Department of Health and Human Services DEPARTMENTAL APPEALS BOARD Civil Remedies Division |
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IN THE CASE OF | |
Stanton Road Clinic, |
DATE: February 23, 2001 |
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Health Care Financing Administration
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Docket No.C-00-189
Decision No. CR740 |
DECISION | |
I deny Petitioners' motions for summary disposition.
Because Petitioners' challenges to the determination of the Health Care
Financing Administration (HCFA) are legally incorrect or beyond my authority
to address, I enter summary judgment for HCFA. A. Background This case involves three Petitioners' challenges to the
effective date assigned by HCFA to their participation in the Medicare
program as Federally Qualified Health Centers (FQHC). The three Petitioners
herein contend that the effective date should have been November 23, 1998,
when applications were first submitted on their behalf to request each
Petitioner's participation as a FQHC. An FQHC is a type of health services supplier under the
Medicare laws. Section 1861(aa)(3) and (4) of the Social Security Act
(Act); 42 C.F.R. § 488.1 (definition of "supplier"). Unlike the words
"hospital" or "nursing home" which have significance outside of the Medicare
program as well, "FQHC" is a classification unique to the Medicare program.
An entity does not acquire the FQHC designation unless it has been approved
for participation in the Medicare program as such. 42 C.F.R. § 405.2401(b).
Consequently, when an entity applies to enter the program as an FQHC,
it is seeking approval for both the FQHC designation as well as Medicare
participation.(1) Generally speaking, the
Medicare program reimburses an approved FQHC for services which are rendered
to a medically under-served population, or which are provided from a location
in a medically under-served area, as demonstrated by an application approved
by the Public Health Service. See, e.g., 42 C.F.R. § 491.5(f). The regulations provide that an entity seeking Medicare
participation as an FQHC is entitled to a hearing in accordance with 42
C.F.R. Part 498 "when HCFA fails to enter into an agreement with the entity."
42 C.F.R. § 405.2430(d). I believe the hearing rights extend to the situation
in this case, where HCFA has failed to enter into an agreement as early
as the Petitioners thought was proper. Given the proceedings to date,
I infer that the parties' interpretation of the hearing regulation is
the same as mine. The parties have submitted and briefed cross-motions for
summary disposition in accordance with Chief Administrative Law Judge
Marion Silva's "Order and Briefing Schedule" dated October 6, 2000 (October
6, 2000 Order). Chief Administrative Law Judge Marion Silva was the presiding
official before the case was reassigned to me. In that order, Judge Silva
summarized the outcome of her prehearing conference with the parties.
Specifically, Judge Silva granted the three Petitioners' unopposed motion
to consolidate their respective cases. Id. at 1. The parties agreed
to brief the following issues, as described by Judge Silva:
Id. at 2. The order noted also the parties' agreement that no material facts were in controversy and that the case could be decided based on written submissions. Id. Consequently, the briefing schedule set by Judge Silva directed Petitioners to file a motion for summary judgment together with their evidence in support, allowed HCFA an opportunity to file its response, and provided Petitioners with the opportunity to file a brief in reply. Id. at 2 - 3. She granted the request of Petitioners to "go forward with a hearing" if the issues cannot be resolved by summary judgment. Id. at 2, n.1.(2) The parties were specifically advised of their right under
42 C.F.R. § 498.50 to file objections to the October 6, 2000 Order within
10 days. Id. at 3. No objections were received from either party.
Accordingly, the agreements of the parties, including the issues for adjudication
as framed by Judge Silva, have become binding on the parties. 42 C.F.R.
§ 498.50(c). In ruling on the parties cross-motions for summary judgment,
I have especially considered the following documents filed pursuant to
the October 6, 2000 Order:
Additionally, I have reviewed the other filings of record,
including the hearing request, dated November 8, 1999, with its attached
copies of Petitioners' documents. B. Discussion According to the undisputed facts of record, each Petitioner
herein was purchased by the Franklin Primary Health Care Center, (Inc.,)
during 1998. (P. Br. at 2.) At the time of the purchases, Franklin Primary Health
Care Center had already been an FQHC receiving funds under Section 330
of the Public Health Service Act for many years. P. Br., 2. Additionally,
Franklin Primary Health Care Center had been awarded continued accreditation
by the Joint Commission on Accreditation of Healthcare Organizations (the
Joint Commission or JCAHO) for its Ambulatory Health Care Program and
Laboratory Accreditation Program. P. Ex. 1; P. Br. at 6. The Joint Commission
issued these certifications to Franklin Primary Health Care Center on
June 23, 1998, based on a survey conducted between May 4 through 6, 1998.
P. Ex. 1. The certification of these two programs took effect on May 7,
1998. P. Ex. 1 at 1. After being purchased by the Franklin Primary Health Care
Center, each Petitioner was opened for business and began serving Medicare
beneficiaries. Petitioner Loxley Family Medical Center was opened for
business on May 1, 1998; Petitioner Dr. A. Thomas Family Medical Center
was opened for business on July 1, 1998; and the Stanton Road Clinic was
opened for business on September 1, 1998. P. Br. at 2. Thereafter, applications were submitted to HCFA requesting
that each of these three Petitioners be allowed to participate in the
Medicare program as an FQHC. Three separate applications (one for each
Petitioner) were sent in at the same time to HCFA. The first set of these
applications was sent on November 23, 1998. P. Br. at 1. Various events
occurred thereafter, including the substitution of new forms for outdated
ones. HCFA did not approve the three Petitioners' participation in the
Medicare program as FQHCs until June 22, 1999. HCFA Br. at 1, 2, and 8.(3)
Additionally, HCFA has denied reimbursement for services rendered by each
of the three Petitioners prior to June 22, 1999. P. Br. at 2. On the bases of these foregoing undisputed facts, Petitioners
seek to have HCFA's June 22, 1999 "effective date of Medicare participation"
set aside as a matter of law. They request summary judgment to deem the
date of their applications, November 23, 1998, as the date on which their
Medicare participation with an FQHC designation should have begun.
On the issue of"[w]hether certification for the parent
entity, Franklin Primary Health Care Center, Inc., encompasses and serves
as blanket certification for any entities created subsequently" (October
6, 2000 Order, at 2), Petitioners summarized their arguments as follows:
P. Br. at 2 - 3. I reject these arguments by Petitioners
for being incorrect as a matter of law. Even assuming that the applications of record were intended
by Franklin Primary Health Care Center to have HCFA "acknowledge and verify
the legal entitlement of Franklin to FQHC reimbursement for services"
furnished at three newly acquired sites, the statute and the regulations
precluded HCFA from deeming the three Petitioners to be FQHCs for Medicare
participation by virtue of the fact that they were purchased and operated
by an existing FQHC. An FQHC is defined at section 1861(aa)(4) of the
Act. As relevant to the facts of this case and Petitioners' arguments,
the regulations state in part:
42 C.F.R. § 405.2401(b)(emphasis added). Therefore, to receive the FQHC designation, entities such
as the Petitioners herein cannot rely solely on their having received
funding from Franklin Primary Health Care Center's section 330 Public
Health Service Act grant. Each Petitioner must still, on its own merits,
meet the requirements to receive a grant under section 329, 330, or 340
of the Public Health Service Act and have "entered into
an agreement with HCFA to meet Medicare program requirements under § 405.2434."
42 C.F.R. § 405.2401(b). Since no Public Health Service Act grant had
actually been awarded to the three Petitioners, they needed for this process
at least a recommendation from the Public Health Service, as well as HCFA's
determination that they would meet the Public Health Service Act's requirements
for receiving one of the specified grants. 42 C.F.R. § 404.2430(a)(1)(I);
42 C.F.R. § 405.2401(b). Moreover, I take notice of 42 C.F.R. § 491.3(a)(3)(iii),
which states in relevant part:
Under this regulation, there can be no inference drawn
that the Petitioners' applications were superfluous ab initio
because each was a part of an existing FQHC, the Franklin Primary Health
Care Center.
On the alternative issue of "whether HCFA erred in its
designation of the effective date of enrollment of June 1999 as opposed
to an earlier date connected with Petitioner's original enrollment application
submission" (October 6, 2000 Order at 2), Petitioners' position is that
42 C.F.R. § 489.13(d) governs what HCFA should have done because Franklin
Primary Health Care Center had received accreditation effective May 7,
1998 from the Joint Commission. Petitioners relied upon the fact that the Joint Commission
is a national accreditation organization with approval by HCFA under 42
C.F.R. § 489.13(d)(1). Petitioners implied that neither they nor Franklin
Primary Health Care Center were subject to the "additional requirements"
exception referenced in 42 C.F.R. § 489.13(d)(1) and (d)(1)(ii). P. Br.
at 6. Therefore, Petitioners reasoned that HCFA should have applied the
following rules in 42 C.F.R. § 489.13(d)(1)(ii) and (2) for Franklin Primary
Health Care Center's benefit:
P. Br. at 5 - 6. These arguments by Petitioners take liberties
with the law and the facts. In this case, there were applications filed on behalf
of the three Petitioners herein, asking that each one be given a separate
Medicare provider number by approving it an FQHC. Franklin Primary Health
Care Center was not seeking designation as a FQHC or a Medicare participation
agreement for itself. As I have already noted above, filing a separate
application for each of the three Petitioners herein was required by 42
C.F.R. § 491.3(a)(3)(iii). Therefore, to consider the applications in
this case to be Franklin Primary Health Care Center's applications would
be as wrong as considering the application filed by a supplier's lawyer
to be the lawyer's application instead of the supplier's application. Petitioners have put forth no evidence concerning the
sites which were surveyed by the Joint Commission from May 4 through 6,
1998, which resulted in its issuance of the May 7, 1998 certification
to Franklin Primary Health Care Center for its Ambulatory Health Care
Program and its Laboratory Accreditation Program, and the sites at issue
here. See P. Ex. 1. Two of the Petitioners, Dr. A. Thomas Family
Medical Center and Stanton Road Clinic, were not even open for business
during May of 1998 while the Joint Commission was conducting its survey.
P. Br. at 2. However, even if all three Petitioners had been surveyed
and covered by the Joint Commission's May 7, 1998 accreditation certificate,
the rules of 42 C.F.R. § 489.13(d)(1)(ii) and (2) would still be inapplicable
to this case. The very regulation relied upon by Petitioners contains
the dispositive caveat that they have disregarded:
42 C.F.R. § 489.12(a)(2)(I). The caveat is consistent
with the fact that Part 489 of the regulations covers only certain types
of providers and suppliers. See 42 C.F.R. § 489.2. An FQHC is not
among the providers and suppliers covered by the Part 489 regulations.
Id. Accordingly, general references to "providers" or "suppliers"
found in 42 C.F.R. § 489.13, a regulation within Part 489, cannot be interpreted
to mean FQHCs. With the exception of 42 C.F.R. § 491.3 (titled "Certification
procedures"), the requirements an entity must meet to participate as an
FQHC are contained instead in Part 491. 42 C.F.R. § 405.2434(a). As correctly pointed out by HCFA, the regulations at 42
C.F.R. § 489.13(a)(2)(I) and 42 C.F.R. § 405.2434(a)(2)(b) make clear
that the effective date of the Medicare agreement with an FQHC must be
the date that HCFA accepts a signed agreement which assures that the FQHC
meets all federal requirements. HCFA Br. at 3. The procedural steps are
outlined in 42 C.F.R. § 405.2430. The process entails, at the very minimum,
the filing of an application by an interested entity, a recommendation
by the Public Health Service that the entity qualifies as an FQHC,(5)
that the FQHC assures HCFA that it meets the requirements specified in
Part 491 of the regulations, and that HCFA sends the applicant a written
disposition of its request. 42 C.F.R. § 405.2430(a)(1) and (2). If the
disposition is favorable, HCFA must then issue two copies of the agreement
to the applicant entity for signing; if the applicant signs and returns
both copies, HCFA may then accept the agreement and return a copy to the
applicant with notice of the effective date determined in accordance with
42 C.F.R. § 405.2434. 42 C.F.R. § 405.2430(a)(3) and (4). The regulations do not permit HCFA to deviate from the
specified procedures. Nor do the regulations permit HCFA to calculate
an effective date for the Petitioners' participation as they have argued.
HCFA's lack of discretion on assigning an effective date to FQHC applicants
has been made clear in no less than three regulations: 42 C.F.R. § 489.12(a)(2)(I),
42 C.F.R. § 405.2434, and 42 C.F.R. § 405.2430(a)(4). The regulations
specify, in addition, "[t]he requirements for provider-based or freestanding
Federally qualified health centers are the same, 42 C.F.R. § 405.2430(c). For all of the forgoing reasons, the Petitioners' challenges
to the effective date assigned by HCFA are incorrect as a matter of law.
The three Petitioners have sought to show that HCFA's
use of six months to process and approve their applications was excessive
and unwarranted by the circumstances. They submitted, for example, the
affidavit of Mr. Charles White, Chief Executive Officer for Franklin Primary
Health Care, to summarize the problems and delays. P. Ex. 2. With the
Petitioners' hearing requests, Mr. White had also submitted a typed summary
of his contacts by telephone and correspondence with various employees
and agents of HCFA in his attempt to have the application process concluded
expeditiously during the six months between November 23, 1998 and June
22, 1999. Suffice it to say that the evidence put forth by Petitioners
concerning the difficulties Mr. White encountered do not flatter HCFA
or its agents and employees. Moreover, it seems especially unfortunate
that a six-month processing period was used to approve the applications
of entities which were caring for a medically under-served population
in the meantime. According to Petitioners, Franklin Primary Health Care
could have received Medicare reimbursement in the six digits had the Petitioners'
FQHC applications been approved on the day they were first submitted,
November 23, 1998. P. Ex. 3. Nevertheless, I am unable to agree with Petitioners' conclusion
that approval of their FQHC applications should have been granted on the
day they were sent (November 23, 1998) because HCFA's work on those applications
consisted of ministerial bureaucratic functions with minor technicalities
which have been unjustifiably complicated by HCFA. See P. Br. at 8 - 9;
P. Reply at 3, 4, and 5. The intended beneficiaries of the FQHC designation
are the people of medically under-served communities or areas. They are
vulnerable and deserve quality health care services. The regulations governing
HCFA's approval or disapproval of FQHC applications serve to protect the
interests of the medically under-served population. Given the importance
of the process, HCFA is expected to give serious deliberation to the information
it receives. Nothing required by these regulations became inapplicable
because the three Petitioners herein were owned by Franklin Primary Health
Care, a long-time FQHC. I have no general or equitable jurisdiction to exercise.
Therefore, even if I thought that HCFA's processing time could have been
shorter in this case, I cannot order the effective date changed. Moreover,
only HCFA has been given the authority to perform the tasks specified
by the regulations discussed above. How long Petitioners or I would have
taken to do those same tasks, or how much deliberation we would have committed
to bringing each task to closure, are of no legal significance. Very clearly,
only HCFA's acceptance of a signed agreement can be used as the
effective date of an applicant's participation in the Medicare program
as an FQHC. 42 C.F.R. § 405.2434(b)(1). I cannot order Medicare reimbursements
to make Petitioners whole because they had provided services before being
approved as FQHCs. For the same reasons, I cannot give effect to Petitioners'
remaining arguments that it was unfair, unconstitutional, and illegal
for HCFA to have applied a set of regulations which were unique to FQHC
applications. P. Reply at 4 - 5. According to Petitioners, the line drawing
done by HCFA in following those regulations was also "arbitrary," "capricious,"
and "unnecessary" because all prospective suppliers and providers should
be subject to the same rules. Id. Petitioners see no valid reason
why they should have been denied the benefit of a retroactive effective
date that was within HCFA's discretion to grant to hospitals, home health
care agencies, or ambulatory surgical centers with certifications also
from the Joint Commission. P. Reply at 4 (referring to 42 C.F.R. § 489.13(d)(2)). In Ruling #2, I have already discussed the legal errors
in Petitioners' use of regulations which, by their very words, are inapplicable
to FQHC applications. HCFA cannot be faulted for having failed or refused
to apply those inapplicable regulations in this case. The lines of distinction
were created by the regulations themselves. I have concluded from my review
of the law and facts of this case that HCFA has no discretion and must
apply the regulations uniquely applicable to FQHC applications. In the
administrative appeals and review process, Petitioners cannot be given
relief because an agency has followed the very regulations it was obligated
to follow.
I noted in the "Background" section of this decision that
Judge Silva had granted Petitioners' request that a hearing be convened
if this case could not be resolved on summary judgment. Her ruling made
explicit what must necessarily happen if there exist disputes of material
facts which preclude entry of summary judgment in full. See, e.g.,
Fed. R. Civ. P. 56. Whether or not further proceedings would be necessary
depends on whether summary judgment could be granted and dispose of all
issues in the case. The ruling did not create an absolute right to an
evidentiary hearing no matter the outcome of the cross-motions for summary
judgment. In this case, Petitioners have set forth only two grounds
for challenging the effective date determination issued by HCFA. See
October 6, 2000 Order at 2. I have found both to be invalid as a matter
of law. Rulings #1 and #2. In their reply brief in further support of
summary judgment, Petitioners present collateral arguments concerning
the inequitable or unconstitutional results of HCFA's adherence to the
set of regulations applicable to only FQHC applications. I have determined
that I am without the authority to provide redress for the results asserted
by Petitioners. Ruling #3. None of the parties has requested or otherwise indicated
a need for further proceedings. All of the disputes between the parties
have arisen from their reliance on different regulations and laws. I have
found no disputed issue of material fact in need of resolution, and the
parties have identified none. Neither party has asked that I stay ruling
on their cross-motions to enable them to gather more facts. Each motion
and brief concluded with a request for summary judgment. Each summary
judgment requested would resolve the entire case and end further proceedings. Accordingly, I conclude that HCFA's determination of the
effective date cannot be disturbed for any of the reasons set forth by
Petitioners, and summary judgment should be granted in favor of HCFA at
this time. Conclusion On the basis of the rulings issued above, I enter summary judgment for HCFA. The proceedings in this case are hereby terminated. |
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JUDGE | |
Mimi Hwang Leahy Administrative Law Judge
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FOOTNOTES | |
1. I may use "FQHC application" to mean an application for Medicare participation as an FQHC. 2. I assume the parties and Judge Silva meant by "hearing" an in-person presentation of contested evidence in accordance with the section titled "Burdens of proof, of coming forward with evidence, and of persuasion" of the October 6, 2000 Order. 3. HCFA's brief consistently referred to June 22, 1999 as the effective date. Petitioner's brief referred to the effective date as June 23, 1999 (P. Br. at 2) as well as June 22, 1999 (Id. at 4 (citing affidavit at P. Ex. 2)). Since the parties agreed during the prehearing conference before Judge Silva that no issue of material fact exists, I am inclined to believe that the June 23 date reflects a typographical error. I do not find it necessary to resolve this discrepancy by examining the original documents in the parties' possession. The one day difference has no material bearing on the parties' arguments or my rulings. 4. I am using each ruling as a numbered conclusion of law, as required by 42 C.F.R. § 498.74(a). I will make no finding of fact since the parties have presented no factual dispute for resolution. 5. The Public Health Service also notifies HCFA if the entity meets the requirements of the Public Health Act. 42 C.F.R. § 405.2430(b)(2). | |