Opinion by
JUDGE NEY
T1 This case raises the issue of whether certain agricultural work constituted employment under the Colorado Employment Security Act (CESA). The dispute centers around the interpretation of section 8-70-120(1)(a), C.R.S. 2014, a CESA provision that defines when agricultural labor is deemed statutory employment.
T2 A hearing officer and the Industrial Claim Appeals Office (Panel) reached differing and conflicting interpretations of this statute which, in turn, resulted in conflicting conclusions as to whether the work was covered employment.
T3 We conclude that the hearing officers interpretation of the statute was correct and that the work performed was not employment as defined under CESA. Consequently, we set aside the Panels order and remand with instructions to reinstate the hearing officers decision.
I. Procedural Background
14 Petitioner, Whitewater Hill, LLC (Whitewater), operates a small vineyard and winery. Following an audit, the Colorado Department of Labor and Employment (Department) issued a liability determination concluding that agricultural work performed by certain individuals (the workers) for Whitewater amounted to covered employment and that Whitewater must pay taxes on amounts it paid the workers.
T5 Whitewater appealed the liability determination arguing, as pertinent here, that the services were agricultural labor and therefore fell outside CESAs definition of employment. Following an administrative hearing, the hearing officer made findings concerning the number of workers Whitewater had employed. Based on those findings and her interpretation of section 8-7O120(1)(a), the hearing officer concluded that the workers services were not employment, but rather exempt agricultural labor. Consequently, the hearing officer concluded that Whitewater was not required to pay taxes on the amounts it paid the workers.
T6 On review, the Panel disagreed with the hearing officers interpretation of section 8-70-120(1)(a) and set forth its own differing interpretation of the statute. The Panel set aside the hearing officers decision and remanded for additional factual findings.
T7 On remand, the hearing officer made supplemental findings as instructed but adhered to her original interpretation of section 870-120(1)(a). Based on that interpretation, the hearing officer again concluded that the workers services constituted exempt agricultural labor.
18 Whitewater appealed a second time. On review, the Panel applied its previous interpretation of section 8-70-120(1)(a) to the hearing officers new findings and concluded that the workers services constituted covered employment. Whitewater now seeks Judicial review of the Panels order.
IL Analysis
T9 Whitewater contends that the workers services were exempt agricultural labor under CESA and that the Panel misinterpreted section 8-70-120(1)(a). We agree.
A. Standard of Review
110 We may set aside the Panels decision if it is erroneous as a matter of law. See § 8-74-107(6)(d), C.R.S. 2014. We are bound by the hearing officers evidentiary findings of fact, which are not in dispute here, if they are supported by substantial evidence in the record. Harbert v. Indus. Claim Appeals Office, 2012 COA 23, ¶ 7, 272 P.3d 1190. However, we review de novo an agencys legal conclusions, including its interpretation of statutes. Commens Workers of Am. 7717 v. Indus. Claim Appeals Office, 2012 COA 148, ¶ 7, 292 P.3d 1127; see Indus. Claim Appeals Office v. Softrock Geological Servs., Inc., 2014 CO 30, ¶ 9, 325 P.3d 560 ([ Whether the ICAO ... applied the appropriate test is a question of law that we review de novo.).
B. Agricultural Labor/Covered Employment
1 11 Section 8-70-109, C.R.S. 2014, defines certain work activities that constitute agricultural labor. The parties do not dispute that the workers services in this case fall within this definition.
112 Section 8-70-126, C.R.S.2014, provides that covered employment does not include services performed by an individual in agricultural labor ... except as provided in section 8-70-120. See also § 8-70-118(1)(d), C.R.S. 2014 (providing that the term employer means [alny employing unit for which agricultural labor as defined in section 8-70-109 is performed and is defined as employment in section 8-70-120).
[13 Section 8-70-120, in turn, describes the limited cireumstances in which agricultural labor may be treated as covered employment subject to. taxation. In this appeal, the parties dispute the meaning of section 8-70-120(1)(a). That subsection provides, in pertinent part, as follows:
(1) Employment means services performed ... by an individual in agricultural labor ... when:
(a) Such service is performed for a person who ... for some portion of a day in each of twenty different calendar weeks ... in either the current or the preceding calendar year, employed in agricultural labor ... ten or more individuals, regardless of whether they were employed at the same moment of time.
C. The Meaning of Section 8-70-120(1)(a)
114 Whitewater and the hearing officer interpret section 8-70120(1)(a) to require that, during the eurrent or preceding year, a putative employer employed ten or more agricultural workers within each of twenty different weeks. More simply stated by the hearing officer, the statute requires [twenty] weeks with ten [or more] agricultural workers each. Because Whitewater had employed ten or more agricultural workers in only four different weeks from 2011 through the first quarter of 2018, the hearing officer concluded that the workers services were not employment under section 8-70120(1)(a).
1 15 In contrast, the Panel interprets seetion 8-70-120(1)(a) to require merely that a putative employer hired ten or more agricultural workers within a year and employed at least one agricultural worker in twenty different weeks. Because Whitewater employed more than ten total agricultural workers during 2011 and 2012 and employed at least one such worker in more than twenty weeks during both years, the Panel concluded that the workers services constituted employment.
[3] 116 We agree with the hearing officers and Whitewaters interpretation of the statute.
1 17 Our primary task in construing a statute is to give effect to the General Assemblys intent. Yotes, Inc. v. Indus. Claim Appeals Office, 2013 COA 124, ¶ 14, 310 P.3d 288. We first look to the plain and ordinary meaning of the words the General Assembly chose to utilize. Accord Human Res., Inc. v. Indus. Claim Appeals Office, 275 P.3d 697, 700 (Colo. App. 2010), affd, 2012 CO 15, 270 P.3d 985. We give consistent, harmonious, and sensible effect to all parts of the statute, and we seek to avoid an interpretation that would render any statutory language meaningless. Yotes, T14. We also must not ascribe a meaning that would lead to an illogical or absurd result. Id.
118 In our view, the Panels interpretation of section 8-70-120(1)(a) ignores the statutes express requirement that a putative employer have employed ten or more workers in each of twenty different calendar weeks. The word each is a distributive adjective pronoun, which denotes or refers to every one of the persons or things mentioned. Hayes v. Ottke, 2018 CO 1, ¶ 20, 298 P.3d 551 (quoting Blacks Law Dictionary 507 (6th ed. 1991)); see Mut. Sav. & Bldg. Assn v. Canon Block Inv. Co., 67 Colo. 75, 79, 185 P. 649, 650 (1919) (concluding that the expression each year meant every one of two or more years).
119 The Panel argues that interpreting the statute to require the hiring of ten or more workers in each of twenty different weeks renders meaningless the phrase regardless of whether they were employed at the same moment of time. We disagree. That phrase simply means that all individuals who worked on a given day must be counted toward the total, regardless of whether they worked at the same time during that day. This interpretation allows us to give effect to both this phrase and to the in each language appearing earlier in the same sentence.
120 Our interpretation of section 8-70-120(1)(a) also comports with the General Assemblys intent that CESA provisions be construed to conform with federal authorities. See § 8-70-108, C.R.S. 2014 (providing that if any provisions of CESA are determined to be in nonconformity with federal statutes, the Division of Unemployment Insurance is authorized to administer said articles so as to conform with the provisions of the federal statutes); see also Indus. Commn v. Bd. of Cnty. Commrs, 690 P.2d 839, 845 (Colo. 1984).
21 Section 8-70-120(1)(a) is based on 26 U.S.C. § 3806(a)(2)(B) (2012). As pertinent here, that statute provides that concerning agricultural labor, the term employer means any person who
on each of some 20 days during the calendar year or during the preceding calendar year, each day being in a different calendar week, employed at least 10 individuals in employment in agricultural labor for some portion of the day.
T 22 This federal provision plainly requires that, to be deemed an employer, the putative employer must have hired at least ten agricultural workers in each of twenty different weeks. Our interpretation of section 8-70-120(1)(a) is consistent with this federal counterpart. See Bd. of Cnty. Commrs; 690 P.2d at 845.
123 The disputed language in section 8-70-120(1)(a) first appeared in 1977 as one of numerous definitional amendments to CESA. See Ch. 91, see. 4, § 8-70-103(10)(f.8)(D)(A), 1977 Colo. Sess. Laws 1615. As Whitewater notes, the legislative history of these 1977 amendments shows they were intended to make CESA conform to recent changes in federal law. See Hearing on H.B. 77-1614 before the S. Bus. Comm., Slst Gen. Assemb., 1st Sess. (Apr. 20, 1997); Hearing on H.B. 77-1614 before the H. Bus. Comm., 51st Gen. Assemb., 1st Sess. (Mar. 29, 1997); see, also People v. Rockwell, 125 P.3d 410, 418-19 (Colo.2005) (discussing statutes legislative history to show that it did not contradict courts interpretation based on clear and unambiguous language).
124 The Panel asserts that section 8-70-120(1)(a) reflects the General Assemblys intent to create a broader definition of employment than that contained in 26 U.S.C. § 3306(a)(2)(B). However, the Panel cites nothing from the legislative history of section 8-70-120(1)(a) or its predecessor, former seetion 8-70-108(10)(£8)(I)(A), to support this assertion. Instead, the Panel relies solely on its expansive reading of section 8-70-120(1)(a) which, as we have already concluded, is erroneous because it renders the language in each meaningless.
25 Finally, the Panels reliance on Laub v. Industrial Claim Appeals Office, 983 P.2d 815, 817 (Colo. App. 1999), is misplaced. In Laub, a division of this court addressed whether work performed for a nonprofit organization constituted employment under section 870-118, C.R.S. 2014. Although that statute contains language similar to section 8-70-120(1)(a) describing the number of workers a putative employer must hire over a specified time period, in Lawb it was undisputed that these timing provisions of the statute had been satisfied. Laub, 983 P.2d at 816-17. Thus, Laub is not instructive because the division did not interpret section 8-70-118s similar timing language.
III. Conclusion
126 In sum, we conclude that because Whitewater employed ten or more agrieul-tural workers during each of only four different weeks in the audit period, the workers services did not constitute covered employment as defined in section 8-70-120(1)(a). Consequently, Whitewater was not required to pay unemployment taxes on amounts it paid the workers.
27 The Panels order is set aside insofar as it concluded that the workers services constituted covered employment rather than exempt agricultural labor, and the case is remanded with directions to reinstate the hearing officers decision.
CHIEF JUDGE LOEB and JUDGE ROY* concur.
Sitting by assignment of the Chief Justice under provisions of Colo. Const. art. VI, § 5(3), and § 24-51-1105, C.R.S. 2014.
. The hearing officer also determined that, as a threshold matter, the workers services constituted employment under the general provisions of section 8-70-115, C.R.S. 2014. We do not address this determination, however, because Whitewater did not challenge it at the administrative level and, instead, focused solely on the agricultural labor exemption issue.