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Triolo v. Employee Trust Funds Board and County of Marathon

11/27/2002

. Matthew Triolo appeals an order affirming the decision of the Employee Trust Funds Board. The issue is whether the Board properly concluded that Triolo is not a "protective occupation participant," as defined in Wis. Stat. § 40.02(48)(a) (1999-2000). We conclude it did, and therefore we affirm.


. Triolo is employed as a Special Investigator in the office of the Marathon County District Attorney. Triolo previously argued to the Board that he should be classified as a protective occupation participant, but the Board rejected that argument in 1996. Triolo commenced a new review in 1999, and the Board again rejected his argument. He then commenced this action for certiorari review, and the circuit court affirmed the Board.


. The parties disagree as to the standard of review we should apply. We have previously held that we will give "great weight" deference to the Board's "interpretation and application" of Wis. Stat. § 40.02(48), which defines the term "protective occupation participant." Mattila v. Employe Trust Funds Bd., 2001 WI App 79, , 243 Wis. 2d 90, 626 N.W.2d 33. Triolo argues that we should not give that deference in his case because the Board's interpretation of the statute has been inconsistent over time. However, our adoption of this standard in Mattila was not based on the Board's consistency on the specific issue then before it, but rather on the Board's general history of interpreting and applying this statute. In Mattila, we said that "there can be little dispute that the Board has acquired considerable experience, expertise, and specialized knowledge regarding `protective occupation' determinations, that it used its expertise and knowledge in deciding this appeal, and that its interpretation fosters the uniform and consistent application of the statute." Id. at . This is equally true in Triolo's case. The test, therefore, is whether the Board's interpretation is reasonable. See id. at .


. Wisconsin Stat. § 40.02(48)(a) provides, in relevant part: "`Protective occupation participant' means any participant whose principal duties are determined by the participating employer ... to involve active law enforcement or active fire suppression or prevention, provided the duties require frequent exposure to a high degree of danger or peril and also require a high degree of physical conditioning." The Board has previously concluded that "principal duties" means 51% or more of the duties. See Mattila, 2001 WI App 79 at n.3. Triolo does not dispute that interpretation.


. The Board found that Triolo's primary function is to provide litigation support to the district attorney, "generally as a supplement to the investigations conducted by local law enforcement agencies, with an emphasis on follow-up investigations and on pretrial preparation." It found that "about half" of his work is finding the present locations of persons the prosecutors want to call as witnesses, and serving subpoenas. The Board further found that Triolo does not carry a firearm in the performance of his duties, and that he is prohibited by the district attorney from carrying a firearm or handcuffs or from making an arrest without the express authority of the district attorney. Further, the Board found that Triolo has never arrested or apprehended a criminal suspect in the course of his work in this position. Triolo does not appear to dispute these findings.


. The Board's main legal focus was on whether Triolo's principal duties involved "active law enforcement." The Board noted that this phrase was not defined in the statute, and stated that the Board has adopted the following "working definition" of that term:


o hold an office or public employment lawful

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