STEARNS, District Judge.
Appellant William McCaffrey seeks review of a final decision of the Commissioner of the Social Security Administration (SSA) affirming Administrative Law Judge (ALJ) Sean Teehan's determination that he is not disabled within the meaning of the Social Security Act (Act). In this appeal, McCaffrey argues: (1) that the ALJ "failed to address the conflicting testimony of Social Security's vocational experts," and (2) that vocational expert Kathleen Regan "misinterpreted what is a transferable skill and when [it is] relevant to another occupation." Pl.'s Mem. at 2.
McCaffrey applied for Disability Insurance Benefits on January 19, 2006, claiming disability as of January 1, 2005.
McCaffrey was born on September 21, 1956. He was 49-years-old when he applied for Disability Insurance Benefits. In 1980, McCaffrey earned a bachelor's degree in marketing from the University of Massachusetts (Dartmouth). He then worked for twelve years as a fabricator, assembling and stacking the components of prefabricated tool sheds. He also supervised two junior employees. McCaffrey left his job as a fabricator in 1992, after receiving a contractor's license. He then worked in the construction trades as a laborer. In July of 2003, McCaffrey suffered neck, shoulder, hip, and leg injuries in a truck accident. He has not worked since.
McCaffrey lives by himself on the first floor of a two-story house in Uxbridge, Massachusetts. He cleans, shops for groceries, and prepares his own meals. He occasionally takes day trips to Brookfield, Massachusetts, where he owns a small camp house. He has a driver's license and is able to drive for up to half an hour at a time. He enjoys hunting, although he
McCaffrey's work history was the subject of the testimony of two vocational experts (VE), Robert Laskey, who testified at the 2007 hearing, and Kathleen Regan, who testified in 2011. They differed over the transferability of McCaffrey's vocational skills. In Laskey's view, these were negligible as McCaffrey's prior work as a fabricator and as a construction laborer had entailed only semi-skilled or unskilled labor. Regan, on the other hand, analogizing McCaffrey's construction work to that of a carpenter, and considering his experience as a fabricator and his degree in marketing, assessed his transferable skills to include basic math and computation skills, cost estimation, planning, materials handling, hand tool operation, customer service, blueprint reading, and purchasing. Both VEs identified available jobs that McCaffrey could perform in the national economy consistent with his residual functional capacity (RFC). In Laskey's opinion, these included sales clerk, parking lot cashier, and finish inspector. Regan testified that McCaffrey was capable of working as a cost estimator for construction projects, a sales representative for signs and displays, a wholesale construction kit manufacturer's representative, and as a sales agent for business services in the construction trades.
In his May 27, 2011 decision, the ALJ first determined that McCaffrey was last insured on December 31, 2009. The ALJ then applied the familiar five-step sequential analysis.
At Step Four, the ALJ determined that McCaffrey was unable to perform any of his past relevant work. At Step Five, he concluded from a consideration of McCaffrey's age, education, work experience, and RFC that he had acquired skills from his past relevant work that were transferable to other jobs in the national economy, specifically those that had been identified by VE Regan.
In the Social Security context, judicial review is limited to a determination of whether the findings of the Commissioner are supported by substantial evidence.
McCaffrey's first claim is that the ALJ erred in failing to explain why he discounted Laskey's testimony in favor of Regan's with respect to "the classification of [his] past relevant work or the transferability of [his] skills to other potential employment positions." Pl.'s Mem. at 11. In support, McCaffrey relies on Nguyen, a Social Security case in which the First Circuit held that an ALJ improperly rejected the "uncontroverted" opinion of a claimant's treating neurologist, while substituting his own assessment of the raw medical data (which the Court found to be beyond the ALJ's lay competence). Nguyen, 172 F.3d 31 at 35. The Nguyen case is, of course, easily distinguishable. Here, the evaluation of the conflicting opinions of the two VEs, amplified as they were at separate hearings, lies well within the competence of a lay person to evaluate. In preferring the opinion of Regan to that of Laskey, the ALJ committed no reversible error. To the contrary, the ALJ was simply doing his job, which is to weigh credibility, resolve conflicting evidence, and draw inferences from the evidence in the record. See Rodriguez, 647 F.2d at 222; see also Pires v. Astrue, 553 F.Supp.2d 15, 21 (D.Mass.2008) ("[R]esolution of conflicts in the evidence or questions of credibility is outside the court's purview, and thus where the record supports more than one outcome, the ALJ's view prevails as long as it is supported by substantial evidence.").
In his second claim on appeal, McCaffrey contends that VE Regan (and by extension, the ALJ) erred in concluding that McCaffrey had acquired transferrable skills during his prior work life. In determining at Step Five whether McCaffrey was disabled, the ALJ applied the Medical-Vocational Guidelines (Grids) Rule 202.15. The Rule directs a finding of not disabled when a claimant's skills are transferable.
In the first instance, McCaffrey contends that basic math and computational abilities (which he does not deny possessing) are not skills that confer a special advantage over less tutored persons in the workforce. Pl.'s Mem. at 13. The court disagrees. Social Security Ruling 82-41(2)(a) defines a skill as follows:
Although basic math and computation might be considered rudimentary skills, the regulations (properly) deem an individual who has acquired basic "arithmetic" skills from at least a high school education or above to be capable of performing semi-skilled and skilled work. High school education and above "means abilities in reasoning, arithmetic, and language skills acquired through formal schooling at a 12th grade level or above. We generally consider that someone with these educational abilities can do semi-skilled through skilled work." 20 C.F.R. § 404.1564(b)(4).
McCaffrey next claims that there is no evidence in the record that he ever acquired the skills of planning, cost estimation, purchasing materials, or customer service in his work as a carpenter and that Regan's conclusion to the contrary "is conjecture on the part of the vocational expert without any support." Pl.'s Mem. at 13. The court disagrees. In Arce Crespo v. Sec'y of Health and Human Servs., 831 F.2d 1
Id. at 5, quoting Gray v. Heckler, 760 F.2d 369, 372 (1st Cir.1985). The burden, in other words, was on McCaffrey to rebut the DOT presumption, a burden that he failed utterly to discharge in the hearings before the ALJ.
Finally, McCaffrey contends that the occupations identified by Regan as available to him in the national economy — cost estimator, sales representative, wholesale manufacturer's representative, and sales agent for construction business services — have no relation to his past work because they would require a significant change in his work conditions. McCaffrey maintains that he has no past relevant work in an office or salesroom environment and cannot be expected to transition to a "more complex position." Pl.'s Mem. at 14. The argument misconstrues what the Social Security regulations mean by transferability of skills.
20 C.F.R. § 404.1568(d) (emphasis added).
It takes no great leap of the imagination to extrapolate the everyday skills of a carpenter in estimating costs and purchasing work materials into those of a cost estimator in the construction industry, or given that McCaffrey has a degree in marketing, those of a sales agent for business services in the construction trades. Similarly, given McCaffrey's experience in fabricating parts for prefabricated tool sheds, one can easily envision him assembling signs and displays as a sales representative or acting as a wholesale manufacturer's agent in promoting similar products requiring assembly.
Because the ALJ's decision that McCaffrey is not disabled within the meaning of the Social Security Act is supported by substantial evidence, his motion to reverse the decision of the Commissioner is DENIED. The Commissioner's cross-motion for an affirmance is ALLOWED. The Clerk will enter judgment accordingly and close the case.
SO ORDERED.