Virginia Beach City Public Schools and PMA Management Corporation, TPA v. Sarah Norman

CourtCourt of Appeals of Virginia
DecidedMarch 2, 2021
Docket1103201
StatusUnpublished

This text of Virginia Beach City Public Schools and PMA Management Corporation, TPA v. Sarah Norman (Virginia Beach City Public Schools and PMA Management Corporation, TPA v. Sarah Norman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

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Virginia Beach City Public Schools and PMA Management Corporation, TPA v. Sarah Norman, (Va. Ct. App. 2021).

Opinion

COURT OF APPEALS OF VIRGINIA

Present: Judges Huff, O’Brien and AtLee UNPUBLISHED

Argued by videoconference

VIRGINIA BEACH CITY PUBLIC SCHOOLS AND PMA MANAGEMENT CORPORATION, TPA MEMORANDUM OPINION* BY v. Record No. 1103-20-1 JUDGE MARY GRACE O’BRIEN MARCH 2, 2021 SARAH NORMAN

FROM THE VIRGINIA WORKERS’ COMPENSATION COMMISSION

Robert L. Samuel, Jr. (Bryan S. Peeples; Pender & Coward, P.C., on briefs), for appellants.

Matthew J. Weinberg (Inman & Strickler, PLC, on brief), for appellee.

Virginia Beach City Public Schools and PMA Management Corporation, TPA (collectively,

“employer”) appeal a Workers’ Compensation Commission decision denying employer’s request to

terminate benefits awarded to Sarah Norman (“claimant”) for a work-related injury. The

Commission held that employer did not prove by a preponderance of the evidence that claimant was

able to return to her pre-injury employment. Employer contends that the Commission erred in

finding it failed to meet its evidentiary burden. For the following reasons, we affirm the

Commission’s decision.

* Pursuant to Code § 17.1-413, this opinion is not designated for publication. BACKGROUND

On appeal, this Court views the evidence in the light most favorable to claimant, the

prevailing party before the Commission. See Merck & Co. v. Vincent, 71 Va. App. 439, 442

(2020).

Claimant was employed as a high school math teacher when she fell in the school parking

lot on March 21, 2017 and sustained a head injury. As a result of her fall, she was diagnosed with a

concussion and post-concussive syndrome and had issues with balance and vision. Claimant was

awarded medical benefits “for as long as necessary” and temporary total disability compensation

from the date of her injury and “continuing until conditions justify a modification thereof.”

On July 29, 2019, employer moved to terminate the award, asserting that claimant’s treating

neurologist and optometrist had released claimant to her pre-injury employment. At a February 25,

2020 hearing before a deputy commissioner, employer introduced the deposition testimony of

Dr. Michelle Kuczma, claimant’s treating neurologist in 2018 and 2019. Dr. Kuczma diagnosed

claimant with balance issues and restricted her from climbing ladders but opined that the restriction

would not prohibit her from returning to work as a teacher. The doctor did not perform a full eye

exam and deferred “any analysis of [claimant’s] ability to work from a standpoint of her vision to

another specialist.”

Dr. Mary Alison Mercer, an optometrist, began treating claimant on May 4, 2017 for the

vision issues that resulted from her injury. Multiple medical records reflected that claimant suffered

from double vision, blurred vision, headaches, and light sensitivity, which were exacerbated by

viewing a computer screen. Dr. Mercer’s treatment included a recommendation to “decrease

monitor use (including TV screen).”

In May 2019, Dr. Mercer analyzed potential alternative employment for claimant and

imposed certain work restrictions related to computer screen time. The restrictions required a -2- fifteen-minute break for each hour of screen time and provided that claimant should engage in “[n]o

more than [two] hours of screen time per half day of work.”

Employer then procured a vocational assessment of claimant’s former job as a math teacher

from Steven Schall, a certified work capacity evaluator. Schall toured the school with assistant

principal Dr. William Washington, who described the general expectations for math teachers and

provided a copy of the school’s bell schedule. Schall saw that the classroom where claimant

previously worked was equipped with an interactive white board, also called a Promethean board.

In a written report, Schall described the white board as “technically a screen . . . used like a

blackboard.” He opined that claimant would be able to perform her pre-injury employment within

Dr. Mercer’s restriction to “stay[] under the [two] hour limit for both morning and afternoon for

computer monitor screen time.” Schall did not think that Dr. Mercer considered using the white

board to count as screen time.

Schall had never performed an evaluation where the disability involved an employee’s

vision, and he did not speak with claimant or observe any other math teachers. At the hearing, he

explained that he was only asked to opine about “the amount of screen time involved” in claimant’s

job, not whether “the restrictions were appropriate.”

Employer sent Dr. Mercer a copy of Schall’s report and asked for confirmation that the job

demands for a math teacher were within the restrictions she placed on claimant. In two July 2019

emails to employer, Dr. Mercer gave qualified medical approval for claimant to return to work but

clarified the restrictions on screen time: “Max [two] hours of screen work per half day with a

b[r]eak every [thirty] minutes of screen time.”

Dr. Washington also testified at the hearing. He stated that his job as assistant principal

includes supervising the math department and although the school wants teachers to “facilitate

students using technology,” use of a computer to teach math is “very minimal” and “there are no -3- demands for the teacher to use th[e] screen.” Dr. Washington testified that although “resources

. . . are available through the computer,” teachers are “not required to use them[;]” during a

two-hour teaching block, a teacher could spend fewer than ten minutes viewing a computer screen.

According to Dr. Washington, “[s]ome math teachers deliberately avoid the screen because it’s

faster to write on the chalkboard.” Dr. Washington explained that because he began his

employment at the school after claimant’s injury, he had never observed her teach.

Dr. Washington acknowledged that Dr. Mercer’s limitation on claimant’s screen use

included not only computer screens but also the Promethean board. He described the Promethean

board as “just like a big computer screen” that “sits on the wall,” and “what’s on [a desktop]

computer is projected onto the wall.”

He also addressed non-instructional use of the computer for planning lessons, grading, and

taking attendance. He testified that although teachers use computers for these purposes, teachers

“can be accommodated” by having someone else, such as a “tech secretary,” input the data.

Claimant testified that before her injury, she taught three consecutive math classes for

eighty-five minutes each, followed by a fifty-minute lunch period and an eighty-five-minute

planning period. In two classes, she used the Promethean board to project lessons from her desktop

computer for approximately sixty-five minutes per class. She used the Promethean board “a little

less” in the third class. Claimant stated that none of the classrooms had blackboards. She indicated

that she would have difficulty using the Promethean board because of her vision.

Claimant also stated that she used a computer for grading and planning lessons and teachers

were required “to upload [lesson plans] to the server.” Additionally, all communication between the

front office and teachers occurred by email. In contrast to Dr. Washington, who testified that the

school put “no demands” on teachers to use computers, claimant stated, “[W]e were expected to use

-4- the computer to teach with.” Claimant testified that she could not adequately perform her job

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