Amisub of S.C., Inc. v. S.C. Dep't of Health & Envtl. Control
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Opinion
GEATHERS, J.:
**84Appellant Charlotte-Mecklenburg Hospital Authority, d/b/a Carolinas Medical Center-Fort Mill (Carolinas), challenges a decision of the South Carolina Administrative Law Court (ALC) ordering Respondent South Carolina Department of Health and Environmental Control (DHEC) to issue a Certificate of Need (CON) to Respondent Amisub of South Carolina, Inc., d/b/a Piedmont Medical Center, d/b/a Fort Mill Medical Center (Piedmont). Carolinas argues the purpose and effect of the ALC's application of the CON Act, the Project Review Criteria, and the 2004-2005 State Health Plan is to protect Piedmont from out-of-state competition, and, therefore, such an application violates the Dormant Commerce Clause.1 We affirm.
**85FACTS/PROCEDURAL HISTORY
Piedmont Medical Center in Rock Hill is the sole hospital in York County. It provides standard community hospital services as well as specialized services such as open heart surgery, neurosurgery, neonatal intensive care, and behavioral health. Amisub of South Carolina, Inc., which is a subsidiary of Tenet Healthcare Corporation, operates Piedmont Medical Center. Tenet Healthcare Corporation is headquartered in Dallas, Texas, and owns forty-nine hospitals in ten states.
Carolinas, which is headquartered in Charlotte, North Carolina, owns multiple hospitals in North Carolina with a large network of employed physicians, the Carolinas Physician Network (CPN), many of whom have practices in York County. As of the date of the final contested case hearing, Carolinas employed between seventy and ninety York County physicians. Additionally, Carolinas owns and operates Roper Hospital in downtown Charleston.
In 2005, Piedmont, Carolinas, Presbyterian Healthcare System (Presbyterian), and Hospital *636Partners of America, Inc. submitted applications to DHEC for a CON to build a sixty-four-bed hospital near Fort Mill based on the 2004-2005 State Health Plan's identification of a need for sixty-four additional acute care hospital beds in York County. Subsequently, Piedmont withdrew its application and submitted a new application for a one-hundred-bed hospital, which would include thirty-six beds transferred from Piedmont's Rock Hill facility to its proposed Fort Mill facility. In 2006, DHEC approved Piedmont's new application and denied the other three applications. Carolinas and Presbyterian filed separate requests for a contested case hearing before the ALC, which took place in September 2009.
The ALC concluded DHEC misinterpreted the 2004-2005 State Health Plan to allow only existing providers to obtain a CON. The ALC remanded the case to DHEC for a determination of which applicant most fully complied with the CON Act, the State Health Plan, Project Review Criteria,2 and applicable **86DHEC regulations. By October 2010,3 the three remaining applicants submitted to DHEC additional information to supplement their respective applications.
In September 2011, DHEC granted Carolinas' application and denied the applications of Piedmont and Presbyterian. Piedmont and Presbyterian submitted their respective requests for a contested case hearing before the ALC, and the ALC consolidated the cases. Presbyterian later withdrew its request, and the ALC dismissed Presbyterian as a party. The ALC ultimately ordered DHEC to award the CON to Piedmont. Carolinas filed a motion for reconsideration pursuant to Rule 59(e), SCRCP, and the ALC issued an Amended Final Order denying the motion. This appeal followed.
STANDARD OF REVIEW
The Administrative Procedures Act governs the standard of review on appeal from a decision of the ALC, allowing this court to
reverse or modify the decision if substantial rights of the appellant have been prejudiced because the administrative findings, inferences, conclusions, or decisions are: (a) in violation of constitutional or statutory provisions; (b) in excess of the statutory authority of the agency; (c) made upon unlawful procedure; (d) affected by other error of law; (e) clearly erroneous in view of the reliable, probative, and substantial evidence on the whole record; or (f) arbitrary or capricious or characterized by abuse of discretion or clearly unwarranted exercise of discretion.
LAW/ANALYSIS
Carolinas does not challenge the constitutionality of the CON Act itself. Further, Carolinas does not challenge the **87constitutionality of the 2004-2005 State Health Plan or the Project Review Criteria. Rather, Carolinas argues the purpose and effect of the ALC's application of the CON Act, the *6372004-2005 State Health Plan, and the Project Review Criteria is to protect Piedmont from out-of-state competition, and, therefore, such an application violates the Dormant Commerce Clause. Carolinas essentially challenges the ALC's conclusions of law concerning adverse impact and outmigration.
On this record,4 we hold the ALC properly applied the provisions of the CON Act, the 2004-2005 State Health Plan, and the Project Review Criteria in considering the needs of residents in all areas of York County and, therefore, did not violate the Dormant Commerce Clause. The ALC placed appropriate significance on adverse impact, as required by the Project Review Criteria, and outmigration, as we explain herein.
We will address each criterion Carolinas references in turn. But first, we will provide a primer on the general principles surrounding the Dormant Commerce Clause and the general provisions of South Carolina's CON law.
Dormant Commerce Clause
The Commerce Clause of the United States Constitution grants Congress the power to regulate commerce among the several states. U.S. Const. art. I, § 8, cl. 3. "The [United States Supreme] Court has consistently explained that the Commerce Clause was designed to prevent States from engaging **88in economic discrimination so they would not divide into isolated, separable units." South Dakota v. Wayfair, Inc. , --- U.S. ----,
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GEATHERS, J.:
**84Appellant Charlotte-Mecklenburg Hospital Authority, d/b/a Carolinas Medical Center-Fort Mill (Carolinas), challenges a decision of the South Carolina Administrative Law Court (ALC) ordering Respondent South Carolina Department of Health and Environmental Control (DHEC) to issue a Certificate of Need (CON) to Respondent Amisub of South Carolina, Inc., d/b/a Piedmont Medical Center, d/b/a Fort Mill Medical Center (Piedmont). Carolinas argues the purpose and effect of the ALC's application of the CON Act, the Project Review Criteria, and the 2004-2005 State Health Plan is to protect Piedmont from out-of-state competition, and, therefore, such an application violates the Dormant Commerce Clause.1 We affirm.
**85FACTS/PROCEDURAL HISTORY
Piedmont Medical Center in Rock Hill is the sole hospital in York County. It provides standard community hospital services as well as specialized services such as open heart surgery, neurosurgery, neonatal intensive care, and behavioral health. Amisub of South Carolina, Inc., which is a subsidiary of Tenet Healthcare Corporation, operates Piedmont Medical Center. Tenet Healthcare Corporation is headquartered in Dallas, Texas, and owns forty-nine hospitals in ten states.
Carolinas, which is headquartered in Charlotte, North Carolina, owns multiple hospitals in North Carolina with a large network of employed physicians, the Carolinas Physician Network (CPN), many of whom have practices in York County. As of the date of the final contested case hearing, Carolinas employed between seventy and ninety York County physicians. Additionally, Carolinas owns and operates Roper Hospital in downtown Charleston.
In 2005, Piedmont, Carolinas, Presbyterian Healthcare System (Presbyterian), and Hospital *636Partners of America, Inc. submitted applications to DHEC for a CON to build a sixty-four-bed hospital near Fort Mill based on the 2004-2005 State Health Plan's identification of a need for sixty-four additional acute care hospital beds in York County. Subsequently, Piedmont withdrew its application and submitted a new application for a one-hundred-bed hospital, which would include thirty-six beds transferred from Piedmont's Rock Hill facility to its proposed Fort Mill facility. In 2006, DHEC approved Piedmont's new application and denied the other three applications. Carolinas and Presbyterian filed separate requests for a contested case hearing before the ALC, which took place in September 2009.
The ALC concluded DHEC misinterpreted the 2004-2005 State Health Plan to allow only existing providers to obtain a CON. The ALC remanded the case to DHEC for a determination of which applicant most fully complied with the CON Act, the State Health Plan, Project Review Criteria,2 and applicable **86DHEC regulations. By October 2010,3 the three remaining applicants submitted to DHEC additional information to supplement their respective applications.
In September 2011, DHEC granted Carolinas' application and denied the applications of Piedmont and Presbyterian. Piedmont and Presbyterian submitted their respective requests for a contested case hearing before the ALC, and the ALC consolidated the cases. Presbyterian later withdrew its request, and the ALC dismissed Presbyterian as a party. The ALC ultimately ordered DHEC to award the CON to Piedmont. Carolinas filed a motion for reconsideration pursuant to Rule 59(e), SCRCP, and the ALC issued an Amended Final Order denying the motion. This appeal followed.
STANDARD OF REVIEW
The Administrative Procedures Act governs the standard of review on appeal from a decision of the ALC, allowing this court to
reverse or modify the decision if substantial rights of the appellant have been prejudiced because the administrative findings, inferences, conclusions, or decisions are: (a) in violation of constitutional or statutory provisions; (b) in excess of the statutory authority of the agency; (c) made upon unlawful procedure; (d) affected by other error of law; (e) clearly erroneous in view of the reliable, probative, and substantial evidence on the whole record; or (f) arbitrary or capricious or characterized by abuse of discretion or clearly unwarranted exercise of discretion.
LAW/ANALYSIS
Carolinas does not challenge the constitutionality of the CON Act itself. Further, Carolinas does not challenge the **87constitutionality of the 2004-2005 State Health Plan or the Project Review Criteria. Rather, Carolinas argues the purpose and effect of the ALC's application of the CON Act, the *6372004-2005 State Health Plan, and the Project Review Criteria is to protect Piedmont from out-of-state competition, and, therefore, such an application violates the Dormant Commerce Clause. Carolinas essentially challenges the ALC's conclusions of law concerning adverse impact and outmigration.
On this record,4 we hold the ALC properly applied the provisions of the CON Act, the 2004-2005 State Health Plan, and the Project Review Criteria in considering the needs of residents in all areas of York County and, therefore, did not violate the Dormant Commerce Clause. The ALC placed appropriate significance on adverse impact, as required by the Project Review Criteria, and outmigration, as we explain herein.
We will address each criterion Carolinas references in turn. But first, we will provide a primer on the general principles surrounding the Dormant Commerce Clause and the general provisions of South Carolina's CON law.
Dormant Commerce Clause
The Commerce Clause of the United States Constitution grants Congress the power to regulate commerce among the several states. U.S. Const. art. I, § 8, cl. 3. "The [United States Supreme] Court has consistently explained that the Commerce Clause was designed to prevent States from engaging **88in economic discrimination so they would not divide into isolated, separable units." South Dakota v. Wayfair, Inc. , --- U.S. ----,
The Court's "[D]ormant Commerce Clause jurisprudence 'significantly limits the ability of States and localities to regulate or otherwise burden the flow of interstate commerce.' " McBurney v. Young ,
In other words, two primary principles mark the boundaries of a State's authority to regulate interstate commerce. "First, state regulations may not discriminate against interstate commerce; and second, States may not impose undue burdens on interstate commerce." Wayfair ,
Focusing exclusively on discrimination against individual firms ... improperly narrows the scope of the judicial inquiry and has the baneful effect of precluding certain meritorious claims. For while the burden on a single firm may have but a negligible impact on interstate commerce, the effect of the law as a whole and in the aggregate may be substantial.
Nonetheless, the Commerce Clause
does not elevate free trade above all other values. As long as a State does not needlessly obstruct interstate trade or attempt to "place itself in a position of economic isolation," it retains broad regulatory authority to protect the health and safety of its citizens and the integrity of its natural resources.
Taylor ,
South Carolina CON Law
The purpose of the CON Act is to "promote cost containment, prevent unnecessary duplication of health care facilities and services, guide the establishment of health facilities and **91services [that] will best serve public needs, and ensure that high quality services are provided in health facilities in this [s]tate."
With the advice of a health planning committee, of which most of the members are appointed by the Governor, DHEC must prepare a State Health Plan for use in administering the CON program.
DHEC may not issue a CON unless an application complies with the State Health Plan, Project Review Criteria, and other regulations.
Need for the Proposed Project (Section 802.1 through 802.4)
Economic Consideration (Section 802.5 through 802.19)
**92Health System Resources (Section 802.20 through 802.25)
Site Suitability (Section 802.26 through 802.30)
Special Consideration (Section 802.31 through 802.33)
When DHEC is considering competing applications, it must award a CON on the basis of which applicant most fully complies with the CON Act, the State Health Plan, Project Review Criteria, and applicable DHEC regulations.
In the present case, DHEC established the relative importance of the Project Review Criteria for the competing CON applications, "listing the most important criteria first, as follows:
The ALC's Application of Project Review Criteria
1. Adverse Impact
Carolinas first challenges the ALC's application of criteria 16(c), 22, and 23(a).5 With regard to these criteria, Carolinas argues the ALC's adverse impact analysis was one-sided and, thus, discriminatory. In other words, the ALC assessed whether awarding a CON to Carolinas would have an adverse impact on Piedmont without assessing whether awarding the CON to Piedmont would have an adverse impact on Carolinas. Carolinas maintains the purpose underlying the ALC's analysis was to protect Piedmont from non-local competition and to reduce the number of South Carolinians seeking healthcare in North Carolina.
a. Criterion 16(c)
Criterion 16 is entitled "Cost Containment (Minimizing Costs)" and is grouped under the general category "Economic Consideration." §§ 801.1, 802.16. Criterion 16(c) states, "The impact of the project upon the applicant's cost to provide services and the applicant's patient charges should be reasonable.
**94The impact of the project upon the cost and charges of other providers of similar services should be considered if the data are available." § 802.16 (emphasis added). Carolinas asserts (1) the ALC incorrectly included Criterion 16(c) in its adverse impact analysis and (2) the intent and effect of the ALC's application of this criterion was "to protect the local hospital's profitability from being harmed by a new market entrant."
In its conclusions of law regarding adverse impact, the ALC stated, "The most heavily disputed application of the Project Review Criteria relates to DHEC's analysis of the Project Review Criteria on adverse impact." The ALC identified Criterion 16(c) as being included in the adverse impact criteria, and explained its conclusion that Piedmont best met Criterion 16(c) as follows:
The effect on Piedmont of the loss of over one thousand (1000) patients and millions of dollars a year will make it more difficult for the hospital to recoup its fixed costs. Its associated per unit cost per unit of services associated would increase. As a result, the operation of [Carolinas' proposed facility] would have an adverse effect on existing providers.
Carolinas is correct in its observation that Criterion 16(c) is not grouped together with the criteria entitled "Adverse Effects on Other Facilities," which falls under the general category of "Health System Resources." See
b. Criterion 22
Criterion 22 states, "The existing distribution of the health service(s) should be identified and the effect of the proposed project upon that distribution should be carefully considered to functionally balance the distribution to the target population." § 802.22. This criterion falls under the general category of Health System Resources. §§ 801.1, 802.22. Carolinas maintains the ALC concluded Piedmont best met Criterion 22 "because increased competition from [Carolinas' proposed facility] would negatively impact Piedmont's ability to retain its staff physicians and receive their referrals." Carolinas argues the ALC applied Criterion 22 for the purpose of "protecting an existing local hospital from competition from a non-local hospital."
The ALC explained its conclusion that Piedmont best met Criterion 22 as follows:
[T]he operation of [Carolinas' proposed facility] would have an adverse effect on the distribution of services provided by existing healthcare providers to the residents of York County. Section 802.22 calls for an evaluation of the effect of the proposed facility or service not only on Piedmont but also on other healthcare providers. Letters from over forty (40) physicians to DHEC during its staff review as well as the testimony of ... three physicians is compelling evidence that the ability of existing York County healthcare providers to serve residents of the county would be jeopardized by the operation of [Carolinas' proposed facility].
Carolinas states that despite the ALC's reference to the adverse effects on physicians, the ALC's findings of fact "demonstrate that the ALC's primary concern was the extent to which changes in the physician market arising from the establishment of [Carolinas' proposed facility] would affect Piedmont."
First, an adverse effect on Piedmont's existing facility alone would be sufficient to warrant the conclusion that Piedmont, **96rather than Carolinas, better meets Criterion 22 because of the specialized services the existing facility offers. In its findings of fact, the ALC stated, "In addition to standard community hospital services, Piedmont Medical Center provides specialized services not usually offered by a hospital its size, including open heart surgery, neurosurgery, cardiac catheterization, vascular surgery, neonatal intensive care, specialized women's and pediatric services, and behavioral health." Notably, Carolinas has not challenged any of the ALC's findings of fact as not being supported by substantial evidence.
Further, the ALC's findings discussing the adverse impact on Piedmont that would result from physicians shifting their patient referrals from Piedmont's existing facility to Carolinas also referenced the likely adverse impact on physicians themselves. The ALC highlighted the testimony of a cardiology physician concerning the effect of awarding the CON to Carolinas:
Dr. Singhi recognized the challenges that would exist if [Carolinas' proposed facility] was approved that would not permit his practice to maintain its present status (e.g.[,] being able to refer and admit patients to any facility [of ] his choosing at which he has privileges ).... If the Carolina Cardiology Physicians become employed by [Carolinas], Dr. Singhi acknowledged that [Carolinas] would expect his group to comply with the CPN physician network referral policy and transfer patients from Piedmont to [Carolinas'] facilities.
*642(emphasis added). The ALC also discussed the testimony of a pulmonologist illustrating the impact Carolinas' proposed facility would have on not only Piedmont's existing specialty services but also specialty physicians' ability to maintain their proficiency as to certain skills due to the decline in the demand for those skills. The ALC found that the "[l]oss or paring of Piedmont's specialty programs would be detrimental to York County citizens, especially those living in the western, more rural part of the county farther away from [Carolinas'] specialty facilities in North Carolina ." (emphasis added). Again, Carolinas has not challenged any of the ALC's findings of fact as not being supported by substantial evidence.
**97The ALC properly identified the "existing distribution of the health service(s)," as required by Criterion 22, by referencing Piedmont and physician providers in York County. Further, the ALC properly considered the impact Carolinas' proposed facility would have on that distribution in order "to functionally balance the distribution to the target population." The ALC implicitly recognized that, in balancing the distribution of health system resources, DHEC may not ignore the needs of citizens in the western part of York County now being served by Piedmont and physicians practicing in that area.
c. Criterion 23(a)
Criterion 23 is entitled "Adverse Effects on Other Facilities" and falls under the general category of Health System Resources. §§ 801.1, 802.23. Criterion 23(a) states, "The impact on the current and projected occupancy rates or use rates of existing facilities and services should be weighed against the increased accessibility offered by the proposed services."
Carolinas argues the ALC focused solely on the adverse financial impact that Carolinas' proposed facility would have on Piedmont's existing facility, and the "sole purpose and practical effect of the ALC's ruling in this regard was to protect Piedmont's market share from competition." While the ALC did not address the increased accessibility offered by Carolinas' proposed facility in its conclusions of law concerning Criterion 23(a), the ALC recognized the increased accessibility offered by both Carolinas' and Piedmont's respective proposed facilities in its findings of fact. Nevertheless, the ALC found Piedmont's proposed 100-bed facility would provide superior accessibility to meet the rapid population growth in northern York County. The ALC further found Carolinas would provide inferior accessibility to medically underserved patients due to the restrictions York County physicians in the CPN had placed on accepting these patients.7 Therefore, the Amended **98Final Order as a whole reflects the ALC's proper balancing of the impact of Carolinas' proposed facility on the occupancy rates of Piedmont's existing facility against the increased accessibility offered by Carolinas' proposed facility as required by Criterion 23(a).
Based on the foregoing, the ALC properly applied Project Review Criteria 16(c), 22, and 23(a) without any discriminatory purpose. We acknowledge that the proper application of these criteria in any case may have the effect of protecting competing providers who already have a presence in the service area, but this particular group of providers is not limited to in-state interests.8 See *643Hazel II,
2. Need
Carolinas next challenges the ALC's application of criteria 2(a), 2(b), 2(c), and 2(e).9 With regard to these criteria, Carolinas argues (1) the ALC applied these criteria to reduce patient outmigration to North Carolina, which discriminates against, and burdens, interstate commerce, (2) the ALC's application of these criteria "seeks to limit out-of-state and out-of-county interests from accessing the local market," and (3) the ALC provided Piedmont with an advantage over Carolinas by considering Piedmont's transfer of beds from its Rock Hill facility and Piedmont's resulting superior ability to accommodate population growth-Carolinas contends that it could not lawfully transfer beds from its North Carolina facilities pursuant to the Bed Transfer Provision of the 2004-2005 State Health Plan-and this advantage discriminates against out-of-state hospital systems. We will address these arguments in turn. But first, we will set forth the pertinent provisions in Criterion 2.
Criterion 2 is entitled "Community Need Documentation" and falls under the general category of "Need for the Proposed Project." §§ 801.1, 802.2. Criterion 2 states, in pertinent part,
a. The target population should be clearly identified as to the size, location, distribution, and socioeconomic status (if applicable).
**100b. Projections of anticipated population changes should be reasonable and based upon accepted demographic or statistical methodologies, with assumptions and methodologies clearly presented in the application. The applicant must use population statistics consistent with those generated by the state demographer, State Budget and Control Board.
c. The proposed project should provide services that meet an identified (documented) need of the target population. The assumptions and methods used to determine the level of need should be specified in the application and based on a reasonable approach as judged by the reviewing body. Any deviation from the population projection used in the South Carolina Health Plan should be explained.
....
e. Current and/or projected utilization should be sufficient to justify the expansion *644or implementation of the proposed service.
§§ 802.2.
As to the ALC's application of these criteria, Carolinas first argues the goal of reducing patient outmigration to North Carolina discriminates against and burdens interstate commerce. We disagree.
Patient outmigration data is typically used in the CON application process to demonstrate the need for an additional provider or service in a particular service area, and the outmigration from one service area to another usually occurs intrastate. In other words, need can be shown by evidence of residents traveling to a provider located outside the service area. See Marlboro Park Hosp. v. S.C. Dep't of Health & Envtl. Control ,
Therefore, the goal of reducing outmigration reflects a legitimate concern regarding patient travel time, which obviously can affect health outcomes in an emergency. While the reduction of outmigration may reduce patient travel to a neighboring state when the service area happens to border another state, the very purpose of this case is the issuance of a CON to build a hospital to be located in South Carolina . Therefore, the analysis must focus on participation in South Carolina's healthcare market rather than "the flow of patients in interstate commerce" as suggested by Carolinas. Further, reduction of patient travel to a neighboring state does not limit participation in South Carolina's healthcare market to only those providers with in-state interests. See Hazel II,
As to community need, presumably, either Piedmont's proposed facility or Carolinas' proposed facility would meet the need for sixty-four more general hospital beds in York County. However, the ALC's analysis of which proposal would best meet community need as set forth in criteria 2(a), 2(b), 2(c), and 2(e) was more complex:
In addition to meeting the need for new hospital services, Piedmont's application was specifically intended to strengthen the York County healthcare system by reducing outmigration from York County. While patients have sought medical services outside of York County for years, primarily in the Charlotte area, the outmigration accelerated from 2005 to 2011. The effects of the outmigration, which are detailed in the relevant Findings of Fact and are incorporated herein, reduced the ability of Piedmont and many of the independent physicians on Piedmont's medical staff to meet the healthcare needs of York County residents. Piedmont demonstrated by a preponderance of the evidence that the establishment of [its proposed facility] would strengthen the capacity of existing York County providers to meet those **102needs. For these reasons, Piedmont best meets § 802.2(a, b, c, e).
The ALC also concluded,
One of the principal differences between the applicants is that the approval of [Carolinas' proposed facility] would have the effect of causing the erosion of quality of care at Piedmont and among specialists practicing there as a result of the diminution in the volume of patients and the degradation of the payor mix of the patients who would continue to be seen at Piedmont. Consequently, there would be no hospital in York County providing many *645of the high quality and tertiary services that Piedmont has added. Alternatively, the establishment of [Piedmont's proposed facility] will ensure that high quality services continue to be provided and added within York County.
The ALC's unchallenged findings of fact support these conclusions. The ALC found outmigration would continue if Carolinas' proposed facility was built in Fort Mill because Carolinas would refer its Fort Mill patients needing specialty care to one of Carolinas' North Carolina facilities providing these types of services rather than to Piedmont's existing facility in Rock Hill.10 The ALC also found that if Carolinas' proposed facility was built in Fort Mill, Carolinas would further reduce Piedmont's market share, thereby reducing the volume necessary for Piedmont's continued provision of its specialty services to residents of Rock Hill and western York County.11 Piedmont had already lost a significant volume of **103complex cases from 2005 to 2011, forcing one of its physicians to terminate use of a new invasive technology acquired by Piedmont in 2009, due to the referral patterns of physicians aligned with Carolinas. In contrast, Piedmont's proposed facility in Fort Mill would strengthen Piedmont's ability to serve residents "throughout York County by increasing the number of patients treated at Piedmont's Rock Hill facility."
While Carolinas would have the court believe the ALC was simply looking out for Piedmont's bottom line, the ALC was looking at the big picture for all of York County, i.e., how to preserve the quality of care and the larger complement of services Piedmont's existing facility provides to York County residents who do not live in the more affluent northern part of the county. These objectives are consistent with the Project Review Criteria, which Carolinas has not challenged, and serve as an additional justification for the goal of reducing outmigration.
As to Carolinas' argument that the ALC's application of the community need criteria "seeks to limit out-of-state and out-of-county interests from accessing the local market," we disagree. As we previously stated, the proper application of the Project Review Criteria may have the effect of protecting competing providers who already have a presence in the service area, but this particular group of providers is not limited to in-state interests.
Carolinas next argues the ALC provided Piedmont with an advantage over Carolinas by considering Piedmont's transfer of beds from its Rock Hill facility when Carolinas could not lawfully transfer beds from its North Carolina facilities and this advantage discriminates against "out-of-state hospital systems." However, even if Piedmont had not proposed to transfer beds from its Rock Hill facility, the ALC's findings support its conclusion that Piedmont best meets criteria 2(a, b, c, e)-these **104findings indicate Piedmont's proposed facility would better preserve the quality of care and the larger complement of services that Piedmont's Rock Hill facility provides to York County residents who live in Rock Hill or the western, rural part of the county. Therefore, the ALC's approval of Piedmont's proposed bed transfer does not *646constitute reversible error. See Judy v. Judy ,
Further, the ALC also took into account the capacity to expand, i.e., "shell space," that each respective proposed facility would possess in order to accommodate population growth. The ALC concluded Piedmont had the superior capacity to expand, and Carolinas has not presented any authorities or evidence indicating it was unfairly prevented from competing with Piedmont on this basis.
Based on the foregoing, the ALC properly applied Project Review Criteria 2(a), 2(b), 2(c), and 2(e) without any discriminatory purpose. Further, there is nothing in the record of this case showing that the ALC's application of these criteria has a discriminatory effect on interstate commerce. See Hazel I ,
3. Efficiency
Criterion 17 is entitled "Efficiency" and falls under the general category of "Economic Consideration." §§ 801.1, **105802.17. Criterion 17 states, "The proposed project should improve efficiency by avoiding duplication of services, promoting shared services[,] and fostering economies of scale or size." § 802.17. The ALC concluded, "Piedmont better satisfies this criterion because its proposal fosters economies of scale by spreading costs over a greater number of beds. Not only will [Piedmont's proposed facility's] 100 beds better accommodate future growth, [Piedmont's proposed facility] is better designed for expansion than is [Carolinas' proposed facility]."
As with criteria 2(a, b, c, e), Carolinas argues the ALC's application of Criterion 17 provided Piedmont with an unfair advantage over Carolinas by considering Piedmont's transfer of beds from its Rock Hill facility. However, Piedmont's bed transfer proposal was not the sole reason for the ALC's determination that Piedmont best met Criterion 17. The ALC also concluded Piedmont's proposed facility was better designed for expansion than Carolinas' proposed facility, and this factor alone allows Piedmont to best meet Criterion 17.
Again, Carolinas does not challenge the constitutionality of any of the Project Review Criteria or the purposes of the CON Act served by these criteria. We find no discriminatory purpose behind the ALC's thoughtful and correct application of these criteria to the complex facts of this case. Further, there is nothing in the record showing that the ALC's application of these criteria has a discriminatory effect on interstate commerce. See Hazel I ,
CONCLUSION
Accordingly, we affirm the ALC's Amended Final Order.
AFFIRMED.
WILLIAMS and THOMAS, JJ., concur.
Related
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