Nebraska Department of Social Services, DAB No. 1389 (1993)

Department of Health and Human Services

DEPARTMENTAL APPEALS BOARD

Appellate Division

SUBJECT: Nebraska Department  of  Social Services

DATE:  February 10, l993
Docket No. 92-166 Decision No.   1389

DECISION

The Nebraska Department of Social Services (Nebraska) appealed a
disallowance by the Health Care Financing Administration (HCFA) under
Title XIX (Medicaid) of the Social Security Act (Act).  HCFA disallowed
$607,238 of Nebraska's claim for federal funding for costs incurred
under its home and community-based services (HCBS) waiver for the period
July 1, 1989 through June 30, 1990.  HCFA concluded that the costs at
issue represented 10 percent of direct residential staff costs incurred
in implementing the waiver for this period, and under the terms of the
waiver must be excluded from Nebraska's claim.

For the reasons explained below, we uphold the disallowance in full.  We
find that this disallowance presents the same basic issue which was
resolved in Nebraska Department of Social Services, DAB 1354 (1992)
(henceforth cited as Nebraska I).  This issue was whether 10 percent of
direct residential staff costs must be excluded from reimbursement under
the terms of Nebraska's approved HCBS waiver.  We found that Nebraska
could not be reimbursed for these costs since it was bound under the
terms of the HCBS waiver, which expressly considered 10 percent of
direct residential staff costs to be non-reimbursable "room and board"
costs.  (The approved waiver at issue here covered the period ending
June 30, 1990 and is precisely the same waiver considered in Nebraska
I.)  Furthermore, we held that even if Nebraska was not bound by its
approved waiver request, it had not demonstrated why it would be
entitled to attribute no residential staff costs to "room and board"
activities in the assisted living context.

In the case before us now, Nebraska relied upon two arguments, one of
which had been raised in its prior appeal leading to Nebraska I.  First,
Nebraska argued that its approved waiver had been amended at a meeting
between officials from HCFA and Nebraska on October 27, 1989 and that
under this amendment a deduction for room and board costs was no longer
required.  Second, Nebraska contended that even if a deduction was still
required, the only amount that should be disallowed is the actual cost
of assisted residential staff attributable to room and board functions,
which Nebraska alleged was substantially less than the 10-percent
deduction.

   ANALYSIS

1.  Nebraska was bound by the terms of its approved waiver.

Nebraska argued that it should not be bound by the terms of its approved
waiver because officials from HCFA and Nebraska had modified the terms
of the waiver on October 27, 1989.  Nebraska argued that HCFA's
subsequent actions served to confirm that a modification had been made.
On January 15, 1991 HCFA approved Nebraska's application for a new
waiver, covering a five year period effective October 1, 1990, and that
waiver did not contain an express 10-percent deduction for room and
board costs. 1/  Nebraska argued that HCFA's renewal of the waiver,
without a demand that Nebraska retain the 10-percent  deduction,
demonstrates that the parties had earlier agreed to disregard the
deduction.  Nebraska contended that this deletion of the room and board
deduction was a significant revision of the waiver, and that if HCFA
truly disagreed with the revision, HCFA should have communicated its
concern to Nebraska.   Nebraska alleged that it only discovered with the
disallowance letter in Nebraska I, coming 17 months after its claim,
that no agreement had been reached on the room and board deduction.
Nebraska Reply Br. at 2. 2/

HCFA disputed that it had ever agreed to an modification to the original
waiver and quoted from the Board's decision in Nebraska I where the
Board concluded that it was unable to find a definitive and binding
agreement between the parties to modify the orginal HCBS waiver.  HCFA
asserted that it had not been aware of Nebraska's elimination of the 10
percent room and board deduction from Appendix J of the new waiver
request effective October 1, 1990 when it approved that waiver.  HCFA
alleged that this oversight was due to the fact that Nebraska did not
indicate in the cover letter to the waiver renewal application that it
had removed the 10 percent deduction requirement, nor did it explicitly
ask for a change in the reimbursement methodology or for a change in the
waiver terms requiring the removal of room and board.  HCFA also argued
that, in any event, Nebraska's argument is not relevant to the
disallowance period at issue.  The waiver renewal was approved for a
five year period beginning October 1, 1990, whereas the disallowance
period at issue related to costs incurred from July 1, 1989 to June 30,
1990. 3/  HCFA also contended that Nebraska did not request HCFA's
approval to change its methodology for determining the waiver rate until
August 4, 1992.  This request, according to HCFA, has not yet been
approved.

We concluded in Nebraska I that the waiver at issue contained an express
provision which required a 10-percent deduction in assisted residential
staff costs because those costs were viewed as non-reimbursable "room
and board."  After fully discussing the circumstances surrounding the
meeting between officials from HCFA and Nebraska on October 27, 1989, we
found no definitive and binding modification of this express waiver term
arising from the meeting.  All five HCFA participants denied that they
had agreed that Nebraska could ignore the deduction.  They further
asserted that they did not review, audit, or approve the regional
worksheet that Nebraska had supplied at the meeting.  See Nebraska I,
pp. 7-9, and HCFA Exhibits (Exs.) 2-6 submitted in the record for that
appeal (Board Docket No. 91-75).  We noted, moreover, in Nebraska I that
where the original waiver request and its approval must both be made in
written form by the appropriate officials, any approved modification
must also be in writing.  There was absolutely no evidence in the record
of an authorized written approval for a waiver modification.

Moreover, the disallowance period at issue here only relates to costs
incurred from July 1, 1989 to June 30, 1990.  Since the new waiver
approved on January 15, 1991 was effective October 1, 1990, it is
inapplicable to the facts of this case.  As HCFA argued, the new waiver
does not even address specifically how the room and board reimbursement
prohibition will be implemented through the provider rate methodology,
and the parties are still negotiating a methodology for setting the
rate. 4/   In any event, we fail to see how the timing of the
disallowance in Nebraska I could be viewed as further evidence of the
existence of a modification.  Simply because HCFA issued its
disallowance 17 months after the claim does not in any way serve to
confirm Nebraska's position concerning the existence of a modification.

Accordingly, we conclude here, as we concluded in Nebraska I, that
Nebraska is bound by the terms of its approved waiver.  The specific
deduction in question was originally proposed by Nebraska and was
expressly included to implement the statutory and regulatory prohibition
on reimbursement for room and board in HCBS waivers.  Moreover, Nebraska
failed to substantiate that HCFA ever approved a modification of the
room and board deduction in the approved waiver.

2.  Nebraska's evidence does not support a reduction in the
disallowance.

Nebraska also argued that even if a deduction was still required, the
only amount that should be disallowed is the actual cost of assisted
residential staff services attributable to room and board functions,
which Nebraska alleged "range[d] from zero (0) to two (2) percent of the
provider's budget."  Nebraska supported this argument with affidavits
from several regional directors and heads of provider agencies located
in various parts of Nebraska.  While a few of these affiants
acknowledged that a portion of the assisted residential staffs' duties
included room and board functions, others alleged that their assisted
residential staff performed no room and board functions.  Nebraska
argued that these estimates indicated that if a disallowance is
warranted, it should be for an amount less than the 10-percent
disallowance amount.

We reject Nebraska's argument because the primary basis for our decision
both here and in Nebraska I is that a 10-percent deduction was required
by the express terms of the waiver.  This deduction was presumably meant
to eliminate the difficult task of differentiating between "room and
board" and all other aspects of staff services, and then allocating the
separate costs incurred in every instance.  In proposing this deduction,
Nebraska effectively acknowledged that 10-percent of residential staff
costs would accurately reflect the amount of non-reimbursable room and
board services performed by the staff.  Nebraska has never persuasively
substantiated why the waiver provision it proposed should now be
disregarded.  Nor has it argued and substantiated that the duties and
responsibilities of the residential staff have changed during the waiver
period.

Furthermore, the affidavits Nebraska provided are highly conclusory, and
do not include any explanation or supporting analysis as to how the
affiants derived their estimates of "actual" room and board costs.  It
is even unclear whether these seven affidavits encompass the entire
universe of Nebraska providers.  Moreover, Nebraska did not attempt to
explain why some providers or regions found it necessary to provide room
and board services and others did not.  If nothing else, these
affidavits undercut Nebraska'a primary position that assisted
residential staff never provided room and board services.

Conclusion

On the basis of the foregoing analysis as well as our analysis in
Nebraska I, we uphold the disallowance in full.


       ____________________________ M. Terry
       Johnson


       _____________________________ Norval D.
       (John) Settle


       _____________________________ Donald F.
       Garrett Presiding Board Member

1.  The new HCBS waiver, covering the period beginning October 1, 1990,
included a new Appendix J that made no reference to a 10 percent
deduction for room and board costs.

2.  In its Reply Brief, Nebraska alleges that it received notification
of HCFA's disallowance "two fiscal years and 17 months after the claim
had been submitted . . . ." State Reply Br. at 2.  (emphasis added).
Since the time span Nebraska is referring to ran from November 22, 1989
to April 26, 1991, we assume that Nebraska meant part of two fiscal
years or 17 months.

3.  Nebraska neglected to make this particular argument in Nebraska I
even though HCFA approved the new waiver well before it issued the
disallowance in that case on April 26, 1991.

4.  Whether or not the new methodology contains a 10-percent deduction
identical to the one considered here, it must still conform with the
statutory and regulatory provisions barring reimbursement for room and

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