Baltimore Co. v. Thiergartner Walters v. Balt. Co. , 442 Md. 518 ( 2015 )


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  • Baltimore County Maryland, et al. v. Carroll Thiergartner
    No. 44, September Term, 2014
    Jeffrey Walters v. Baltimore County Maryland
    No. 58, September Term, 2014
    Workers’ Compensation Benefits - Presumption Accorded Public Safety Employees -
    Offset for Retirement Benefits - Deferred Retirement Option Benefits. The State
    Workers’ Compensation Act includes a special presumption for public safety employees that
    certain medical conditions are the result of an occupational disease and are compensable
    under the Act. Benefits paid as a result of that presumption, however, are capped such that
    the weekly total of those benefits and any retirement benefits received by the individual do
    not exceed the individual’s average weekly salary; if the total exceeds the average weekly
    salary, the workers’ compensation benefits are reduced by the amount of the excess. One
    form of retirement benefits available to long-time employees of Baltimore County was the
    Deferred Retirement Option Program (“DROP”), under which an employee delayed
    retirement in return for benefits that could be received as a lump sum upon retirement or as
    part of an enhanced monthly retirement payment. A lump sum DROP payment must be
    converted to a weekly amount for purposes of the offset computation in the Workers’
    Compensation Act. The method adopted by the Workers’ Compensation Commission in one
    of these cases – using the higher recurring benefits figure that would have been paid if the
    individual had made a different election with respect to the DROP – was a reasonable way
    of doing so. Maryland Code, Labor & Employment Article, §9-503; Baltimore County Code,
    §5-1-302.
    Circuit Court for Baltimore County
    Thiergartner: Case No. 03-C-12-001950
    Walters: Case Nos. 03-C-09-002702,
    03-C-09-009329
    Argued: February 10, 2015
    IN THE COURT OF APPEALS
    OF MARYLAND
    Nos. 44 and 58
    September Term, 2014
    B ALTIMORE C OUNTY, M ARYLAND ET AL.
    v.
    C ARROLL T HIERGARTNER
    J EFFREY W ALTERS
    V.
    B ALTIMORE C OUNTY, M ARYLAND
    Barbera, C.J.
    Harrell
    Battaglia
    Greene
    Adkins
    McDonald
    Watts,
    JJ.
    Opinion by McDonald, J.
    Filed: April 20, 2015
    These cases reach us in somewhat different procedural postures, but the issue is the
    same in both. Both cases concern a limit that the Legislature has placed on workers’
    compensation benefits that a retired public safety employee may receive under a special
    presumption in the Maryland Workers’ Compensation Act – a limit based in part on the
    amount of retirement benefits that the individual also receives.
    A provision of the workers’ compensation law creates a presumption favorable to
    certain categories of public safety employees. In particular, the law presumes that certain
    disabling medical conditions, such as heart disease, hypertension, and lung disease, are
    occupational diseases suffered in the line of duty and are therefore compensable under the
    workers’ compensation law. However, the statute caps those benefits: the sum of workers’
    compensation benefits and a retired employee’s retirement benefits may not exceed the
    employee’s average weekly salary during employment. The formula for capping workers’
    compensation benefits, seemingly simple in its description, inevitably raises questions in its
    implementation, particularly when its components take different forms paid on different
    timetables.
    The retirement benefits involved in these cases derive in part from an optional
    retirement program once offered by Baltimore County. The program was designed to
    encourage senior employees, otherwise eligible to retire, to remain on the job in return for
    enhanced retirement benefits – an enhancement that can be taken in a lump sum upon
    retirement or in other ways that result in higher recurring retirement payments. The two
    retired firefighters in these cases – Carroll Thiergartner, the Respondent in No. 44, and
    Jeffrey Walters, the Appellant in No. 581 – participated in that program and opted to receive
    the enhancement as a lump sum payment upon their retirements. Both retirees also qualified
    for workers’ compensation benefits as a result of the special presumption for public safety
    employees. The issue in both cases is how the lump sum retirement payment is to be
    included in the formula for capping their workers’ compensation benefits.
    We hold that the statute that imposes the cap on weekly workers’ compensation
    benefits necessarily contemplates a comparison involving payments, such as salary and
    retirement benefits, that are paid on different time schedules and that must be converted to
    a weekly number to apply the statutory formula. There is no evident reason to exclude a
    lump sum paid at the outset of retirement from such a conversion when applying the statutory
    formula.
    As to the manner of including the lump sum payment in that formula, we decline to
    adopt the method proposed by the retirees, which would treat the lump sum differently from
    other retirement benefits and count it only for the particular week in which it was paid. Nor
    do we adopt the method proposed by the County which, although it would convert the lump
    sum to a weekly figure for a period of time, would front-load that amount to offset workers’
    compensation benefits completely for that period.
    1
    The two cases involve a different pair of appellations for the parties
    (Petitioner/Respondent v. Appellant/Appellee) because the Thiergartner case made a stop
    at the Court of Special Appeals en route to us while the Walters case did not. See Maryland
    Rule 8-111.
    2
    In our view, the most reasonable and accurate way to convert this portion of
    retirement benefits to a weekly figure would be to compute a figure for a stream of weekly
    amounts over the course of retirement that equates in some reasonable way to the lump sum
    payment. Such an approach is consistent with prior appellate decisions concerning another
    offset provision in the Workers’ Compensation Act.           The Workers’ Compensation
    Commission adopted such a method in the Thiergartner case.
    I
    Background
    Workers’ Compensation and Public Safety Employees
    The Maryland Workers’ Compensation Act, codified at Maryland Code, Labor &
    Employment Article (“LE”), §9–101 et seq., is designed to ensure that employees receive
    compensation for disabilities resulting from work-related injuries and occupational diseases.
    R.P. Gilbert, et al., Maryland Workers’ Compensation Handbook (4th ed. 2013), §§1.03,
    7.01. That law provides special consideration for public safety employees by creating a
    presumption that certain disabling diseases or conditions are occupational diseases suffered
    in the line of duty and therefore compensable under the workers’ compensation law. LE §9-
    503.2 Pertinent to these cases, the statute provides that a paid firefighter who suffers from
    2
    The history of the workers’ compensation law and the presumption that certain
    disabilities suffered by public safety employees or retirees are related to their employment
    is discussed in some detail in Polomski v. Mayor and City Council of Baltimore, 
    344 Md. 70
    ,
    76-79, 
    684 A.2d 1338
    (1996).
    3
    heart disease, hypertension, or lung disease that results in total or partial disability or death
    “is presumed to have an occupational disease that was suffered in the line of duty and is
    compensable under [the workers’ compensation law].” LE §9-503(a).
    Many firefighters who qualify for that presumption will be retired and will be
    receiving retirement benefits as a result of their employment as a firefighter. The statute
    provides for an adjustment of any workers’ compensation benefits awarded to such an
    employee. Under that provision, the workers’ compensation benefits received as a result of
    the presumption are to be offset in certain circumstances by retirement benefits that the
    individual receives.3 In particular, the statute provides as follows:
    (1)    Except as provided in paragraph (2) of this
    subsection, any [firefighter] eligible for benefits under [LE §9-
    503(a)] shall receive the benefits in addition to any benefits that
    the individual ... [is] entitled to receive under the retirement
    system in which the individual was a participant at the time of
    the claim.
    (2)    The benefits received under [the workers’
    compensation law] shall be adjusted so that the weekly total of
    3
    The Workers’ Compensation Act also contains a provision that offsets workers’
    compensation benefits by retirement benefits related to disability – a provision designed to
    prevent what might be considered “double dipping” as both governmental payments would
    relate to the same disability. See LE §9-610; Blevins v. Baltimore County, 
    352 Md. 620
    , 639-
    40, 
    724 A.2d 22
    (1999); Newman v. Subsequent Injury Fund, 
    311 Md. 721
    , 728, 
    537 A.2d 274
    (1988). The offset provision in LE §9-503(e)(2) is somewhat different in nature in that
    the offsetting retirement benefits are not necessarily related to the disability that supports the
    workers’ compensation award. Rather, the offset in LE §9-503(e)(2) appears to be designed
    to moderate the fiscal effect of the generous presumption accorded to public safety
    employees in LE §9-503(a).
    4
    those benefits and retirement benefits does not exceed the
    weekly salary that was paid to the ... firefighter ....
    LE §9-503(e). On its face, the statutory formula appears to be a straightforward exercise that
    involves (1) adding two numbers (the weekly workers’ compensation benefit and weekly
    retirement benefit), (2) comparing the result to the weekly salary earned by the firefighter
    during employment, and (3) if the result exceeds the weekly salary, reducing the workers’
    compensation benefit by the amount of the difference. But things are never so simple as they
    seem.
    The Baltimore County DROP Program
    Like a number of other jurisdictions, Baltimore County has included in its personnel
    law a provision known as the Deferred Retirement Option Program (“DROP”). The DROP
    is designed to retain certain categories of long-time County employees who might otherwise
    choose to retire by offering them the option of an enhanced retirement benefit if an employee
    defers retirement and remains an active County employee.
    Under the DROP related to firefighters, a County firefighter who is eligible to retire
    and has the requisite years of service may elect to participate in the DROP. The employee
    then continues to work for the County as an active employee while deferring certain
    compensation related to the forgone pension payments and ongoing employee pension
    contributions in a special account. Baltimore County Code, §5-1-302(b)-(e). In particular,
    when the employee elects to participate in the DROP, an account is created for the employee
    that includes (1) an amount equivalent to a year’s worth of pension payments for each year
    5
    that the employee continues to work for the County after the employee becomes eligible for
    retirement (the “DROP period”); (2) the retirement contributions made by the employee
    during the DROP period; and (3) interest earned on the amounts in the DROP account.
    Baltimore County Code, §5-1-302(e).
    When the period of deferred retirement comes to an end and the employee actually
    retires, the employee has a choice as to how to receive the amount in the DROP account. The
    employee can elect to receive the accumulated amount in the DROP account as a lump sum
    or roll it over into an eligible retirement plan and thereby enhance future retirement benefits.
    Baltimore County Code, §5-1-302(f).
    Thiergartner
    Mr. Thiergartner was employed as a sworn firefighter with Baltimore County for 33
    years. He retired in September 2005. At the time of his retirement, Mr. Thiergartner elected
    to receive a lump sum from his DROP account. He received a payment of $189,346.90
    within 30 days of that election. He also began to receive a monthly retirement allowance of
    $3,672.07. Converted to a weekly figure, that amount is $847.40 per week.
    In February 2011, more than five years after his retirement, Mr. Thiergartner filed a
    workers’ compensation claim for heart disease related to his employment. In his claim, he
    identified the date of disablement as May 19, 2010.
    In June 2011, applying the presumption in LE §9-503(a), the Workers’ Compensation
    Commission found that Mr. Thiergartner had sustained an occupational disease – coronary
    6
    artery disease – related to his employment as a firefighter and agreed that the first date of
    disablement was May 19, 2010. It found that he was entitled to a maximum weekly benefit
    for a permanent partial disability of $307 for 125 weeks. The Commission order identified
    his “average weekly wage” as $1,213.80.
    The Commission also computed the offset under LE §9-503(e)(2). As described
    above, in order to apply the offset, one must compare Mr. Thiergartner’s combined
    retirement and workers’ compensation benefits, expressed as an aggregate weekly amount,
    with his “weekly salary.” Setting aside the lump sum DROP payment for the moment, Mr.
    Thiergartner’s ongoing pension payment, converted from a monthly figure to a weekly
    figure, is $847.40; his maximum weekly workers’ compensation benefit under the
    Commission’s award is $307.00. Added together, they amount to $1,154.40 per week.
    Assuming that “weekly salary” for purposes of LE §9-503(e) is equivalent to “average
    weekly wage,”4 there would be no offset, as the combined figure ($1,154.40) does not exceed
    4
    There is no definition of the phrase “weekly salary” in the statute. In computing the
    offset in these cases, the Commission apparently assumed that “weekly salary” is equivalent
    to “average weekly wage,” a phrase defined in the Workers’ Compensation Act. See LE §9-
    602. When the offset formula was recodified in 1991 as part of the new Labor &
    Employment Article, the code revisors noted, for consideration by the General Assembly that
    the statute did not specify the period of time that should be used for determining the “weekly
    salary” of the individual. Chapter 8, §2, Laws of Maryland 1991 at pp. 850-51. The General
    Assembly has not yet responded to the revisors’ suggestion.
    In the Circuit Court in the Walters case, the County argued that the phrase “weekly
    salary” is susceptible to a different interpretation than “average weekly wage,” which
    resulted, at least in that case, in a lower figure. See footnote 6 below. The County did not
    include that issue in its petitions for certiorari in these cases and the merits of the
    7
    $1,213.80. Whether there should be an offset under the statutory formula will depend on
    whether – and how – the DROP benefit is included in this comparison.
    In February 2012, the Commission held that the DROP benefit should be included in
    the computation on a pro-rated basis. To come up with a pro-rated figure, the Commission
    looked to the higher monthly retirement benefit that Mr. Thiergartner would have received
    if he had not elected to receive the DROP benefit as a lump sum payment. That amount,
    converted to a weekly figure, was $946.15.5 Applying the statutory cap, the Commission set
    the weekly payment of workers’ compensation benefits, after what amounted to a partial
    offset, as $272.03 for a period of 125 weeks.
    The County sought judicial review of the Commission’s decision in the Circuit Court
    for Baltimore County. The County did not challenge the Commission’s conclusion that Mr.
    Thiergartner was entitled to benefits as a result of the statutory presumption, but excepted
    to its computation of the offset. Following a hearing on the parties’ cross motions for
    summary judgment, that court granted Mr. Thiergartner’s motion, denied the County’s
    motion, and affirmed the Commission’s decision.
    Commission’s use of the average weekly wage figure is not before us.
    5
    There is some discrepancy in the record before us as to the origin of that figure. At
    the hearing in the Circuit Court and in his brief before us, Mr. Thiergartner’s counsel stated
    that the figure was based on the monthly benefit that Mr. Thiergartner would have received
    if he had elected to take the DROP benefit as an enhanced monthly retirement benefit instead
    of as a lump sum. Before us, the County’s counsel stated that it was based on the monthly
    benefit Mr. Thiergartner would have received if he had never participated in the DROP. We
    need not resolve this discrepancy for purposes of this opinion other than to note that the
    former method would appear to be a more precise way of pro-rating the DROP payment.
    8
    The County appealed the decision to the Court of Special Appeals. The intermediate
    appellate court affirmed the judgment of the Circuit Court in favor of Mr. Thiergartner, but
    ordered that the case be remanded to the Commission to recalculate the monthly benefit in
    a way that eliminated any offset. 
    216 Md. App. 560
    , 
    88 A.3d 844
    (2014). It held that,
    because the offset formula in LE §9-503(e) referred to a “weekly total” of retirement and
    workers’ compensation benefits, there was no occasion for factoring in the lump sum DROP
    payment that Mr. Thiergartner had received at the outset of his retirement well before he was
    awarded any workers’ compensation benefits.
    We granted the County’s petition for a writ of certiorari to consider whether the lump
    sum DROP payment should be factored into the computation required by LE §9-503(e)(2)
    and, if so, how.
    Walters
    Mr. Walters’ case began earlier than Mr. Thiergartner’s case, but arrived at our Court
    later. Like Mr. Thiergartner, Mr. Walters was a firefighter with Baltimore County for more
    than 30 years. He retired in June 2006. Mr. Walters had participated in the DROP and, upon
    retirement, elected to receive a lump sum in the amount of $146,959.90. He also began to
    receive monthly retirement benefits of $3,745.00. Converted to a weekly figure, the
    retirement benefits amount to $846.23 per week. (The record does not indicate what his
    monthly retirement benefit – or its weekly equivalent – would have been, if he had elected
    9
    to take the DROP benefit as an enhanced monthly retirement payment instead of as a lump
    sum).
    Two years after his retirement, Mr. Walters had a heart attack and was diagnosed as
    having heart disease. In July 2008, Mr. Walters filed a claim for workers’ compensation
    benefits. The County contested the claim. In February 2009, the Commission awarded Mr.
    Walters permanent partial disability benefits of $685 per week for 333 weeks. In order to
    determine the offset under LE §9-503(e)(2), it determined that his average weekly wage was
    $1,282.00 and converted his monthly retirement benefits to $864.23 per week. This resulted
    in a partial offset that reduced Mr. Walters’ workers’ compensation benefit to approximately
    $417 per week.
    Unlike Mr. Thiergartner’s case – which would not come before the Commission until
    two years later – the County initially did not ask the Commission to include the DROP lump
    sum payment in its computation of the offset amount and the Commission’s order made no
    reference to the DROP payment.
    The County later sought judicial review of the Commission’s award in the Circuit
    Court for Baltimore County, arguing that there should be an offset for the DROP lump sum,
    and also asked the Commission to modify its order for the same reason. In the meantime, it
    did not pay any workers’ compensation benefits to Mr. Walters, apparently on the theory (1)
    that the offset provision in LE §9-503(e)(2) was effective as a matter of law, even if not
    included in the Commission’s order, and (2) that Mr. Walters’ workers’ compensation
    10
    benefits should be offset dollar for dollar by the lump sum DROP payment until the amount
    of the offsets equaled the amount of the lump sum – a time that, given the figures involved,
    would be considerably in the future.6 There followed litigation before the Commission, the
    Circuit Court, and the Court of Special Appeals in which Mr. Walters sought to compel the
    County to pay the Commission’s award while the County pursued judicial review of the
    award. It resulted in the intermediate appellate court dismissing the County’s appeal and
    remanding to the Circuit Court to conduct a hearing “on the role of the DROP funds, if any,
    in the calculation of the offset.”
    Before the Circuit Court, Mr. Walters won the battle – the court ordered the County
    to comply with the Commission order while the matter was under judicial review – but lost
    the war. The Circuit Court eventually sided with the County on its interpretation of the offset
    provision and, in a written opinion issued in July 2011, ordered that the lump sum be applied
    to offset workers’ compensation benefits until the full amount of the DROP payment has
    been credited against the workers’ compensation benefits, a period that it computed to be 352
    weeks.
    6
    The County subtracted the weekly retirement benefit figure from the average weekly
    wage found by the Commission to derive a “gap” of $417. Dividing that amount into the
    lump sum DROP payment received by Mr. Walters, the County argued that it was entitled
    to offset any workers’ compensation benefits up to $417 for 352.42 weeks – nearly seven
    years. (The County also urged that a lower figure be used for “average weekly salary” which
    would result in a “gap” of $190.36. When the County’s method of computing the offset was
    used with this figure, the complete offset of workers’ compensation benefits would last 772
    weeks – nearly 15 years).
    11
    Mr. Walters appealed that decision. After briefs had been filed, but before argument
    was held in the Court of Special Appeals, the County filed a petition for certiorari and
    suggested that we hear the case together with the Thiergartner case in the interest of judicial
    economy. Mr. Walters, who is represented by the same counsel as Mr. Thiergartner, did not
    oppose the petition. We granted the petition and accepted the County’s suggestion that we
    consider the cases together.
    II
    Discussion
    There is no dispute as to the underlying facts in either of these cases. The result in
    both cases turns on a question of law: Is a lump sum DROP payment a retirement benefit
    that is to be offset against workers’ compensation benefits pursuant to LE §9-503(e)(2) and,
    if so, how?
    Standard of Review
    In a judicial proceeding to review an award of the Commission, the decision of the
    Commission is “presumed to be prima facie correct.” LE §9-745(b)(1). A court may reverse
    a Commission decision only if the court finds that the Commission’s action was based on an
    erroneous construction of the facts or law. Frank v. Baltimore County, 
    284 Md. 655
    , 658,
    
    399 A.2d 250
    (1979); LE §9-745(c)(3). As indicated above, the facts are undisputed and the
    issue is purely one of law.
    12
    Because we are dealing with a question of law, we accord no special deference to the
    decisions of the Circuit Court or the Court of Special Appeals. Of course, as in any case
    where another court has given thoughtful consideration of the legal issue at stake, this does
    not prevent us from taking advantage of the reasoning and analysis of the courts that have
    considered the same issue that is before us. Sturdivant v. Department of Health & Mental
    Hygiene, 
    436 Md. 584
    , 587-88, 
    84 A.3d 83
    (2014).
    Whether the Lump Sum DROP Payment Should be Included in the Offset Computation
    There can be no dispute that the DROP payment is a retirement benefit for purposes
    of LE §9-503(e)(2).     See 
    Polomski, 344 Md. at 82
    (construing “retirement benefits”
    referenced in statute broadly to “make no distinction between [those] accruing by reason of
    age and service versus those accruing as the result of a disability”); cf. Dennis v. Fire &
    Police Employees’ Retirement System, 
    390 Md. 639
    , 651, 
    890 A.2d 737
    (2006) (DROP
    payments are pension benefits for purposes of qualified domestic relations order). Nor does
    there appear to be any dispute that the lump sum DROP payment must be accounted for in
    some way in the formula set forth in LE §9-503(e)(2).7
    7
    Counsel for Mr. Thiergartner and Mr. Walters has cited a provision of the County
    Code that provides that benefits from a deferred compensation program do not “effect a
    reduction of the amount of any ... other benefit provided by law.” Baltimore County Code,
    §5-2-105. It is not entirely clear that this provision applies to the DROP, which appears in
    a different title of Article 5 of the County Code. In any event, State law clearly provides for
    an offset in LE §9-503(e)(2) and counsel for the retirees does not argue that the County Code
    provision would prevail over the State statute.
    13
    How the Lump sum DROP Payment Should be Included in the Offset Computation
    As noted above, the offset provision in LE §9-503(e)(2) provides simply that “the
    benefits received [under the workers’ compensation law] shall be adjusted so that the weekly
    total of those benefits and retirement benefits does not exceed the weekly salary that was paid
    to the ... firefighter ....” The statutory offset formula thus contemplates a comparison of a
    retiree’s “weekly salary” with the workers’ compensation award (which is typically expressed
    as a weekly amount) and retirement benefits which, for purposes of the comparison, must be
    expressed as a weekly figure. This means that any retirement benefit payment not paid on
    a weekly basis – which is likely true for most, if not all, retirement payments – must be
    converted to a weekly figure for this formula. The statute does not explicitly state how to do
    this. What legislative history exists is also silent on this question.8
    8
    The presumption favoring certain firefighters was originally added to the workers’
    compensation law in 1971 prior to the time when the General Assembly retained legislative
    background materials pertaining to individual bills. Chapter 695, Laws of Maryland 1971,
    enacting Maryland Code, Article 101, §64A. As originally enacted, that section provided
    that the workers’ compensation benefits that a firefighter received with the benefit of the
    presumption would be “in addition to such benefits as he may be entitled to under the
    retirement system in which said firefighter was a participant at the time of his claim.” It went
    on to provide that the workers’ compensation benefits were to be adjusted so that “the total
    of all weekly benefits” would not exceed the weekly salary of the firefighter. Although the
    statute was tweaked in a number of respects over subsequent years, the language defining the
    offset formula remained intact until the provision was recodified in the new Labor and
    Employment Article in 1991. At that time, the code revisors stated that the current statutory
    language was derived without substantive change from the original language. Chapter 8, §2,
    Laws of Maryland 1991 at pp. 850-51.
    14
    A case concerning another offset provision of the Workers’ Compensation Act
    provides some guidance. See Blevins v. Baltimore County, 
    352 Md. 620
    , 
    724 A.2d 22
    (1999). Blevins concerned an offset provision, codified at LE §9-610, that is designed to
    avoid duplicative disability payments to government employees and retirees.9 It states that,
    if a governmental employer provides a benefit to an employee that exceeds the employer’s
    obligation to pay workers’ compensation benefits, that payment offsets the employer’s
    obligation to pay workers’ compensation benefits. This Court held that a workers’
    compensation benefit awarded for a period preceding the employee’s disability retirement
    was not a duplicate benefit that would be offset by the employee’s subsequent disability
    retirement benefit, even though the worker’s compensation benefit was paid in a lump sum
    after 
    retirement. 352 Md. at 627
    . Thus, Blevins held that, for purposes of computing the
    offset in LE §9-610, a lump sum benefits payment should be attributed to the period to which
    the benefits related, as opposed to the period during which the lump sum happened to be
    paid.
    Returning to the question before us: how should the DROP lump sum payment be
    converted to a weekly figure that reflects the entire period of the individual’s retirement?
    Three possibilities have been proposed in these cases. For convenience, we shall refer to
    them as the Retiree Proposal, the County Proposal, and the Commission Approach.10
    9
    See footnote 3 above.
    10
    In what is perhaps an indication that this issue is not a straightforward one, each of
    the courts below chose a different option. In particular, the Court of Special Appeals
    15
    (1)    Retiree Proposal: Include the lump sum in the formula only for the week in
    which it was paid and not for any subsequent weeks
    Before the Commission and in the Circuit Court, counsel for Mr. Thiergartner and Mr.
    Walters argued that a lump sum DROP payment should be part of the offset computation
    only for the particular week in which it is paid.11 This would have the effect of wiping out
    any workers’ compensation benefits paid for that week, but the DROP payment would drop
    out of the computation for all subsequent weeks. In both of these cases, the retirees received
    the lump sum long before they even applied for workers’ compensation benefits. The DROP
    payment would therefore not be included in the offset computation in these cases.
    The Court of Special Appeals adopted this approach in the Thiergartner case. In
    particular, it interpreted the statutory language to mean that “the restriction contemplated by
    the statute can only apply to weekly retirement and workers’ compensation benefits that are
    due 
    concurrently.” 216 Md. App. at 570
    (boldface in original). It essentially held that,
    because LE §9-503(e)(2) involves a comparison of weekly benefits with weekly salary and
    because the lump sum DROP payment was not a “weekly” payment, it should not be included
    in the formula under the plain language of the statute. 
    Id. at 571
    (“We do not see a basis for
    an interpretation that would allow for the accounting of any retirement benefits other than
    adopted the Retiree Proposal in the Thiergartner case, the Circuit Court in the Walters case
    adopted the County Proposal, and the Circuit Court in the Thiergartner case affirmed the
    Commission Approach.
    11
    As a fallback position, counsel also argued that the Commission Approach was
    superior to the County Proposal.
    16
    those which are to be paid weekly and concurrently with a workers’ compensation award”).
    The problem with that conclusion is that there are few, if any, retirement benefits paid
    on a weekly basis. Indeed, the record in these cases indicates that the ongoing retirement
    benefit payments for both Mr. Thiergartner and Mr. Walters are made on a monthly basis.12
    Taken to its logical conclusion, construing the offset to apply only to concurrent “weekly”
    payments would mean that virtually no retirement benefits would ever be included in the
    offset computation, with the likely result that there would never be any offset for any public
    safety retiree who benefits from the presumption in LE §9-503. If the offset is keyed to the
    particular week in which a retirement benefit is paid, the offset would be applied in the one
    week of the month in which monthly retirement benefits are paid and not applied in the other
    weeks of the month. This would essentially render LE §9-503(e)(2) completely ineffective
    or unwieldy, contrary to a basic canon of statutory construction.13
    In our view, the use of the term “weekly” in the statute does not restrict the type of
    retirement benefits to be taken into account by the frequency of payment. Rather, the statute
    refers to the “weekly total” of retirement benefits and workers’ compensation benefits in
    12
    Retirement benefits are typically paid on a monthly basis. According to the
    frequently asked questions page of the website for the Baltimore County retirement system,
    benefits are paid by direct deposit to a retiree’s bank account at the end of each month. See
    . The
    same schedule is followed by the Maryland State Retirement and Pension System. See
    .
    13
    See, e.g., Maryland Dept. of State Police v. Maryland State Conference of NAACP
    Branches, 
    430 Md. 179
    , 196, 
    59 A.3d 1037
    (2013); Fisher v. Eastern Correctional Inst., 
    425 Md. 699
    , 706, 
    43 A.3d 338
    (2012).
    17
    order to provide a sensible formula that includes workers’ compensation benefits – which are
    expressed as weekly dollar figure and which are the payment that will potentially be affected
    by the offset. Retirement benefits, whether paid monthly or bi-weekly or on some other
    timetable, must be converted to a weekly figure in order to be combined with workers’
    compensation benefits for one side of the statutory formula.14 See, e.g., Polomski v. Mayor
    and City Council of Baltimore, 
    344 Md. 70
    , 73, 
    684 A.2d 1338
    (1996) (converting bi-weekly
    retirement benefit to weekly figure in computing potential offset). Similarly, the employee’s
    salary during employment – which also was likely expressed as an annual amount and paid
    on a monthly or bi-weekly basis – must be converted to a weekly figure for the other side of
    the formula.
    Thus, the reference to the “weekly total” of retirement benefits and workers’
    compensation benefits is not a limitation on what retirement benefits to include – i.e., only
    those paid weekly – but rather a direction on how to include retirement benefits in the
    computation – i.e., express the retirement benefits as a weekly amount so that the statutory
    comparison can be made. There is no obvious reason why the DROP lump sum payment,
    if it is part of the employee’s “retirement benefits,” should not be converted to a weekly
    figure, just as other portions of the employee’s “retirement benefits” and the employee’s
    salary are.
    14
    The Court of Special Appeals implicitly accepted this proposition as it used a figure
    derived from converting Mr. Thiergartner’s monthly retirement benefit to a weekly figure in
    computing the 
    offset. 216 Md. App. at 572
    .
    18
    Accordingly, the Retiree Proposal is a strained construction of the statute and is
    inconsistent with the treatment of other payments used in the formula that are not typically
    expressed as a weekly figure or paid on a weekly basis.
    (2)    County Proposal: Divide the lump sum by whatever weekly amount of
    workers’ compensation benefits are awarded and offset those benefits in full
    for however many weeks it takes
    The County Proposal would convert the DROP lump sum into a weekly figure, but
    the method of conversion appears inconsistent with the principle we derive from Blevins.
    The County proposes that the lump sum be offset as a weekly amount equal to whatever the
    weekly workers’ compensation benefit of the retiree happens to be (after any offset based on
    the monthly retirement payment) – an approach that completely offsets the workers’
    compensation benefits for a significant period of time, after which the DROP lump sum
    would not figure in the computation at all. As a practical matter, in both of the cases before
    us, the offset would negate all or nearly all of the workers’ compensation award.
    For example, in Mr. Thiergartner’s case, the County would divide the lump sum
    payment of $189,346.90 by the maximum weekly workers’ compensation award that Mr.
    Thiergartner could receive – $307 – to come up with the number of weeks (617) for which
    the workers’ compensation benefits would be completely offset. Perhaps unsurprisingly, this
    19
    appears to maximize the offset for the County and would completely eliminate the worker’s
    compensation award.15
    In Mr. Walters’ case, the County Proposal would divide the lump sum payment of
    $146, 959.90 by the maximum weekly workers’ compensation benefit that Mr. Walters could
    receive (after the partial offset for the monthly retirement payment) – $417 – to come up with
    the number of weeks (352) for which workers’ compensation benefits would be completely
    offset. At the conclusion of that period, there would no offset at all.
    It is difficult to comprehend the rationale underlying the County Proposal. Although
    the County promotes it as a method of pro-rating the lump sum for offset purposes, it appears
    to be designed primarily to minimize the workers’ compensation benefit rather than spread
    the lump sum over the period of retirement in some logical and fair manner. In the two cases
    before us, Mr. Thiergartner received a substantially greater lump sum payment than Mr.
    Walters, but the County would “pro-rate” Mr. Thiergartner’s lump sum at a much lower rate
    ($307 per week) than Mr. Walters’ lump sum ($417 per week). Perhaps this would make
    sense if Mr. Thiergartner had a much longer life expectancy – i.e., the higher lump sum
    would be pro-rated at a lower rate because it was being spread over a longer period of time.
    15
    As part of its argument that this was an appropriately “pro-rated” figure, the County
    appeared to suggest at oral argument that its proposal would also involve reducing the
    potential offset attributable to the lump sum payment by $307 per week from the date of
    payment of the lump sum – even before the date of disablement. Even though that period
    was nearly five years in duration, the end result would still be a complete offset of Mr.
    Thiergartner’s workers’ compensation award.
    20
    But that is not the basis for the different rates by which the County would pro-rate the lump
    sums.        The rate is based solely on the amount of the particular retiree’s workers’
    compensation award – a figure quite independent of the retirement benefits or expected
    length of retirement.16 This is not a consistent way of attributing the lump sum DROP
    payment to the period to which it relates – the retiree’s retirement.
    (3)      Commission Approach: Devise a way to spread the value of the lump sum
    over the period for which retirement benefits would be paid
    The Commission approach would pro-rate the DROP lump sum payment by a method
    independent of the amount of the worker’s compensation award. In Thiergartner, at the time
    of the initial award by the Commission, the County raised the question of how the lump sum
    DROP payment should be included in the offset computation. In response, the Commission
    recognized that some accounting should be made for the portion of Mr. Thiergartner’s
    retirement benefits represented by the lump sum DROP payment.17 As recounted above, the
    16
    In arguing in favor of its proposal, the County has suggested that the DROP program
    is expensive and that the retirees are receiving a windfall of some kind. (The County
    discontinued the program for new employees in 2007). Whether the DROP program was
    wise policy is not before us and is not our call. But there can be no question that those who
    authorized and created it anticipated that it would cost the County something more than
    normal retirement. In essence, the County was offering enhanced retirement benefits to
    experienced employees in order to retain them in its active work force. Whether those
    employees performed better than their replacements would have, whether the costs associated
    with replacing them earlier and paying retirement benefits earlier would have exceeded the
    costs of the DROP program, and whether the citizens of Baltimore County experienced better
    or worse public services as a result of the program involve economic assessments beyond our
    expertise. In any event, such an assessment is irrelevant to the legal question before us.
    17
    As noted earlier, the County did not ask the Commission to include the DROP lump
    sum payment in its order in the Walters case and the Circuit Court ultimately decided the
    21
    Commission sought to convert the lump sum to a weekly figure by reference to the higher
    monthly retirement benefit Mr. Thiergartner would have received, had he not elected the
    lump sum option.
    The Court of Special Appeals has affirmed a similar approach by the Commission in
    applying the offset provision in LE §9-610 of the Workers’ Compensation Act. Garrett v.
    Board of Education, 
    94 Md. App. 169
    , 
    616 A.2d 446
    (1992). As noted above, that statute
    also concerns an offset of workers’ compensation benefits by retirement benefits. In Garrett,
    the retiree elected an option that involved a lower monthly retirement payment but with a
    future survivor benefit. The Court of Special Appeals held that the appropriate figure to use
    for the offset computation was an “actuarially equal” figure – derived from an alternative
    option under the retirement plan – that expressed the retirement benefit as a recurring
    payment during the period of the retiree’s retirement.
    Similarly, in these cases, the lump sum DROP payment is simply one option that an
    employee can pick to receive the enhanced retirement benefit provided by the DROP; the
    alternative to the lump sum would be a higher monthly benefit payment in the future. The
    lump sum is thus a benefit payment that relates to the entirety of the employee’s retirement
    and not simply to the particular date on which it happens to be paid or to the period over
    which workers’ compensation benefits are to be paid.
    issue without a prior Commission decision on the issue.
    22
    While the Commission’s approach in Thiergartner represented the view of a single
    commissioner who stated a conclusion without a detailed analysis, in our estimate it is
    superior to either the Retiree Proposal or the County Proposal in that it converts the lump
    sum to a weekly figure and does so in a way that relates the lump sum to the entire period of
    retirement. This Court does not function as the chief actuary or chief economist under the
    Workers’ Compensation Act and we do not hold that the Commission Approach is the only
    way to convert a lump sum retirement payment into a weekly figure for purposes of this
    statute. There may be other reasonable ways, consistent with the statute and the principle set
    forth in Blevins to do so. But any such method adopted by the Commission should comply
    with the principles set forth in this opinion.
    III
    Conclusion
    As is sometimes the case in statutory construction, the Legislature’s enactment
    provides clear direction only up to a point, after which the court must earn its keep. Here,
    the offset provision in LE §9-503(e)(2) clearly requires a comparison involving retirement
    benefits paid to a retiree without any exception based on the payment timetable of the
    benefits and thus includes a lump sum DROP payment.             The statute also necessarily
    contemplates the conversion of such payments to a weekly figure for purposes of the offset
    computation. Under the principle stated in Blevins, any conversion must pro-rate the lump
    sum payment over the entire period of retirement to which it relates. But the statute provides
    23
    no direction on the method of conversion. The approach adopted by the Commission in
    Thiergartner – looking to what the retirement system would have paid on a recurring basis
    under an alternate option – is one reasonable way to do so.
    J UDGMENT OF THE C OURT OF S PECIAL A PPEALS
    IN N O . 44 V ACATED AND C ASE R EMANDED TO
    THAT C OURT WITH I NSTRUCTIONS TO R EMAND
    THE C ASE TO THE C IRCUIT C OURT FOR
    B ALTIMORE C OUNTY FOR FURTHER
    P ROCEEDINGS C ONSISTENT WITH THIS O PINION.
    J UDGMENT OF THE C IRCUIT C OURT FOR
    B ALTIMORE C OUNTY IN N O. 58 V ACATED AND
    C ASE R EMANDED TO T HAT C OURT FOR
    F URTHER P ROCEEDINGS CONSISTENT WITH THIS
    O PINION.
    C OSTS TO BE P AID BY B ALTIMORE C OUNTY.
    24