High Court Considers If Providers Can Sue States For Higher Medicaid Pay

The U.S. Supreme Court heard arguments Tuesday in a case that could block hospitals, doctors — or anyone else — from suing states over inadequate payment rates for providers who participate in the Medicaid program for low-income Americans.

Federal law requires Medicaid, which covers 70 million people, to provide the same access to care as that given to people with private insurance. But many doctors avoid seeing Medicaid recipients, saying the program pays too little. That can lead to delays and difficulties in getting care for millions of poor people.

In Armstrong vs. Exceptional Child Center, several providers for developmentally disabled Medicaid patients sued the state of Idaho after officials failed to increase Medicaid payments as required under a formula approved by the federal government. An appellate court upheld a judgment in favor of the providers last year, noting that Idaho had conceded that it held rates flat since 2006 for “purely budgetary reasons.”

The issue before the high court is whether the U.S. Constitution gives providers the right to sue the state to increase their pay. And the court appeared split on that issue based on their remarks Tuesday. Chief Justice John G. Roberts Jr. expressed concern about opening the door to a flood of lawsuits that could have federal judges determining state payment rates and potentially gutting state budgets, while more liberal judges appeared more sympathetic to the providers.

“It seems to me that this is a prescription for budget-busting across the board.” Roberts said of allowing provider lawsuits. “It seems to me [we] will be putting the setting of budget priorities in the hands of dozens of different federal judges, and I just don’t know what the practical significance of that is going to be.”

In the past two decades, providers and patient advocates have sued Medicaid programs in numerous states, including California, Illinois, Massachusetts, Oklahoma, Texas and the District of Columbia — with many of those suits resulting in higher pay for doctors and other providers.

But Justice Sonia Sotomayor noted that in the case before them, Idaho officials had failed to follow the federally approved Medicaid payment formula.

Idaho is asking the Supreme Court to hold that neither providers, nor any other private party has the right to challenge payment rates in court; indeed that only the federal government has that ability.  A decision is expected by June.

More than half the states and the Obama administration have backed Idaho’s position. Major provider groups including the American Medical Association and the American Hospital Association — along with patient advocacy groups such as the National Health Law Program — have sided with the providers.

During the hearing, Roberts and Justice Antonin Scalia questioned why providers don’t take the issue up with the federal Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services, which oversees state Medicaid programs. But the federal government has few options to sanction states other than cutting off a state’s federal Medicaid funding — the so called “nuclear option,” which CMS has never used, said an attorney representing the Idaho health providers.

The last time the court considered the issue, in a 2012 case from California called Douglas vs. Independent Living, a narrow majority sent the case back to lower court without clearly affirming or negating the right to sue. But four conservative justices in their dissent said that without explicit language from Congress saying that such a right exists, private parties such as providers and patients could not challenge Medicaid fees.

State Medicaid programs typically pay low rates — at least one third lower than Medicare, the federal plan covering the elderly and disabled. The Affordable Care Act widened eligibility for Medicaid to cover more low-income adults, adding nearly 10 million people to the program in the past year. The law temporarily increased reimbursement rates for primary care providers, but only in 2013 and 2014.

Kaiser Health News (KHN) is a national health policy news service. It is an editorially independent program of the Henry J. Kaiser Family Foundation.

A Tax on Wallstreet Goes Beyond Treating the Symptom

With President Obama’s 2015 State of the Union speech Tuesday night expected to include calls for higher taxes on capital gains and closure of assorted tax breaks for the 1 percent – on the heels of the recent proposal by Representative Chris Van Hollen, the second top ranked Democrat in the House, for revenue enhancements including a version of a tax on Wall Street – it’s clear the campaign for tax justice is making traction in Washington.

At the forefront of the push for a more equitable tax system have been the Robin Hood Tax activists who have mobilized around the nation for a tax on Wall Street speculation, as embodied in the Inclusive Prosperity Act introduced by Rep. Keith Ellison, with some 28 co-sponsors.

Nurses have long been in the forefront of the call for a Robin Hood Tax.

National Nurses United, for example, that the Robin Hood Tax could generate hundreds of billions of dollars every year “to provide a critical lifeline for improving the health and safety of people in the U.S. and across the globe – from ending HIV/AIDS, to reducing the effects of the climate crisis, including the widespread health problems caused by climate change, to paying for the unfinished job of healthcare for all in the U.S.,” notes NNU Co-President Karen Higgins, RN.

While the Obama administration has yet to support the concept of the Wall Street tax – and in fact actively opposed the proposed European Financial Transaction Tax – the President’s call for those who have benefited from growing disparity of wealth to return some of that wealth for education and retirement benefits is a step forward.

An even bigger step would be active promotion of a robust tax on Wall Street – the source of the economic crisis in 2008 that put so many families and communities in crisis.

Van Hollen goes farther with his proposal, becoming the first figure in the Democratic leadership in Washington to embrace a financial transaction tax already adopted in some 40 countries around the world, including in many of the leading global markets and closest U.S. allies abroad.

It’s a clear sign that the concept of a more just tax system is gaining traction, even if neither the Van Hollen proposal nor the President’s go far enough. The Van Hollen idea, for example, does not raise nearly enough revenue, because the tax rate is too small, and is intended to provide a tax cut for middle income taxpayers when the funds are desperately needed to meet the human needs so neglected by years of austerity economics and conservative priorities.

Unfortunately, Van Hollen accepts the Republicans’ conservative premise that what working people need is a tax cut rather than government social programs that will help everyone.  A tax cut won’t repair our bridges, it won’t help clean up the environment, it won’t fund our schools, and it won’t cure the HIV/AIDS pandemic. 

Rep. Ellison’s bill, on the other hand, soon to be re-introduced, would raise hundreds of billions of dollars every year for such critical needs as ending attacking mushrooming student debt, helping pay for jobs at living wages, affordable housing, a clean environment, and enhanced retirement security, as well as healthcare for all and other basic needs.

What the Obama Administration and Rep. Van Hollen proposals have in common is an emphasis on re-directing tax cuts from the rich to the rest of us. This is a treatment of the symptom, but not the cure.

The Ellison bill would spark real change for American families. By encouraging employers to share the wealth with their employees, Van Hollen’s bill is a start, but the Robin Hood tax only works if it is the lever for requiring reckless speculators to pay their fair share of the cost of addressing the climate crisis, providing healthcare for all or retooling public educational system.

We in the Robin Hood Tax movement have worked hard to keep each other informed about what is the most economically just cause of our time – closing the largest, money-draining loophole in our system to provide the funds we need to rebuild America. – See more at: http://www.robinhoodtax.org/news/blog/tax-wallstreet-goes-beyond-treating-symptom