Sacramento Children's Home v. State Department of Social Services

81 Cal. App. 4th 786, 97 Cal. Rptr. 2d 203, 2000 Daily Journal DAR 6619, 2000 Cal. App. LEXIS 488
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 23, 2000
DocketNo. C030858
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 81 Cal. App. 4th 786 (Sacramento Children's Home v. State Department of Social Services) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sacramento Children's Home v. State Department of Social Services, 81 Cal. App. 4th 786, 97 Cal. Rptr. 2d 203, 2000 Daily Journal DAR 6619, 2000 Cal. App. LEXIS 488 (Cal. Ct. App. 2000).

Opinion

Opinion

DAVIS, Acting P. J.

After an adverse administrative adjudication, plaintiff Sacramento Children’s Home (SCH) petitioned for a writ of mandate directing defendant State Department of Social Services (DSS) to set aside its decision that plaintiff SCH was liable for overpayments during the 1991-1992 fiscal year. The superior court denied the writ. On appeal, plaintiff SCH contends it cannot be compelled to repay money it did not receive, defendant DSS abused its discretion in calculating the amount of overpayments under its governing regulations and statutes, and DSS regulations are not consistent with their authorizing legislation. We shall affirm.

As plaintiff SCH concedes in its brief, it does not challenge the accuracy of the defendant’s computations. Rather, it challenges the underlying methodological theories on which the calculations are based, raising purely legal [789]*789issues. As a consequence, we need relate little if any of the evidence in the administrative record. Such facts as are pertinent will be incorporated in the Discussion where relevant.

Discussion

I. Background

A. Legal

“A group home program shall be initially classified, for purposes of emergency regulations, according to the level of care and services to be provided using a point system developed by [DSS] and described in the report . . . prepared by the [DSS], August 30, 1989.” (Welf. & Inst. Code, § 11462, subd. (b) [undesignated section references are to this code].)1 Based on the number of points, the program is classified in one of 14 ranges known as rate classification levels (RCL’s), with RCL 14 compensated at the highest rate. (Id., subd. (f).) The defendant determines the RCL for a group home program on a prospective basis for the fiscal year. (Id., subd. (e).)

Under the 1989 report’s methodology, a group home vendor applies for compensation for a program by adding together the projected number of staff hours per child for the coming fiscal year in each of three categories of services (child care, social work, and mental health). (MPP §§ 402.211, 402.212, 402.213, 402.237, 402.331.)2 These staff hours are multiplied by factors representing the education and experience of the various employees providing the services, with the general effect of child-care hours having the lowest weight and mental-health hours the greatest. (MPP §§ 402.221, subd. (b), 402.222, subd. (a), 402.223, subd. (a), 402.231.) The resulting weighted staff hours in each category are then divided by 90 percent of the program’s licensed capacity. (MPP §§ 402.232, 402.233.) The sum of the three components is the point total for the program, which determines the RCL according to the statutory categories. (MPP §§ 402.235, 402.236.) The RCL is thus a measure of a projected staffing level providing a particular mix of services, without regard to the actual number of clients in the program.

[790]*790A vendor ordinarily must determine its RCL annually. However, the vendor may apply during the course of the year for a program change (which includes, inter alia, an increase in the RCL). (MPP §§ 400, subd. (p)(6), 402.430 et seq.)

As might be expected, the defendant audits vendor records, comparing their reports of the actual services each vendor provided over the course of the fiscal year with the projected RCL. (MPP §§ 402.510, 402.531.) The defendant averages the actual RCL points over the course of the audit period and compares this with the lowest end of the range of points for the projected RCL. (If there has been a program change based on a change in the RCL, each RCL is a separate audit period.) If the actual points fall short, this is called a “failure to maintain” and results in an overpayment to the vendor. There is a sliding scale of liability for overpayment. A shortage of up to 5 points incurs liability of $100 per actual client; a shortage of 6 to 10 points incurs a liability of $200 per actual client; and anything greater incurs a liability of the full difference between the RCL rate at which the defendant compensated the vendor per actual client and the compensation level that the vendor’s actual RCL warrants. (MPP §§ 402.532, subd. (a)(1), 402.625, 402.643.)

In 1993, the Legislature directed the defendant to provide for an exception to liability for overpayment where “the level of care and services provided per child . . . equals or exceeds the level associated with the program’s RCL.” However, the defendant is to focus solely on whether the vendor provided “services other than child care [i.e., hours of social work and mental-health services] . . . in an amount that is at least proportionate on a per child basis to the amount projected in the . . . application” (italics added), and where these other services fall short of a proportionate level, child-care hours may not make up the shortfall. (§ 11466.2, subd. (b)(2).) The defendant promulgated regulations putting these legislative directives into effect. (MPP §§ 402.562-402.565.)3

B. Procedural4

During fiscal year 1991-1992, the plaintiff initially applied for compensation for a program at RCL 9, requiring a minimum point total of 270. During the course of the year, it filed a program change, proposing to operate at RCL 11 effective February 1, 1992, which requires a minimum point total of 330.

[791]*791In February 1993, the defendant audited the plaintiff’s 1991-1992 program. Pursuant to its regulations, it separately audited the different RCL’s. The audit verified the plaintiff’s program operated at the proposed RCL 9 level through January 30, 1992. However, the audit concluded the program averaged only 304.95 points from February through June 1992 (coming within the 300-329 point range for RCL 10 rather than the proposed RCL 11 rate), resulting in an overpayment of the full difference between the two RCL’s.

The plaintiff filed a protest in May 1993. The defendant modified its calculation of the program’s average actual occupancy and otherwise sustained the audit. Following hearings in July 1995 and January 1996, the defendant’s hearing officer issued a proposed decision which sustained the plaintiff’s arguments regarding the defendant’s improper implementation of the statutory “proportionality” exception to overpayment liability, and otherwise denied the administrative appeal. The defendant declined to adopt the decision and issued a decision denying the appeal in whole.

In ruling on the plaintiff’s petition, the court denied most of the arguments at the hearing; in a written ruling, it rejected a remaining issue (in which the plaintiff argued the proportionality of its program to RCL 11 must be determined over a 12-month period rather than only the last five months of fiscal 1991-1992). The court did not consider any evidence outside the administrative record.

II.

The plaintiff’s first argument is the most curious. It contends it cannot be compelled to repay money it never received. The gist of this argument is the use of 90 percent of licensed capacity as a measure of the level of services rather than the actual census.

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Bluebook (online)
81 Cal. App. 4th 786, 97 Cal. Rptr. 2d 203, 2000 Daily Journal DAR 6619, 2000 Cal. App. LEXIS 488, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sacramento-childrens-home-v-state-department-of-social-services-calctapp-2000.