Carbon County Home for Aged v. Commonwealth

535 A.2d 1243, 112 Pa. Commw. 583, 1988 Pa. Commw. LEXIS 59
CourtCommonwealth Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJanuary 20, 1988
DocketAppeal, No. 163 C. D. 1986
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 535 A.2d 1243 (Carbon County Home for Aged v. Commonwealth) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Commonwealth Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Carbon County Home for Aged v. Commonwealth, 535 A.2d 1243, 112 Pa. Commw. 583, 1988 Pa. Commw. LEXIS 59 (Pa. Ct. App. 1988).

Opinion

Opinion by

Judge Colins,

Eight county-operated nursing homes (collectively, petitioners)1 appeal an order of the Department of Public Welfare (Department) reversing a decision of the Office of Hearings and Appeals which, in turn, adopted in its entirety a Hearing Examiners decision that newly-revised reimbursements be paid to petitioners retroactive to July 1, 1980 rather than to October 1, 1980 as determined by the Department. The sole question for [585]*585our review is whether the Department properly delayed the retroactive payment by three months.

Petitioners, participants in the Pennsylvania Medical Assistance (MA) Program, are skilled nursing and intermediate care facilities (SNFs and ICFs, respectively). Prior to the reimbursement revision here at issue, petitioners were reimbursed by the Department on the basis of actual allowable costs subject to a ceiling on net operating costs calculated on the basis of the Statewide weighted average cost of providing long-term care in county nursing homes. However, Section 201 of the General Appropriation Act of 1980 modified such computation by providing that:

For public nursing homes. . . . Effective January 1, 1981, in accordance with Federal regulations, the [Department] shall replace the current Statewide ceilings for county nursing homes. New ceilings shall be calculated for each standard metropolitan statistical area and nonstandard metropolitan statistical area group within the State and shall be paid retroactively to July 1, 1980. The new ceilings shall provide that no public nursing home shall have a ceiling below its rate that was in effect prior to implementation of the new ceilings. This and any other change in the method of county home reimbursement must be approved in advance by the Federal Department of Health and Human Services. (Emphasis added.)

On July 26, 1980, the Department advised all interested parties2 that current statewide reimbursement ceilings for county-operated SNFs and ICFs were to be replaced, in accordance with the Act, with ceilings based on standard and nonstandard metropolitan statis[586]*586tical areas. The Department thereafter submitted to the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) a proposed amendment to the State MA plan incorporating the newly-revised reimbursement methodology and was advised by HHS that federal regulations might require sixty days public notice of the proposed revision if the anticipated payment varied from previous payments by one percent or more. The pertinent íegulátion found at 42 C.F.R. §447.205 provides that:

Public notice of changes in Statewide method or level of reimbursement.
(a) When notice is required. [T]he agency must provide public notice of any proposed change in the Statewide method or level of reimbursement for a service, if the change is expected to increase or decrease the Medicaid payments for that service by 1 percent or more during the 12 months following thé effective date of the change.

The commentary accompanying the regulation requires public notice of proposed changes that meet all of the following conditions:

(1) The proposed change affects the general method of payment to all providers of a particular service.
(2) The proposed change áflfects the level of payment for that particular service. . . .
(3) The proposed change is projected to affect a States Medicaid expenditure for a particular service by 1% or more during the 12 months following the effective date of the change. (Emphasis added.)

On July 25, 1981, the Department implemented3 the SMS A reimbursement methodology for county-op[587]*587erated nursing facilities. Despite the Acts directive that such payments be made retroactive to July 1, 1980, the Department ordered payments be made retroactive only to October 1, 1980. According to the Department, the deviation was a consequence of compliance with the sixty day notice requirement of the federal regulation; as it first published notice of its intent to change the level of reimbursement on July 26, 1980, it necessarily directed an effective date of October 1, 1980.

Upon receipt of audit information indicating the retroactive reimbursement at the revised ceiling only to October 1, 1980, petitioners individually appealed to the Department and the appeals were consolidated for a hearing before a designated Hearing Examiner. The Hearing Examiner determined that the proposed change in reimbursement affected only county-operated nursing facilities, thus rendering 42 C.F.R. §447.205 inapplicable to the instant matter because the proposed change did not affect the general method of payment to all providers of a particular service. The Hearing Examiner concluded that the Department acted improperly in delaying the effective date of reimbursement at the newly-revised rate and held that payments should be paid retroactive to July 1, 1980, in accordance with the statutory mandate. The Office of Hearings and Appeals adopted the Hearing Examiners decision in its entirety.

Upon administrative appeal, the Executive Deputy Secretary of the Department concluded that county nursing facilities comprised a separate class of provider rendering a distinct type of service. Having so found, the Secretary determined that the proposed change in reimbursement of county nursing homes affected “the general method of payment to all providers,” thus calling into play the federal notice requirement of 42 C.F.R. §447.205. He finally determined that the tripartite test of that regulation had been met in toto and that [588]*588the Department properly deferred retroactive payment to petitioners until October 1, 1980. Petitioners’ appeal to this Court followed.

Upon appeal, petitioners contend the Secretary erred in holding the federal notice provision here applicable. As they correctly argue, such provision requires public notice of a proposed change in reimbursement only if three criteria coalesce. Petitioners submit that two of the three requisite criteria are absent, that is, that the proposed change in reimbursement will not affect all providers of a particular service nor vary Medicaid expenditures by 1% or more during the year following the effective date of the change. The Department counters that its application of the regulation constituted a reasoned judgment taken to protect the public fisc; had it failed to abide by federal regulatory constraints, HHS might have withheld monies, or so the Department now contends.

Our threshhold determination, of course, is whether the proposed change in reimbursement ceilings affects the general method of payment to all providers of a particular service.4 The Hearing Examiner here found such characterization precluded by the feet that the revised rates applied solely to county-owned facilities.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
535 A.2d 1243, 112 Pa. Commw. 583, 1988 Pa. Commw. LEXIS 59, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/carbon-county-home-for-aged-v-commonwealth-pacommwct-1988.