underlying intent and purpose.
Based on evidence that miners who
worked for at least fifteen years were
more likely to develop pneumoconiosis,
Congress chose to extend the
presumption only to those miners who
worked in the mines for at least fifteen
years and who were totally disabled by
respiratory or pulmonary impairments.
See generally S. Rep. No. 92–743 at 13
(1972), reprinted in 1972 U.S.C.C.A.N.
2305, 2316–17. Congress adopted the
presumption to ‘‘[r]elax the often
insurmountable burden of proving
eligibility’’ these miners faced. S. Rep.
No. 92–743 at 1. In short, Congress
effectively singled out these miners for
special treatment. Adopting a rigorous
rebuttal standard in those limited
circumstances in which the opposing
party cannot demonstrate the absence of
coal-mine-related pneumoconiosis (and
thus can only rebut by showing that the
E:\FR\FM\25SER2.SGM
25SER2
TKELLEY on DSK3SPTVN1PROD with RULES2
Federal Register / Vol. 78, No. 186 / Wednesday, September 25, 2013 / Rules and Regulations
miner’s disability is not related to
pneumoconiosis) is consistent with
Congress’ approach. See generally
Consolidation Coal Co. v. Director,
OWCP, 721 F.3d 789, 795 (7th Cir. 2013)
(noting ‘‘[i]t is no secret that the 15-year
presumption is difficult to rebut’’).
The Department has consistently
interpreted Section 411(c)(4) as
requiring the rebutting party to show
that the miner’s disability did not arise
‘‘in whole or in part’’ from coal mining.
See 20 CFR 718.305(d) (2012). And the
courts considering the rebuttal
provisions have concurred with the
Department’s use of the ‘‘in whole or in
part’’ standard. See, e.g., Blakley v.
Amax Coal Co., 54 F.3d 1313, 1320 (7th
Cir. 1995); Bosco v. Twin Pines Coal Co.,
892 F.2d 1473, 1481 (10th Cir. 1989);
Rose, 614 F.2d at 939; Colley & Colley
Coal Co. v. Breeding, 59 Fed. Appx. 563,
567 (4th Cir. Mar. 11, 2003) (unpub.).
The ‘‘in no part’’ standard the
Department has adopted in the final rule
is a reasonable interpretation of the
statutory language and effectuates
Section 411(c)(4)’s purposes. It is
intended to simplify and clarify the ‘‘in
whole or in part standard.’’
Contrary to one commenter’s
suggestion, the § 718.305(d) rebuttal
standards adopted by the final rule do
not violate the burden of proof imposed
by the APA. As interpreted by the
Supreme Court, the APA requires the
proponent of a rule or order to bear the
burden of persuasion by a
preponderance of the evidence to
prevail. Greenwich Collieries, 512 U.S at
277–78. The ‘‘in no part’’ standard does
not run afoul of this holding because it
is the fact that must be established and
not the ‘‘degree of certainty needed to
find a fact or element under the
preponderance standard.’’ Metropolitan
Stevedore Co. v. Rambo, 521 U.S. 121,
129 (1997). As the Supreme Court has
explained, ‘‘the preponderance standard
goes to how convincing the evidence in
favor of a fact must be in comparison
with the evidence against it before that
fact may be found, but does not
determine what facts must be proven as
a substantive part of a claim or
defense.’’ Id. (citing Greenwich
Collieries v. Director, OWCP, 990 F.2d
730, 736 (3d Cir. 1993)). The ‘‘in no
part’’ standard also does not govern the
level of certainty with which a medical
opinion must be expressed to be
considered probative evidence; the rule
provides only what facts must be
established to rebut the presumption.
Thus, the commenter’s fears that the
standard requires a higher level of
certainty in medical opinions than is
currently required are unfounded.
Moreover, contrary to the commenter’s
VerDate Mar<15>2010
18:04 Sep 24, 2013
Jkt 229001
statement, a medical opinion need not
be expressed with ‘‘reasonable medical
certainty’’ to be probative of a medical
fact under the BLBA. Instead, it is
sufficient if the opinion is documented
and constitutes a reasoned medical
judgment. See, e.g., Mancia v. Director,
OWCP, 130 F.3d 579, 588 (3d Cir. 1997).
Thus, a party opposing entitlement may
rebut the presumption when the
preponderance of the evidence,
including medical opinions that are
documented and reasoned exercises of
physicians’ medical judgment,
demonstrates that pneumoconiosis
played no role in the miner’s respiratory
disability.
Survivors’ claims. In the survivor’s
context, a claimant who establishes the
invocation criteria receives a
presumption that the miner died due to
pneumoconiosis. This presumption
encompasses the two entitlement
elements in survivors’ claims: Disease
(that the miner had clinical and legal
pneumoconiosis) and death (that the
miner died due to pneumoconiosis). For
the reasons stated above regarding
rebuttal in a miner’s claim, the
Department has made parallel changes
to § 718.305(d)(2) in this final rule to
clarify how the presumption may be
rebutted when the party opposing
entitlement seeks to disprove these
presumed facts.
(d) No further comments were
received and the Department has
promulgated the remainder of the
regulation as proposed.
20 CFR 725.212, 725.218, 725.222
Conditions of entitlement
(a) This series of rules prescribes the
conditions required for a miner’s
survivors to establish entitlement to
benefits. Section 725.212 applies to a
miner’s surviving spouse or a surviving
divorced spouse, § 725.218 applies to a
deceased miner’s children, and
§ 725.222 applies to surviving parents
and siblings. The Department proposed
revising these regulations to omit
certain conditions of entitlement
applicable only to claims filed prior to
June 30, 1982, and to add new
conditions of entitlement made
applicable to certain claims by the ACA
amendments. Specifically, ACA Section
1556(b) amended Section 422(l) to
revive automatic entitlement for
survivors of miners awarded lifetime
disability benefits and whose claims
meet the effective date requirements of
ACA Section 1556(c). Proposed
§§ 725.212(a)(3)(ii), 725.218(a)(2), and
725.222(a)(5)(ii) implement this
amendment by clarifying that qualifying
survivors who file a claim for survivors’
benefits after January 1, 2005, that is
PO 00000
Frm 00007
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
59107
pending on or after March 23, 2010, are
not required to establish that the miner
died due to pneumoconiosis. 77 FR at
19467; 19477–78.
(b) Two commenters, who submitted
identical comments, object generally to
the Department’s construction of the
statute. They argue that the ACA
restores derivative benefits to survivors
only if the related miner’s disability
claim was filed after January 1, 2005,
and pending on or after March 23, 2010.
One commenter generally supports the
Department’s proposal to implement the
ACA amendment restoring derivative
survivors’ benefits.
The Department continues to believe,
as explained in the proposal (77 FR at
19467–68), that the ACA amendments
apply to all claims, including survivors’
claims, meeting the effective date
criteria. The plain language of Section
1556(c) states that the amendments
apply to ‘‘claims filed . . . after January
1, 2005, that are pending on or after
[March 23, 2010].’’ Public Law 111–148,
1556(c), 124 Stat. 119, 260(c) (2010).
Nothing in the text of ACA Section
1556(c) or Section 1556(b) suggests that
the amendment only applies to
disability claims by miners and not to
survivors’ claims. To the contrary, the
most natural reading of the unqualified
word ‘‘claims’’ in Section 1556(c)
encompasses both miners’ and
survivors’ claims. The four courts that
have considered the issue have
unanimously agreed with this reading
and held that the amendment restoring
derivative benefits applies to survivors’
claims that satisfy Section 1556(c)’s
effective-date requirements even if the
related miner’s disability claim did not.
See Marmon Coal Co. v. Director, OWCP
[Eckman], ___ F.3d ___, ___ n.3, 2013
WL 4017160, *6 n.3 (3d Cir. 2013) (‘‘the
ACA revives § 932(l)’s automatic
benefits to the extent that a survivor
files a claim for benefits after January 1,
2005, that is pending on or after the
ACA’s effective date, March 23, 2010.’’);
U.S. Steel Mining v. Director, OWCP
[Starks], 719 F.3d 1275, 1285 (11th Cir.
2013) (‘‘Section 1556(c) does not
distinguish between miners’ claims and
survivors’ claims. The plain meaning of
§ 1556(c) is that anyone—miner or
survivor—who filed a claim for benefits
after January 1, 2005, that remained
pending on March 23, 2010, can receive
the benefit of the amendments.’’); Vision
Processing, LLC v. Groves, 705 F.3d 551,
555 (6th Cir. 2013) (‘‘Language and
context show that the 2010 amendments
apply to all survivor-benefit and all
miner-benefit claims filed after January
1, 2005, and pending on March 23,
2010.’’); West Virginia CWP Fund v.
Stacy, 671 F.3d 378, 388 (4th Cir. 2011)
E:\FR\FM\25SER2.SGM
25SER2
TKELLEY on DSK3SPTVN1PROD with RULES2
59108
Federal Register / Vol. 78, No. 186 / Wednesday, September 25, 2013 / Rules and Regulations
(‘‘Because Congress used the term
‘claims’ [in ACA Section 1556(c)]
without any qualifying language, and
because both miners and their survivors
may file claims under the BLBA . . . the
plain language supports the Director’s
position that amended § 932(l) applies
to survivors’ claims that comply with
Section 1556(c)’s effective date
requirements.’’).
The Department’s conclusion is
further informed by Section 1556(c)’s
impact on non-survivor claims. Section
1556(c)’s effective-date requirements
apply not just to claims subject to
revived Section 422(l) (Section 1556(b)),
but also to claims subject to the revived
Section 411(c)(4) 15-year presumption
(Section 1556(a)). The 15-year
presumption explicitly applies to claims
brought by both miners and survivors.
See 30 U.S.C. 921(c)(4). The
commenters’ proposed statutory
construction would create an
inappropriate dichotomy: the term
‘‘claims’’ in subsection (c) would mean
‘‘miners’ and survivors’ claims’’ when
considering entitlement to the fifteenyear presumption under subsection (a),
but only ‘‘miners’ claims’’ when
considering entitlement to derivative
benefits under subsection (b). This
incongruous result violates the ‘‘basic
canon of statutory construction that
identical terms within an Act bear the
same meaning.’’ Estate of Cowart v.
Nicklos Drilling Co., 505 U.S. 469, 479
(1992). Indeed, the Fourth Circuit has
rejected this construction as ‘‘tortured.’’
Stacy, 671 F.3d at 389.
To further support their position, the
commenters note that because Section
422(l) ostensibly relieves survivors of
the obligation to file claims, it is
illogical to use the survivor’s claim
filing date as the operative date for
determining eligibility under Section
422(l). The context in which Congress
adopted the ACA amendments leads to
a different conclusion. At the time
Section 1556 was enacted, both miners
and survivors filed claims. Indeed,
except for the survivors of miners who
had filed successful claims before 1982,
the only way a survivor could obtain
benefits was to file an independent
claim, even if the miner had been
awarded lifetime disability benefits.
See, e.g., Hill v. Peabody Coal Co., 94
Fed. Appx. 298, 299 (6th Cir. 2004)
(unpub.). Thus, Congress knew when it
restored derivative benefits in 2010 that
independent survivors’ claims were
common. See generally Vimar Seguros y
Reaseguros, S.A. v. M/V Sky Reefer, 515
U.S. 528, 554 (1995) (Congress is
presumed to know the law, and to know
how it has been interpreted.).
Interpreted in that light, the term
VerDate Mar<15>2010
18:04 Sep 24, 2013
Jkt 229001
‘‘claim’’ includes both miners’ and
survivors’ claims. See Starks, 719 F.3d
at 1285 (‘‘Just because the application of
the amended § 932(l) to a claim operates
to eliminate the need for that claim does
not render its application illogical or
unworkable.’’); Stacy, 671 F.3d at 388–
89 (‘‘Although amended § 932(l) states
that a survivor is not required to file a
new claim for benefits, the conclusion
petitioner draws from this language—
that the operative date for determining
eligibility cannot be the date the
survivor’s claim was filed—simply does
not follow.’’); Groves, 705 F.3d at 556
(‘‘Section 1556(b) eliminates the
requirement that survivors file a claim
before obtaining benefits; it does not
prohibit such claims.’’). See also B & G
Constr. Co. v. Director, OWCP
[Campbell], 662 F.3d 233, 244 n.12 (3d
Cir. 2011) (‘‘[S]urely a widow seeking
benefits must file something in order to
receive them. After all, notwithstanding
section 1556 a claimant might not be the
miner’s real widow. But what a widow
does not have to do is establish that the
miner died from pneumoconiosis.’’).
The commenters also state that the
proposed rule is inconsistent with how
the Department interpreted the 1982
amendment to Section 422(l)
eliminating derivative benefits in claims
filed after 1981. The Department then
permitted derivative benefits in
survivors’ claims filed after 1981 so long
as the related miner’s disability claim
was filed before 1982 and resulted in an
award. The commenters cite Pothering
v. Parkson Coal Co., 861 F.2d 1321 (3d
Cir. 1988), to support their view.
Pothering, which interpreted the text of
the 1981 amendment, has no bearing on
the meaning of Section 1556(c), which
uses entirely different language. The
Department’s interpretation of the 1981
amendment’s use of the term ‘‘claim’’ as
meaning only miners’ claims was
compelled by its particular text and
legislative history, which are
inapplicable to Section 1556. As noted
above, the Third Circuit itself has
confirmed that the ACA’s automatic
entitlement provisions apply to
survivors’ claims filed within Section
1556’s temporal limitations. Eckman,
___ F.3d at ___ n.3, 2013 WL 4017160,
*6 n.3. Other courts confronted with the
Pothering argument have either
specifically or implicitly rejected it. See
Starks, 719 F.3d at 1286 (rejecting
Pothering argument and noting that ‘‘[i]f
[the Section 1556] context does not
demand a variation in the meaning of
the word ‘claim,’ we do not know what
context would. Any other reading of the
word in this context is . . . tortured.’’)
(internal quotation marks omitted);
PO 00000
Frm 00008
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
Stacy, 671 F.3d at 388–89; Groves, 705
F.3d at 555–56.
(c) No other comments were received
concerning these sections, and the
Department has promulgated these
regulations as proposed.
20 CFR 725.309 Additional claims;
effect of a prior denial of benefits
(a) Section 725.309 addresses both the
filing of additional claims for benefits
and the effect of a prior denial. In its
notice of proposed rulemaking, the
Department proposed to revise the
current rule to clarify how the ACA
amendment restoring Section 422(l)
derivative-survivors’ benefits applies
when a survivor files a subsequent
claim. 77 FR at 19467–68; 19478. The
proposed rule added a new paragraph,
§ 725.309(d)(1), to clarify that a survivor
need not establish a change in a
condition of entitlement if the
subsequent claim meets the
requirements for entitlement under
amended Section 422(l). The proposed
rule also limited this exception to
survivors whose prior claims were
finally denied prior to March 23, 2010,
i.e., before the ACA was enacted. Once
a survivor files a claim subject to the
ACA and that claim is denied, any
subsequent claim the survivor files is
subject to the usual rules of claim
preclusion set forth in proposed
§ 725.309(c) because the subsequent
claim asserts the same cause of action as
the prior denied claim.
(b) The Department received five
comments asking it to abandon the
proposed rule. These commenters list
several related reasons for their request.
They assert that ‘‘re-opening’’ denied
survivors’ claims violates the doctrine of
res judicata, and that the ACA
amendments do not create a new cause
of action that would justify an exception
to the doctrine or otherwise allow for reopening of previously denied survivor
claims. The commenters also suggest
that the proposed rule violates ACA
Section 1556(c), which restricts
application of the amendments to
claims filed after January 1, 2005.
Finally, one commenter stated that the
proposed rule does not clearly convey
the Department’s intent.
Two comments support the proposed
rule. One contends that the
Department’s decision to allow
survivors to file subsequent claims is
both compelled by the statute’s remedial
purposes and consistent with res
judicata concepts.
Although the Department declines to
abandon the proposed rule, the final
rule has been revised to more clearly
convey the Department’s intent.
Specifically, the final rule
E:\FR\FM\25SER2.SGM
25SER2
TKELLEY on DSK3SPTVN1PROD with RULES2
Federal Register / Vol. 78, No. 186 / Wednesday, September 25, 2013 / Rules and Regulations
comprehensively describes the universe
of survivors who are exempt from
having to prove a change in a condition
of entitlement under § 725.309(d) to
pursue a subsequent claim. The
proposed rule inadvertently excluded
survivors whose prior claims were filed
on or before January 1, 2005 that
remained pending after the ACA’s
March 23, 2010 enactment date. As
explained in the NPRM, 77 FR at 19468,
and discussed in detail below, the
ACA’s revival of Section 422(l)’s
automatic survivor entitlement
provision created a new cause of action.
Thus, these survivors may take
advantage of the amendment by filing a
subsequent claim without being
hindered by the findings made in the
prior claim. Accordingly, the
Department has modified § 725.309(c)(1)
by adding two subparagraphs
(§§ 725.309(c)(1)(i)–(ii)) to provide
explicit filing and pendency date
requirements for the prior claim that
cover all survivor claims not previously
adjudicated under amended Section
422(l). With this change, the final rule
also makes clear that only a survivor
whose prior claim was not subject to the
Section 422(l) amendment may be found
entitled to benefits on a subsequent
claim without having to establish a
change in a condition of entitlement.
The Department is not persuaded by
the comments that argue against
allowing subsequent survivors’ claims
in these circumstances. The
commenters’ underlying assumption—
that the Department’s proposed rule reopens previously denied claims—
misperceives the rule. As the
Department emphasized in its proposal,
77 FR at 19468, the ACA does not
authorize reopening of previously
denied claims and the proposed rule
was not intended to reopen denied
survivors’ claims. See generally
Eckman, ___ F.3d at ___, 2013 WL
4017160, *5 (a subsequent claim is a
‘‘new assertion[] of entitlement’’ that
does not re-open a prior denied claim or
‘‘disregard principles of finality and res
judicata’’); Union Carbide Corp. v.
Richards, 721 F.3d 307, 314 (4th Cir.
2013) (‘‘[R]es judicata is not implicated
by [subsequent survivors’] claims since
entitlement under Section 932(l), as
revived by Section 1556, does not
require relitigation of the prior findings
that the miners’ deaths were not due to
pneumoconiosis.’’). Instead, consistent
with the plain language of the ACA, the
rule is intended to make automatic
entitlement available in subsequent
claims, which are entirely new
assertions of entitlement distinct from
any previous claim. See Lovilia Coal Co.
VerDate Mar<15>2010
18:04 Sep 24, 2013
Jkt 229001
v. Harvey, 109 F.3d 445, 449 (8th Cir.
1997) (a ‘‘claim’’ under the BLBA refers
to a distinct application for benefits, not
an operator’s general liability to a
particular claimant).
Importantly, the rule leaves the
survivor’s prior claim decision, and its
underlying findings, in effect. This
means that the survivor will not be
entitled to benefits for any period of
time pre-dating the prior denial. See 77
FR at 19468. Consequently, the rule is
consistent with the Department’s
longstanding recognition that, for
purposes of a subsequent claim, ‘‘the
correctness of [the prior decision’s] legal
conclusion’’ must be accepted in
adjudicating the latter application. Lisa
Lee Mines v. Director, OWCP, 86 F.3d
1358, 1361 (4th Cir. 1996) (en banc); see
also Richards, 721 F.3d at 317 & n.5
(limiting benefits period on subsequent
survivor’s claim to period after prior
claim denial provides claimant
‘‘meaningful benefits’’ while also
‘‘mitigat[ing] the burden to the operator
and respect[ing] the validity of the
earlier denial.’’).
The commenters are also incorrect
that the doctrine of res judicata
precludes application of section 422(l)
to a survivor’s subsequent claim. Res
judicata ‘‘bars a party from suing on a
claim that has already been ‘litigated to
a final judgment by that party . . . and
precludes the assertion by such parties
of any legal theory, cause of action, or
defense which could have been asserted
in that action.’ ’’ Ohio Valley Envtl.
Coal. v. Arcoma Coal Co. (OVEC), 556
F.3d 177, 210 (4th Cir. 2009) (quoting 18
James Wm. Moore et al., Moore’s
Federal Practice § 131.10(1)(a) (3d ed.
2008). For res judicata to bar a
subsequent action, ‘‘three elements must
be present: (1) A judgment on the merits
in a prior suit resolving (2) claims by the
same parties . . . , and (3) a subsequent
suit based on the same cause of action.’’
OVEC, 556 F.3d at 210 (internal
quotation marks omitted). Res judicata
is not applicable in this situation
because a subsequent claim for
automatic entitlement, arising by virtue
of the ACA’s 2010 amendment of the
BLBA, is not the same cause of action
as the original claim. Eckman, ___ F.3d
at ___, 2013 WL 4017160, *6 (holding
that a survivor’s ‘‘subsequent claim thus
involves a different cause of action, and
res judicata does not prevent [the
survivor] from receiving survivors’
benefits under the BLBA.’’).
The Department does not disagree
with the notion, as expressed by one
commenter, that causes of action are
generally defined by a ‘‘transactional’’
approach. Citing various legal
precedents, the commenter states that a
PO 00000
Frm 00009
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
59109
cause of action arises out of a common
nucleus of facts and does not depend on
a particular theory of recovery. It is
undoubtedly correct that ‘‘[a] claim
[that] existed at the time of the first suit
and ‘might have been offered’ in the
same cause of action, . . . is barred by
res judicata.’’ Aliff v. Joy Mfg. Co., 914
F.2d 39, 43–44 (4th Cir. 1990). But a
claim that did not exist at the time of
the prior proceeding, because the new
claim could not have been raised in the
prior proceeding, is not so barred.
Richards, 721 F.3d at 314–15; OVEC,
556 F.3d at 210–11. The Supreme Court
explained this principle: ‘‘[w]hile [a
prior] judgment precludes recovery on
claims arising prior to its entry, it
cannot be given the effect of
extinguishing claims which did not
even then exist and which could not
possibly have been sued upon in the
previous case.’’ Lawlor v. Nat’l Screen
Serv. Corp., 349 U.S. 322, 328 (1955).
Contrary to the commenter’s
contention, it is well-recognized that a
statutory amendment subsequent to a
first action can create a new cause of
action that is not barred by res judicata,
even where the new action is based on
the same facts as the prior one.
Richards, 721 F.3d at 315 (‘‘While
typically it is a new factual
development that gives rise to a fresh
cause of action, changes in law can also
have that effect.’’) (internal citations
omitted); Alvear-Velez v. Mukasey, 540
F.3d 672 (7th Cir. 2008); Moore et al. at
¶ 131.22[3] (‘‘when a new statute
provides an independent basis for relief
which did not exist at the time of the
prior action, a second action on the new
statute may be justified’’). In AlvearVelez, the Seventh Circuit clearly
differentiated between ‘‘changes in case
law [which] almost never provide a
justification for instituting a new
action’’ and ‘‘statutory changes that
occur after the previous litigation has
concluded [which] may justify a new
action.’’ 540 F.3d at 678. As to the
former, a change in precedent provides
no relief from res judicata because it
merely reflects the error in the prior
decision, which the aggrieved party
accepted by not appealing. Id.; Pittston
Coal Group v. Sebben, 488 U.S. 105,
122–23 (1988); Moore et al. at ¶
131.22[3]. By contrast, no such appellate
remedy is available where a statutory
barrier precludes relief. Alvear-Velez,
540 F.3d at 678 n.4.
Moreover, the second action is
permissible where there is a statutory
amendment because ‘‘the rule against
claim splitting, which is one component
of res judicata, is inapplicable when a
statutory change creates a course of
action unavailable in the previous
E:\FR\FM\25SER2.SGM
25SER2
TKELLEY on DSK3SPTVN1PROD with RULES2
59110
Federal Register / Vol. 78, No. 186 / Wednesday, September 25, 2013 / Rules and Regulations
action.’’ Alvear-Velez, 540 F.3d at 678.
See also Maldonado v. U.S. Attorney
Gen., 664 F.3d 1369, 1377 (11th Cir.
2011) (court rejected a res judicata
defense to the removal of an alien on a
new statutory ground in a second
proceeding—although for the same
offense as in a prior proceeding—
explaining that ‘‘the doctrine does not
say that a new claim is barred when it
is based on a new theory not otherwise
available at the time of the prior
proceeding,’’ and thus permitted
removal based on the new statutory
ground); Ljutica v. Holder, 588 F.3d 119,
127 (2d Cir. 2009) (rejecting res judicata
defense to a second removal
proceeding—based on the same crime as
the first proceeding—because Congress
created a new ground for removal
subsequent to the first action); Dalombo
Fontes v. Gonzales, 498 F.3d 1, 2–3 (1st
Cir. 2007) (noting in dicta that res
judicata does not apply when Congress
amends the statutory grounds for
removal, ‘‘[b]ecause a different and
broader definition [of removal offenses]
now controlled and that definition
applied retroactively, the two
proceedings did not involve the same
claim or cause of action’’); Marvel
Characters, Inc., v. Simon, 310 F.3d 280,
287 (2d Cir. 2002) (rejecting res judicata
defense because amendments to
Copyright Act provided plaintiff ‘‘an
entirely new and wholly separate right
than the renewal right,’’ which could
not have been adjudicated in the first
action).
Although one commenter states that
‘‘authorities supporting the notion that
a change in law does not create a new
cause of action are legion,’’ the two
cases it cites are not persuasive
authority on the issue of a statutory
change. The two somewhat dated
decisions it cites, Hurn v. Oursler, 289
U.S. 238 (1933), and Friederichsen v.
Renard, 247 U.S. 207 (1918), do not
involve the doctrine of res judicta and
do not address whether a change in
statutory law would create a new cause
of action.
Even when viewed on a factual level,
a survivor’s subsequent claim that meets
the ACA’s filing and pendency
requirements is a different cause of
action. The determination of whether
two proceedings involve the same cause
of action requires close analysis of the
underlying facts in each proceeding.
See, e.g., Duhaney v. Attorney Gen., 621
F.3d 340, 348 (3d Cir. 2010) (‘‘the focus
of the inquiry is whether the acts
complained of were the same, whether
the material facts alleged in each suit
were the same, and whether the
witnesses and documentation required
to prove such allegations were the
VerDate Mar<15>2010
18:04 Sep 24, 2013
Jkt 229001
same’’) (internal quotation marks
omitted). Res judicata, however, does
not apply when ‘‘[a]though there are
common elements of fact between the
two . . . proceedings, the critical acts
and the necessary documentation were
different for the two proceedings.’’ Id. at
349; see also Eckman, ___ F.3d at ___,
2013 WL 4017160, *6 (‘‘The mere
existence of common elements of fact
between two claims does not establish
the same cause of action if the critical
acts and the necessary documentation
were different for the two claims.’’);
Meekins v. United Transp. Union, 946
F.2d 1054, 1058 (4th Cir. 1991) (res
judicata inapplicable where a later suit
‘‘arises from events separate from those
at issue in the first suit’’). Moreover, it
does not matter that the same ultimate
remedy is available in both the first and
second actions, as the cause of action
springs out of the underlying facts, not
the remedy. See Duhaney, 621 F.3d at
349.
Applying these principles in the
context of survivors entitled under
amended Section 422(l) shows that a
subsequent claim is based on a different
factual predicate than an original claim.
In an original claim not subject to the
ACA amendments, a survivor could
recover only by proving that the miner’s
death was due to pneumoconiosis. See
20 CFR 718.205. Resolution of this issue
is based on an intensive review of
medical evidence. The adjudicator is
required to determine what condition or
conditions resulted in the miner’s death,
as well as the etiology of those
conditions. In contrast, the cause of the
miner’s death is not at issue in a
survivor’s subsequent claim awarded
pursuant to amended Section 422(l),
and medical evidence is wholly
irrelevant. Rather, the survivor’s
entitlement is based solely on an
administrative fact—whether the miner
had been awarded benefits in his
lifetime claim. See 30 U.S.C. 932(l).
Thus, ‘‘subsequent claims arise from
operative facts that are separate and
distinct from those underlying [the
survivors’] initial claims, and therefore
constitute new causes of action.’’
Richards, 721 F.3d at 315. Accord
Eckman, ___ F.3d at ___, 2013 WL
4017160, *6 (‘‘material facts alleged’’ in
prior and subsequent survivor’s claims
were different; ‘‘the subsequent claim
thus involves a different cause of
action’’ not barred by res judicata).
Precluding subsequent claims of
survivors in these circumstances would
not further the purposes of the res
judicata doctrine in any event. ‘‘[R]es
judicata and collateral estoppel relieve
parties of the cost and vexation of
multiple lawsuits, conserve judicial
PO 00000
Frm 00010
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
resources, and, by preventing
inconsistent decisions, encourage
reliance on adjudication.’’ Allen v.
McCurry, 449 U.S. 90, 94 (1980); see
generally 18 Wright, Miller & Cooper,
Federal Practice and Procedure § 4403
(2d ed. 2002). Where subsequent claims
are based on automatic entitlement,
there will be little need for factual
development, and most such claims can
be decided in summary fashion without
protracted litigation or the expenditure
of significant judicial resources. Res
judicata should be used as a shield
against vexatious (harassing) lawsuits or
to conserve resources, not as a sword to
defeat plainly meritorious claims.
Furthermore, the danger of
inconsistent decisions between original
and subsequent claims is absent because
the subsequent claim represents a
different cause of action. In fact, the
danger of inconsistency lies in the other
direction. If res judicata bars survivors’
subsequent claims, there would be
different results for similarly situated
survivors who satisfy the ACA
requirements based solely on the fact
that one previously failed to prove a fact
(death due to pneumoconiosis) that is
now wholly irrelevant. See C.I.R. v.
Sunnen, 333 U.S. 591, 599 (1948)
(where revenue laws changed following
original litigation, expressing concern
that collateral estoppel will result in
unequal treatment of taxpayers in same
class). In short, there is no compelling
reason why the doctrine of res judicata
should be applied in situations covered
by the rule.
The commenters’ assertion that the
rule circumvents the ACA’s 2005 bar
date is also without foundation. The
rule applies only to survivors’ claims
filed after January 1, 2005 and pending
on or after the ACA’s enactment date. It
is thus fully consistent with the ACA’s
plain language, which makes automatic
entitlement applicable to all qualifying
survivors’ claims, both original and
subsequent. It states, without
qualification, that the amendments to
the BLBA ‘‘apply with respect to claims
filed . . . after January 1, 2005, that are
pending on or after [March 23, 2010].’’
Public Law 111–148, § 1556(c) (2010)
(emphasis added). This provision makes
no distinction between miners’ and
survivors’ claims, or between original
and subsequent claims. Rather, as the
Fourth Circuit has held, ‘‘the plain
language of [Section 1556(c)] requires
that amended § 932(l) apply to all
claims [that satisfy Section 1556’s time
limitations].’’ Stacy, 671 F.3d at 388
(emphasis in original). See also Groves,
705 F.3d at 555–56. Thus, ‘‘the statutory
text supports [the] position that
amended Section 932(l) applies to all
E:\FR\FM\25SER2.SGM
25SER2
TKELLEY on DSK3SPTVN1PROD with RULES2
Federal Register / Vol. 78, No. 186 / Wednesday, September 25, 2013 / Rules and Regulations
claims that comply with Section
1556(c)’s time limitations, including
subsequent claims.’’ Richards, 721 F.3d
at 314. Accord Eckman, ___ F.3d at ___,
2013 WL 4017160, *5 (Section 1556(c)’s
plain language ‘‘encompasses’’
subsequent survivor claims).
Along the same lines, one commenter
points to Senator Byrd’s post-enactment
statement that the ACA amendments
will apply to ‘‘all claims that will be
filed henceforth, including many claims
filed by miners whose prior claims were
denied, or by widows who never filed
for benefits following the death of a
husband’’ as evidence that amended
Section 422(l) is not intended to apply
to subsequent claims filed by survivors.
See 156 Cong. Rec. S2083 (daily ed.
March 25, 2010). The commenter has
misinterpreted the passage. Even if
considered persuasive authority, see
Starks, 719 F.3d at 1283 n.9 (stating that
Senator Byrd’s post-enactment
statement is not ‘‘legitimate legislative
history’’), the Senator’s statement is
clearly intended simply to provide
illustrative examples of groups who
could potentially benefit from the ACA.
See Richards, 721 F.3d at 316 (Senator
Byrd’s ‘‘description of the scope of the
statute as ‘including’ certain types of
claims connotes that his selected
examples were intended to be
illustrative of the amendment’s reach,
not exhaustive.’’). Senator Byrd was not
limiting the universe of claims affected
by the ACA only to miners’ subsequent
claims or survivors’ first filings. Indeed,
such a reading would lead to an absurd
result since it would exclude miners
who are first-time filers from accessing
the revived 15-year presumption
provided under Section 1556(a).
Eckman, ___ F.3d at ___, 2013 WL
4017160, *4 (concluding that Senator
Byrd’s list is not necessarily
‘‘exhaustive’’ and pointing out that the
list ‘‘does not include the largest class
of potential claims: Original claims filed
by miners, either pending or filed
henceforth.’’).
One comment argues that the
application of Section 1556 to survivors’
subsequent claims likely violates the
constitutional separation-of-powers
principle, at least where the survivor’s
prior claim was finally decided by a
United States Court of Appeals. The
commenter relies on Plaut v.
Spendthrift Farm, Inc., 514 U.S. 211
(1995) in support. Striking down a
Security and Exchange Act statutory
amendment that allowed plaintiffs to
reinstate certain suits that had already
been finally dismissed as time-barred,
Plaut held that Article III of the
Constitution established a ‘‘judicial
department,’’ with ‘‘the power, not
VerDate Mar<15>2010
18:04 Sep 24, 2013
Jkt 229001
merely to rule on cases, but to decide
them, subject to review only by superior
courts . . .—with an understanding
. . . that a ‘judgment conclusively
resolves the case’ because ‘[the
judiciary] render[s] dispositive
judgments.’ ’’ 514 U.S. at 218–19
(quoting Easterbrook, Presidential
Review, 40 Case W. Res. L. Rev. 905,
926 (1990)).
Plaut and the separation-of-powers
principle have no relevance with
respect to ACA Section 1556 and
proposed § 725.309. Unlike the statute
at issue in Plaut, Section 1556 and the
rule implementing it do not require the
reopening of final judicial decisions.
Rather, Section 1556 changed the
underlying substantive law, thereby
creating a new cause of action that
applies only to claims pending on or
after its enactment date (March 23,
2010). See, e.g., In re Swanson, 540 F.3d
1368, 1378–79 (Fed. Cir. 2008) (rejecting
separation-of-powers challenge to
reexamination of patent previously
upheld by court, as two examinations
were ‘‘differing proceedings with
different evidentiary standards’’). Far
from allowing a legislative veto of a
prior judicial determination, Section
1556 and the proposed rule give ‘‘full
credit’’ to prior claim denial. Buck
Creek Coal Co. v. Sexton, 706 F.3d 756,
759–60 (6th Cir. 2013) (quoting U.S.
Steel Mining Co., LLC, v. Director,
OWCP, 386 F.3d 977, 990 (11th Cir.
2004)). The rules governing the date
from which benefits are payable—
including those payable on subsequent
survivor claims—evidence this
principle because no benefits are
payable ‘‘for any period prior to the date
upon which the order denying the prior
claim became final.’’ 20 CFR
725.309(d)(5) (2012).
(c) No other comments on this section
were received and the Department has
promulgated the rule as proposed.
IV. Information Collection
Requirements (Subject to the
Paperwork Reduction Act) Imposed
Under the Proposed Rule
This rulemaking imposes no new
collections of information.
V. Executive Orders 12866 and 13563
(Regulatory Planning and Review)
Executive Orders 12866 and 13563
direct agencies to assess all costs and
benefits of available regulatory
alternatives and, if regulation is
necessary, to select regulatory
approaches that maximize net benefits
(including potential economic,
environmental, public health and safety
effects, distributive impacts, and
equity). E.O. 13563 emphasizes the
PO 00000
Frm 00011
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
59111
importance of quantifying both costs
and benefits, of reducing costs, of
harmonizing rules, and of promoting
flexibility. It also instructs agencies to
review ‘‘rules that may be outmoded,
ineffective, insufficient, or excessively
burdensome, and to modify, streamline,
expand, or repeal them.’’ In accordance
with this Executive Order, the
Department has proposed certain
changes to these rules not otherwise
required to implement the ACA’s
statutory amendments.
These final rules are consistent with
the statutory mandate, reflecting the
policy choices made by Congress in
adopting the ACA amendments. Those
choices reflect Congress’ rational
decision ‘‘to spread the costs of the
employees’ disabilities to those who
have profited from the fruits of their
labor—the operators and the coal
consumers.’’ Stacy, 671 F.3d at 383
(quoting Usery, 428 U.S. at 18)). In
restoring Section 411(c)(4), ‘‘Congress
decided to ease the path to recovery for
claimants who could prove at least 15
years of coal mine employment and a
totally disabling pulmonary
impairment,’’ thus giving miners and
their survivors ‘‘a better shot at
obtaining benefits.’’ Keene v.
Consolidation Coal Co., 645 F.3d 844,
849 (7th Cir. 2011). And in restoring
Section 422(l), Congress made ‘‘a
legislative choice to compensate a
miner’s dependents for the suffering
they endured due to the miner’s
pneumoconiosis or as a means to
provide a miner with peace of mind that
his dependents will continue to receive
benefits after his death.’’ Campbell, 662
F.3d at 258. The rules faithfully
implement these Congressional
directives.
Although additional expenditures
associated with these rules primarily
flow from the statutory amendments
themselves rather than the rules, the
Department has evaluated the financial
impact of the amendments’ application
on coal mine operators, and in
particular those classified as small
businesses, as set forth in the NPRM.
See 77 FR at 19470–74. Coal mine
operators’ outlays for the workers’
compensation insurance necessary to
secure the payment of any benefits
resulting from the amendments will
likely increase, at least in the short run.
Self-insured operators may also be
required to pay out more in
compensation to entitled miners and
survivors.
These operator expenditures are
transfer payments as defined by OMB
Circular A–4 (i.e., payments from one
group to another that do not affect the
total resources available to society). To
E:\FR\FM\25SER2.SGM
25SER2
TKELLEY on DSK3SPTVN1PROD with RULES2
59112
Federal Register / Vol. 78, No. 186 / Wednesday, September 25, 2013 / Rules and Regulations
estimate additional workers’
compensation insurance premiums that
may result from the ACA amendments,
the Department projected new claim
filings, award rates and associated
insurance premiums both with and
without the amendments for the tenyear period 2010 through 2019. Based
on the projected differences, the
Department estimates that annualized
industry insurance premiums will
increase $35 million over this ten-year
period as a result of the ACA
amendments. This figure likely
overstates the premium increase
because it is based on two important
assumptions designed to consider a
maximum-impact scenario: The
estimates assume that all coal mine
operators purchase commercial workers’
compensation insurance rather than
self-insuring, and the insurance rates
used are based on the higher rates
charged by assigned-risk plans rather
than the lower rates generally available
in the voluntary market. The
Department’s estimate is explained
more fully in the Regulatory Flexibility
Act discussion below.
Transfers also occur between
insurance carriers or self-insured coal
mine operators and benefit recipients.
These transfers take the form of benefit
payments. The amount of benefits
payable on any given award depends
upon a variety of factors, including the
benefit recipient’s identity, the length of
the recipient’s life, and whether the
recipient has any eligible dependents
for whom the basic benefit amount may
be augmented. See generally 20 CFR
725.202–725.228; 725.520 (2012).
For example, in FY 2010, the
Department oversaw 28,671 active Part
C BLBA claims with income and
medical benefit disbursements of
approximately $238 million. This
translates into an annual benefit rate of
$8,316 per claim, or an average monthly
benefit of $693. Of the total active
claims in 2010 payable by coal mine
operators and their insurance carriers,
an estimated 156 were new awards
resulting from the ACA amendments,
translating into approximately $1.3
million in additional income and
medical benefit disbursements in the
first year. Accordingly, the Department’s
predicted 425 new awards in
responsible operator claims for 2011
equates to an estimated $3.5 million
increase in benefit disbursements for the
first year.
Payments from the Black Lung
Disability Trust Fund will also increase
due to a small number of claims
awarded under the ACA amendments
and for which no coal mine operator
may be held liable. The Department
VerDate Mar<15>2010
18:04 Sep 24, 2013
Jkt 229001
estimates that Trust Fund benefit
payments will increase a total of
approximately $48.3 million over the
10-year period from 2010–2019. Despite
this amendment-related increase, Trust
Fund benefit payments as a whole are
decreasing annually. The majority of the
Trust Fund’s liabilities stem from earlier
days of the black lung program, when
the Trust Fund bore liability for a much
higher percentage of awarded claims.
Trust Fund payments cease when these
benefit recipients pass away. As a result,
the Trust Fund’s expenditures continue
to decrease each year.
Claimants who obtain benefits under
the ACA amendments will gain a variety
of advantages that are difficult to
quantify in monetary terms. A disabled
miner ‘‘has suffered in at least two
ways: His health is impaired, and he has
been rendered unable to perform the
kind of work to which he has adapted
himself.’’ Usery, 428 U.S. at 21. Income
disbursements give these miners some
financial relief and provide a modicum
of compensation for the health
impairment the miners suffered in
working to meet the Nation’s energy
needs. Medical treatment benefits
provide health care to miners for the
injury caused by their occupationally
acquired pulmonary diseases and
disabilities so as to maximize both their
longevity and quality of life. Both
income and medical benefits alleviate
drains on public assistance resources.
And miners awarded benefits under the
ACA amendments may also rest assured
that their dependent survivors will not
be left wholly without financial support.
In exchange, coal mine operators
continue to be protected from common
law tort actions that could otherwise be
brought by these miners or their
survivors for pneumoconiosis arising
from the miner’s employment and
related disabilities or death. See 33
U.S.C. 905(a), incorporated by 30 U.S.C.
932(a). And because the monthly benefit
amounts payable are fixed by statute,
compensation costs are predictable and
feasible for insurers to cover at an
affordable rate. This predictability also
allows coal mine operators to pass their
costs for insurance (or benefits if selfinsured) on to consumers.
From a program-administration
viewpoint, the Department will realize
some cost savings from the ACA
amendment restoring Section 422(l)’s
automatic entitlement for survivors.
Before the amendment, the Department
had to develop each survivor’s claim,
including obtaining relevant medical
evidence, evaluating that evidence, and
issuing a detailed decision adjudicating
whether the miner’s death was due to
pneumoconiosis. That administrative
PO 00000
Frm 00012
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
work, and the costs associated with it,
is no longer necessary where the
survivor is entitled under Section 422(l).
Instead, the regulations adopt a
streamlined process for those cases that
eliminates most evidentiary
development and evaluation. This
process has the dual benefit of
delivering compensation to entitled
survivors more quickly and reducing the
costs associated with that delivery.
The Department received only two
comments on its economic analysis of
the impact of the ACA amendments and
the proposed rules. The Department’s
response to those two comments is
included in the Regulatory Flexibility
Act section below.
The Office of Information and
Regulatory Affairs of the Office of
Management and Budget has
determined that the Department’s rule
represents a ‘‘significant regulatory
action’’ under Section 3(f)(4) of
Executive Order 12866 and has
reviewed the rule.
VI. Small Business Regulatory
Enforcement Fairness Act of 1996
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 rule to
both Houses of the Congress and to the
Comptroller General prior to its effective
date. The report will state that the rule
is not a ‘‘major rule’’ as defined under
5 U.S.C. 804(2).
VII. Unfunded Mandates Reform Act of
1995
Title II of the Unfunded Mandates
Reform Act of 1995, 2 U.S.C. 1531 et
seq., directs agencies to assess the
effects of Federal Regulatory Actions on
State, local, and tribal governments, and
the private sector, ‘‘other than to the
extent that such regulations incorporate
requirements specifically set forth in
law.’’ 2 U.S.C. 1531. For purposes of the
Unfunded Mandates Reform Act, this
rule does not include any Federal
mandate that may result in increased
expenditures by State, local, tribal
governments, or increased expenditures
by the private sector of more than
$100,000,000.
VIII. Regulatory Flexibility Act and
Executive Order 13272 (Proper
Consideration of Small Entities in
Agency Rulemaking)
The Regulatory Flexibility Act of
1980, as amended, 5 U.S.C. 601 et seq.,
(RFA), requires an agency to prepare an
initial regulatory flexibility analysis
describing the proposed rule’s impact
E:\FR\FM\25SER2.SGM
25SER2
TKELLEY on DSK3SPTVN1PROD with RULES2
Federal Register / Vol. 78, No. 186 / Wednesday, September 25, 2013 / Rules and Regulations
on small entities. 5 U.S.C. 603. The RFA
also requires agencies to prepare a final
regulatory flexibility analysis when
promulgating the final rule. 5 U.S.C.
604. In either instance, the RFA does
not require a regulatory flexibility
analysis if the agency certifies that the
proposed or final rule will not have ‘‘a
significant economic impact on a
substantial number of small entities’’
and provides the factual basis for the
certification. 5 U.S.C. 605. The
Department has determined that a final
regulatory flexibility analysis is not
required for this rulemaking.
The Department conducted an initial
regulatory flexibility analysis (IRFA)
prior to publishing the proposed rule,
informed the public how to obtain a
copy of the complete analysis,
summarized the analysis in the
preamble to the proposed rule, and
asked for public comment on all aspects
of the costs and benefits of the proposed
rule, particularly with respect to
impacts on small businesses. 77 FR at
19471–74. The Department surveyed the
industry and determined that virtually
all coal mine operators in the United
States fall within the Small Business
Administration’s definition of a small
business. 77 FR at 19471–72. Even
though the statutory amendments
themselves, rather than the rules
implementing them, account for most, if
not all, of the additional costs imposed
on the coal mining industry, the
Department estimated the maximum
financial impact that might result from
the amendments and rules by evaluating
potential increased costs to purchase
workers’ compensation insurance. See
30 U.S.C. 933 (requiring all coal mine
operators to either purchase commercial
workers’ compensation insurance or
qualify as a self-insurer to insure
covered workers). The Department
determined that the ACA amendments
and the implementing rules would
impose an annualized cost on the
industry of $35 million—or only onetenth of one percent of average annual
industry revenues—over the ten years
from 2010 to 2019, with decreasing
costs thereafter. 77 FR at 19473. The
Department noted that these estimates
likely overstated the actual cost impact
and were transitory in nature. 77 FR at
19471–73.
One comment generally states that the
Department’s economic analysis is
opaque, unsupported by data or
analysis, and lacks source citations for
such data and analysis necessary to
allow it to adequately review the
Department’s conclusions. The
comment also believes the Department’s
analysis was overly dismissive given the
prospect of reopening thousands of
VerDate Mar<15>2010
18:04 Sep 24, 2013
Jkt 229001
previously denied survivors’ claims and
allowing re-filing of an unknown
number of denied miners’ claims.
Another comment questions how the
Department calculated the number of
survivors (and the resulting benefits
payable) who would be automatically
entitled to benefits under amended
Section 422(l). This comment was made
in the context of the Department’s
construction of subsequent survivor
claims.
The Department believes its economic
analysis was complete. The Department
prepared a fully documented and
explained IRFA that cited both internal
and external data sources, and made the
IRFA available to the public through the
internet and by individual request. 77
FR at 19471. One comment grossly
overstates the potential impact of
subsequent survivors’ claims liability on
the costs associated with the
amendments and the rule. In the NPRM,
the Department estimated that out of a
pool of 445 potential survivors in this
category, only 317 might file subsequent
claims to assert entitlement under
amended Section 422(l). 77 FR at
19473–74. Actual experience has shown
that number to be far lower. To date,
only 143 survivors have filed
subsequent claims seeking benefits
under amended Section 422(l).
Moreover, as the Department noted in
the NPRM, the financial impact of
revised § 725.309 on coal mine
operators is mitigated in two ways. 77
at FR 19474. First, the survivors in
question would not be entitled to
benefits for the period prior to the day
on which the prior denial became final.
Second, an operator who ensures its
BLBA liabilities with commercial
insurance will not incur any additional
costs because it has already purchased
the insurance necessary to cover the
survivor’s claim. For these reasons, the
Department does not believe that
allowing re-filing survivors to receive
benefits under amended Section 422(l)
imposes significant hardships on small
coal mine businesses.
Significantly, no commenter or
interested small business brought forth
any information that contradicts the
Department’s conclusions in the IRFA,
despite the Department’s specific
request for comments about adverse
effects on small businesses. For
instance, no one submitted
documentation detailing actual
experience with either increased
workers’ compensation insurance
premium rates or self-insurance
expenses since enactment of the ACA
amendments in 2010. Nor did any
comment allege that such increases have
occurred. The Department therefore has
PO 00000
Frm 00013
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
59113
no reason to conclude that its cost
estimates set forth in the IRFA are
understated or that these businesses will
incur significant adverse financial
impacts.
Thus, although most coal mine
operators are small businesses, the
Department does not believe that an
estimated annualized cost imposed for
complying with the ACA amendments,
as implemented by these regulations,
amounting to at most one-tenth of one
percent of industry revenues is a
significant economic impact. The
Department therefore certifies that this
final rule will not have significant
economic impact on a substantial
number of small entities. Accordingly, it
has not prepared a final regulatory
impact analysis. The Department has
provided the Chief Counsel for
Advocacy of the Small Business
Administration with a copy of this
certification. See 5 U.S.C. 605.
IX. Executive Order 13132 (Federalism)
The Department has reviewed this
final rule in accordance with Executive
Order 13132 regarding federalism, and
has determined that it does not have
‘‘federalism implications.’’ E.O. 13132,
64 FR 43255 (Aug. 4, 1999). The final
rule will not ‘‘have substantial direct
effects on the States, on the relationship
between the national government and
the States, or on the distribution of
power and responsibilities among the
various levels of government.’’ Id.
X. Executive Order 12988 (Civil Justice
Reform)
The final rule meets the applicable
standards in Sections 3(a) and 3(b)(2) of
Executive Order 12988, Civil Justice
Reform, to minimize litigation,
eliminate ambiguity, and reduce
burden.
XI. Congressional Review Act
The final rule is not a ‘‘major rule’’ as
defined in the Congressional Review
Act, 5 U.S.C. 801 et seq. This rule will
not result in an annual effect on the
economy of $100,000,000 or more; a
major increase in costs or prices for
consumers, individual industries,
Federal, State or local government
agencies, or geographic regions; or
significant adverse effects on
competition, employment, investment,
productivity, innovation, or on the
ability of United States-based
enterprises to compete with foreignbased enterprises in domestic and
export markets.
E:\FR\FM\25SER2.SGM
25SER2
59114
Federal Register / Vol. 78, No. 186 / Wednesday, September 25, 2013 / Rules and Regulations
List of Subjects in 20 CFR Parts 718 and
725
Total Disability due to
pneumoconiosis; coal miners’
entitlement to benefits; survivors’
entitlement to benefits.
For the reasons set forth in the
preamble, the Department of Labor
amends 20 CFR parts 718 and 725 as
follows:
§ 718.3
PART 718—STANDARDS FOR
DETERMINING COAL MINERS’ TOTAL
DISABILITY OR DEATH DUE TO
PNEUMOCONIOSIS
1. The authority citation for part 718
is revised to read as follows:
■
Authority: 5 U.S.C. 301; Reorganization
Plan No. 6 of 1950, 15 FR 3174; 30 U.S.C. 901
et seq., 902(f), 934, 936; 33 U.S.C. 901 et seq.;
42 U.S.C. 405; Secretary’s Order 10–2009, 74
FR 58834.
■
2. Revise § 718.1 to read as follows:
§ 718.1
Statutory provisions.
Section 402(f) of the Act authorizes
the Secretary of Labor to establish
criteria for determining total disability
or death due to pneumoconiosis to be
applied in the processing and
adjudication of claims filed under Part
C of the Act. Section 402(f) further
authorizes the Secretary of Labor, in
consultation with the National Institute
for Occupational Safety and Health, to
establish criteria for all appropriate
medical tests administered in
connection with a claim for benefits.
Section 413(b) of the Act authorizes the
Secretary of Labor to establish criteria
for the techniques used to take chest
roentgenograms (x-rays) in connection
with a claim for benefits under the Act.
■ 3. Revise § 718.2 to read as follows:
TKELLEY on DSK3SPTVN1PROD with RULES2
§ 718.2
Applicability of this part.
(a) With the exception of the second
sentence of § 718.204(a), this part is
applicable to the adjudication of all
claims filed on or after June 30, 1982
under Part C of the Act. It provides
standards for establishing entitlement to
benefits under the Act and describes the
criteria for the development of medical
evidence used in establishing such
entitlement. The second sentence of
§ 718.204(a) is applicable to the
adjudication of all claims filed after
January 19, 2001.
(b) Publication of certain provisions
or parts of certain provisions that apply
only to claims filed prior to June 30,
1982, or to claims subject to Section 435
of the Act, has been discontinued
because those provisions affect an
increasingly smaller number of claims.
The version of Part 718 set forth in 20
VerDate Mar<15>2010
18:04 Sep 24, 2013
Jkt 229001
CFR, parts 500 to end, edition revised as
of April 1, 2010, applies to the
adjudication of all claims filed prior to
June 30, 1982, as appropriate.
(c) The provisions of this part must,
to the extent appropriate, be construed
together in the adjudication of claims.
■ 4. In § 718.3, revise paragraph (a) to
read as follows:
Scope and intent of this part.
(a) This part sets forth the standards
to be applied in determining whether a
coal miner is or was totally disabled due
to pneumoconiosis or died due to
pneumoconiosis. It also specifies the
procedures and requirements to be
followed in conducting medical
examinations and in administering
various tests relevant to such
determinations.
*
*
*
*
*
■ 5. In § 718.202, revise paragraph (a)(3)
to read as follows:
§ 718.202 Determining the existence of
pneumoconiosis.
(a) * * *
(3) If the presumptions described in
§ 718.304 or § 718.305 are applicable, it
must be presumed that the miner is or
was suffering from pneumoconiosis.
*
*
*
*
*
■ 6. Revise § 718.205 to read as follows:
§ 718.205
Death due to pneumoconiosis.
(a) Benefits are provided to eligible
survivors of a miner whose death was
due to pneumoconiosis. In order to
receive benefits based on a showing of
death due to pneumoconiosis, a
claimant must prove that:
(1) The miner had pneumoconiosis
(see § 718.202);
(2) The miner’s pneumoconiosis arose
out of coal mine employment (see
§ 718.203); and
(3) The miner’s death was due to
pneumoconiosis as provided by this
section.
(b) Death will be considered to be due
to pneumoconiosis if any of the
following criteria is met:
(1) Where competent medical
evidence establishes that
pneumoconiosis was the cause of the
miner’s death, or
(2) Where pneumoconiosis was a
substantially contributing cause or
factor leading to the miner’s death or
where the death was caused by
complications of pneumoconiosis, or
(3) Where the presumption set forth at
§ 718.304 is applicable, or
(4) For survivors’ claims filed after
January 1, 2005, and pending on or after
March 23, 2010, where the presumption
at § 718.305 is invoked and not rebutted.
PO 00000
Frm 00014
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
(5) However, except where the
§ 718.304 presumption is invoked,
survivors are not eligible for benefits
where the miner’s death was caused by
a traumatic injury (including suicide) or
the principal cause of death was a
medical condition not related to
pneumoconiosis, unless the claimant
establishes (by proof or presumption)
that pneumoconiosis was a substantially
contributing cause of death.
(6) Pneumoconiosis is a ‘‘substantially
contributing cause’’ of a miner’s death if
it hastens the miner’s death.
■ 7. Revise § 718.301 to read as follows:
§ 718.301 Establishing length of
employment as a miner.
The presumptions set forth in
§§ 718.302 and 718.305 apply only if a
miner worked in one or more coal mines
for the number of years required to
invoke the presumption. The length of
the miner’s coal mine work history must
be computed as provided by 20 CFR
725.101(a)(32).
§ 718.303
■
■
[Removed and Reserved]
8. Remove and reserve § 718.303.
9. Revise § 718.305 to read as follows:
§ 718.305 Presumption of
pneumoconiosis.
(a) Applicability. This section applies
to all claims filed after January 1, 2005,
and pending on or after March 23, 2010.
(b) Invocation. (1) The claimant may
invoke the presumption by establishing
that—
(i) The miner engaged in coal-mine
employment for fifteen years, either in
one or more underground coal mines, or
in coal mines other than underground
mines in conditions substantially
similar to those in underground mines,
or in any combination thereof; and
(ii) The miner or survivor cannot
establish entitlement under § 718.304 by
means of chest x-ray evidence; and
(iii) The miner has, or had at the time
of his death, a totally disabling
respiratory or pulmonary impairment
established pursuant to § 718.204,
except that § 718.204(d) does not apply.
(2) The conditions in a mine other
than an underground mine will be
considered ‘‘substantially similar’’ to
those in an underground mine if the
claimant demonstrates that the miner
was regularly exposed to coal-mine dust
while working there.
(3) In a claim involving a living
miner, a miner’s affidavit or testimony,
or a spouse’s affidavit or testimony, may
not be used by itself to establish the
existence of a totally disabling
respiratory or pulmonary impairment.
(4) In the case of a deceased miner,
affidavits (or equivalent sworn
E:\FR\FM\25SER2.SGM
25SER2
TKELLEY on DSK3SPTVN1PROD with RULES2
Federal Register / Vol. 78, No. 186 / Wednesday, September 25, 2013 / Rules and Regulations
testimony) from persons knowledgeable
of the miner’s physical condition must
be considered sufficient to establish
total disability due to a respiratory or
pulmonary impairment if no medical or
other relevant evidence exists which
addresses the miner’s pulmonary or
respiratory condition; however, such a
determination must not be based solely
upon the affidavits or testimony of any
person who would be eligible for
benefits (including augmented benefits)
if the claim were approved.
(c) Facts presumed. Once invoked,
there will be rebuttable presumption—
(1) In a miner’s claim, that the miner
is totally disabled due to
pneumoconiosis, or was totally disabled
due to pneumoconiosis at the time of
death; or
(2) In a survivor’s claim, that the
miner’s death was due to
pneumoconiosis.
(d) Rebuttal—(1) Miner’s claim. In a
claim filed by a miner, the party
opposing entitlement may rebut the
presumption by—
(i) Establishing both that the miner
does not, or did not, have:
(A) Legal pneumoconiosis as defined
in § 718.201(a)(2); and
(B) Clinical pneumoconiosis as
defined in § 718.201(a)(1), arising out of
coal mine employment (see § 718.203);
or
(ii) Establishing that no part of the
miner’s respiratory or pulmonary total
disability was caused by
pneumoconiosis as defined in § 718.201.
(2) Survivor’s claim. In a claim filed
by a survivor, the party opposing
entitlement may rebut the presumption
by—
(i) Establishing both that the miner
did not have:
(A) Legal pneumoconiosis as defined
in § 718.201(a)(2); and
(B) Clinical pneumoconiosis as
defined in § 718.201(a)(1), arising out of
coal mine employment (see § 718.203);
or
(ii) Establishing that no part of the
miner’s death was caused by
pneumoconiosis as defined in § 718.201.
(3) The presumption must not be
considered rebutted on the basis of
evidence demonstrating the existence of
a totally disabling obstructive
respiratory or pulmonary disease of
unknown origin.
§ 718.306
[Removed and Reserved]
10. Remove and reserve § 718.306.
■ 11. Revise the introductory text of
Appendix C to Part 718 to read as
follows:
■
VerDate Mar<15>2010
18:04 Sep 24, 2013
Jkt 229001
Appendix C to Part 718—Blood-Gas
Tables
The following tables set forth the values to
be applied in determining whether total
disability may be established in accordance
with § 718.204(b)(2)(ii). The values contained
in the tables are indicative of impairment
only. They do not establish a degree of
disability except as provided in
§ 718.204(b)(2)(ii) of this subchapter, nor do
they establish standards for determining
normal alveolar gas exchange values for any
particular individual. Tests must not be
performed during or soon after an acute
respiratory or cardiac illness. A miner who
meets the following medical specifications
must be found to be totally disabled, in the
absence of rebutting evidence, if the values
specified in one of the following tables are
met:
*
*
*
*
*
PART 725—CLAIMS FOR BENEFITS
UNDER PART C OF TITLE IV OF THE
FEDERAL MINE SAFETY AND HEALTH
ACT, AS AMENDED
12. The authority citation for part 725
continues to read as follows:
■
Authority: 5 U.S.C. 301; Reorganization
Plan No. 6 of 1950, 15 FR 3174; 30 U.S.C. 901
et seq., 902(f), 921, 932, 936; 33 U.S.C. 901
et seq.; 42 U.S.C. 405; Secretary’s Order 10–
2009, 74 FR 58834.
■
13. Revise § 725.1 to read as follows:
§ 725.1
Statutory provisions.
(a) General. Subchapter IV of the
Federal Coal Mine Health and Safety
Act of 1969, as amended by the Black
Lung Benefits Act of 1972, the Federal
Mine Safety and Health Amendments
Act of 1977, the Black Lung Benefits
Reform Act of 1977, the Black Lung
Benefits Revenue Act of 1977, the Black
Lung Benefits Amendments of 1981, the
Black Lung Benefits Revenue Act of
1981, the Black Lung Consolidation of
Responsibility Act of 2002, and the
Patient Protection and Affordable Care
Act of 2010 (together comprising the
Black Lung Benefits Act (see
§ 725.101(a)(1)) provides for the
payment of benefits to certain disabled
coal miners and their survivors. See
§ 725.201.
(b) Part B. Part B of subchapter IV of
the Act provided that claims filed before
July 1, 1973 were to be filed with, and
adjudicated and administered by, the
Social Security Administration (SSA). If
awarded, these claims were paid by SSA
out of appropriated funds. The Black
Lung Consolidation of Administrative
Responsibility Act (see paragraph (h) of
this section) transferred all
responsibility for continued
administration of these claims to the
Department of Labor.
PO 00000
Frm 00015
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
59115
(c) Part C. Claims filed by a miner or
survivor on or after January 1, 1974, are
filed, adjudicated, and paid under the
provisions of part C of subchapter IV of
the Act. Part C requires that a claim
filed on or after January 1, 1974, shall
be filed under an applicable approved
State workers’ compensation law, or if
no such law has been approved by the
Secretary of Labor, the claim may be
filed with the Secretary of Labor under
Section 422 of the Act. Claims filed with
the Secretary of Labor under part C are
processed and adjudicated by the
Secretary. Individual coal mine
operators are primarily liable for
benefits; however, if the miner’s last
coal mine employment terminated
before January 1, 1970, or if no
responsible operator can be identified,
benefits are paid by the Black Lung
Disability Trust Fund. Claims
adjudicated under part C are subject to
certain incorporated provisions of the
Longshore and Harbor Workers’
Compensation Act.
(d) Changes made by the Black Lung
Benefits Reform Act of 1977. The Black
Lung Benefits Reform Act of 1977
contains a number of significant
amendments to the Act’s standards for
determining eligibility for benefits.
Among these are:
(1) A provision which clarifies the
definition of ‘‘pneumoconiosis’’ to
include any ‘‘chronic dust disease of the
lung and its sequelae, including
respiratory and pulmonary
impairments, arising out of coal mine
employment’’;
(2) A provision which defines
‘‘miner’’ to include any person who
works or has worked in or around a coal
mine or coal preparation facility, and in
coal mine construction or coal
transportation under certain
circumstances;
(3) A provision that continued
employment in a coal mine is not
conclusive proof that a miner is not or
was not totally disabled;
(4) A provision which authorizes the
Secretary of Labor to establish standards
and develop criteria for determining
total disability or death due to
pneumoconiosis with respect to a part C
claim;
(5) Provisions relating to the treatment
to be accorded a survivor’s affidavit,
certain X-ray interpretations, and
certain autopsy reports in the
development of a claim; and
(6) Other clarifying, procedural, and
technical amendments.
(e) Changes made by the Black Lung
Benefits Revenue Act of 1977. The Black
Lung Benefits Revenue Act of 1977
established the Black Lung Disability
Trust Fund which is financed by a
E:\FR\FM\25SER2.SGM
25SER2
TKELLEY on DSK3SPTVN1PROD with RULES2
59116
Federal Register / Vol. 78, No. 186 / Wednesday, September 25, 2013 / Rules and Regulations
specified tax imposed upon each ton of
coal (except lignite) produced and sold
or used in the United States after March
31, 1978. The Secretary of the Treasury
is the managing trustee of the fund and
benefits are paid from the fund upon the
direction of the Secretary of Labor. The
fund was made liable for the payment
of all claims approved under part C of
the Act for all periods of eligibility
occurring on or after January 1, 1974,
with respect to claims where the miner’s
last coal mine employment terminated
before January 1, 1970, or where
individual liability can not be assessed
against a coal mine operator due to
bankruptcy, insolvency, or the like. The
fund was also authorized to pay certain
claims which a responsible operator has
refused to pay within a reasonable time,
and to seek reimbursement from such
operator. The purpose of the fund and
the Black Lung Benefits Revenue Act of
1977 was to insure that coal mine
operators, or the coal industry, will fully
bear the cost of black lung disease for
the present time and in the future. The
Black Lung Benefits Revenue Act of
1977 also contained other provisions
relating to the fund and authorized a
coal mine operator to establish its own
trust fund for the payment of certain
claims.
(f) Changes made by the Black Lung
Benefits Amendments of 1981. The
Black Lung Benefits Amendments of
1981 made a number of significant
changes in the Act’s standards for
determining eligibility for benefits and
concerning the payment of such
benefits, and applied the changes to
claims filed on or after January 1, 1982.
Among these are:
(1) The Secretary of Labor may re-read
any X-ray submitted in support of a
claim and may rely upon a second
opinion concerning such an X-ray as a
means of auditing the validity of the
claim;
(2) The rebuttable presumption that
the total disability of a miner with
fifteen or more years employment in the
coal mines, who has demonstrated a
totally disabling respiratory or
pulmonary impairment, is due to
pneumoconiosis is no longer applicable
(but the presumption was reinstated for
claims filed after January 1, 2005, and
pending on or after March 23, 2010, by
the Patient Protection and Affordable
Care Act of 2010 (see paragraph (i) of
this section));
(3) In the case of deceased miners,
where no medical or other relevant
evidence is available, only affidavits
from persons not eligible to receive
benefits as a result of the adjudication
of the claim will be considered
VerDate Mar<15>2010
18:04 Sep 24, 2013
Jkt 229001
sufficient to establish entitlement to
benefits;
(4) Unless the miner was found
entitled to benefits as a result of a claim
filed prior to January 1, 1982, benefits
are payable on survivors’ claims filed on
and after January 1, 1982, only when the
miner’s death was due to
pneumoconiosis (but for survivors’
claims filed after January 1, 2005, and
pending on or after March 23, 2010, an
award of a miner’s claim may form the
basis for a survivor’s entitlement under
the Patient Protection and Affordable
Care Act of 2010 (see paragraph (i) of
this section));
(5) Benefits payable under this part
are subject to an offset on account of
excess earnings by the miner; and
(6) Other technical amendments.
(g) Changes made by the Black Lung
Benefits Revenue Act of 1981. The Black
Lung Benefits Revenue Act of 1981
temporarily doubles the amount of the
tax upon coal until the fund has repaid
all advances received from the United
States Treasury and the interest on all
such advances. With respect to claims
filed on or after January 1, 1982, the
fund’s authorization for the payment of
interim benefits is limited to the
payment of prospective benefits only.
These changes also define the rates of
interest to be paid to and by the fund.
(h) Changes made by the Black Lung
Consolidation of Administrative
Responsibility Act. The Black Lung
Consolidation of Administrative
Responsibility Act of 2002 transferred
administrative responsibility for all
claims previously filed with or
administered by the Social Security
Administration to the Department of
Labor, effective January 31, 2003. As a
result, certain obsolete provisions in the
BLBA (30 U.S.C. 904, 924a, and 945)
were repealed. Various technical
changes were made to other statutory
provisions.
(i) Changes made by the Patient
Protection and Affordable Care Act of
2010. The Patient Protection and
Affordable Care Act of 2010 (the ACA)
changed the entitlement criteria for
miners’ and survivors’ claims filed after
January 1, 2005, and pending on or after
March 23, 2010, by reinstating two
provisions made inapplicable by the
Black Lung Benefits Amendments of
1981.
(1) For miners’ claims meeting these
date requirements, the ACA reinstated
the rebuttable presumption that the
miner is (or was) totally disabled due to
pneumoconiosis if the miner has (or
had) 15 or more years of qualifying coal
mine employment and a totally
disabling respiratory or pulmonary
impairment.
PO 00000
Frm 00016
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
(2) For survivors’ claims meeting
these date requirements, the ACA made
two changes. First, it reinstated the
rebuttable presumption that the miner’s
death was due to pneumoconiosis if the
miner had 15 years or more of
qualifying coal mine employment and
was totally disabled by a respiratory or
pulmonary impairment at the time of
death. Second, it reinstituted derivative
survivors’ entitlement. As a result, an
eligible survivor will be entitled to
benefits if the miner is or was found
entitled to benefits on his or her lifetime
claim based on total disability due to
pneumoconiosis arising out of coalmine employment.
(j) Longshore Act provisions. The
adjudication of claims filed under part
C of the Act (i.e., claims filed on or after
January 1, 1974) is governed by various
procedural and other provisions
contained in the Longshore and Harbor
Workers’ Compensation Act (LHWCA),
as amended from time to time, which
are incorporated within the Act by
section 422. The incorporated LHWCA
provisions are applicable under the Act
except as is otherwise provided by the
Act or as provided by regulations of the
Secretary. Although occupational
disease benefits are also payable under
the LHWCA, the primary focus of the
procedures set forth in that Act is upon
a time-definite-traumatic injury or
death. Because of this and other
significant differences between a black
lung and longshore claim, it is
determined, in accordance with the
authority set forth in Section 422 of the
Act, that certain of the incorporated
procedures prescribed by the LHWCA
must be altered to fit the circumstances
ordinarily confronted in the
adjudication of a black lung claim. The
changes made are based upon the
Department’s experience in processing
black lung claims since July 1, 1973,
and all such changes are specified in
this part. No other departure from the
incorporated provisions of the LHWCA
is intended.
(k) Social Security Act provisions.
Section 402 of Part A of the Act
incorporates certain definitional
provisions from the Social Security Act,
42 U.S.C. 301 et seq. Section 430
provides that the 1972, 1977 and 1981
amendments to part B of the Act shall
also apply to part C ‘‘to the extent
appropriate.’’ Sections 412 and 413
incorporate various provisions of the
Social Security Act into part B of the
Act. To the extent appropriate,
therefore, these provisions also apply to
part C. In certain cases, the Department
has varied the terms of the Social
Security Act provisions to accommodate
the unique needs of the black lung
E:\FR\FM\25SER2.SGM
25SER2
Federal Register / Vol. 78, No. 186 / Wednesday, September 25, 2013 / Rules and Regulations
benefits program. Parts of the Longshore
and Harbor Workers’ Compensation Act
are also incorporated into part C. Where
the incorporated provisions of the two
acts are inconsistent, the Department
has exercised its broad regulatory
powers to choose the extent to which
each incorporation is appropriate.
Finally, Section 422(g), contained in
part C of the Act, incorporates 42 U.S.C.
403(b)–(l).
■ 14. Revise § 725.2 to read as follows:
TKELLEY on DSK3SPTVN1PROD with RULES2
§ 725.2
part.
Purpose and applicability of this
(a) This part sets forth the procedures
to be followed and standards to be
applied in filing, processing,
adjudicating, and paying claims filed
under part C of subchapter IV of the Act.
(b) This part applies to all claims filed
under part C of subchapter IV of the Act
on or after June 30, 1982. Publication of
certain provisions or parts of certain
provisions that apply only to claims
filed prior to June 30, 1982, or to claims
subject to Section 435 of the Act, has
been discontinued because those
provisions affect an increasingly smaller
number of claims. The version of Part
725 set forth in 20 CFR, parts 500 to
end, edition revised as of April 1, 2010,
applies to the adjudication of all claims
filed prior to June 30, 1982, as
appropriate.
(c) The provisions of this part reflect
revisions that became effective on
January 19, 2001. This part applies to all
claims filed after January 19, 2001 and
all benefits payments made on such
claims. With the exception of the
following sections, this part also applies
to the adjudication of claims that were
pending on January 19, 2001 and all
benefits payments made on such claims:
§§ 725.101(a)(31), 725.204, 725.212(b),
725.213(c), 725.214(d), 725.219(d),
725.309, 725.310, 725.351, 725.360,
725.367, 725.406, 725.407, 725.408,
725.409, 725.410, 725.411, 725.412,
725.414, 725.415, 725.416, 725.417,
725.418, 725.421(b), 725.423, 725.454,
725.456, 725.457, 725.458, 725.459,
725.465, 725.491, 725.492, 725.493,
725.494, 725.495, 725.547, 725.701(e).
The version of those sections set forth
in 20 CFR, parts 500 to end, edition
revised as of April 1, 1999, apply to the
adjudications of claims that were
pending on January 19, 2001. For
purposes of construing the provisions of
this section, a claim will be considered
pending on January 19, 2001 if it was
not finally denied more than one year
prior to that date.
■ 15. In § 725.101, revise paragraphs
(a)(1), (a)(2), (a)(4), (a)(32)(i) through
(iv), and (b) to read as follows:
VerDate Mar<15>2010
18:04 Sep 24, 2013
Jkt 229001
§ 725.101
Definition and use of terms.
(a) * * *
(1) The Act means the Black Lung
Benefits Act, 30 U.S.C. 901–44, as
amended.
(2) The Longshore Act or LHWCA
means the Longshore and Harbor
Workers’ Compensation Act, 33 U.S.C.
901–950, as amended from time to time.
*
*
*
*
*
(4) Administrative law judge means a
person qualified under 5 U.S.C. 3105 to
conduct hearings and adjudicate claims
for benefits filed pursuant to section 415
and part C of the Act. Until March 1,
1979, it also means an individual
appointed to conduct such hearings and
adjudicate such claims under Public
Law 94–504.
*
*
*
*
*
(32) * * *
(i) If the evidence establishes that the
miner worked in or around coal mines
at least 125 working days during a
calendar year or partial periods totaling
one year, then the miner has worked
one year in coal mine employment for
all purposes under the Act. If a miner
worked fewer than 125 working days in
a year, he or she has worked a fractional
year based on the ratio of the actual
number of days worked to 125. Proof
that the miner worked more than 125
working days in a calendar year or
partial periods totaling a year, does not
establish more than one year.
(ii) To the extent the evidence
permits, the beginning and ending dates
of all periods of coal mine employment
must be ascertained. The dates and
length of employment may be
established by any credible evidence
including (but not limited to) company
records, pension records, earnings
statements, coworker affidavits, and
sworn testimony. If the evidence
establishes that the miner’s employment
lasted for a calendar year or partial
periods totaling a 365-day period
amounting to one year, it must be
presumed, in the absence of evidence to
the contrary, that the miner spent at
least 125 working days in such
employment.
(iii) If the evidence is insufficient to
establish the beginning and ending
dates of the miner’s coal mine
employment, or the miner’s
employment lasted less than a calendar
year, then the adjudication officer may
use the following formula: divide the
miner’s yearly income from work as a
miner by the coal mine industry’s
average daily earnings for that year, as
reported by the Bureau of Labor
Statistics (BLS). A copy of the BLS table
must be made a part of the record if the
adjudication officer uses this method to
PO 00000
Frm 00017
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
59117
establish the length of the miner’s work
history.
(iv) Periods of coal mine employment
occurring outside the United States
must not be considered in computing
the miner’s work history.
(b) Statutory terms. The definitions
contained in this section must not be
construed in derogation of terms of the
Act.
*
*
*
*
*
■ 16. In § 725.201:
■ a. Revise paragraph (a);
■ b. Remove paragraph (b); and
■ c. Redesignate paragraphs (c) and (d)
as paragraphs (b) and (c).
The revision reads as follows:
§ 725.201 Who is entitled to benefits;
contents of this subpart.
(a) Part C of the Act provides for the
payment of periodic benefits in
accordance with this part to:
(1) A miner who meets the conditions
of entitlement set forth in § 725.202(d);
or
(2) The surviving spouse or surviving
divorced spouse of a deceased miner
who meets the conditions of entitlement
set forth in § 725.212; or,
(3) Where neither exists, the child of
a deceased miner who meets the
conditions of entitlement set forth in
§ 725.218; or
(4) The surviving dependent parents,
where there is no surviving spouse or
child, or the surviving dependent
brothers or sisters, where there is no
surviving spouse, child, or parent, of a
miner, who meet the conditions of
entitlement set forth in § 725.222; or
(5) The child of a miner’s surviving
spouse who was receiving benefits
under Part C of the Act at the time of
such spouse’s death.
*
*
*
*
*
■ 17. In § 725.212, republish paragraph
(a)(3) introductory text and revise
paragraphs (a)(3)(i) and (ii) to read as
follows:
§ 725.212 Conditions of entitlement;
surviving spouse or surviving divorced
spouse.
(a) * * *
(3) The deceased miner either:
(i) Is determined to have died due to
pneumoconiosis; or
(ii) Filed a claim for benefits on or
after January 1, 1982, which results or
resulted in a final award of benefits, and
the surviving spouse or surviving
divorced spouse filed a claim for
benefits after January 1, 2005 which was
pending on or after March 23, 2010.
*
*
*
*
*
■ 18. In § 725.218, republish paragraph
(a) introductory text and revise
E:\FR\FM\25SER2.SGM
25SER2
59118
Federal Register / Vol. 78, No. 186 / Wednesday, September 25, 2013 / Rules and Regulations
paragraphs (a)(1) and (2) to read as
follows:
§ 725.218
Conditions of entitlement; child.
(a) An individual is entitled to
benefits where he or she meets the
required standards of relationship and
dependency under this subpart (see
§ 725.220 and § 725.221) and is the
child of a deceased miner who:
(1) Is determined to have died due to
pneumoconiosis; or
(2) Filed a claim for benefits on or
after January 1, 1982, which results or
resulted in a final award of benefits, and
the surviving child filed a claim for
benefits after January 1, 2005 which was
pending on or after March 23, 2010.
*
*
*
*
*
■ 19. In § 725.222, republish paragraph
(a)(5) introductory text and revise
paragraphs (a)(5)(i) and (ii) to read as
follows:
§ 725.222 Conditions of entitlement;
parent, brother or sister.
(a) * * *
(5) The deceased miner:
(i) Is determined to have died due to
pneumoconiosis; or
(ii) Filed a claim for benefits on or
after January 1, 1982, which results or
resulted in a final award of benefits, and
the surviving parent, brother or sister
filed a claim for benefits after January 1,
2005 which was pending on or after
March 23, 2010.
*
*
*
*
*
■ 20. Revise § 725.309 to read as
follows:
TKELLEY on DSK3SPTVN1PROD with RULES2
§ 725.309 Additional claims; effect of prior
denial of benefits.
(a) If a claimant files a claim under
this part while another claim filed by
the claimant under this part is still
pending, the later claim must be merged
with the earlier claim for all purposes.
For purposes of this section, a claim
must be considered pending if it has not
yet been finally denied.
(b) If a claimant files a claim under
this part within one year after the
effective date of a final order denying a
claim previously filed by the claimant
under this part (see § 725.502(a)(2)), the
later claim must be considered a request
for modification of the prior denial and
will be processed and adjudicated under
§ 725.310.
(c) If a claimant files a claim under
this part more than one year after the
effective date of a final order denying a
claim previously filed by the claimant
under this part (see § 725.502(a)(2)), the
later claim must be considered a
subsequent claim for benefits. A
subsequent claim will be processed and
adjudicated in accordance with the
VerDate Mar<15>2010
18:04 Sep 24, 2013
Jkt 229001
provisions of subparts E and F of this
part. Except as provided in paragraph
(1) below, a subsequent claim must be
denied unless the claimant
demonstrates that one of the applicable
conditions of entitlement (see
§§ 725.202(d) (miner), 725.212 (spouse),
725.218 (child), and 725.222 (parent,
brother, or sister)) has changed since the
date upon which the order denying the
prior claim became final. The
applicability of this paragraph may be
waived by the operator or fund, as
appropriate. The following additional
rules apply to the adjudication of a
subsequent claim:
(1) The requirement to establish a
change in an applicable condition of
entitlement does not apply to a
survivor’s claim if the requirements of
§§ 725.212(a)(3)(ii), 725.218(a)(2), or
725.222(a)(5)(ii) are met, and the
survivor’s prior claim was filed—
(i) On or before January 1, 2005, or
(ii) After January 1, 2005 and was
finally denied prior to March 23, 2010.
(2) Any evidence submitted in
connection with any prior claim must
be made a part of the record in the
subsequent claim, provided that it was
not excluded in the adjudication of the
prior claim.
(3) For purposes of this section, the
applicable conditions of entitlement are
limited to those conditions upon which
the prior denial was based. For example,
if the claim was denied solely on the
basis that the individual was not a
miner, the subsequent claim must be
denied unless the individual worked as
a miner following the prior denial.
Similarly, if the claim was denied
because the miner did not meet one or
more of the eligibility criteria contained
in part 718 of this subchapter, the
subsequent claim must be denied unless
the miner meets at least one of the
criteria that he or she did not meet
previously.
(4) If the applicable condition(s) of
entitlement relate to the miner’s
physical condition, the subsequent
claim may be approved only if new
evidence submitted in connection with
the subsequent claim establishes at least
one applicable condition of entitlement.
A subsequent claim filed by a surviving
spouse, child, parent, brother, or sister
must be denied unless the applicable
conditions of entitlement in such claim
include at least one condition unrelated
to the miner’s physical condition at the
time of his death.
(5) If the claimant demonstrates a
change in one of the applicable
conditions of entitlement, no findings
made in connection with the prior
claim, except those based on a party’s
failure to contest an issue (see
PO 00000
Frm 00018
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
§ 725.463), will be binding on any party
in the adjudication of the subsequent
claim. However, any stipulation made
by any party in connection with the
prior claim will be binding on that party
in the adjudication of the subsequent
claim.
(6) In any case in which a subsequent
claim is awarded, no benefits may be
paid for any period prior to the date
upon which the order denying the prior
claim became final.
(d) In any case involving more than
one claim filed by the same claimant,
under no circumstances are duplicate
benefits payable for concurrent periods
of eligibility. Any duplicate benefits
paid will be subject to collection or
offset under subpart H of this part.
■ 21. Revise § 725.418 to read as
follows:
§ 725.418
Proposed decision and order.
(a) Within 20 days after the
termination of all informal conference
proceedings, or, if no informal
conference is held, at the conclusion of
the period permitted by § 725.410(b) for
the submission of evidence, the district
director will issue a proposed decision
and order. A proposed decision and
order is a document, issued by the
district director after the evidentiary
development of the claim is completed
and all contested issues, if any, are
joined, which purports to resolve a
claim on the basis of the evidence
submitted to or obtained by the district
director. A proposed decision and order
will be considered a final adjudication
of a claim only as provided in § 725.419.
A proposed decision and order may be
issued by the district director at any
time during the adjudication of any
claim if:
(1) Issuance is authorized or required
by this part;
(2) The district director determines
that its issuance will expedite the
adjudication of the claim; or
(3) The district director determines
that the claimant is a survivor who is
entitled to benefits under 30 U.S.C.
932(l). In such cases, the district
director may designate the responsible
operator in the proposed decision and
order regardless of whether the
requirements of paragraph (d) of this
section have been met. Any operator
identified as liable for benefits under
this paragraph may challenge the
finding of liability by timely requesting
revision of the proposed decision and
order and specifically indicating
disagreement with that finding. See 20
CFR 725.419(a) and (b). In such cases,
the district director must allow all
parties 30 days within which to submit
liability evidence. At the end of this
E:\FR\FM\25SER2.SGM
25SER2
Federal Register / Vol. 78, No. 186 / Wednesday, September 25, 2013 / Rules and Regulations
TKELLEY on DSK3SPTVN1PROD with RULES2
period, the district director must issue
a new proposed decision and order.
(b) A proposed decision and order
must contain findings of fact and
conclusions of law. It must be served on
all parties to the claim by certified mail.
(c) The proposed decision and order
must contain a notice of the right of any
interested party to request a formal
hearing before the Office of
Administrative Law Judges. If the
proposed decision and order is a denial
of benefits, and the claimant has
previously filed a request for a hearing,
the proposed decision and order must
notify the claimant that the case will be
referred for a hearing pursuant to the
previous request unless the claimant
VerDate Mar<15>2010
18:04 Sep 24, 2013
Jkt 229001
notifies the district director that he no
longer desires a hearing. If the proposed
decision and order is an award of
benefits, and the designated responsible
operator has previously filed a request
for a hearing, the proposed decision and
order must notify the operator that the
case will be referred for a hearing
pursuant to the previous request unless
the operator notifies the district director
that it no longer desires a hearing.
(d) The proposed decision and order
must reflect the district director’s final
designation of the responsible operator
liable for the payment of benefits.
Except as provided in paragraph (a)(3)
of this section, no operator may be
finally designated as the responsible
PO 00000
Frm 00019
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 9990
59119
operator unless it has received
notification of its potential liability
pursuant to § 725.407, and the
opportunity to submit additional
evidence pursuant to § 725.410. The
district director must dismiss, as parties
to the claim, all other potentially liable
operators that received notification
pursuant to § 725.407 and that were not
previously dismissed pursuant to
§ 725.410(a)(3).
Signed at Washington, DC, this 16th day of
September, 2013.
Gary A. Steinberg,
Acting Director, Office of Workers’
Compensation Programs.
[FR Doc. 2013–22874 Filed 9–24–13; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4510–CK–P
E:\FR\FM\25SER2.SGM
25SER2
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 78, Number 186 (Wednesday, September 25, 2013)]
[Rules and Regulations]
[Pages 59101-59119]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2013-22874]
[[Page 59101]]
Vol. 78
Wednesday,
No. 186
September 25, 2013
Part II
Department of Labor
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
Office of Workers' Compensation Programs
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
20 CFR Parts 718 and 725
Regulations Implementing the Byrd Amendments to the Black Lung Benefits
Act: Determining Coal Miners' and Survivors' Entitlement to Benefits;
Final Rule
Federal Register / Vol. 78 , No. 186 / Wednesday, September 25, 2013
/ Rules and Regulations
[[Page 59102]]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF LABOR
Office of Workers' Compensation Programs
20 CFR Parts 718 and 725
RIN 1240-AA04
Regulations Implementing the Byrd Amendments to the Black Lung
Benefits Act: Determining Coal Miners' and Survivors' Entitlement to
Benefits
AGENCY: Office of Workers' Compensation Programs, Labor.
ACTION: Final rule.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: This final rule revises the Black Lung Benefits Act (BLBA or
Act) regulations to implement amendments made by the Patient Protection
and Affordable Care Act (ACA). The ACA amended the BLBA in two ways.
First, it revived a rebuttable presumption of total disability or death
due to pneumoconiosis for certain claims. Second, it reinstituted
automatic entitlement to benefits for certain eligible survivors of
coal miners whose lifetime benefit claims were awarded because they
were totally disabled due to pneumoconiosis. These regulations clarify
how the statutory presumption may be invoked and rebutted and the
application and scope of the survivor-entitlement provision. The rule
also eliminates several unnecessary or obsolete provisions.
DATES: This rule is effective October 25, 2013.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Steven Breeskin, Director, Division of
Coal Mine Workers' Compensation, Office of Workers' Compensation
Programs, U.S. Department of Labor, 200 Constitution Avenue NW., Suite
C-3520, Washington, DC 20210. Telephone: (202) 343-5904 (this is not a
toll-free number). TTY/TDD callers may dial toll-free 1-800-877-8339
for further information.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
I. Background of This Rulemaking
On March 30, 2012, the Department issued a Notice of Proposed
Rulemaking (NPRM) under the BLBA, 30 U.S.C. 901-944, proposing revised
rules to implement amendments to the BLBA made by the ACA, Public Law
111-148, 1556, 124 Stat. 119, 260 (2010), and inviting public comment.
77 FR 19456-19478 (Mar. 30, 2012). These amendments reinstated two BLBA
entitlement provisions--Section 411(c)(4), 30 U.S.C. 921(c)(4) (the
``15-year presumption'') and Section 422(l), 30 U.S.C. 932(l)
(survivors' automatic entitlement provision)--that had been repealed
with respect to claims filed on or after January 1, 1982. As a result
of these amendments, a miner or survivor who files his or her claim
after January 1, 2005 may now rely on the 15-year presumption in
establishing entitlement to benefits, provided that the claim was
pending on or after March 23, 2010 and the presumption's requirements
for invocation are met. In addition, survivors whose claims meet the
effective-date requirements are entitled to benefits if the miner was
awarded disability benefits on a lifetime claim, assuming that the
survivor meets the BLBA's other conditions of entitlement (such as
relationship and dependency). The Department recounted the history of
these provisions in the NPRM. 77 FR at 19456-58. The Department also
proposed revising or ceasing publication of several related rules that
are obsolete or unnecessary. The NPRM's comment period closed May 29,
2012.
II. Statutory Authority
Section 426(a) of the BLBA, 30 U.S.C. 936(a), authorizes the
Secretary of Labor to prescribe rules and regulations necessary for the
administration and enforcement of the Act.
III. Discussion of Significant Comments
The Department received approximately fifteen comments on the
proposed regulations. Most of these comments focus on only a few
substantive issues. The Department's response to the major comments is
set forth below in the Section-by-Section Explanation, along with an
explanation of any changes made to the proposed rules in response. Some
members of the public applauded the Department for eliminating outdated
or unnecessary provisions and streamlining the regulations where
possible. See generally Executive Order 13563, 76 FR 3821 (January 18,
2011) (instructing agencies to review ``rules that may be outmoded,
ineffective, insufficient, or excessively burdensome, and to modify,
streamline, expand, or repeal them.''). The public submitted no
negative comments on the revisions proposed to Sec. Sec. 718.1, 718.2,
718.3(a), 718.202(a)(3), 718.301, 718.303, 718.306, Part 718 Appendix
C, 725.1, 725.2, 725.101(a)(1) and (2), 725.201, and 725.418.
Accordingly, the Department is promulgating these regulations as
proposed with the technical change explained below.
The Department has made an additional technical change and replaced
the term ``shall'' throughout the regulatory sections revised by this
final rule. Executive Order 13563 states that regulations must be
``accessible, consistent, written in plain language, and easy to
understand.'' 76 FR 3821. See also E.O. 12866, 58 FR 51735 (Sept. 30,
1993) (``Each agency shall draft its regulations to be simple and easy
to understand, with the goal of minimizing the potential for
uncertainty and litigation arising from such uncertainty.''). To that
end, the Department has removed the imprecise term ``shall'' in those
sections it is amending and substituted ``must,'' ``must not,''
``will,'' or other situation-appropriate terms. See generally Federal
Plain Language Guidelines, https://www.plainlanguage.gov/howto/guidelines; Black's Law Dictionary 1499 (9th ed. 2009) (``shall'' can
be read either as permissive or mandatory).
Some of the Department's rules as proposed in the NPRM used the
term ``shall.'' The final version eliminates the term from these
proposed subsections: Sec. Sec. 718.2(c), 718.202(a)(3),
718.305(b)(1)(iii), 718.305(b)(4), 718.305(d)(3), Part 718 Appendix C,
725.1(g), 725.309(c), 725.309(c)(1), 725.418(a), 725.418(a)(3), and
725.418(d). The final rule also makes similar technical changes to the
following subsections: Sec. Sec. 725.2(c), 725.101(a)(4),
725.101(a)(32)(i) through (iv), 725.101(b), 725.309(a), 725.309(c)(2)
through (4), 725.309(d), 725.418(b)-(c). (All references are to
regulations as designated in the final rule.) Although not included in
the NPRM, the Department has revised these additional subsections to
eliminate the term ``shall'' from all subsections of each amended
regulation. No change in meaning is intended.
Section-by-Section Explanation
20 CFR 718.205 Death due to pneumoconiosis
(a) Section 718.205 sets forth the criteria for establishing that a
miner's death was due to pneumoconiosis. The Department proposed
revising Sec. 718.205 to: (1) Clarify that some survivors need not
prove the miner died due to pneumoconiosis to be entitled to benefits
given the ACA's revival of Section 422(l); (2) expand the criteria to
include the Section 411(c)(4) 15-year presumption of death due to
pneumoconiosis for claims governed by the ACA amendments; and (3)
eliminate outmoded provisions. 77 FR at 19459-60. In particular, the
Department proposed revising the ``traumatic injury'' provision in
Sec. 718.205(c)(4) and redesignating it as Sec. 718.205(b)(5).
Section 718.205(c)(4) currently precludes survivor entitlement where
the miner's death was caused by a
[[Page 59103]]
traumatic injury or a medical condition unrelated to pneumoconiosis
``unless the evidence establishes that pneumoconiosis was a
substantially contributing cause of death.'' 20 CFR 718.205(c)(4)
(2011). To implement the 15-year presumption and clarify that certain
survivors could establish this required causal connection by
presumption, the Department proposed revising this last clause to read
``unless the claimant establishes (by proof or presumption) that
pneumoconiosis was a substantially contributing cause of death.'' 77 FR
19460, 19475.
(b) One comment asks the Department to adopt a blanket rule that a
survivor is not entitled to benefits when the miner commits suicide.
This commenter argues that suicide should never be compensable, even
where the survivor establishes that the miner suffered from complicated
pneumoconiosis and invokes the Section 411(c)(3) irrebuttable
presumption of entitlement, 30 U.S.C. 921(c)(3). The comment states
that allowing compensation in these circumstances is at odds with other
Federal workers' compensation statutes (including the Longshore and
Harbor Workers' Compensation Act, 33 U.S.C. 901-950), most state
workers' compensation systems, and public policy. The comment points to
Benefits Review Board and Sixth Circuit case precedent holding that a
survivor cannot recover benefits when a miner commits suicide.
Another comment strongly objects to this commenter, stating that
survivors should not be deprived of benefits in those tragic cases
where the miner commits suicide. This comment notes that the survivors
have likely nursed the disabled miner as his physical condition
deteriorated and contends that coal mine operators should bear
responsibility for the pain and psychological problems pneumoconiosis
causes.
The final rule treats suicide like any other traumatic event that
ends a miner's life. There is no basis in the statute or legislative
history to draw a distinction for suicide. Since 1983, the regulations
have explicitly recognized that pneumoconiosis might be a substantially
contributing cause of a death even when the miner's death was
immediately caused by a traumatic injury. When the Department first
promulgated Sec. 718.205, the regulation contained no provision
addressing traumatic injury or a principal cause of death other than
pneumoconiosis. But the Department noted legislative history
demonstrating Congress' intent ``that traditional workers' compensation
principles such as those, for example, which permit a finding of
eligibility where the totally disabling condition was significantly
related to or aggravated by the occupational exposure be included
within such regulations.'' 45 FR 13678, 13690 (Feb. 29, 1980) citing S.
Rep. No. 209, 95th Cong., 1st Sess. 13-14 (1977). In 1983, the
Department extensively revised Sec. 718.205 to implement the 1981
Amendments to the BLBA, which restricted survivor eligibility by
eliminating automatic entitlement for claims filed after 1981 and
required all survivors to prove that the miner's death was due to
pneumoconiosis. See generally 77 FR at 19456-57 (outlining statutory
history). Based on the accompanying legislative history, the Department
added Sec. 718.205(c)(4) to clarify that a survivor could prove
entitlement by showing that pneumoconiosis substantially contributed to
the miner's death even when the principal cause of death was a
traumatic injury or a medical condition unrelated to pneumoconiosis. 48
FR 24272, 24277-78 (May 31, 1983). Once again the Department noted
Congress' desire to ``make the federal statute consistent with
traditional workers' compensation principles.'' 48 FR at 24278.
The majority of states allow workers' compensation death benefits
when an otherwise compensable injury caused an employee to ``become
dominated by a disturbance of the mind of such severity to override
normal rational judgment'' which resulted in the employee taking his or
her own life. 2 John L. Gelman, Modern Workers Compensation Sec. 115:5
(West 2013); Lex K. Larson, Larson's Workers Compensation Law
Sec. Sec. 38.01-38.05 (Matthew Bender, Rev. Ed. 2012); see also, e.g.,
Graver Tank & Mfg. Co. v. Indus. Comm'n, 399 P.2d 664, 668 (Ariz. 1965)
(``where the original work-connected injuries suffered by the employee
result in his becoming devoid of normal judgment and dominated by a
disturbance of mind directly caused by his injury and its consequences,
such as severe pain and despair, the self-inflicted injury'' may be
compensable); Advance Aluminum Co. v. Leslie, 869 SW.2d 39, 41 (Ky.
1994) (``[A]n employee's suicide is compensable if (1) the employee
sustained an injury which itself arose in the course of and resulted
from covered employment; (2) without that injury the employee would not
have developed a mental disorder of such a degree as to impair the
employee's normal and rational judgment; and (3) without that mental
disorder, the employee would not have committed suicide.''). Contrary
to the commenter's assertion, this standard--often called the ``chain
of causation test''--has also been applied in cases arising under the
Longshore and Harbor Workers' Compensation Act, a federal workers'
compensation statute. E.g., Kealoha v. Director, OWCP, 713 F.3d 521,
524-25 (9th Cir. 2013) (``Given the best-reasoned modern trend of case
law, we hold that a suicide or injuries from a suicide attempt are
compensable under the Longshore Act when there is a direct and unbroken
chain of causation between a compensable work-related injury and the
suicide attempt.''). The rule is also applied in states where suicide
or attempted suicide is still a criminal offense. See, e.g., Kahle v.
Plochman, Inc., 428 A.2d 913, 917 (N.J. 1981) (adopting the chain of
causation rule); Petty v. Associated Transp., Inc., 173 SE.2d 321, 329
(N.C. 1970) (same). Thus, contrary to the adverse comment, ``[i]n
effect, no jurisdictions recognize suicide as an intentional act that
automatically breaks the chain of causation to defeat a claim for death
benefits.'' Campbell v. Young Motor Co., 684 P.2d 1101, 1102 (Mont.
1984).
The commenter primarily relies on the Sixth Circuit's decision in
Johnson v. Peabody Coal Co., 26 F.3d 618 (6th Cir. 1994), to support
the view that a miner's suicide should always bar his survivors'
entitlement. Johnson considered Sec. 718.205(c)(4) in the suicide
context. The court found the Act's legislative history to be silent on
whether psychological injury may establish the causal link between
pneumoconiosis and death. In part because the then-applicable 1981
Amendments ``were designed to limit, not expand benefits,'' 26 F.3d at
620, the court concluded that benefits should not be paid to the
survivors of a miner who commits suicide. But that important reasoning
is no longer valid because the ACA amendments repealed many of the
restrictions on benefits that were instituted by the 1981 Amendments
and considered by the Johnson court. Accordingly, the Department does
not view the Johnson decision as dispositive. Instead, compensating a
miner's survivors where the miner's suicide is causally linked to
pneumoconiosis is consistent with workers' compensation principles and
underlying Congressional intent.
The final rule also clarifies the Department's longstanding view
that suicide does not preclude entitlement once the survivor invokes
the Section 411(c)(3) irrebutable presumption of entitlement by
establishing that the miner suffered from complicated pneumoconiosis.
This result is
[[Page 59104]]
compelled by the presumption's plain language. The provision is simply
written: ``If a miner is suffering or suffered from a chronic dust
disease of the lung [that is described by the statutory criteria for
complicated pneumoconiosis], then there shall be an irrebuttable
presumption that he is totally disabled due to pneumoconiosis or that
his death was due to pneumoconiosis, or that at the time of his death
he was totally disabled by pneumoconiosis[,] as the case may be.'' 30
U.S.C. 921(c)(3). The language of the presumption itself renders the
cause of the miner's death--even a death by suicide--irrelevant to the
entitlement inquiry. ``[T]he presumption operates conclusively to
establish entitlement to benefits.'' Usery v. Turner Elkhorn Mining
Co., 428 U.S. 1, 11 (1976). The Supreme Court explained in upholding
Section 411(c)(3) against constitutional challenge that the
presumption's effect ``is to grant benefits to the survivors of any
miner who during his lifetime had complicated pneumoconiosis arising
out of employment in the mines, regardless of whether the miner's death
was caused by pneumoconiosis.'' Id. at 24 (emphasis added). Although
the Court acknowledged that an unrelated death ``can hardly be termed a
`cost' of the operator's business,'' it still concluded that the
``clear'' intent of the presumption was not to provide benefits
``simply as compensation for damages due to the miner's Death, but as
deferred compensation for injury suffered during the miner's lifetime
as a result of his illness itself.'' Id. at 25. See also Gray v. SLC
Coal Co., 176 F.3d 382, 386-87 (6th Cir. 1999) (agreeing with
Department's view that Sec. 718.205(c)(4) traumatic injury provision
does not preclude survivor of miner who committed suicide from pursuing
benefits under Section 411(c)(3) presumption); USX Corp. v. Director,
OWCP, 19 F.3d 1431 (4th Cir. 1994) (unpublished table decision) (citing
Usery and affirming survivor's benefits award under Section 411(c)(3),
notwithstanding Sec. 718.205(c)(4), where miner's death was caused by
a non-work-related tractor accident).
In sum, the final rule allows the survivors of a miner who
committed suicide to prove death due to pneumoconiosis by demonstrating
either that the suicide was causally linked to pneumoconiosis or by
invoking the Section 411(c)(3) irrebutable presumption of entitlement.
The Department believes these changes will have little practical impact
on claim adjudications given the ACA's revitalization of automatic
survivors' entitlement, which also makes the cause of a miner's death
irrelevant if the miner was entitled to lifetime benefits. If the
miner's claim was not awarded, the Department anticipates that his
survivors will be able to demonstrate a link between disease and
suicide only in rare cases.
(c) No further comments on this section were received and the
Department has promulgated the remainder of the regulation as proposed.
20 CFR 718.305 Presumption of pneumoconiosis
(a) Section 718.305 implements the Section 411(c)(4) 15-year
presumption. This statutory section provides a rebuttable presumption
of total disability or death due to pneumoconiosis if the miner ``was
employed for fifteen years or more in one or more underground coal
mines'' or in a coal mine other than an underground mine in conditions
``substantially similar to conditions in an underground mine'' and
suffers or suffered from ``a totally disabling respiratory or pulmonary
impairment.'' 30 U.S.C. 921(c)(4). Because current Sec. 718.305
describes the presumption's requirements using language largely taken
verbatim from the statute and offers little additional guidance
regarding how the presumption may be invoked or rebutted, the
Department proposed substantial revisions to clarify the presumption's
operation. The proposed rule also eliminated obsolete provisions.
(b) Invocation. Three comments object to proposed Sec.
718.305(b)(2), which states that ``[t]he conditions in a mine other
than an underground mine will be considered `substantially similar' to
those in an underground mine if the miner was exposed to coal-mine dust
while working there.'' 77 FR at 19475. The Department explained in the
preamble that under this standard, a claimant would not need to produce
evidence about underground mining conditions and that it was incumbent
upon the fact finder to compare the claimant's non-underground mining
exposure with those conditions known to exist in underground mines. 77
FR at 19461. The Department cited several circuit court cases,
including Director, OWCP v. Midland Coal Co., 855 F.2d 509, 512 (7th
Cir. 1988), and Benefits Review Board cases which had adopted this
approach.
The commenters that object to this section point out that although
the preamble states that the fact finder must compare the miner's non-
underground mine exposure with underground mine conditions, the
regulation itself only requires that a claimant demonstrate some coal-
mine-dust exposure in non-underground mining. They contend this is
contrary to the statute's plain language because it does not require
the claimant to prove any type of similarity between exposures in
underground and non-underground work. The comments also state that the
Department should adopt an objective standard for proving substantial
similarity (although no comment suggests a particular standard) and
that the test should take into consideration certain studies showing
that non-underground miners rarely develop disabling pneumoconiosis.
One comment notes that administrative law judges do not necessarily
have the requisite expertise to compare an individual non-underground
miner's exposure to usual conditions in underground mining. Another
comment suggests that OWCP confer with the Mine Safety and Health
Administration and the National Institutes of Health to develop a
standard.
Two comments support proposed Sec. 718.305(b)(2) and the adoption
of the Midland Coal standard. One states that it is a common sense rule
that administrative law judges have had no problem applying. The
commenters argue that any rule that requires a claimant to quantify a
miner's dust exposure would be impractical. The commenters also note
that the potential exposure in non-underground mining is actually
greater than in underground mining because no ventilation systems
mitigate the exposure. These comments also disagree with the other
commenters' representations that certain medical studies demonstrate
non-underground miners are not at increased risk for pneumoconiosis,
especially once silicosis is taken into account.
The Department has revised Sec. 718.305(b)(2) to clarify the
standard. The Department agrees with those comments that noted the
proposed rule could be interpreted as allowing a ``substantial
similarity'' finding when the miner was exposed to any coal-mine dust
in non-underground coal mining. This would not satisfy the statutory
standard and was not the Department's intent.
The final rule's revised language clarifies the Department's intent
about how the substantial similarity analysis should be conducted. The
final rule acknowledges, as the Seventh Circuit recognized in Midland
Coal, a fundamental premise underlying the BLBA, as demonstrated by the
legislative history, i.e., that ``underground mines are dusty.''
Midland Coal, 855 F.2d at 512. Given
[[Page 59105]]
that legislative fact, it is unnecessary for a claimant to prove
anything about dust conditions existing at an underground mine for
purposes of invoking the 15-year presumption. Instead, the claimant
need only focus on developing evidence addressing the dust conditions
prevailing at the non-underground mine or mines at which the miner
worked. The objective of this evidence is to show that the miner's
duties regularly exposed him to coal mine dust, and thus that the
miner's work conditions approximated those at an underground mine. The
term ``regularly'' has been added to clarify that a demonstration of
sporadic or incidental exposure is not sufficient to meet the
claimant's burden. The fact-finder simply evaluates the evidence
presented, and determines whether it credibly establishes that the
miner's non-underground mine working conditions regularly exposed him
to coal mine dust. If that fact is established to the fact-finder's
satisfaction, the claimant has met his burden of showing substantial
similarity. And if the periods of regular exposure in non-underground
mine employment (combined with any underground mine employment) total
15 years or more, the claimant will be entitled to invoke the
presumption if a total respiratory or pulmonary disability is also
established. This procedure will also alleviate one commenter's concern
that some administrative law judges may not be knowledgeable about
conditions in underground mines.
To the extent the comments urge the Department to adopt technical
comparability criteria, such as requiring a claimant to produce
scientific evidence specifically quantifying the miner's exposure to
coal mine dust during non-underground mining, the Department rejects
the suggestion. Benefit claimants, who must bear the burden of proving
substantial similarity to invoke the presumption, generally do not
control this type of technical information about the mines in which the
miner worked. See generally Usery, 428 U.S. at 29 (noting that
``showing of the degree of dust concentration to which a miner was
exposed [is] a historical fact difficult for the miner to prove.'').
Instead, the coal mine operators control dust-sampling and similar
information about their mines. While this information is publicly
available from the Mine Safety and Health Administration for some
mines, it may not be relevant or available in any particular case. Dust
sampling in non-underground mines is done on a designated-position
basis (e.g., bulldozer operator, driller). See generally 30 CFR 71.201
et seq. Thus, the results may not be relevant to miners doing other
jobs and certainly would not be an adequate basis for the Department to
adopt an exposure rule for all non-underground miners.
Instead, the Department believes the standard should be one that
may be satisfied by lay evidence addressing the individual miner's
experiences. Congress enacted the Section 411(c)(4) presumption to
assist miners and their survivors in establishing entitlement to
benefits, and also permitted certain claimants to prove entitlement by
lay evidence. 30 U.S.C. 923(b). Putting insurmountable hurdles in
claimants' paths does not comport with that intent. Moreover, because a
claimant's dust exposure evidence will be inherently anecdotal, it
would serve no purpose for the Department to develop an objective, and
therefore dissimilar, benchmark of underground mine conditions for
comparison purposes. The legislative fact that underground coal mines
are dusty is fully sufficient for this purpose. Of course, nothing
would preclude a coal mine operator from introducing evidence--
including any technical data within its control--showing that the
particular miner was not regularly exposed to coal mine dust during his
non-underground coal mine employment.
The Department also does not believe that reviewing current medical
and scientific literature on the prevalence of pneumoconiosis in non-
underground miners would be useful in promulgating this particular
rule. By explicitly making the presumption available to at least some
non-underground miners, Section 411(c)(4) finds as a legislative fact
that these miners can develop pneumoconiosis. Moreover, the statute
focuses the substantial similarity question on a comparison of
conditions existing at the different types of mines, not on the medical
question of whether certain exposures do or do not lead to
pneumoconiosis. See Midland Coal, 855 F.2d at 512 (``Congress focused
specifically on dust conditions in enacting the `substantial
similarity' provision.'') The Department is not free to depart from
Congress' express intent on this issue. If the particular miner did
not, in fact, suffer from pneumoconiosis, the coal mine operator will
be able to rebut the presumption.
(c) Rebuttal. The Department proposed Sec. 718.305(d) to set out
the burden of proof on the party opposing entitlement to rebut the
presumption in both miners' and survivors' claims. The proposed
rebuttal standards were modeled on language contained in both the
statutory presumption itself and current Sec. 718.305(d), which were
used in claims filed before January 1, 1982. Applying the statutory
limitations imposed on rebuttal, proposed Sec. 718.305(d) provided
that the party opposing entitlement could rebut the presumption in only
two ways: Showing that the miner did not have pneumoconiosis or that
his disability or death did not arise out of coal-mine-dust exposure.
For this second method, proposed Sec. 718.305(d)(1)(ii) (for miners'
claims) and Sec. 718.305(d)(2)(ii) (for survivors' claims) provided
that the presumption could be rebutted by proof that the miner's
respiratory disability or death ``did not arise in whole or in part out
of dust exposure in the miner's coal mine employment.'' 77 FR at 19475.
The Department explained in the preamble that this language had been
interpreted by the courts, in both Section 411(c)(4) and the similar 20
CFR 727.203(b)(3) context, as requiring the party opposing entitlement
to ``rule out'' coal mine employment as a cause of the miner's
disabling respiratory or pulmonary impairment. 77 FR at 19463.
One commenter argues that the limitations on rebuttal set forth in
Section 411(c)(4) do not apply to coal mine operators under the Usery
decision. Several comments acknowledge that the ``in whole or in part''
standard in the proposed rule is the equivalent of the ``rule-out''
standard mentioned in the preamble, but express disagreement with the
rule-out standard. They note that claimants who attempt to establish
entitlement without benefit of the presumption must show that
pneumoconiosis was a ``substantially contributing cause'' of disability
or death, and cannot recover if pneumoconiosis was only an
insignificant or ``de minimis'' cause of disability or death under
current Sec. 718.204(c)(1) and Sec. 718.205(c)(2). They also contend
that a ``rule-out'' requirement improperly imposes a different standard
on operators because it requires them to establish that pneumoconiosis
was not even an insignificant or de minimis cause of disability or
death. One comment argues that by including the ``rule-out'' standard
in the preamble (rather than the regulatory text), the Department has
violated its duty to publish its rules for public comment. This comment
contends that if the ``rule-out'' standard is intended to establish a
party's burden of proof on rebuttal, it violates the Administrative
Procedure Act (APA) as construed by the Supreme Court in Director, OWCP
v. Greenwich Collieries, 512 U.S. 267 (1994). This comment also states
that if the ``rule-out'' standard is intended to define the legal
criteria for
[[Page 59106]]
rebuttal, it has no authoritative source and is inconsistent with the
``reasonable medical certainty'' standard it asserts applies in BLBA
claim adjudications.
Two comments generally support the proposed rule. One states that
the presumption should be strong and remarks that ensuring operators'
liability for coal-mine related lung disease creates an incentive for
operators to comply with dust-control standards.
The final rule adopts an approach similar to the proposed rule. But
the Department has made several revisions to clarify the rebuttal
provisions and to accommodate some of the concerns expressed in the
comments. We explain those changes below.
Miners' claims. A miner seeking BLBA benefits is required to
establish, with direct evidence or via presumption, four elements of
entitlement: (1) Disease: that the miner suffers from pneumoconiosis in
clinical or legal form, or both; (2) disease causation: that the
pneumoconiosis arose at least in part out of coal mine employment; (3)
disability: that the miner has a pulmonary or respiratory impairment
that prevents the performance of the miner's usual coal mine work; and
(4) disability causation: that the miner's pneumoconiosis contributes
to that disability. 20 CFR 725.202(d)(2); see, e.g., Morrison v. Tenn.
Consol Coal Co., 644 F.3d 473, 478 (6th Cir. 2011); Lane v. Union
Carbide Corp., 105 F.3d 166, 170 (4th Cir. 1997). If a miner proves the
disability element by a preponderance of the evidence, then Section
411(c)(4) presumes the remaining three entitlement elements. But
because the presumption is rebuttable, the party opposing entitlement
must be given an opportunity to show by a preponderance of the evidence
that the three presumed elements (disease, disease causation, and
disability causation) are not in fact present. If the opposing party
establishes that the miner does not have a lung disease related to coal
mine employment (elements one and two) or that the miner's totally
disabling respiratory or pulmonary impairment is unrelated to his
pneumoconiosis (element four), the presumption is rebutted.
The Department has revised Sec. 718.305(d) in this final rule to
more clearly reflect that all three of the presumed elements may be
rebutted. Section 718.305(d)(1)(i) provides that the party opposing
entitlement may rebut the presumption by proving that the miner has
neither legal nor clinical pneumoconiosis, including where the miner's
clinical pneumoconiosis did not arise from covered coal mine employment
(disease and disease causation). See Barber v. Director, OWCP, 43 F.3d
899, 901 (4th Cir. 1995) (party rebutting Section 411(c)(4) presumption
must demonstrate absence of both clinical and legal pneumoconiosis); 77
FR at 19462-63 (same). Section 718.305(d)(1)(ii) provides that rebuttal
may also be accomplished when the party opposing the claim shows that
no part of the miner's respiratory disability was caused by
pneumoconiosis (disability causation). See generally Mingo Logan Coal
Co. v. Owens, ------ F.3d ------, ------, 2013 WL 3929081, *4 (4th Cir.
2013) (outlining three elements available for rebuttal under Section
411(c)(4)).
These revisions also should relieve the concern expressed in the
comments that the limitations Section 411(c)(4) places on rebuttal are
not applicable to coal mine operators. Enacted in 1972, Section
411(c)(4) provides that ``[t]he Secretary may rebut such presumption
only by establishing that (A) such miner does not, or did not, have
pneumoconiosis, or that (B) his respiratory or pulmonary impairment did
not arise out of, or in connection with, employment in a coal mine.''
In 1976, the Supreme Court held that ``the Sec. 411(c)(4) limitation
on rebuttal evidence is inapplicable to operators.'' Usery, 428 U.S. at
35. Nevertheless, when the Department adopted Sec. 718.305 in 1980, it
listed the same two exclusive methods of rebuttal, but did not limit
their application to the Secretary. The explanation for the change is
simple. The 1978 amendments to the BLBA expanded the definition of
``pneumoconiosis'' to include what is now known as ``legal
pneumoconiosis,'' i.e., any ``chronic lung disease or impairment . . .
arising out of coal mine employment.'' 20 CFR 718.201(a)(2). This
amendment rendered proof that a miner's disability resulted from a lung
disease caused by coal dust exposure that was not pneumoconiosis no
longer a valid method of rebuttal because every disabling lung disease
caused by coal dust exposure is legal pneumoconiosis. Thus, the
scenario motivating Usery's discussion of the rebuttal-limiting
sentence no longer exists: The only ways that any liable party--whether
a mine operator or the government--can rebut the 15-year presumption
are the two set forth in the presumption, which encompass the disease,
disease-causation, and disability-causation entitlement elements.
Authorities post-dating this amendment that state the coal mine
operator is limited to the statutory rebuttal methods simply reflect
that fact. See, e.g., Rose v. Clinchfield Coal Co., 614 F.2d 936, 939
(4th Cir. 1980).
The Department does not believe that the comment's discussion of
Supreme Court decisions limiting an agency's power to re-interpret
statutes that have been construed by the Court as unambiguous compels
the Department to limit the proposed rebuttal standards to the
Secretary. See Nat'l Cable & Telecomms. Ass'n v. Brand X Internet
Servs., 545 U.S. 967 (2005), United States v. Home Concrete & Supply,
Inc., -- U.S. --, 132 S. Ct. 1836 (2012). These cases are beside the
point: Neither forbid an agency from adopting a regulation that
conflicts with a prior judicial decision when the new regulation is
compelled by a subsequent amendment to the statute. Moreover, as
already discussed, there simply are no other facts presumed under the
Sec. 411(c)(4) presumption that a coal mine operator could rebut.
Thus, the Department believes that applying the Sec. 718.305(d)
rebuttal standards to all parties opposing entitlement, as proposed,
will prove more helpful to the regulated public by informing it of the
ways it can rebut the presumption.
The Department is also not persuaded by those comments that
advocate applying the ``substantially contributing cause'' standard for
disability causation set forth at Sec. 718.204(c)(1) to the Sec.
718.305(d) rebuttal standard. The comments correctly state that the
proposed rules apply a different disability-causation standard to
claims governed by the general Part 718 criteria than those in which
the miner successfully invokes the Section 411(c)(4) presumption. But
that difference is warranted by the statutory section's underlying
intent and purpose. Based on evidence that miners who worked for at
least fifteen years were more likely to develop pneumoconiosis,
Congress chose to extend the presumption only to those miners who
worked in the mines for at least fifteen years and who were totally
disabled by respiratory or pulmonary impairments. See generally S. Rep.
No. 92-743 at 13 (1972), reprinted in 1972 U.S.C.C.A.N. 2305, 2316-17.
Congress adopted the presumption to ``[r]elax the often insurmountable
burden of proving eligibility'' these miners faced. S. Rep. No. 92-743
at 1. In short, Congress effectively singled out these miners for
special treatment. Adopting a rigorous rebuttal standard in those
limited circumstances in which the opposing party cannot demonstrate
the absence of coal-mine-related pneumoconiosis (and thus can only
rebut by showing that the
[[Page 59107]]
miner's disability is not related to pneumoconiosis) is consistent with
Congress' approach. See generally Consolidation Coal Co. v. Director,
OWCP, 721 F.3d 789, 795 (7th Cir. 2013) (noting ``[i]t is no secret
that the 15-year presumption is difficult to rebut'').
The Department has consistently interpreted Section 411(c)(4) as
requiring the rebutting party to show that the miner's disability did
not arise ``in whole or in part'' from coal mining. See 20 CFR
718.305(d) (2012). And the courts considering the rebuttal provisions
have concurred with the Department's use of the ``in whole or in part''
standard. See, e.g., Blakley v. Amax Coal Co., 54 F.3d 1313, 1320 (7th
Cir. 1995); Bosco v. Twin Pines Coal Co., 892 F.2d 1473, 1481 (10th
Cir. 1989); Rose, 614 F.2d at 939; Colley & Colley Coal Co. v.
Breeding, 59 Fed. Appx. 563, 567 (4th Cir. Mar. 11, 2003) (unpub.). The
``in no part'' standard the Department has adopted in the final rule is
a reasonable interpretation of the statutory language and effectuates
Section 411(c)(4)'s purposes. It is intended to simplify and clarify
the ``in whole or in part standard.''
Contrary to one commenter's suggestion, the Sec. 718.305(d)
rebuttal standards adopted by the final rule do not violate the burden
of proof imposed by the APA. As interpreted by the Supreme Court, the
APA requires the proponent of a rule or order to bear the burden of
persuasion by a preponderance of the evidence to prevail. Greenwich
Collieries, 512 U.S at 277-78. The ``in no part'' standard does not run
afoul of this holding because it is the fact that must be established
and not the ``degree of certainty needed to find a fact or element
under the preponderance standard.'' Metropolitan Stevedore Co. v.
Rambo, 521 U.S. 121, 129 (1997). As the Supreme Court has explained,
``the preponderance standard goes to how convincing the evidence in
favor of a fact must be in comparison with the evidence against it
before that fact may be found, but does not determine what facts must
be proven as a substantive part of a claim or defense.'' Id. (citing
Greenwich Collieries v. Director, OWCP, 990 F.2d 730, 736 (3d Cir.
1993)). The ``in no part'' standard also does not govern the level of
certainty with which a medical opinion must be expressed to be
considered probative evidence; the rule provides only what facts must
be established to rebut the presumption. Thus, the commenter's fears
that the standard requires a higher level of certainty in medical
opinions than is currently required are unfounded. Moreover, contrary
to the commenter's statement, a medical opinion need not be expressed
with ``reasonable medical certainty'' to be probative of a medical fact
under the BLBA. Instead, it is sufficient if the opinion is documented
and constitutes a reasoned medical judgment. See, e.g., Mancia v.
Director, OWCP, 130 F.3d 579, 588 (3d Cir. 1997). Thus, a party
opposing entitlement may rebut the presumption when the preponderance
of the evidence, including medical opinions that are documented and
reasoned exercises of physicians' medical judgment, demonstrates that
pneumoconiosis played no role in the miner's respiratory disability.
Survivors' claims. In the survivor's context, a claimant who
establishes the invocation criteria receives a presumption that the
miner died due to pneumoconiosis. This presumption encompasses the two
entitlement elements in survivors' claims: Disease (that the miner had
clinical and legal pneumoconiosis) and death (that the miner died due
to pneumoconiosis). For the reasons stated above regarding rebuttal in
a miner's claim, the Department has made parallel changes to Sec.
718.305(d)(2) in this final rule to clarify how the presumption may be
rebutted when the party opposing entitlement seeks to disprove these
presumed facts.
(d) No further comments were received and the Department has
promulgated the remainder of the regulation as proposed.
20 CFR 725.212, 725.218, 725.222 Conditions of entitlement
(a) This series of rules prescribes the conditions required for a
miner's survivors to establish entitlement to benefits. Section 725.212
applies to a miner's surviving spouse or a surviving divorced spouse,
Sec. 725.218 applies to a deceased miner's children, and Sec. 725.222
applies to surviving parents and siblings. The Department proposed
revising these regulations to omit certain conditions of entitlement
applicable only to claims filed prior to June 30, 1982, and to add new
conditions of entitlement made applicable to certain claims by the ACA
amendments. Specifically, ACA Section 1556(b) amended Section 422(l) to
revive automatic entitlement for survivors of miners awarded lifetime
disability benefits and whose claims meet the effective date
requirements of ACA Section 1556(c). Proposed Sec. Sec.
725.212(a)(3)(ii), 725.218(a)(2), and 725.222(a)(5)(ii) implement this
amendment by clarifying that qualifying survivors who file a claim for
survivors' benefits after January 1, 2005, that is pending on or after
March 23, 2010, are not required to establish that the miner died due
to pneumoconiosis. 77 FR at 19467; 19477-78.
(b) Two commenters, who submitted identical comments, object
generally to the Department's construction of the statute. They argue
that the ACA restores derivative benefits to survivors only if the
related miner's disability claim was filed after January 1, 2005, and
pending on or after March 23, 2010. One commenter generally supports
the Department's proposal to implement the ACA amendment restoring
derivative survivors' benefits.
The Department continues to believe, as explained in the proposal
(77 FR at 19467-68), that the ACA amendments apply to all claims,
including survivors' claims, meeting the effective date criteria. The
plain language of Section 1556(c) states that the amendments apply to
``claims filed . . . after January 1, 2005, that are pending on or
after [March 23, 2010].'' Public Law 111-148, 1556(c), 124 Stat. 119,
260(c) (2010). Nothing in the text of ACA Section 1556(c) or Section
1556(b) suggests that the amendment only applies to disability claims
by miners and not to survivors' claims. To the contrary, the most
natural reading of the unqualified word ``claims'' in Section 1556(c)
encompasses both miners' and survivors' claims. The four courts that
have considered the issue have unanimously agreed with this reading and
held that the amendment restoring derivative benefits applies to
survivors' claims that satisfy Section 1556(c)'s effective-date
requirements even if the related miner's disability claim did not. See
Marmon Coal Co. v. Director, OWCP [Eckman], ------ F.3d ------, ------
n.3, 2013 WL 4017160, *6 n.3 (3d Cir. 2013) (``the ACA revives Sec.
932(l)'s automatic benefits to the extent that a survivor files a claim
for benefits after January 1, 2005, that is pending on or after the
ACA's effective date, March 23, 2010.''); U.S. Steel Mining v.
Director, OWCP [Starks], 719 F.3d 1275, 1285 (11th Cir. 2013)
(``Section 1556(c) does not distinguish between miners' claims and
survivors' claims. The plain meaning of Sec. 1556(c) is that anyone--
miner or survivor--who filed a claim for benefits after January 1,
2005, that remained pending on March 23, 2010, can receive the benefit
of the amendments.''); Vision Processing, LLC v. Groves, 705 F.3d 551,
555 (6th Cir. 2013) (``Language and context show that the 2010
amendments apply to all survivor-benefit and all miner-benefit claims
filed after January 1, 2005, and pending on March 23, 2010.''); West
Virginia CWP Fund v. Stacy, 671 F.3d 378, 388 (4th Cir. 2011)
[[Page 59108]]
(``Because Congress used the term `claims' [in ACA Section 1556(c)]
without any qualifying language, and because both miners and their
survivors may file claims under the BLBA . . . the plain language
supports the Director's position that amended Sec. 932(l) applies to
survivors' claims that comply with Section 1556(c)'s effective date
requirements.'').
The Department's conclusion is further informed by Section
1556(c)'s impact on non-survivor claims. Section 1556(c)'s effective-
date requirements apply not just to claims subject to revived Section
422(l) (Section 1556(b)), but also to claims subject to the revived
Section 411(c)(4) 15-year presumption (Section 1556(a)). The 15-year
presumption explicitly applies to claims brought by both miners and
survivors. See 30 U.S.C. 921(c)(4). The commenters' proposed statutory
construction would create an inappropriate dichotomy: the term
``claims'' in subsection (c) would mean ``miners' and survivors'
claims'' when considering entitlement to the fifteen-year presumption
under subsection (a), but only ``miners' claims'' when considering
entitlement to derivative benefits under subsection (b). This
incongruous result violates the ``basic canon of statutory construction
that identical terms within an Act bear the same meaning.'' Estate of
Cowart v. Nicklos Drilling Co., 505 U.S. 469, 479 (1992). Indeed, the
Fourth Circuit has rejected this construction as ``tortured.'' Stacy,
671 F.3d at 389.
To further support their position, the commenters note that because
Section 422(l) ostensibly relieves survivors of the obligation to file
claims, it is illogical to use the survivor's claim filing date as the
operative date for determining eligibility under Section 422(l). The
context in which Congress adopted the ACA amendments leads to a
different conclusion. At the time Section 1556 was enacted, both miners
and survivors filed claims. Indeed, except for the survivors of miners
who had filed successful claims before 1982, the only way a survivor
could obtain benefits was to file an independent claim, even if the
miner had been awarded lifetime disability benefits. See, e.g., Hill v.
Peabody Coal Co., 94 Fed. Appx. 298, 299 (6th Cir. 2004) (unpub.).
Thus, Congress knew when it restored derivative benefits in 2010 that
independent survivors' claims were common. See generally Vimar Seguros
y Reaseguros, S.A. v. M/V Sky Reefer, 515 U.S. 528, 554 (1995)
(Congress is presumed to know the law, and to know how it has been
interpreted.). Interpreted in that light, the term ``claim'' includes
both miners' and survivors' claims. See Starks, 719 F.3d at 1285
(``Just because the application of the amended Sec. 932(l) to a claim
operates to eliminate the need for that claim does not render its
application illogical or unworkable.''); Stacy, 671 F.3d at 388-89
(``Although amended Sec. 932(l) states that a survivor is not required
to file a new claim for benefits, the conclusion petitioner draws from
this language--that the operative date for determining eligibility
cannot be the date the survivor's claim was filed--simply does not
follow.''); Groves, 705 F.3d at 556 (``Section 1556(b) eliminates the
requirement that survivors file a claim before obtaining benefits; it
does not prohibit such claims.''). See also B & G Constr. Co. v.
Director, OWCP [Campbell], 662 F.3d 233, 244 n.12 (3d Cir. 2011)
(``[S]urely a widow seeking benefits must file something in order to
receive them. After all, notwithstanding section 1556 a claimant might
not be the miner's real widow. But what a widow does not have to do is
establish that the miner died from pneumoconiosis.'').
The commenters also state that the proposed rule is inconsistent
with how the Department interpreted the 1982 amendment to Section
422(l) eliminating derivative benefits in claims filed after 1981. The
Department then permitted derivative benefits in survivors' claims
filed after 1981 so long as the related miner's disability claim was
filed before 1982 and resulted in an award. The commenters cite
Pothering v. Parkson Coal Co., 861 F.2d 1321 (3d Cir. 1988), to support
their view. Pothering, which interpreted the text of the 1981
amendment, has no bearing on the meaning of Section 1556(c), which uses
entirely different language. The Department's interpretation of the
1981 amendment's use of the term ``claim'' as meaning only miners'
claims was compelled by its particular text and legislative history,
which are inapplicable to Section 1556. As noted above, the Third
Circuit itself has confirmed that the ACA's automatic entitlement
provisions apply to survivors' claims filed within Section 1556's
temporal limitations. Eckman, ------ F.3d at ------ n.3, 2013 WL
4017160, *6 n.3. Other courts confronted with the Pothering argument
have either specifically or implicitly rejected it. See Starks, 719
F.3d at 1286 (rejecting Pothering argument and noting that ``[i]f [the
Section 1556] context does not demand a variation in the meaning of the
word `claim,' we do not know what context would. Any other reading of
the word in this context is . . . tortured.'') (internal quotation
marks omitted); Stacy, 671 F.3d at 388-89; Groves, 705 F.3d at 555-56.
(c) No other comments were received concerning these sections, and
the Department has promulgated these regulations as proposed.
20 CFR 725.309 Additional claims; effect of a prior denial of benefits
(a) Section 725.309 addresses both the filing of additional claims
for benefits and the effect of a prior denial. In its notice of
proposed rulemaking, the Department proposed to revise the current rule
to clarify how the ACA amendment restoring Section 422(l) derivative-
survivors' benefits applies when a survivor files a subsequent claim.
77 FR at 19467-68; 19478. The proposed rule added a new paragraph,
Sec. 725.309(d)(1), to clarify that a survivor need not establish a
change in a condition of entitlement if the subsequent claim meets the
requirements for entitlement under amended Section 422(l). The proposed
rule also limited this exception to survivors whose prior claims were
finally denied prior to March 23, 2010, i.e., before the ACA was
enacted. Once a survivor files a claim subject to the ACA and that
claim is denied, any subsequent claim the survivor files is subject to
the usual rules of claim preclusion set forth in proposed Sec.
725.309(c) because the subsequent claim asserts the same cause of
action as the prior denied claim.
(b) The Department received five comments asking it to abandon the
proposed rule. These commenters list several related reasons for their
request. They assert that ``re-opening'' denied survivors' claims
violates the doctrine of res judicata, and that the ACA amendments do
not create a new cause of action that would justify an exception to the
doctrine or otherwise allow for re-opening of previously denied
survivor claims. The commenters also suggest that the proposed rule
violates ACA Section 1556(c), which restricts application of the
amendments to claims filed after January 1, 2005. Finally, one
commenter stated that the proposed rule does not clearly convey the
Department's intent.
Two comments support the proposed rule. One contends that the
Department's decision to allow survivors to file subsequent claims is
both compelled by the statute's remedial purposes and consistent with
res judicata concepts.
Although the Department declines to abandon the proposed rule, the
final rule has been revised to more clearly convey the Department's
intent. Specifically, the final rule
[[Page 59109]]
comprehensively describes the universe of survivors who are exempt from
having to prove a change in a condition of entitlement under Sec.
725.309(d) to pursue a subsequent claim. The proposed rule
inadvertently excluded survivors whose prior claims were filed on or
before January 1, 2005 that remained pending after the ACA's March 23,
2010 enactment date. As explained in the NPRM, 77 FR at 19468, and
discussed in detail below, the ACA's revival of Section 422(l)'s
automatic survivor entitlement provision created a new cause of action.
Thus, these survivors may take advantage of the amendment by filing a
subsequent claim without being hindered by the findings made in the
prior claim. Accordingly, the Department has modified Sec.
725.309(c)(1) by adding two subparagraphs (Sec. Sec. 725.309(c)(1)(i)-
(ii)) to provide explicit filing and pendency date requirements for the
prior claim that cover all survivor claims not previously adjudicated
under amended Section 422(l). With this change, the final rule also
makes clear that only a survivor whose prior claim was not subject to
the Section 422(l) amendment may be found entitled to benefits on a
subsequent claim without having to establish a change in a condition of
entitlement.
The Department is not persuaded by the comments that argue against
allowing subsequent survivors' claims in these circumstances. The
commenters' underlying assumption--that the Department's proposed rule
re-opens previously denied claims--misperceives the rule. As the
Department emphasized in its proposal, 77 FR at 19468, the ACA does not
authorize reopening of previously denied claims and the proposed rule
was not intended to reopen denied survivors' claims. See generally
Eckman, ------ F.3d at ------, 2013 WL 4017160, *5 (a subsequent claim
is a ``new assertion[] of entitlement'' that does not re-open a prior
denied claim or ``disregard principles of finality and res judicata'');
Union Carbide Corp. v. Richards, 721 F.3d 307, 314 (4th Cir. 2013)
(``[R]es judicata is not implicated by [subsequent survivors'] claims
since entitlement under Section 932(l), as revived by Section 1556,
does not require relitigation of the prior findings that the miners'
deaths were not due to pneumoconiosis.''). Instead, consistent with the
plain language of the ACA, the rule is intended to make automatic
entitlement available in subsequent claims, which are entirely new
assertions of entitlement distinct from any previous claim. See Lovilia
Coal Co. v. Harvey, 109 F.3d 445, 449 (8th Cir. 1997) (a ``claim''
under the BLBA refers to a distinct application for benefits, not an
operator's general liability to a particular claimant).
Importantly, the rule leaves the survivor's prior claim decision,
and its underlying findings, in effect. This means that the survivor
will not be entitled to benefits for any period of time pre-dating the
prior denial. See 77 FR at 19468. Consequently, the rule is consistent
with the Department's longstanding recognition that, for purposes of a
subsequent claim, ``the correctness of [the prior decision's] legal
conclusion'' must be accepted in adjudicating the latter application.
Lisa Lee Mines v. Director, OWCP, 86 F.3d 1358, 1361 (4th Cir. 1996)
(en banc); see also Richards, 721 F.3d at 317 & n.5 (limiting benefits
period on subsequent survivor's claim to period after prior claim
denial provides claimant ``meaningful benefits'' while also
``mitigat[ing] the burden to the operator and respect[ing] the validity
of the earlier denial.'').
The commenters are also incorrect that the doctrine of res judicata
precludes application of section 422(l) to a survivor's subsequent
claim. Res judicata ``bars a party from suing on a claim that has
already been `litigated to a final judgment by that party . . . and
precludes the assertion by such parties of any legal theory, cause of
action, or defense which could have been asserted in that action.' ''
Ohio Valley Envtl. Coal. v. Arcoma Coal Co. (OVEC), 556 F.3d 177, 210
(4th Cir. 2009) (quoting 18 James Wm. Moore et al., Moore's Federal
Practice Sec. 131.10(1)(a) (3d ed. 2008). For res judicata to bar a
subsequent action, ``three elements must be present: (1) A judgment on
the merits in a prior suit resolving (2) claims by the same parties . .
. , and (3) a subsequent suit based on the same cause of action.''
OVEC, 556 F.3d at 210 (internal quotation marks omitted). Res judicata
is not applicable in this situation because a subsequent claim for
automatic entitlement, arising by virtue of the ACA's 2010 amendment of
the BLBA, is not the same cause of action as the original claim.
Eckman, ------ F.3d at ------, 2013 WL 4017160, *6 (holding that a
survivor's ``subsequent claim thus involves a different cause of
action, and res judicata does not prevent [the survivor] from receiving
survivors' benefits under the BLBA.'').
The Department does not disagree with the notion, as expressed by
one commenter, that causes of action are generally defined by a
``transactional'' approach. Citing various legal precedents, the
commenter states that a cause of action arises out of a common nucleus
of facts and does not depend on a particular theory of recovery. It is
undoubtedly correct that ``[a] claim [that] existed at the time of the
first suit and `might have been offered' in the same cause of action, .
. . is barred by res judicata.'' Aliff v. Joy Mfg. Co., 914 F.2d 39,
43-44 (4th Cir. 1990). But a claim that did not exist at the time of
the prior proceeding, because the new claim could not have been raised
in the prior proceeding, is not so barred. Richards, 721 F.3d at 314-
15; OVEC, 556 F.3d at 210-11. The Supreme Court explained this
principle: ``[w]hile [a prior] judgment precludes recovery on claims
arising prior to its entry, it cannot be given the effect of
extinguishing claims which did not even then exist and which could not
possibly have been sued upon in the previous case.'' Lawlor v. Nat'l
Screen Serv. Corp., 349 U.S. 322, 328 (1955).
Contrary to the commenter's contention, it is well-recognized that
a statutory amendment subsequent to a first action can create a new
cause of action that is not barred by res judicata, even where the new
action is based on the same facts as the prior one. Richards, 721 F.3d
at 315 (``While typically it is a new factual development that gives
rise to a fresh cause of action, changes in law can also have that
effect.'') (internal citations omitted); Alvear-Velez v. Mukasey, 540
F.3d 672 (7th Cir. 2008); Moore et al. at ] 131.22[3] (``when a new
statute provides an independent basis for relief which did not exist at
the time of the prior action, a second action on the new statute may be
justified''). In Alvear-Velez, the Seventh Circuit clearly
differentiated between ``changes in case law [which] almost never
provide a justification for instituting a new action'' and ``statutory
changes that occur after the previous litigation has concluded [which]
may justify a new action.'' 540 F.3d at 678. As to the former, a change
in precedent provides no relief from res judicata because it merely
reflects the error in the prior decision, which the aggrieved party
accepted by not appealing. Id.; Pittston Coal Group v. Sebben, 488 U.S.
105, 122-23 (1988); Moore et al. at ] 131.22[3]. By contrast, no such
appellate remedy is available where a statutory barrier precludes
relief. Alvear-Velez, 540 F.3d at 678 n.4.
Moreover, the second action is permissible where there is a
statutory amendment because ``the rule against claim splitting, which
is one component of res judicata, is inapplicable when a statutory
change creates a course of action unavailable in the previous
[[Page 59110]]
action.'' Alvear-Velez, 540 F.3d at 678. See also Maldonado v. U.S.
Attorney Gen., 664 F.3d 1369, 1377 (11th Cir. 2011) (court rejected a
res judicata defense to the removal of an alien on a new statutory
ground in a second proceeding--although for the same offense as in a
prior proceeding--explaining that ``the doctrine does not say that a
new claim is barred when it is based on a new theory not otherwise
available at the time of the prior proceeding,'' and thus permitted
removal based on the new statutory ground); Ljutica v. Holder, 588 F.3d
119, 127 (2d Cir. 2009) (rejecting res judicata defense to a second
removal proceeding--based on the same crime as the first proceeding--
because Congress created a new ground for removal subsequent to the
first action); Dalombo Fontes v. Gonzales, 498 F.3d 1, 2-3 (1st Cir.
2007) (noting in dicta that res judicata does not apply when Congress
amends the statutory grounds for removal, ``[b]ecause a different and
broader definition [of removal offenses] now controlled and that
definition applied retroactively, the two proceedings did not involve
the same claim or cause of action''); Marvel Characters, Inc., v.
Simon, 310 F.3d 280, 287 (2d Cir. 2002) (rejecting res judicata defense
because amendments to Copyright Act provided plaintiff ``an entirely
new and wholly separate right than the renewal right,'' which could not
have been adjudicated in the first action).
Although one commenter states that ``authorities supporting the
notion that a change in law does not create a new cause of action are
legion,'' the two cases it cites are not persuasive authority on the
issue of a statutory change. The two somewhat dated decisions it cites,
Hurn v. Oursler, 289 U.S. 238 (1933), and Friederichsen v. Renard, 247
U.S. 207 (1918), do not involve the doctrine of res judicta and do not
address whether a change in statutory law would create a new cause of
action.
Even when viewed on a factual level, a survivor's subsequent claim
that meets the ACA's filing and pendency requirements is a different
cause of action. The determination of whether two proceedings involve
the same cause of action requires close analysis of the underlying
facts in each proceeding. See, e.g., Duhaney v. Attorney Gen., 621 F.3d
340, 348 (3d Cir. 2010) (``the focus of the inquiry is whether the acts
complained of were the same, whether the material facts alleged in each
suit were the same, and whether the witnesses and documentation
required to prove such allegations were the same'') (internal quotation
marks omitted). Res judicata, however, does not apply when ``[a]though
there are common elements of fact between the two . . . proceedings,
the critical acts and the necessary documentation were different for
the two proceedings.'' Id. at 349; see also Eckman, ------ F.3d at ----
--, 2013 WL 4017160, *6 (``The mere existence of common elements of
fact between two claims does not establish the same cause of action if
the critical acts and the necessary documentation were different for
the two claims.''); Meekins v. United Transp. Union, 946 F.2d 1054,
1058 (4th Cir. 1991) (res judicata inapplicable where a later suit
``arises from events separate from those at issue in the first suit'').
Moreover, it does not matter that the same ultimate remedy is available
in both the first and second actions, as the cause of action springs
out of the underlying facts, not the remedy. See Duhaney, 621 F.3d at
349.
Applying these principles in the context of survivors entitled
under amended Section 422(l) shows that a subsequent claim is based on
a different factual predicate than an original claim. In an original
claim not subject to the ACA amendments, a survivor could recover only
by proving that the miner's death was due to pneumoconiosis. See 20 CFR
718.205. Resolution of this issue is based on an intensive review of
medical evidence. The adjudicator is required to determine what
condition or conditions resulted in the miner's death, as well as the
etiology of those conditions. In contrast, the cause of the miner's
death is not at issue in a survivor's subsequent claim awarded pursuant
to amended Section 422(l), and medical evidence is wholly irrelevant.
Rather, the survivor's entitlement is based solely on an administrative
fact--whether the miner had been awarded benefits in his lifetime
claim. See 30 U.S.C. 932(l). Thus, ``subsequent claims arise from
operative facts that are separate and distinct from those underlying
[the survivors'] initial claims, and therefore constitute new causes of
action.'' Richards, 721 F.3d at 315. Accord Eckman, ------ F.3d at ----
--, 2013 WL 4017160, *6 (``material facts alleged'' in prior and
subsequent survivor's claims were different; ``the subsequent claim
thus involves a different cause of action'' not barred by res
judicata).
Precluding subsequent claims of survivors in these circumstances
would not further the purposes of the res judicata doctrine in any
event. ``[R]es judicata and collateral estoppel relieve parties of the
cost and vexation of multiple lawsuits, conserve judicial resources,
and, by preventing inconsistent decisions, encourage reliance on
adjudication.'' Allen v. McCurry, 449 U.S. 90, 94 (1980); see generally
18 Wright, Miller & Cooper, Federal Practice and Procedure Sec. 4403
(2d ed. 2002). Where subsequent claims are based on automatic
entitlement, there will be little need for factual development, and
most such claims can be decided in summary fashion without protracted
litigation or the expenditure of significant judicial resources. Res
judicata should be used as a shield against vexatious (harassing)
lawsuits or to conserve resources, not as a sword to defeat plainly
meritorious claims.
Furthermore, the danger of inconsistent decisions between original
and subsequent claims is absent because the subsequent claim represents
a different cause of action. In fact, the danger of inconsistency lies
in the other direction. If res judicata bars survivors' subsequent
claims, there would be different results for similarly situated
survivors who satisfy the ACA requirements based solely on the fact
that one previously failed to prove a fact (death due to
pneumoconiosis) that is now wholly irrelevant. See C.I.R. v. Sunnen,
333 U.S. 591, 599 (1948) (where revenue laws changed following original
litigation, expressing concern that collateral estoppel will result in
unequal treatment of taxpayers in same class). In short, there is no
compelling reason why the doctrine of res judicata should be applied in
situations covered by the rule.
The commenters' assertion that the rule circumvents the ACA's 2005
bar date is also without foundation. The rule applies only to
survivors' claims filed after January 1, 2005 and pending on or after
the ACA's enactment date. It is thus fully consistent with the ACA's
plain language, which makes automatic entitlement applicable to all
qualifying survivors' claims, both original and subsequent. It states,
without qualification, that the amendments to the BLBA ``apply with
respect to claims filed . . . after January 1, 2005, that are pending
on or after [March 23, 2010].'' Public Law 111-148, Sec. 1556(c)
(2010) (emphasis added). This provision makes no distinction between
miners' and survivors' claims, or between original and subsequent
claims. Rather, as the Fourth Circuit has held, ``the plain language of
[Section 1556(c)] requires that amended Sec. 932(l) apply to all
claims [that satisfy Section 1556's time limitations].'' Stacy, 671
F.3d at 388 (emphasis in original). See also Groves, 705 F.3d at 555-
56. Thus, ``the statutory text supports [the] position that amended
Section 932(l) applies to all
[[Page 59111]]
claims that comply with Section 1556(c)'s time limitations, including
subsequent claims.'' Richards, 721 F.3d at 314. Accord Eckman, ------
F.3d at ------, 2013 WL 4017160, *5 (Section 1556(c)'s plain language
``encompasses'' subsequent survivor claims).
Along the same lines, one commenter points to Senator Byrd's post-
enactment statement that the ACA amendments will apply to ``all claims
that will be filed henceforth, including many claims filed by miners
whose prior claims were denied, or by widows who never filed for
benefits following the death of a husband'' as evidence that amended
Section 422(l) is not intended to apply to subsequent claims filed by
survivors. See 156 Cong. Rec. S2083 (daily ed. March 25, 2010). The
commenter has misinterpreted the passage. Even if considered persuasive
authority, see Starks, 719 F.3d at 1283 n.9 (stating that Senator
Byrd's post-enactment statement is not ``legitimate legislative
history''), the Senator's statement is clearly intended simply to
provide illustrative examples of groups who could potentially benefit
from the ACA. See Richards, 721 F.3d at 316 (Senator Byrd's
``description of the scope of the statute as `including' certain types
of claims connotes that his selected examples were intended to be
illustrative of the amendment's reach, not exhaustive.''). Senator Byrd
was not limiting the universe of claims affected by the ACA only to
miners' subsequent claims or survivors' first filings. Indeed, such a
reading would lead to an absurd result since it would exclude miners
who are first-time filers from accessing the revived 15-year
presumption provided under Section 1556(a). Eckman, ------ F.3d at ----
--, 2013 WL 4017160, *4 (concluding that Senator Byrd's list is not
necessarily ``exhaustive'' and pointing out that the list ``does not
include the largest class of potential claims: Original claims filed by
miners, either pending or filed henceforth.'').
One comment argues that the application of Section 1556 to
survivors' subsequent claims likely violates the constitutional
separation-of-powers principle, at least where the survivor's prior
claim was finally decided by a United States Court of Appeals. The
commenter relies on Plaut v. Spendthrift Farm, Inc., 514 U.S. 211
(1995) in support. Striking down a Security and Exchange Act statutory
amendment that allowed plaintiffs to reinstate certain suits that had
already been finally dismissed as time-barred, Plaut held that Article
III of the Constitution established a ``judicial department,'' with
``the power, not merely to rule on cases, but to decide them, subject
to review only by superior courts . . .--with an understanding . . .
that a `judgment conclusively resolves the case' because `[the
judiciary] render[s] dispositive judgments.' '' 514 U.S. at 218-19
(quoting Easterbrook, Presidential Review, 40 Case W. Res. L. Rev. 905,
926 (1990)).
Plaut and the separation-of-powers principle have no relevance with
respect to ACA Section 1556 and proposed Sec. 725.309. Unlike the
statute at issue in Plaut, Section 1556 and the rule implementing it do
not require the reopening of final judicial decisions. Rather, Section
1556 changed the underlying substantive law, thereby creating a new
cause of action that applies only to claims pending on or after its
enactment date (March 23, 2010). See, e.g., In re Swanson, 540 F.3d
1368, 1378-79 (Fed. Cir. 2008) (rejecting separation-of-powers
challenge to reexamination of patent previously upheld by court, as two
examinations were ``differing proceedings with different evidentiary
standards''). Far from allowing a legislative veto of a prior judicial
determination, Section 1556 and the proposed rule give ``full credit''
to prior claim denial. Buck Creek Coal Co. v. Sexton, 706 F.3d 756,
759-60 (6th Cir. 2013) (quoting U.S. Steel Mining Co., LLC, v.
Director, OWCP, 386 F.3d 977, 990 (11th Cir. 2004)). The rules
governing the date from which benefits are payable--including those
payable on subsequent survivor claims--evidence this principle because
no benefits are payable ``for any period prior to the date upon which
the order denying the prior claim became final.'' 20 CFR 725.309(d)(5)
(2012).
(c) No other comments on this section were received and the
Department has promulgated the rule as proposed.
IV. Information Collection Requirements (Subject to the Paperwork
Reduction Act) Imposed Under the Proposed Rule
This rulemaking imposes no new collections of information.
V. Executive Orders 12866 and 13563 (Regulatory Planning and Review)
Executive Orders 12866 and 13563 direct agencies to assess all
costs and benefits of available regulatory alternatives and, if
regulation is necessary, to select regulatory approaches that maximize
net benefits (including potential economic, environmental, public
health and safety effects, distributive impacts, and equity). E.O.
13563 emphasizes the importance of quantifying both costs and benefits,
of reducing costs, of harmonizing rules, and of promoting flexibility.
It also instructs agencies to review ``rules that may be outmoded,
ineffective, insufficient, or excessively burdensome, and to modify,
streamline, expand, or repeal them.'' In accordance with this Executive
Order, the Department has proposed certain changes to these rules not
otherwise required to implement the ACA's statutory amendments.
These final rules are consistent with the statutory mandate,
reflecting the policy choices made by Congress in adopting the ACA
amendments. Those choices reflect Congress' rational decision ``to
spread the costs of the employees' disabilities to those who have
profited from the fruits of their labor--the operators and the coal
consumers.'' Stacy, 671 F.3d at 383 (quoting Usery, 428 U.S. at 18)).
In restoring Section 411(c)(4), ``Congress decided to ease the path to
recovery for claimants who could prove at least 15 years of coal mine
employment and a totally disabling pulmonary impairment,'' thus giving
miners and their survivors ``a better shot at obtaining benefits.''
Keene v. Consolidation Coal Co., 645 F.3d 844, 849 (7th Cir. 2011). And
in restoring Section 422(l), Congress made ``a legislative choice to
compensate a miner's dependents for the suffering they endured due to
the miner's pneumoconiosis or as a means to provide a miner with peace
of mind that his dependents will continue to receive benefits after his
death.'' Campbell, 662 F.3d at 258. The rules faithfully implement
these Congressional directives.
Although additional expenditures associated with these rules
primarily flow from the statutory amendments themselves rather than the
rules, the Department has evaluated the financial impact of the
amendments' application on coal mine operators, and in particular those
classified as small businesses, as set forth in the NPRM. See 77 FR at
19470-74. Coal mine operators' outlays for the workers' compensation
insurance necessary to secure the payment of any benefits resulting
from the amendments will likely increase, at least in the short run.
Self-insured operators may also be required to pay out more in
compensation to entitled miners and survivors.
These operator expenditures are transfer payments as defined by OMB
Circular A-4 (i.e., payments from one group to another that do not
affect the total resources available to society). To
[[Page 59112]]
estimate additional workers' compensation insurance premiums that may
result from the ACA amendments, the Department projected new claim
filings, award rates and associated insurance premiums both with and
without the amendments for the ten-year period 2010 through 2019. Based
on the projected differences, the Department estimates that annualized
industry insurance premiums will increase $35 million over this ten-
year period as a result of the ACA amendments. This figure likely
overstates the premium increase because it is based on two important
assumptions designed to consider a maximum-impact scenario: The
estimates assume that all coal mine operators purchase commercial
workers' compensation insurance rather than self-insuring, and the
insurance rates used are based on the higher rates charged by assigned-
risk plans rather than the lower rates generally available in the
voluntary market. The Department's estimate is explained more fully in
the Regulatory Flexibility Act discussion below.
Transfers also occur between insurance carriers or self-insured
coal mine operators and benefit recipients. These transfers take the
form of benefit payments. The amount of benefits payable on any given
award depends upon a variety of factors, including the benefit
recipient's identity, the length of the recipient's life, and whether
the recipient has any eligible dependents for whom the basic benefit
amount may be augmented. See generally 20 CFR 725.202-725.228; 725.520
(2012).
For example, in FY 2010, the Department oversaw 28,671 active Part
C BLBA claims with income and medical benefit disbursements of
approximately $238 million. This translates into an annual benefit rate
of $8,316 per claim, or an average monthly benefit of $693. Of the
total active claims in 2010 payable by coal mine operators and their
insurance carriers, an estimated 156 were new awards resulting from the
ACA amendments, translating into approximately $1.3 million in
additional income and medical benefit disbursements in the first year.
Accordingly, the Department's predicted 425 new awards in responsible
operator claims for 2011 equates to an estimated $3.5 million increase
in benefit disbursements for the first year.
Payments from the Black Lung Disability Trust Fund will also
increase due to a small number of claims awarded under the ACA
amendments and for which no coal mine operator may be held liable. The
Department estimates that Trust Fund benefit payments will increase a
total of approximately $48.3 million over the 10-year period from 2010-
2019. Despite this amendment-related increase, Trust Fund benefit
payments as a whole are decreasing annually. The majority of the Trust
Fund's liabilities stem from earlier days of the black lung program,
when the Trust Fund bore liability for a much higher percentage of
awarded claims. Trust Fund payments cease when these benefit recipients
pass away. As a result, the Trust Fund's expenditures continue to
decrease each year.
Claimants who obtain benefits under the ACA amendments will gain a
variety of advantages that are difficult to quantify in monetary terms.
A disabled miner ``has suffered in at least two ways: His health is
impaired, and he has been rendered unable to perform the kind of work
to which he has adapted himself.'' Usery, 428 U.S. at 21. Income
disbursements give these miners some financial relief and provide a
modicum of compensation for the health impairment the miners suffered
in working to meet the Nation's energy needs. Medical treatment
benefits provide health care to miners for the injury caused by their
occupationally acquired pulmonary diseases and disabilities so as to
maximize both their longevity and quality of life. Both income and
medical benefits alleviate drains on public assistance resources. And
miners awarded benefits under the ACA amendments may also rest assured
that their dependent survivors will not be left wholly without
financial support.
In exchange, coal mine operators continue to be protected from
common law tort actions that could otherwise be brought by these miners
or their survivors for pneumoconiosis arising from the miner's
employment and related disabilities or death. See 33 U.S.C. 905(a),
incorporated by 30 U.S.C. 932(a). And because the monthly benefit
amounts payable are fixed by statute, compensation costs are
predictable and feasible for insurers to cover at an affordable rate.
This predictability also allows coal mine operators to pass their costs
for insurance (or benefits if self-insured) on to consumers.
From a program-administration viewpoint, the Department will
realize some cost savings from the ACA amendment restoring Section
422(l)'s automatic entitlement for survivors. Before the amendment, the
Department had to develop each survivor's claim, including obtaining
relevant medical evidence, evaluating that evidence, and issuing a
detailed decision adjudicating whether the miner's death was due to
pneumoconiosis. That administrative work, and the costs associated with
it, is no longer necessary where the survivor is entitled under Section
422(l). Instead, the regulations adopt a streamlined process for those
cases that eliminates most evidentiary development and evaluation. This
process has the dual benefit of delivering compensation to entitled
survivors more quickly and reducing the costs associated with that
delivery.
The Department received only two comments on its economic analysis
of the impact of the ACA amendments and the proposed rules. The
Department's response to those two comments is included in the
Regulatory Flexibility Act section below.
The Office of Information and Regulatory Affairs of the Office of
Management and Budget has determined that the Department's rule
represents a ``significant regulatory action'' under Section 3(f)(4) of
Executive Order 12866 and has reviewed the rule.
VI. Small Business Regulatory Enforcement Fairness Act of 1996
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 rule to both Houses of the Congress and to the
Comptroller General prior to its effective date. The report will state
that the rule is not a ``major rule'' as defined under 5 U.S.C. 804(2).
VII. Unfunded Mandates Reform Act of 1995
Title II of the Unfunded Mandates Reform Act of 1995, 2 U.S.C. 1531
et seq., directs agencies to assess the effects of Federal Regulatory
Actions on State, local, and tribal governments, and the private
sector, ``other than to the extent that such regulations incorporate
requirements specifically set forth in law.'' 2 U.S.C. 1531. For
purposes of the Unfunded Mandates Reform Act, this rule does not
include any Federal mandate that may result in increased expenditures
by State, local, tribal governments, or increased expenditures by the
private sector of more than $100,000,000.
VIII. Regulatory Flexibility Act and Executive Order 13272 (Proper
Consideration of Small Entities in Agency Rulemaking)
The Regulatory Flexibility Act of 1980, as amended, 5 U.S.C. 601 et
seq., (RFA), requires an agency to prepare an initial regulatory
flexibility analysis describing the proposed rule's impact
[[Page 59113]]
on small entities. 5 U.S.C. 603. The RFA also requires agencies to
prepare a final regulatory flexibility analysis when promulgating the
final rule. 5 U.S.C. 604. In either instance, the RFA does not require
a regulatory flexibility analysis if the agency certifies that the
proposed or final rule will not have ``a significant economic impact on
a substantial number of small entities'' and provides the factual basis
for the certification. 5 U.S.C. 605. The Department has determined that
a final regulatory flexibility analysis is not required for this
rulemaking.
The Department conducted an initial regulatory flexibility analysis
(IRFA) prior to publishing the proposed rule, informed the public how
to obtain a copy of the complete analysis, summarized the analysis in
the preamble to the proposed rule, and asked for public comment on all
aspects of the costs and benefits of the proposed rule, particularly
with respect to impacts on small businesses. 77 FR at 19471-74. The
Department surveyed the industry and determined that virtually all coal
mine operators in the United States fall within the Small Business
Administration's definition of a small business. 77 FR at 19471-72.
Even though the statutory amendments themselves, rather than the rules
implementing them, account for most, if not all, of the additional
costs imposed on the coal mining industry, the Department estimated the
maximum financial impact that might result from the amendments and
rules by evaluating potential increased costs to purchase workers'
compensation insurance. See 30 U.S.C. 933 (requiring all coal mine
operators to either purchase commercial workers' compensation insurance
or qualify as a self-insurer to insure covered workers). The Department
determined that the ACA amendments and the implementing rules would
impose an annualized cost on the industry of $35 million--or only one-
tenth of one percent of average annual industry revenues--over the ten
years from 2010 to 2019, with decreasing costs thereafter. 77 FR at
19473. The Department noted that these estimates likely overstated the
actual cost impact and were transitory in nature. 77 FR at 19471-73.
One comment generally states that the Department's economic
analysis is opaque, unsupported by data or analysis, and lacks source
citations for such data and analysis necessary to allow it to
adequately review the Department's conclusions. The comment also
believes the Department's analysis was overly dismissive given the
prospect of reopening thousands of previously denied survivors' claims
and allowing re-filing of an unknown number of denied miners' claims.
Another comment questions how the Department calculated the number of
survivors (and the resulting benefits payable) who would be
automatically entitled to benefits under amended Section 422(l). This
comment was made in the context of the Department's construction of
subsequent survivor claims.
The Department believes its economic analysis was complete. The
Department prepared a fully documented and explained IRFA that cited
both internal and external data sources, and made the IRFA available to
the public through the internet and by individual request. 77 FR at
19471. One comment grossly overstates the potential impact of
subsequent survivors' claims liability on the costs associated with the
amendments and the rule. In the NPRM, the Department estimated that out
of a pool of 445 potential survivors in this category, only 317 might
file subsequent claims to assert entitlement under amended Section
422(l). 77 FR at 19473-74. Actual experience has shown that number to
be far lower. To date, only 143 survivors have filed subsequent claims
seeking benefits under amended Section 422(l).
Moreover, as the Department noted in the NPRM, the financial impact
of revised Sec. 725.309 on coal mine operators is mitigated in two
ways. 77 at FR 19474. First, the survivors in question would not be
entitled to benefits for the period prior to the day on which the prior
denial became final. Second, an operator who ensures its BLBA
liabilities with commercial insurance will not incur any additional
costs because it has already purchased the insurance necessary to cover
the survivor's claim. For these reasons, the Department does not
believe that allowing re-filing survivors to receive benefits under
amended Section 422(l) imposes significant hardships on small coal mine
businesses.
Significantly, no commenter or interested small business brought
forth any information that contradicts the Department's conclusions in
the IRFA, despite the Department's specific request for comments about
adverse effects on small businesses. For instance, no one submitted
documentation detailing actual experience with either increased
workers' compensation insurance premium rates or self-insurance
expenses since enactment of the ACA amendments in 2010. Nor did any
comment allege that such increases have occurred. The Department
therefore has no reason to conclude that its cost estimates set forth
in the IRFA are understated or that these businesses will incur
significant adverse financial impacts.
Thus, although most coal mine operators are small businesses, the
Department does not believe that an estimated annualized cost imposed
for complying with the ACA amendments, as implemented by these
regulations, amounting to at most one-tenth of one percent of industry
revenues is a significant economic impact. The Department therefore
certifies that this final rule will not have significant economic
impact on a substantial number of small entities. Accordingly, it has
not prepared a final regulatory impact analysis. The Department has
provided the Chief Counsel for Advocacy of the Small Business
Administration with a copy of this certification. See 5 U.S.C. 605.
IX. Executive Order 13132 (Federalism)
The Department has reviewed this final rule in accordance with
Executive Order 13132 regarding federalism, and has determined that it
does not have ``federalism implications.'' E.O. 13132, 64 FR 43255
(Aug. 4, 1999). The final rule will not ``have substantial direct
effects on the States, on the relationship between the national
government and the States, or on the distribution of power and
responsibilities among the various levels of government.'' Id.
X. Executive Order 12988 (Civil Justice Reform)
The final rule meets the applicable standards in Sections 3(a) and
3(b)(2) of Executive Order 12988, Civil Justice Reform, to minimize
litigation, eliminate ambiguity, and reduce burden.
XI. Congressional Review Act
The final rule is not a ``major rule'' as defined in the
Congressional Review Act, 5 U.S.C. 801 et seq. This rule will not
result in an annual effect on the economy of $100,000,000 or more; a
major increase in costs or prices for consumers, individual industries,
Federal, State or local government agencies, or geographic regions; or
significant adverse effects on competition, employment, investment,
productivity, innovation, or on the ability of United States-based
enterprises to compete with foreign-based enterprises in domestic and
export markets.
[[Page 59114]]
List of Subjects in 20 CFR Parts 718 and 725
Total Disability due to pneumoconiosis; coal miners' entitlement to
benefits; survivors' entitlement to benefits.
For the reasons set forth in the preamble, the Department of Labor
amends 20 CFR parts 718 and 725 as follows:
PART 718--STANDARDS FOR DETERMINING COAL MINERS' TOTAL DISABILITY
OR DEATH DUE TO PNEUMOCONIOSIS
0
1. The authority citation for part 718 is revised to read as follows:
Authority: 5 U.S.C. 301; Reorganization Plan No. 6 of 1950, 15
FR 3174; 30 U.S.C. 901 et seq., 902(f), 934, 936; 33 U.S.C. 901 et
seq.; 42 U.S.C. 405; Secretary's Order 10-2009, 74 FR 58834.
0
2. Revise Sec. 718.1 to read as follows:
Sec. 718.1 Statutory provisions.
Section 402(f) of the Act authorizes the Secretary of Labor to
establish criteria for determining total disability or death due to
pneumoconiosis to be applied in the processing and adjudication of
claims filed under Part C of the Act. Section 402(f) further authorizes
the Secretary of Labor, in consultation with the National Institute for
Occupational Safety and Health, to establish criteria for all
appropriate medical tests administered in connection with a claim for
benefits. Section 413(b) of the Act authorizes the Secretary of Labor
to establish criteria for the techniques used to take chest
roentgenograms (x-rays) in connection with a claim for benefits under
the Act.
0
3. Revise Sec. 718.2 to read as follows:
Sec. 718.2 Applicability of this part.
(a) With the exception of the second sentence of Sec. 718.204(a),
this part is applicable to the adjudication of all claims filed on or
after June 30, 1982 under Part C of the Act. It provides standards for
establishing entitlement to benefits under the Act and describes the
criteria for the development of medical evidence used in establishing
such entitlement. The second sentence of Sec. 718.204(a) is applicable
to the adjudication of all claims filed after January 19, 2001.
(b) Publication of certain provisions or parts of certain
provisions that apply only to claims filed prior to June 30, 1982, or
to claims subject to Section 435 of the Act, has been discontinued
because those provisions affect an increasingly smaller number of
claims. The version of Part 718 set forth in 20 CFR, parts 500 to end,
edition revised as of April 1, 2010, applies to the adjudication of all
claims filed prior to June 30, 1982, as appropriate.
(c) The provisions of this part must, to the extent appropriate, be
construed together in the adjudication of claims.
0
4. In Sec. 718.3, revise paragraph (a) to read as follows:
Sec. 718.3 Scope and intent of this part.
(a) This part sets forth the standards to be applied in determining
whether a coal miner is or was totally disabled due to pneumoconiosis
or died due to pneumoconiosis. It also specifies the procedures and
requirements to be followed in conducting medical examinations and in
administering various tests relevant to such determinations.
* * * * *
0
5. In Sec. 718.202, revise paragraph (a)(3) to read as follows:
Sec. 718.202 Determining the existence of pneumoconiosis.
(a) * * *
(3) If the presumptions described in Sec. 718.304 or Sec. 718.305
are applicable, it must be presumed that the miner is or was suffering
from pneumoconiosis.
* * * * *
0
6. Revise Sec. 718.205 to read as follows:
Sec. 718.205 Death due to pneumoconiosis.
(a) Benefits are provided to eligible survivors of a miner whose
death was due to pneumoconiosis. In order to receive benefits based on
a showing of death due to pneumoconiosis, a claimant must prove that:
(1) The miner had pneumoconiosis (see Sec. 718.202);
(2) The miner's pneumoconiosis arose out of coal mine employment
(see Sec. 718.203); and
(3) The miner's death was due to pneumoconiosis as provided by this
section.
(b) Death will be considered to be due to pneumoconiosis if any of
the following criteria is met:
(1) Where competent medical evidence establishes that
pneumoconiosis was the cause of the miner's death, or
(2) Where pneumoconiosis was a substantially contributing cause or
factor leading to the miner's death or where the death was caused by
complications of pneumoconiosis, or
(3) Where the presumption set forth at Sec. 718.304 is applicable,
or
(4) For survivors' claims filed after January 1, 2005, and pending
on or after March 23, 2010, where the presumption at Sec. 718.305 is
invoked and not rebutted.
(5) However, except where the Sec. 718.304 presumption is invoked,
survivors are not eligible for benefits where the miner's death was
caused by a traumatic injury (including suicide) or the principal cause
of death was a medical condition not related to pneumoconiosis, unless
the claimant establishes (by proof or presumption) that pneumoconiosis
was a substantially contributing cause of death.
(6) Pneumoconiosis is a ``substantially contributing cause'' of a
miner's death if it hastens the miner's death.
0
7. Revise Sec. 718.301 to read as follows:
Sec. 718.301 Establishing length of employment as a miner.
The presumptions set forth in Sec. Sec. 718.302 and 718.305 apply
only if a miner worked in one or more coal mines for the number of
years required to invoke the presumption. The length of the miner's
coal mine work history must be computed as provided by 20 CFR
725.101(a)(32).
Sec. 718.303 [Removed and Reserved]
0
8. Remove and reserve Sec. 718.303.
0
9. Revise Sec. 718.305 to read as follows:
Sec. 718.305 Presumption of pneumoconiosis.
(a) Applicability. This section applies to all claims filed after
January 1, 2005, and pending on or after March 23, 2010.
(b) Invocation. (1) The claimant may invoke the presumption by
establishing that--
(i) The miner engaged in coal-mine employment for fifteen years,
either in one or more underground coal mines, or in coal mines other
than underground mines in conditions substantially similar to those in
underground mines, or in any combination thereof; and
(ii) The miner or survivor cannot establish entitlement under Sec.
718.304 by means of chest x-ray evidence; and
(iii) The miner has, or had at the time of his death, a totally
disabling respiratory or pulmonary impairment established pursuant to
Sec. 718.204, except that Sec. 718.204(d) does not apply.
(2) The conditions in a mine other than an underground mine will be
considered ``substantially similar'' to those in an underground mine if
the claimant demonstrates that the miner was regularly exposed to coal-
mine dust while working there.
(3) In a claim involving a living miner, a miner's affidavit or
testimony, or a spouse's affidavit or testimony, may not be used by
itself to establish the existence of a totally disabling respiratory or
pulmonary impairment.
(4) In the case of a deceased miner, affidavits (or equivalent
sworn
[[Page 59115]]
testimony) from persons knowledgeable of the miner's physical condition
must be considered sufficient to establish total disability due to a
respiratory or pulmonary impairment if no medical or other relevant
evidence exists which addresses the miner's pulmonary or respiratory
condition; however, such a determination must not be based solely upon
the affidavits or testimony of any person who would be eligible for
benefits (including augmented benefits) if the claim were approved.
(c) Facts presumed. Once invoked, there will be rebuttable
presumption--
(1) In a miner's claim, that the miner is totally disabled due to
pneumoconiosis, or was totally disabled due to pneumoconiosis at the
time of death; or
(2) In a survivor's claim, that the miner's death was due to
pneumoconiosis.
(d) Rebuttal--(1) Miner's claim. In a claim filed by a miner, the
party opposing entitlement may rebut the presumption by--
(i) Establishing both that the miner does not, or did not, have:
(A) Legal pneumoconiosis as defined in Sec. 718.201(a)(2); and
(B) Clinical pneumoconiosis as defined in Sec. 718.201(a)(1),
arising out of coal mine employment (see Sec. 718.203); or
(ii) Establishing that no part of the miner's respiratory or
pulmonary total disability was caused by pneumoconiosis as defined in
Sec. 718.201.
(2) Survivor's claim. In a claim filed by a survivor, the party
opposing entitlement may rebut the presumption by--
(i) Establishing both that the miner did not have:
(A) Legal pneumoconiosis as defined in Sec. 718.201(a)(2); and
(B) Clinical pneumoconiosis as defined in Sec. 718.201(a)(1),
arising out of coal mine employment (see Sec. 718.203); or
(ii) Establishing that no part of the miner's death was caused by
pneumoconiosis as defined in Sec. 718.201.
(3) The presumption must not be considered rebutted on the basis of
evidence demonstrating the existence of a totally disabling obstructive
respiratory or pulmonary disease of unknown origin.
Sec. 718.306 [Removed and Reserved]
0
10. Remove and reserve Sec. 718.306.
0
11. Revise the introductory text of Appendix C to Part 718 to read as
follows:
Appendix C to Part 718--Blood-Gas Tables
The following tables set forth the values to be applied in
determining whether total disability may be established in
accordance with Sec. 718.204(b)(2)(ii). The values contained in the
tables are indicative of impairment only. They do not establish a
degree of disability except as provided in Sec. 718.204(b)(2)(ii)
of this subchapter, nor do they establish standards for determining
normal alveolar gas exchange values for any particular individual.
Tests must not be performed during or soon after an acute
respiratory or cardiac illness. A miner who meets the following
medical specifications must be found to be totally disabled, in the
absence of rebutting evidence, if the values specified in one of the
following tables are met:
* * * * *
PART 725--CLAIMS FOR BENEFITS UNDER PART C OF TITLE IV OF THE
FEDERAL MINE SAFETY AND HEALTH ACT, AS AMENDED
0
12. The authority citation for part 725 continues to read as follows:
Authority: 5 U.S.C. 301; Reorganization Plan No. 6 of 1950, 15
FR 3174; 30 U.S.C. 901 et seq., 902(f), 921, 932, 936; 33 U.S.C. 901
et seq.; 42 U.S.C. 405; Secretary's Order 10-2009, 74 FR 58834.
0
13. Revise Sec. 725.1 to read as follows:
Sec. 725.1 Statutory provisions.
(a) General. Subchapter IV of the Federal Coal Mine Health and
Safety Act of 1969, as amended by the Black Lung Benefits Act of 1972,
the Federal Mine Safety and Health Amendments Act of 1977, the Black
Lung Benefits Reform Act of 1977, the Black Lung Benefits Revenue Act
of 1977, the Black Lung Benefits Amendments of 1981, the Black Lung
Benefits Revenue Act of 1981, the Black Lung Consolidation of
Responsibility Act of 2002, and the Patient Protection and Affordable
Care Act of 2010 (together comprising the Black Lung Benefits Act (see
Sec. 725.101(a)(1)) provides for the payment of benefits to certain
disabled coal miners and their survivors. See Sec. 725.201.
(b) Part B. Part B of subchapter IV of the Act provided that claims
filed before July 1, 1973 were to be filed with, and adjudicated and
administered by, the Social Security Administration (SSA). If awarded,
these claims were paid by SSA out of appropriated funds. The Black Lung
Consolidation of Administrative Responsibility Act (see paragraph (h)
of this section) transferred all responsibility for continued
administration of these claims to the Department of Labor.
(c) Part C. Claims filed by a miner or survivor on or after January
1, 1974, are filed, adjudicated, and paid under the provisions of part
C of subchapter IV of the Act. Part C requires that a claim filed on or
after January 1, 1974, shall be filed under an applicable approved
State workers' compensation law, or if no such law has been approved by
the Secretary of Labor, the claim may be filed with the Secretary of
Labor under Section 422 of the Act. Claims filed with the Secretary of
Labor under part C are processed and adjudicated by the Secretary.
Individual coal mine operators are primarily liable for benefits;
however, if the miner's last coal mine employment terminated before
January 1, 1970, or if no responsible operator can be identified,
benefits are paid by the Black Lung Disability Trust Fund. Claims
adjudicated under part C are subject to certain incorporated provisions
of the Longshore and Harbor Workers' Compensation Act.
(d) Changes made by the Black Lung Benefits Reform Act of 1977. The
Black Lung Benefits Reform Act of 1977 contains a number of significant
amendments to the Act's standards for determining eligibility for
benefits. Among these are:
(1) A provision which clarifies the definition of
``pneumoconiosis'' to include any ``chronic dust disease of the lung
and its sequelae, including respiratory and pulmonary impairments,
arising out of coal mine employment'';
(2) A provision which defines ``miner'' to include any person who
works or has worked in or around a coal mine or coal preparation
facility, and in coal mine construction or coal transportation under
certain circumstances;
(3) A provision that continued employment in a coal mine is not
conclusive proof that a miner is not or was not totally disabled;
(4) A provision which authorizes the Secretary of Labor to
establish standards and develop criteria for determining total
disability or death due to pneumoconiosis with respect to a part C
claim;
(5) Provisions relating to the treatment to be accorded a
survivor's affidavit, certain X-ray interpretations, and certain
autopsy reports in the development of a claim; and
(6) Other clarifying, procedural, and technical amendments.
(e) Changes made by the Black Lung Benefits Revenue Act of 1977.
The Black Lung Benefits Revenue Act of 1977 established the Black Lung
Disability Trust Fund which is financed by a
[[Page 59116]]
specified tax imposed upon each ton of coal (except lignite) produced
and sold or used in the United States after March 31, 1978. The
Secretary of the Treasury is the managing trustee of the fund and
benefits are paid from the fund upon the direction of the Secretary of
Labor. The fund was made liable for the payment of all claims approved
under part C of the Act for all periods of eligibility occurring on or
after January 1, 1974, with respect to claims where the miner's last
coal mine employment terminated before January 1, 1970, or where
individual liability can not be assessed against a coal mine operator
due to bankruptcy, insolvency, or the like. The fund was also
authorized to pay certain claims which a responsible operator has
refused to pay within a reasonable time, and to seek reimbursement from
such operator. The purpose of the fund and the Black Lung Benefits
Revenue Act of 1977 was to insure that coal mine operators, or the coal
industry, will fully bear the cost of black lung disease for the
present time and in the future. The Black Lung Benefits Revenue Act of
1977 also contained other provisions relating to the fund and
authorized a coal mine operator to establish its own trust fund for the
payment of certain claims.
(f) Changes made by the Black Lung Benefits Amendments of 1981. The
Black Lung Benefits Amendments of 1981 made a number of significant
changes in the Act's standards for determining eligibility for benefits
and concerning the payment of such benefits, and applied the changes to
claims filed on or after January 1, 1982. Among these are:
(1) The Secretary of Labor may re-read any X-ray submitted in
support of a claim and may rely upon a second opinion concerning such
an X-ray as a means of auditing the validity of the claim;
(2) The rebuttable presumption that the total disability of a miner
with fifteen or more years employment in the coal mines, who has
demonstrated a totally disabling respiratory or pulmonary impairment,
is due to pneumoconiosis is no longer applicable (but the presumption
was reinstated for claims filed after January 1, 2005, and pending on
or after March 23, 2010, by the Patient Protection and Affordable Care
Act of 2010 (see paragraph (i) of this section));
(3) In the case of deceased miners, where no medical or other
relevant evidence is available, only affidavits from persons not
eligible to receive benefits as a result of the adjudication of the
claim will be considered sufficient to establish entitlement to
benefits;
(4) Unless the miner was found entitled to benefits as a result of
a claim filed prior to January 1, 1982, benefits are payable on
survivors' claims filed on and after January 1, 1982, only when the
miner's death was due to pneumoconiosis (but for survivors' claims
filed after January 1, 2005, and pending on or after March 23, 2010, an
award of a miner's claim may form the basis for a survivor's
entitlement under the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act of
2010 (see paragraph (i) of this section));
(5) Benefits payable under this part are subject to an offset on
account of excess earnings by the miner; and
(6) Other technical amendments.
(g) Changes made by the Black Lung Benefits Revenue Act of 1981.
The Black Lung Benefits Revenue Act of 1981 temporarily doubles the
amount of the tax upon coal until the fund has repaid all advances
received from the United States Treasury and the interest on all such
advances. With respect to claims filed on or after January 1, 1982, the
fund's authorization for the payment of interim benefits is limited to
the payment of prospective benefits only. These changes also define the
rates of interest to be paid to and by the fund.
(h) Changes made by the Black Lung Consolidation of Administrative
Responsibility Act. The Black Lung Consolidation of Administrative
Responsibility Act of 2002 transferred administrative responsibility
for all claims previously filed with or administered by the Social
Security Administration to the Department of Labor, effective January
31, 2003. As a result, certain obsolete provisions in the BLBA (30
U.S.C. 904, 924a, and 945) were repealed. Various technical changes
were made to other statutory provisions.
(i) Changes made by the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act
of 2010. The Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act of 2010 (the
ACA) changed the entitlement criteria for miners' and survivors' claims
filed after January 1, 2005, and pending on or after March 23, 2010, by
reinstating two provisions made inapplicable by the Black Lung Benefits
Amendments of 1981.
(1) For miners' claims meeting these date requirements, the ACA
reinstated the rebuttable presumption that the miner is (or was)
totally disabled due to pneumoconiosis if the miner has (or had) 15 or
more years of qualifying coal mine employment and a totally disabling
respiratory or pulmonary impairment.
(2) For survivors' claims meeting these date requirements, the ACA
made two changes. First, it reinstated the rebuttable presumption that
the miner's death was due to pneumoconiosis if the miner had 15 years
or more of qualifying coal mine employment and was totally disabled by
a respiratory or pulmonary impairment at the time of death. Second, it
reinstituted derivative survivors' entitlement. As a result, an
eligible survivor will be entitled to benefits if the miner is or was
found entitled to benefits on his or her lifetime claim based on total
disability due to pneumoconiosis arising out of coal-mine employment.
(j) Longshore Act provisions. The adjudication of claims filed
under part C of the Act (i.e., claims filed on or after January 1,
1974) is governed by various procedural and other provisions contained
in the Longshore and Harbor Workers' Compensation Act (LHWCA), as
amended from time to time, which are incorporated within the Act by
section 422. The incorporated LHWCA provisions are applicable under the
Act except as is otherwise provided by the Act or as provided by
regulations of the Secretary. Although occupational disease benefits
are also payable under the LHWCA, the primary focus of the procedures
set forth in that Act is upon a time-definite-traumatic injury or
death. Because of this and other significant differences between a
black lung and longshore claim, it is determined, in accordance with
the authority set forth in Section 422 of the Act, that certain of the
incorporated procedures prescribed by the LHWCA must be altered to fit
the circumstances ordinarily confronted in the adjudication of a black
lung claim. The changes made are based upon the Department's experience
in processing black lung claims since July 1, 1973, and all such
changes are specified in this part. No other departure from the
incorporated provisions of the LHWCA is intended.
(k) Social Security Act provisions. Section 402 of Part A of the
Act incorporates certain definitional provisions from the Social
Security Act, 42 U.S.C. 301 et seq. Section 430 provides that the 1972,
1977 and 1981 amendments to part B of the Act shall also apply to part
C ``to the extent appropriate.'' Sections 412 and 413 incorporate
various provisions of the Social Security Act into part B of the Act.
To the extent appropriate, therefore, these provisions also apply to
part C. In certain cases, the Department has varied the terms of the
Social Security Act provisions to accommodate the unique needs of the
black lung
[[Page 59117]]
benefits program. Parts of the Longshore and Harbor Workers'
Compensation Act are also incorporated into part C. Where the
incorporated provisions of the two acts are inconsistent, the
Department has exercised its broad regulatory powers to choose the
extent to which each incorporation is appropriate. Finally, Section
422(g), contained in part C of the Act, incorporates 42 U.S.C. 403(b)-
(l).
0
14. Revise Sec. 725.2 to read as follows:
Sec. 725.2 Purpose and applicability of this part.
(a) This part sets forth the procedures to be followed and
standards to be applied in filing, processing, adjudicating, and paying
claims filed under part C of subchapter IV of the Act.
(b) This part applies to all claims filed under part C of
subchapter IV of the Act on or after June 30, 1982. Publication of
certain provisions or parts of certain provisions that apply only to
claims filed prior to June 30, 1982, or to claims subject to Section
435 of the Act, has been discontinued because those provisions affect
an increasingly smaller number of claims. The version of Part 725 set
forth in 20 CFR, parts 500 to end, edition revised as of April 1, 2010,
applies to the adjudication of all claims filed prior to June 30, 1982,
as appropriate.
(c) The provisions of this part reflect revisions that became
effective on January 19, 2001. This part applies to all claims filed
after January 19, 2001 and all benefits payments made on such claims.
With the exception of the following sections, this part also applies to
the adjudication of claims that were pending on January 19, 2001 and
all benefits payments made on such claims: Sec. Sec. 725.101(a)(31),
725.204, 725.212(b), 725.213(c), 725.214(d), 725.219(d), 725.309,
725.310, 725.351, 725.360, 725.367, 725.406, 725.407, 725.408, 725.409,
725.410, 725.411, 725.412, 725.414, 725.415, 725.416, 725.417, 725.418,
725.421(b), 725.423, 725.454, 725.456, 725.457, 725.458, 725.459,
725.465, 725.491, 725.492, 725.493, 725.494, 725.495, 725.547,
725.701(e). The version of those sections set forth in 20 CFR, parts
500 to end, edition revised as of April 1, 1999, apply to the
adjudications of claims that were pending on January 19, 2001. For
purposes of construing the provisions of this section, a claim will be
considered pending on January 19, 2001 if it was not finally denied
more than one year prior to that date.
0
15. In Sec. 725.101, revise paragraphs (a)(1), (a)(2), (a)(4),
(a)(32)(i) through (iv), and (b) to read as follows:
Sec. 725.101 Definition and use of terms.
(a) * * *
(1) The Act means the Black Lung Benefits Act, 30 U.S.C. 901-44, as
amended.
(2) The Longshore Act or LHWCA means the Longshore and Harbor
Workers' Compensation Act, 33 U.S.C. 901-950, as amended from time to
time.
* * * * *
(4) Administrative law judge means a person qualified under 5
U.S.C. 3105 to conduct hearings and adjudicate claims for benefits
filed pursuant to section 415 and part C of the Act. Until March 1,
1979, it also means an individual appointed to conduct such hearings
and adjudicate such claims under Public Law 94-504.
* * * * *
(32) * * *
(i) If the evidence establishes that the miner worked in or around
coal mines at least 125 working days during a calendar year or partial
periods totaling one year, then the miner has worked one year in coal
mine employment for all purposes under the Act. If a miner worked fewer
than 125 working days in a year, he or she has worked a fractional year
based on the ratio of the actual number of days worked to 125. Proof
that the miner worked more than 125 working days in a calendar year or
partial periods totaling a year, does not establish more than one year.
(ii) To the extent the evidence permits, the beginning and ending
dates of all periods of coal mine employment must be ascertained. The
dates and length of employment may be established by any credible
evidence including (but not limited to) company records, pension
records, earnings statements, coworker affidavits, and sworn testimony.
If the evidence establishes that the miner's employment lasted for a
calendar year or partial periods totaling a 365-day period amounting to
one year, it must be presumed, in the absence of evidence to the
contrary, that the miner spent at least 125 working days in such
employment.
(iii) If the evidence is insufficient to establish the beginning
and ending dates of the miner's coal mine employment, or the miner's
employment lasted less than a calendar year, then the adjudication
officer may use the following formula: divide the miner's yearly income
from work as a miner by the coal mine industry's average daily earnings
for that year, as reported by the Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS). A
copy of the BLS table must be made a part of the record if the
adjudication officer uses this method to establish the length of the
miner's work history.
(iv) Periods of coal mine employment occurring outside the United
States must not be considered in computing the miner's work history.
(b) Statutory terms. The definitions contained in this section must
not be construed in derogation of terms of the Act.
* * * * *
0
16. In Sec. 725.201:
0
a. Revise paragraph (a);
0
b. Remove paragraph (b); and
0
c. Redesignate paragraphs (c) and (d) as paragraphs (b) and (c).
The revision reads as follows:
Sec. 725.201 Who is entitled to benefits; contents of this subpart.
(a) Part C of the Act provides for the payment of periodic benefits
in accordance with this part to:
(1) A miner who meets the conditions of entitlement set forth in
Sec. 725.202(d); or
(2) The surviving spouse or surviving divorced spouse of a deceased
miner who meets the conditions of entitlement set forth in Sec.
725.212; or,
(3) Where neither exists, the child of a deceased miner who meets
the conditions of entitlement set forth in Sec. 725.218; or
(4) The surviving dependent parents, where there is no surviving
spouse or child, or the surviving dependent brothers or sisters, where
there is no surviving spouse, child, or parent, of a miner, who meet
the conditions of entitlement set forth in Sec. 725.222; or
(5) The child of a miner's surviving spouse who was receiving
benefits under Part C of the Act at the time of such spouse's death.
* * * * *
0
17. In Sec. 725.212, republish paragraph (a)(3) introductory text and
revise paragraphs (a)(3)(i) and (ii) to read as follows:
Sec. 725.212 Conditions of entitlement; surviving spouse or surviving
divorced spouse.
(a) * * *
(3) The deceased miner either:
(i) Is determined to have died due to pneumoconiosis; or
(ii) Filed a claim for benefits on or after January 1, 1982, which
results or resulted in a final award of benefits, and the surviving
spouse or surviving divorced spouse filed a claim for benefits after
January 1, 2005 which was pending on or after March 23, 2010.
* * * * *
0
18. In Sec. 725.218, republish paragraph (a) introductory text and
revise
[[Page 59118]]
paragraphs (a)(1) and (2) to read as follows:
Sec. 725.218 Conditions of entitlement; child.
(a) An individual is entitled to benefits where he or she meets the
required standards of relationship and dependency under this subpart
(see Sec. 725.220 and Sec. 725.221) and is the child of a deceased
miner who:
(1) Is determined to have died due to pneumoconiosis; or
(2) Filed a claim for benefits on or after January 1, 1982, which
results or resulted in a final award of benefits, and the surviving
child filed a claim for benefits after January 1, 2005 which was
pending on or after March 23, 2010.
* * * * *
0
19. In Sec. 725.222, republish paragraph (a)(5) introductory text and
revise paragraphs (a)(5)(i) and (ii) to read as follows:
Sec. 725.222 Conditions of entitlement; parent, brother or sister.
(a) * * *
(5) The deceased miner:
(i) Is determined to have died due to pneumoconiosis; or
(ii) Filed a claim for benefits on or after January 1, 1982, which
results or resulted in a final award of benefits, and the surviving
parent, brother or sister filed a claim for benefits after January 1,
2005 which was pending on or after March 23, 2010.
* * * * *
0
20. Revise Sec. 725.309 to read as follows:
Sec. 725.309 Additional claims; effect of prior denial of benefits.
(a) If a claimant files a claim under this part while another claim
filed by the claimant under this part is still pending, the later claim
must be merged with the earlier claim for all purposes. For purposes of
this section, a claim must be considered pending if it has not yet been
finally denied.
(b) If a claimant files a claim under this part within one year
after the effective date of a final order denying a claim previously
filed by the claimant under this part (see Sec. 725.502(a)(2)), the
later claim must be considered a request for modification of the prior
denial and will be processed and adjudicated under Sec. 725.310.
(c) If a claimant files a claim under this part more than one year
after the effective date of a final order denying a claim previously
filed by the claimant under this part (see Sec. 725.502(a)(2)), the
later claim must be considered a subsequent claim for benefits. A
subsequent claim will be processed and adjudicated in accordance with
the provisions of subparts E and F of this part. Except as provided in
paragraph (1) below, a subsequent claim must be denied unless the
claimant demonstrates that one of the applicable conditions of
entitlement (see Sec. Sec. 725.202(d) (miner), 725.212 (spouse),
725.218 (child), and 725.222 (parent, brother, or sister)) has changed
since the date upon which the order denying the prior claim became
final. The applicability of this paragraph may be waived by the
operator or fund, as appropriate. The following additional rules apply
to the adjudication of a subsequent claim:
(1) The requirement to establish a change in an applicable
condition of entitlement does not apply to a survivor's claim if the
requirements of Sec. Sec. 725.212(a)(3)(ii), 725.218(a)(2), or
725.222(a)(5)(ii) are met, and the survivor's prior claim was filed--
(i) On or before January 1, 2005, or
(ii) After January 1, 2005 and was finally denied prior to March
23, 2010.
(2) Any evidence submitted in connection with any prior claim must
be made a part of the record in the subsequent claim, provided that it
was not excluded in the adjudication of the prior claim.
(3) For purposes of this section, the applicable conditions of
entitlement are limited to those conditions upon which the prior denial
was based. For example, if the claim was denied solely on the basis
that the individual was not a miner, the subsequent claim must be
denied unless the individual worked as a miner following the prior
denial. Similarly, if the claim was denied because the miner did not
meet one or more of the eligibility criteria contained in part 718 of
this subchapter, the subsequent claim must be denied unless the miner
meets at least one of the criteria that he or she did not meet
previously.
(4) If the applicable condition(s) of entitlement relate to the
miner's physical condition, the subsequent claim may be approved only
if new evidence submitted in connection with the subsequent claim
establishes at least one applicable condition of entitlement. A
subsequent claim filed by a surviving spouse, child, parent, brother,
or sister must be denied unless the applicable conditions of
entitlement in such claim include at least one condition unrelated to
the miner's physical condition at the time of his death.
(5) If the claimant demonstrates a change in one of the applicable
conditions of entitlement, no findings made in connection with the
prior claim, except those based on a party's failure to contest an
issue (see Sec. 725.463), will be binding on any party in the
adjudication of the subsequent claim. However, any stipulation made by
any party in connection with the prior claim will be binding on that
party in the adjudication of the subsequent claim.
(6) In any case in which a subsequent claim is awarded, no benefits
may be paid for any period prior to the date upon which the order
denying the prior claim became final.
(d) In any case involving more than one claim filed by the same
claimant, under no circumstances are duplicate benefits payable for
concurrent periods of eligibility. Any duplicate benefits paid will be
subject to collection or offset under subpart H of this part.
0
21. Revise Sec. 725.418 to read as follows:
Sec. 725.418 Proposed decision and order.
(a) Within 20 days after the termination of all informal conference
proceedings, or, if no informal conference is held, at the conclusion
of the period permitted by Sec. 725.410(b) for the submission of
evidence, the district director will issue a proposed decision and
order. A proposed decision and order is a document, issued by the
district director after the evidentiary development of the claim is
completed and all contested issues, if any, are joined, which purports
to resolve a claim on the basis of the evidence submitted to or
obtained by the district director. A proposed decision and order will
be considered a final adjudication of a claim only as provided in Sec.
725.419. A proposed decision and order may be issued by the district
director at any time during the adjudication of any claim if:
(1) Issuance is authorized or required by this part;
(2) The district director determines that its issuance will
expedite the adjudication of the claim; or
(3) The district director determines that the claimant is a
survivor who is entitled to benefits under 30 U.S.C. 932(l). In such
cases, the district director may designate the responsible operator in
the proposed decision and order regardless of whether the requirements
of paragraph (d) of this section have been met. Any operator identified
as liable for benefits under this paragraph may challenge the finding
of liability by timely requesting revision of the proposed decision and
order and specifically indicating disagreement with that finding. See
20 CFR 725.419(a) and (b). In such cases, the district director must
allow all parties 30 days within which to submit liability evidence. At
the end of this
[[Page 59119]]
period, the district director must issue a new proposed decision and
order.
(b) A proposed decision and order must contain findings of fact and
conclusions of law. It must be served on all parties to the claim by
certified mail.
(c) The proposed decision and order must contain a notice of the
right of any interested party to request a formal hearing before the
Office of Administrative Law Judges. If the proposed decision and order
is a denial of benefits, and the claimant has previously filed a
request for a hearing, the proposed decision and order must notify the
claimant that the case will be referred for a hearing pursuant to the
previous request unless the claimant notifies the district director
that he no longer desires a hearing. If the proposed decision and order
is an award of benefits, and the designated responsible operator has
previously filed a request for a hearing, the proposed decision and
order must notify the operator that the case will be referred for a
hearing pursuant to the previous request unless the operator notifies
the district director that it no longer desires a hearing.
(d) The proposed decision and order must reflect the district
director's final designation of the responsible operator liable for the
payment of benefits. Except as provided in paragraph (a)(3) of this
section, no operator may be finally designated as the responsible
operator unless it has received notification of its potential liability
pursuant to Sec. 725.407, and the opportunity to submit additional
evidence pursuant to Sec. 725.410. The district director must dismiss,
as parties to the claim, all other potentially liable operators that
received notification pursuant to Sec. 725.407 and that were not
previously dismissed pursuant to Sec. 725.410(a)(3).
Signed at Washington, DC, this 16th day of September, 2013.
Gary A. Steinberg,
Acting Director, Office of Workers' Compensation Programs.
[FR Doc. 2013-22874 Filed 9-24-13; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4510-CK-P