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HILL-GUTHRIE PROPERTIES vs. DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND REHABILITATIVE SERVICES, 83-000610 (1983)
Division of Administrative Hearings, Florida Number: 83-000610 Latest Update: Apr. 18, 1985

Findings Of Fact I. BACKGROUND HILL-GUTHRIE, also known as Hill Guthrie Realty Company, is a wholly- owned subsidiary of First American Corporation, in Huntsville, Alabama. During the past 17 years, First American Corporation has developed, owned, and operated approximately 80 nursing homes and health care facilities. On October 15, 1982, HILL-GUTHRIE filed an application with HRS for a CON to construct and operate a community nursing home in the City of Niceville, in Okaloosa County, Florida. The original application sought authorization for a 120-bed nursing home, to be known as "Twin Cities Health Facility." Estimated cost of construction was $3,180,000. By its "State Agency Action Report," dated January 28, 1983, HRS preliminarily denied the application, stating: The proposed project is not consistent with Chapter 10-5.11, Florida Administrative Code, Nursing Home Bed Need Methodology. A need does not exist to add any nursing home beds to Okaloosa County through 1985. There are 70 approved but not constructed beds in the county. The bed need methodology produces an excess of 10 nursing home beds in the county through 1985. (emphasis included) [Respondent's Ex. 3.]. HILL-GUTHRIE contested the denial, resulting in this proceeding. At final hearing, HILL-GUTHRIE amended its earlier application, reducing the number of nursing home beds, from 120 to 60. Other changes to the application were made to reflect the reduction in beds. The estimated cost of construction was reduced from $3,180,000 to $1,780,000. [Petitioner's Ex. 2]. HRS did not seek a continuance or additional time to evaluate the newly amended application. Rather, it represented that it was prepared to proceed. II. APPLICATION OF THE NURSING HOME BED-NEED METHODOLOGY Both parties agree that HILL-GUTHRIE'S application is governed by the licensing criteria contained in Rule 10-5.11(21) Florida Administrative Code, and Section 381.494(6)(c), Florida Statutes. Generally, the rule provides that applications for community nursing home beds will be considered "in context with applicable statutory and rule criteria"; that applications will "not normally [be] approve[d] . . . if approval . . . would cause the number of community beds in that departmental service district to exceed the number of beds calculated by the methodology described in [the rule]"; and that this methodology, consisting of several numerical formulae, will be used to evaluate applications "in addition to relevant statutory and rule criteria." Section 5.11(21)(a), (b), Fla. Admin. Code. The statute being implemented, Section 381.494(6)(c), Florida Statutes, enumerates a myriad of criteria, including availability, accessibility, extent of utilization, quality of care and adequacy of like and existing health care services in the area to be served. Section 381.494(6)(c), Fla. Stat. (1983). It has been construed to require a balanced consideration of these factors. HRS cannot ignore some factors and emphasize others. 1/ The HRS methodology--consisting of formulae which do not take into account all criteria listed in the statute--comports with this requirement by incorporating, by reference, all other relevant statutory or rule criteria, and recognizing that new beds may be permitted even though such approval would cause the number of beds to exceed the number allowed by the formulae. Section 5.11(21)(a), (b), Fla. Admin. Code. The HRS bed need methodology, at least that part consisting of the various formulae, establishes a 3-step analysis. First, theoretical bed need for the relevant district and sub-district is calculated using an area's particular poverty ratio, a statewide bed-need ratio of 27 beds per 1,000 elderly population, and the area's elderly population projected three years into the future. "Existing and approved" beds in the sub-district area are then subtracted to arrive at the number of additional beds needed in the district and sub-district. In the instant case, it is undisputed that this first step in the analysis is satisfied. The formulae, when "run," indicate a 1987 theoretical bed-need of at least 250 additional beds in District 1, the relevant district, and 58 additional beds in Okaloosa County, the relevant sub-district. Respondent's Ex. 1, 2). The remaining two steps involve applying current and prospective utilization formulae. When, as here, both district and subdistrict show a theoretical need for additional beds, a specific bed need/availability relationship is identified, which correlates with specific current and prospective utilization thresholds. Section 5.11(21)(e)1., (f), (g), Fla. Admin. Code. Normally, if both thresholds are satisfied, "need" is indicated and the application approved. If either threshold is not met, thus indicating "no need," HRS must decide whether, on balance, this failure is outweighed by favorable findings under other criteria made relevant by rule or statute. If so, approval is justified, or even required. HRS describes this inquiry as one of determining whether there are unusual, or extenuating and mitigating circumstances in a case which would justify approving an application, notwithstanding failure to satisfy the formulae. In the instant case, the applicable utilization thresholds are that average current utilization rate in the sub-district must exceed 85 percent, and any additional beds must not cause the prospective utilization rate in the sub- district to drop below 80 percent. Section 10-5.11(f), (g), Fla. Admin. Code. [Respondent's Ex. 1.] According to the June, 1984 HRS Semiannual Census Report, the nursing home bed utilization rate for Okaloosa County was 97.1 percent from October, 1983 through March, 1984. More recent nursing home data filed with HRS, on a quarterly basis, indicates a current utilization rate of 96.5 percent. Thus, using either data base, the 85 percent current utilization threshold is satisfied--a conclusion agreed to by both parties. The prospective utilization threshold, however, permits additional beds only to the point at which further beds would drop the sub-district prospective utilization rate below 80 percent. HILL-GUTHRIE, using the HRS Semiannual Census Report, the number of existing and approved beds in the sub-district, and the projected elderly population, concludes that the sub-district (Okaloosa County) could be allowed an additional 16 beds before the prospective utilization falls below 80 percent. HRS, using the quarterly census data, finds need for an additional 13 beds. As conceded by the HRS expert--the 3-bed difference is insignificant. More importantly, as both parties agree, the granting of HILL-GUTHRIE'S 60-bed application would drop the projected utilization rate below the required 80 percent. (A nursing home of less than 60 beds is not considered financially feasible.) Thus, the formulae indicate "no- need" for the proposed 60-bed nursing home. The inquiry, then, must turn to whether failure to satisfy the formulae is, on balance, outweighed by other rule or statutory criteria, or extenuating and mitigating circumstances unique to this case. III. APPLICATION OF OTHER STATUTORY AND RULE CRITERIA The HRS bed-need formulae are useful tools to evaluate CON applications: they are objective, abstract, and can be applied with ease; they enhance consistency, uniformity, and predictability of decision. But these formulae are rudimentary, inexact tools which, though useful, are incomplete. They do not take into account numerous criteria which, by statute and rule, also apply to CON applications. For instance, they do not take into account, in any direct and meaningful way, factors such as financial feasibility, accessibility, quality of care, efficiency, and impact on cost of care. See, Section 10- 5.11(3), (5), (6), and (2)(b), Fla. Admin. Code; Section 381.494(6)(c)1., 2., 9., and 12., Fla. Stat. (1983). It is the measurement of HILL-GUTHRIE'S application by these criteria which is at issue here. The power of HRS to find that failure to satisfy the formulae is outweighed, or overridden, by other factors is not at issue. HRS has, in the past, granted numerous CON's (despite failure to satisfy the formulae) based on favorable findings under other criteria, such as accessibility. Petitioner's Ex.`s 3, 5, 7, 53. Without a bona fide evidentiary basis, agencies cannot treat similarly situated applicants in an inconsistent manner. 2/ A. Accessibility of Existing Nursing Homes To Niceville Area Residents Currently, four nursing homes providing a total of 355 beds--are located in Okaloosa County (the relevant sub-district). The majority of these beds (295) are found in three of the nursing homes located in the more heavily populated and faster growing coastal area of the county. The remaining beds (60) are located in a nursing home in Crestview, a city north of Niceville, in the central part of the county. This nursing home has an additional 60 beds which have been under renovation for a considerable time. HRS has no projected completion date for this renovation. The date of completion is, apparently, a matter within the sole discretion of the nursing home and its contractors. The Crestview nursing home primarily serves residents of the northern and central portion of Okaloosa County. Since it is the northernmost nursing home in the county, it also receives patients from South Alabama. Existing nursing homes in the county have a high rate of utilization. Occupancy rates in the four existing nursing homes average 97.1 percent for the six month period ending March, 1984; 96.5 percent for the six months ending June, 1984. Recent data compiled by the Local Health Council indicate a 98.8 percent utilization rate for the nine months preceding hearing. Nursing home occupancy rates in adjoining counties approach 95 percent, no doubt contributing to the high rate of utilization in Okaloosa County Some nursing homes have lengthy waiting lists. 3/ One patient, although ninth on the waiting list, has waited 3 years for placement in the Westwood Nursing Home, located in the coastal part of the county. The Crestview nursing home has a waiting list of more than 60 persons, making it unlikely that-- even after the renovations are completed--further beds will be available. It is reasonably anticipated that the recently enacted Medicare hospital reimbursement system, based on diagnostic-related guidelines (DRG's), will increase the demand for nursing home beds, thereby aggravating the shortage. With Medicare hospital payments tied to the diagnosis of illness, rather than the length of patient stay, hospitals will have increased economic incentives to discharge patient earlier. Some local hospitals have had to retain patients, who no longer require acute care, because nursing home beds are unavailable. At Crestview Community Hospital, hospital patients have had to wait or face delays of from one week to 63 days during the period from May to August, 1984. During that time period, 43 patients were eligible for nursing home placement. Eleven spent a combined total of 271 hospital days awaiting placement. Three of the 11 were eventually discharged, but (at time of hearing) were still awaiting placement. At Twin Cities Hospital, in Niceville, two or three patients (at time of hearing) required but could not obtain nursing home placement. In August, 1984, five patients were ready for early discharge, but could not be placed in nursing homes because of crowded conditions. In May, 1984, three Twin Cities Hospital patients were placed in a Panama City nursing home, over one and one half hours travel time from Niceville, because of crowded local conditions. Local physicians have had similar difficulties finding nursing home placements during the past year. Robert S. Ellis, M.D., a Niceville physician, could not obtain prompt nursing home placement for from eight to ten of his patients. They faced waits ranging from ten days to two months. Many of his patients were finally placed in nursing homes outside the county; recently, he had no choice but to place a patient in a Gulf Breeze nursing home, approximately 50 miles away. He has never been successful in placing a patient in the Crestview nursing home, primarily because Crestview residents are given priority consideration. His experience is shared by other local physicians. Existing nursing homes in the county are a considerable distance from Niceville. Given the existing road system and traffic conditions in the coastal area, it has become increasingly burdensome for Niceville residents to visit their friends and relatives in coastal nursing homes. Frequent visits and contacts with friends and relatives is recognized as beneficial to nursing home residents. It is important that residents maintain their ties to the community, and their relationships with friends and relatives outside the nursing home. For Niceville residents, it takes 20-30 minutes to drive to nursing homes located in the coastal area, 45 minutes to drive to the Crestview nursing home. This burden, which affects nursing home residents as well as their families and friends, is real and significant. It is established not only by the testimony of area physicians, hospital administrators, and Niceville residents, but it is convincingly corroborated by the testimony of three Niceville city council members, and by petitions signed by over 480 elderly citizens in the Niceville area. [Public Ex.'s 1-3]. The HRS bed-need formulae do not take geographic accessibility of existing nursing homes into account, and no minimum access/travel time has been established by rule. Before adoption of the bed-need formulae, HRS had relied on a 30-minute standard set by the Local Health Council. A health care expert who, in 1982, conducted the HRS public hearing on the HILL- GUTHRIE application concluded that access times (for Niceville area residents) to existing nursing homes bordered on or exceeded this ad hoc 30-minute standard. HRS has not established, by competent evidence, a travel/access standard for use in this proceeding. More importantly, HRS concedes that initial denial of the HILL-GUTHRIE application is due, in large part, to the delay in completing renovations to the Crestview nursing home which, when complete, will provide an additional 60 beds. [Transcript, p. 232]. As conceded by HRS's expert and sole witness, if the 60 renovated beds were available, they would "probably be well utilized." [Transcript, p. 232]. (Given the lengthy witness list, it is likely that, within a short time, the additional 60 beds would be filled.) The expert further concluded that, should the 60 beds be filled, the bed-need formulae would indicate need" and--provided other standards were met--HRS would be able to approve the HILL-GUTHRIE application. [Transcript, p. 234]. B. Financial Feasibility of the Proposed Nursing Home The proposed nursing home is financially feasible, both in the short and long-term. The revised total cost of the nursing home is 51,780,000, which is reasonable, given the nature and size of the project. It will be 100 percent financed through the issuance of industrial revenue bonds at an interest rate of 14 percent over 30 years. The assets of the parent company, First American Corporation, would be available, if needed, to help construct and operate the nursing home. Projected utilization of the nursing home during the first year will be 81 percent Medicaid, 5 percent Medicare, and 14 percent private pay. [Petitioner's Ex. 2]. Occupancy is projected to reach 97 percent by the fifth month of operation, and would be supported, in part, by increased demand for nursing home beds resulting from implementation of DRG's. These projections are based on HILL-GUTHRIE's experience in northwest Florida, and are accepted as reasonable. Pro forma statements for the first and second years of operation show a net operating profit, beginning in the ninth month, and continuing through the second year. For overall operations during the first year, a net loss of $40,082 is projected; in the second year, a net gain of $122,200 is projected. [Petitioner's Ex. 2]. These projections--together with equipment and construction costs, staffing patterns and personnel budget, square footage and space requirements--are accepted as reasonable, and have not been refuted by HRS. If approved, HILL-GUTHRIE's proposed nursing home should be constructed and available for occupancy by the end of 1985. C. Impact (of the Proposed Nursing Home) On Cost of Health Care, and Efficiency and Utilization of Existing Nursing Homes Construction of the proposed nursing home should help relieve the existing financial burden on hospital acute care patients who, because of lack of available nursing home beds, must remain in hospitals, where daily charges far exceed those of nursing homes. Similarly, hospitals would less likely have to absorb the cost of Medicare patients (beyond DRG payment limits) because nursing home beds were unavailable. Hospitals, with their highly specialized staffs, could be used more efficiently, in that patients not requiring acute medical care would not be retained in acute care beds. The proposed nursing home, if constructed, should not adversely impact existing nursing homes in the county. With present occupancy rates in excess of 95 percent, with waiting lists and increasing demand for nursing home beds, no significant drop in occupancy rates should occur. The only evidence HRS presented on possible adverse impact was a conditional statement made by its health care expert: If there were a surplus of beds, nursing homes might be forced to increase the rates to their private `pay' patients . . . they may have to try to cover their expenses. (e.s.) [Transcript, p. 186]. The evidence, however, indicates that there will not be a surplus of beds. Furthermore, at hearing, no opposition to the proposed nursing home was offered by any existing nursing home in the county. D. Balancing the Factors On balance, HILL-GUTHRIE's failure to satisfy all aspects of the bed- need formulae is outweighed by favorable findings made under other criteria equally applicable by rule and statute. In particular, nursing homes in the county are overcrowded, and--without the proposed facility--most likely will continue to be so. There are no nursing homes in Niceville and it is a significant hardship for Niceville residents to visit their friends and relatives in existing nursing homes. Such visits are a positive benefit to nursing home residents. Construction of the proposed nursing home would reduce costs now imposed on hospitals and their patients due to lack of available nursing home beds, and would not adversely impact the occupancy rates of existing nursing homes.

Recommendation Based on the foregoing, it is RECOMMENDED: That HILL-GUTHRIE's application for a CON to build and operate a 60-bed nursing home in Niceville, Florida, be granted. DONE and ORDERED this 16th day of January, 1985, in Tallahassee, Florida. R.L. CALEEN, JR. Hearing Officer Division of Administrative Hearings The Oakland Building 2009 Apalachee Parkway Tallahassee, Florida 32301 (904) 488-9675 FILED with the Clerk of the Division of Administrative Hearings this 16th day of January, 1985

Florida Laws (3) 120.52120.57120.68
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WUESTHOFF HEALTH SERVICES, INC. vs. DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND REHABILITATIVE SERVICES, 85-002868 (1985)
Division of Administrative Hearings, Florida Number: 85-002868 Latest Update: Jan. 26, 1987

Recommendation Based on the foregoing Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law, it is, therefore: RECOMMENDED That Manor Care be issued a CON for the construction of a 60 bed nursing home; Palm Bay Care Center be awarded a CON for the construction of a 60 bed nursing home; Forum Group be awarded a CON for a 40 bed nursing home and Courtenay Springs be awarded a CON for 36 nursing home beds. RECOMMENDED this 26th day of January, 1987, at Tallahassee, Florida. ARNOLD H. POLLOCK, Hearing Officer Division of Administrative Hearings The Oakland Building 2009 Apalachee Parkway Tallahassee, Florida 32301 (904) 488-99675 Filed with the Clerk of the Division of Administrative Hearings this 26th day of January, 1987. COPIES FURNISHED: William Page, Jr., Secretary Department of Health and Rehabilitative Services 1323 Winewood Boulevard Tallahassee, Florida 32301 Jean Laramore, Esquire Kenneth Hoffman, Esquire 325 North Calhoun Street Tallahassee, Florida 32301 Thomas B. Smith, Esquire Post Office Box 633 Orlando, Florida 32802 John Grout, Esquire Post Office Box 180 Orlando, Florida 32802 Donna H. Stinson, Esquire Suite 100 Perkins House 118 North Gadsden Street Tallahassee, Florida 32301 Susan G. Tuttle, Esquire 402 South Florida Avenue Tampa, Florida 33602 Robert D. Newell, Jr., Esquire Suite B 200 South Monroe Street Tallahassee, Florida 32301 John F. Gilroy, Esquire Department of Health and Rehabilitative Services 1323 Winewood Boulevard Tallahassee, Florida 32301 APPENDIX The following constitutes my specific rulings pursuant to Section 120.57(2), Florida Statutes, on all of the Proposed Findings of Fact submitted by the parties herein. 1-13 Accepted. 14 & 15 Accepted. 16-18 Rejected as a recitation of the evidence. 19-23 Accepted. 24 Accepted. 25-29 Accepted. 30 & 31 Accepted. 32 Irrelevant. 33-34 Accepted. 35-37 Accepted. 38-46 Accepted. 47 & 48 Accepted. 49 & 50 Accepted. 51 Discussion, not Finding of Fact. 52-56 Accepted. Rejected as a recitation of the evidence. Accepted. Accepted to the fact that there were no sheltered beds in existence. Irrelevant. 61-63 Accepted but not of substantial positive value. 64 & 65 Accepted. Opinion not Finding of Fact. Accepted. 68-75 Accepted. 76-80 Irrelevant based on part operation and evidence shows facility is to be sold. 81-85 Irrelevant - see next 86-90 Rejected as a conclusion of law and not a Finding of Fact. 91 Not a Finding of Fact. 92-94 Accepted. 95 Irrelevant as to local district. 96-103 Accepted. 104-105 Rejected as contrary to the weight of the evidence. Accepted as to what Dr. Hoffman supported. Accepted as to what Dr. Hoffman indicated. 108-110 Accepted. Rejected as contrary to the weight of the evidence. Accepted. Not a Finding of Fact. 114-118 Accepted. 119&120 Not a Finding of Fact. 121&122 Accepted. 123 Accepted as to the one facility currently operated. 124-127 Accepted. Speculation insufficient to support a Finding of Fact. Argument, not a Finding of Fact. Accepted. 131-133 Accepted. 134 Not a Finding of Fact. 135-137 Accepted. 138 Not supported by the weight of the evidence. 139-147 Accepted. 148&149 Not a Finding of Fact. 150-164 Accepted. Rejected as a summary of testimony, not a Finding of Fact. Irrelevant. 167-176 Accepted. Rejected as contrary to the weight of the evidence Rejected as a summary of testimony. Accepted. 180&181 Accepted. 182 Irrelevant. 183&184 Accepted. 185 Rejected as a conclusion. 186&187 Rejected as contrary to the weight of the evidence. As to Manor Care 1 Accepted. 2&3 Rejected as not a part of the case. 4 Accepted. 5-7 Accepted. Accepted. Accepted. 10-11 Accepted. 12 Accepted. 13-19 Accepted. 20-22 Accepted. As to Forum 1-13 Accepted. 14-16 Accepted. 17-22 Accepted. 23&24 Accepted. 25-27 Accepted. 28-31 Accepted. 32 Accepted. 33-35 Accepted. 36 Rejected as speculation. 37-42 Accepted. 43 Accepted. 44-47 Accepted. 48&49 Accepted. 50-55 Accepted. Rejected as a conclusion not consistent with the evidence. Accepted. 58&59 Accepted. 60-64 Accepted. 65-69 Accepted. 70&71 Irrelevant. 72&73 Accepted. 74-76 Accepted. Accepted as to the first sentence. Second sentence is not a Finding of Fact. Accepted. As to PBCC 1&2 Accepted. 3 Rejected as a Conclusion of Law. 46 Accepted. Accepted. Rejected as contrary to the weight of the evidence. Accepted. 10-12 Accepted. Rejected as contrary to the weight of the evidence except for the first sentence which is accepted. Rejected. 15-20 Accepted. 21-27 Accepted. 28 Rejected as an overstatement and not supported by the evidence. 29&30 Accepted. 31 Rejected as contrary to the weight of the evidence. 32-38 Accepted. 39-43 Accepted. 44-50 Accepted. 51-57 Accepted. Accepted except for the first sentence which is unsupported by credible evidence of record. Accepted. Rejected. Accepted. As to Courtenay This party failed to number or otherwise identify its Findings of Fact individually. Therefore, no specific ruling as to each Finding of Fact is hereby made. In light of the ultimate recommendation of the Hearing Officer that the party's CON be approved, no prejudice to this party can be said to have occurred. As to DHRS 1-4 Accepted 5 Summary of testimony and not a Finding of Fact. 6-1 Is an argument of the party's position, not a Finding of Fact. 12-14 Rejected as matters not a part of the party's position at hearing. Accepted. Accepted. Accepted. Accepted. 19-22 Accepted. Rejected as a summary of testimony and not a Finding of Fact. Accepted. 25-28 Accepted. 29-31 Accepted.

Florida Laws (1) 120.57
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HEALTH QUEST CORPORATION, D/B/A REGENTS PARK OF DADE COUNTY vs. DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND REHABILITATIVE SERVICES, 84-003297 (1984)
Division of Administrative Hearings, Florida Number: 84-003297 Latest Update: Nov. 06, 1985

Findings Of Fact The Petitioner originally applied for a certificate of need to construct and operate a 180 bed community nursing home in Broward County, Florida. By stipulation, the Petitioner's application was amended to be an application for a certificate of need for 120 nursing home beds at a cost of $4,600,000. Stipulation filed August 9, 1985. The only issue in this case is whether there is a need for 120 nursing home beds in Broward County. T. 25. The parties agree that need is to be determined in this case by application of rule 10-5.11(21), Florida Administrative Code. Prehearing Stipulation, pp. 2-3. In the case at bar, the relevant district is District X, which is Broward County and is not subdivided into subdistricts. T. 147. Rule 10-5.11(21)(b)1-4, which is applicable to this case, requires use of the following data and abbreviations: The number of licensed beds ("LB"). The current district population age 65-74 (POPC"). The current district population age 75+ ("POPD"). The district population age 65-74 projected three years ahead ("POPA"). The district population age 75+ projected three years ahead ("POPB"). The average occupancy rate for licensed nursing home beds in the district ("OR"). The number of nursing home beds in the district which have received CON approval but are not yet licensed ("approved beds"). HRS gathers data-from local health councils as to the number of patients in a given nursing home on the first day of each month, and this data, collected in six month segments, is compiled into a semiannual occupancy report. T. 145-46. Joint Exhibit 17 is the semiannual census report and bed need allocation published June 3, 1985, and contains data collected on the first days of the months of October-December 1984 and January-March, l98. T. 147; Joint Exhibit 17. The population figures to be used in this case are from the office of the Governor, and neither party disputes the accuracy of these figures. Relying upon the data in Joint Exhibit 17, HRS concluded that there is only a net need for 11 community nursing home beds in District X on the date of the hearing. Joint Exhibit 17, Joint Exhibit 15, T. 150. This was correctly calculated in Petitioner's proposed finding of fact 20: Underlying data: LB = 2,875 POPC = 157,371 POPD = 104,860 POPA = 168,793 POPB = 124,570 OR = 87.59 percent Approved beds = 415 Calculations: Bed rates: BA = LB POPC + (6 x POPD) = 2,875 157,371 + (6 x 104,860) = 2,765 786,531 = 3.65/1,000 BB = 6 x BA = 6 x 3.65/1,000 = 21.93/1,000 Age-adjusted bed total: A = (POPA x BA) + (POPB x BB) = (168,793 x 3.65) + (124,570 x 21.93) 1,000 ( 1,000) = (168.793 x 3.65) + (124,570 x 21.93) = 617 + 2,732 = 3,349 Occupancy-adjusted total: SA = A x OR 90 = 3,349 x 87.59 90 = 3,259 Deduction for licensed & approved beds: Net beds = SA - LB - .9 (approved beds) = 3,259 - 2,875 - .9 (415) = 384 - 373 Net beds = 11 Beverly Manor was licensed as a community nursing home for 120 beds on May 13, 1985. T. 140-41, 151; Petitioner's Exhibit 16. The Department of Health and Rehabilitative Services has a policy to use May 1, 1985, as the cutoff date for Counting licensed nursing home beds for the June 1985 semiannual report, and based on that policy, did not consider the licensed beds at Beverly Manor in calculating bed need in Joint Exhibit 17 and 15. T. 149, 151-52. The Department of Health and Rehabilitative Services uses a variety of other cutoff dates in compiling the semiannual report. Poverty data is from 1980. Approved bed count is from May 1, 1985. Population data is from January 1985. T. 148-50. The reason offered by HRS for using May 1, 1985, for a cutoff date for counting licensed nursing home beds was to give HRS employees enough time to put all the data together t issue the semiannual report on the due date, June 1985. T. 159-60. Daystar, Inc., is reported to be a 44 bed nursing home in District X on Joint Exhibit 17. The Department of Health and Rehabilitative Services includes in the semiannual report all nursing homes that are licensed by the HRS office of licensure and certification. T. 152. HRS included Daystar, Inc., on the semiannual report. Id. Daystar, Inc., operates a 44 bed facility far Christian Scientists that does not offer medical treatment or medication of any kind, but relies solely upon spiritual healing. T. 36-37. On September 29, 1981, certificate of need number 1746 was issued to Colonial Palms Nursing Home East. Petitioner's Exhibit 18. The termination date was extended to March 27, 1983. Id. Three days before the termination date, HRS issued an amended certificate of need number 1746, to Colonial Palms, Inc. to construct the 120 beds in two phases. Phase I was the addition of 46 beds to an existing facility, which HRS did not name, and phase II was to construct a new 74 bed nursing home facility. Petitioner's Exhibit 19. On April 5, 1983, a Robert T. Held wrote to HRS on "Colonial Palms Nursing Home" letterhead stating that construction regarding certificate of need 1746 had commenced. On June 3, 1985, a William R. Meyer spoke with a Ruth Dixon, Control Clerk, Broward County Permit Bureau, and Ms. Dixon advised Mr. Meyer that no building permit had been issued to Colonial Palms West at 51 West Sample Road, Pompano Beach, Florida 33064 or to Bodee Construction Company for 74 beds. Ms. Dixon further advised Mr. Meyer that "Colonial Palms" has not been issued a building permit since 1983, and that she checked both addresses of Colonial Palms and under the construction company in her investigation. HRS takes the position that the Colonial Palms Certificate of need for 74 new beds is still valid since it is still on its approved list and has not been taken off as void. T. 156-57. The foregoing evidence is not sufficient to conclude that certificate of need lumber 1746 is void in whole or in part due to failure to commence construction. The evidence is ambiguous as to which entity holds the certificate of need or which entity was checked for construction permits, and there is no evidence as to whether construction could have been initiated without a construction permit on file in Broward County. Moreover, the Broward County evidence is hearsay, and although there has been no objection to it, the Hearing Officer independently does not regard it to be sufficient, pursuant to section 120.58(1)(a), Fla. Stat., to be relied upon. Finally, it is entirely unclear what type of construction, undertaken by what entity, would be required for this certificate of need to satisfy the "commence construction" requirement. Colonial Palms was not licensed for an additional 46 beds until January 18, 1985, and thus it had only 81 licensed beds on the first of January, 1985; thus, the occupancy report for Colonial Palms for January, 1985, should have been 83 patients in 81 licensed beds. T. 154; Petitioner's Exhibit 13. The "occupancy rate" contained in the semiannual reports, Joint Exhibit 17 and Petitioner's Exhibit 9, is calculated by dividing the total of the patient census in all nursing homes on the first of each month for the six month reporting period by the total of all licensed nursing home beds for those same facilities during the same months. T. 161. Petitioner's Exhibit 10 is an example of how HRS makes this calculation. Id. As a result of adding the 120 licensed beds at Beverly Manor, the "licensed beds" (LB) figure in the formula increases to 2,995, and "approved beds" changes from 415 to 295. The correction to the January 1985 licensed beds at Colonial Palms (corrected to 81 licensed beds), results in a change to the "occupancy rate" from 87.59 percent as reported in Joint Exhibit 17, to 88.06 percent. This calculation is derived from Petitioner's Exhibits 12, 13, and 14. The patient census for October 1984 through March 1985 was 13,051. The licensed beds total for the same months, however, would be 14,820, which is the result of subtracting 46 beds from Colonial Palms for January 1985. The result, 13,051 divided by 14,820, is 88.06 percent. In the past, HRS has granted partial approval of a lesser number of beds than sought by the applicant for a certificate of need. T. 142. The computations contained in conclusion of law paragraph 10 are found to be the correct computation of need pursuant to the rule, and are hereby incorporated by reference as a finding of fact.

Recommendation It is therefore recommended, subject to paragraph 12 above, that the Department of Health and Rehabilitative Services issue to the Petitioner, Health Quest Corporation d/b/a Regents Park of Broward, a certificate of need to construct and operate 120 community nursing home beds in District X. DONE and ORDERED this 6th day of November 1985, in Tallahassee, Florida. WILLIAM C. SHERRILL, JR. Hearing Officer Division of Administrative Hearings The Oakland Building 2009 Apalachee Parkway Tallahassee, Florida 32301 (904) 488-9675 Filed with the Clerk of the Division of Administrative Hearings this 6th day of November, 1985. APPENDIX TO RECOMMENDED ORDER IN CASE NO. 84-3297 The following proposed findings of fact by Petitioner are adopted herein, if these proposed findings have not already been adopted in the findings of fact: 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 13, 14, 17, 19, 20 and 21. The following proposed findings were concerned with the December 1984 semiannual report, and thus are not relevant since better and more current data, the June 1985 semiannual report, exists: 9, 10, 11, 15, and 16. See conclusions of law 2-6. The following proposed findings are rejected to the extent that they concern exclusion of Daystar, Inc., data, or to the extent that they are based upon exclusion of Colonial Palms data due to the theory that the Colonial Palms certificate of need is void due to failure to commence construction: 18, 22, and 23. The rejection of these factual matters has been explained in findings of fact 14-16 and conclusions of law 7-9. Proposed finding 24 is rejected as irrelevant, since a net bed need is shown by the rule formula. See rule 10- 5.11(21)(b)10. Moreover, even if the net bed need, which is called the "net bed allocation" by the rule, were zero, the facts proposed in finding of fact 24 are not of the type permitted under this exception of the rule. COPIES FURNISHED: Paul V. DeBianchi, P.A. 2601 East Oakland Park Blvd. Suite #500 Fort Lauderdale, Florida 33306 Charles M. Loeser, Esquire Assistant General Counsel Health Quest Corporation 315 W. Jefferson Blvd. South Bend, Indiana 46601-1586 Harden King, Esquire Assistant General Counsel Department of Health and Rehabilitative Services 1323 Winewood Boulevard Tallahassee, Florida 32301 =================================================================

Florida Laws (1) 120.57
# 3
MANOR CARE, INC. (SARASOTA COUNTY) vs. DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND REHABILITATIVE SERVICES AND HEALTH CARE AND RETIREMENT CORPORATION, D/B/A KENSINGTON MANOR, 87-003471 (1987)
Division of Administrative Hearings, Florida Number: 87-003471 Latest Update: Aug. 09, 1988

Findings Of Fact The Parties Manor-Sarasota Manor Health Care Corporation operates 140 nursing centers throughout the country with nine nursing homes and three adult congregate living facilities (ACLF) in Florida. Seven of the nine Florida nursing homes are rated superior and two are standard. Manor-Sarasota is a wholly-owned subsidiary of Manor Health Care Corporation, and currently owns and operates a 120 bed nursing home, with a 120 bed ACLF, at 5511 Swift Road, Sarasota, Florida. The facility opened in December, 1983 and currently has a standard license, although for a period in 1986 its license was conditional. Manor-Sarasota is currently licensed as a skilled nursing home providing trach care, nasogastric feedings, wound care, physical, speech and occupational therapy, as well as Clinatron beds for patients with severe decubitus ulcers. On or about January 15, 1987, Manor-Sarasota filed CON application number 5050 for the addition of sixty community nursing home beds at its facility. The proposed additional beds will include a separate 30-bed specialized unit for elderly persons suffering from Alzheimer's Disease and related disorders. Manor Health Care Corporation currently operates 13 to 15 Alzheimer's units within their existing centers. Between 30 percent - 50 percent of Manor-Sarasota's current patients are diagnosed as having Alzheimer's or related disorders. There are no specialized facilities for Alzheimer's patients in Sarasota at the current time. The current facility is a two-story nursing home, and the additional beds would be configured in a two-story addition of thirty-five beds on the first floor and twenty-five beds on the second floor. The thirty-bed Alzheimer's unit would be located on the first floor. A separate dining room for Alzheimer's patients will also be provided. An additional nurse's station would be added to provide 4 nurse's stations for 180 beds. Total project costs are reasonably projected at $1.85 million, with construction costs of $1.26 million, equipment costs of approximately $170,000, professional services of approximately $137,000 and related costs of approximately $253,000. The proposal would add 16,683 gross square feet to the existing 49,454 gross square feet. The total project cost per additional bed would be $30,872, while the construction cost per square foot would be $55.00. The gross square footage per bed would be 278 feet. Manor-Sarasota projects a 40 percent Medicaid and 60 percent private pay utilization for the 60 bed addition, although its Medicaid utilization at the existing facility has only been between 15 percent and 24 percent. Since there is an upward trend in Medicaid utilization, Manor-Sarasota would accept a 40 percent Medicaid condition on its CON, if approved. Medicare patients will continue to be served within the existing facility. The project will be funded through 25 percent equity and 75 percent financing. Manor Health Care Corporation will finance the project internally through the sale of assets, and the sale of senior subordinated notes and convertible subordinated debentures, and this financing proposal is reasonable and realistic. In Manor-Sarasota's original application, six 3-bed wards were proposed. As a result of criticism of 3-bed wards in the Department's State Agency Action Report (SAAR) concerning this application as well as other facilities, the applicant modified its proposed design to eliminate all 3-bed wards and to include 24 semiprivate and 12 private rooms. The square footage of the addition was also increased by 21 percent from 13,750 to 16,683 square feet. This modification was presented at hearing and was filed subsequent to the application being deemed complete, and the SAAR being prepared. Competent substantial evidence in support of the original application was not offered, but rather evidence was presented in support of the substantially modified proposal. The applicant's existing 120-bed nursing home has experienced over 90 percent occupancy for the months of November, 1987 to the date of hearing, and also experienced an average occupancy of approximately 86 percent for 1986 and the first ten months of 1987. During the first year of operation, 65 percent occupancy is projected for the 60 new beds which are now being sought, and 95 percent occupancy is projected for the second year of operation. Sarasota Healthcare Sarasota Healthcare, Ltd., is a Georgia limited partnership whose general partners are Stiles A. Kellett, Jr. and Samuel B. Kellett. Sarasota Healthcare proposes to enter into a management agreement with Convalescent Services, Inc., (CSI) for the operation and administration of their proposed facility. The Kelletts, as 100 percent owners, comprise the Board of Directors of CSI and also serve as its Chairman and President. CSI operates 21 nursing homes in seven states, and 85 percent of its beds have superior licenses. There are 6 CSI operated nursing homes in Florida, one of which, Pinebrook Place, is located in Sarasota County in the City of Venice. Pinebrook Place is a 120 bed nursing home and has a superior license. Sarasota Healthcare does not own or operate any other nursing homes. A new 120 bed freestanding nursing home is proposed by Sarasota Healthcare in CON application 5025, which was filed with the Department in January, 1987. The project would be located in Sarasota County at a specific site which has not yet been identified. Sarasota Healthcare projects a utilization of 40 percent Medicaid, 5 percent Medicare and 55 percent private pay at its proposed facility, and would accept a 40 percent Medicaid condition of this CON, if approved. The proposed facility would offer skilled, intermediate, respite and hospice care; specialized services for Alzheimer's patients; physical, occupational, speech and rehabilitative therapy; counseling; and social services. Alzheimer's patients will not be located in a separate unit but will be intermingled with other patients while receiving specialized services and protections for their disease. Sarasota Healthcare proposes a 120 bed nursing home comprised of 12 private and 54 semiprivate rooms, 37,7000 gross square feet and a total project cost of $3.9 million The proposed size and cost of this facility are reasonable. The cost per bed would be $32,500 and the construction cost per square foot would be $58.00. Total project costs are reasonable and consist of approximately $2.45 million in construction costs, $385,000 in equipment costs, $145,000 for professional services, land acquisition of $600,000 for 3 to 5 acres, and $324,000 in related costs. The gross square footage per bed would be 314 feet. The project will be funded with 25 percent equity funding from the general partners, Stiles and Samuel Kellett, and 75 percent from a commercial bank, assuming a 9.5 percent interest rate with 1 percent discount point. The proposal is reasonable, but is dependent upon the general partners' ability to personally fund 25 percent of the costs of the project through an equity contribution, and on their ability to obtain commercial financing for the remaining project costs. Financial statements of the Kelletts provided in the record of this proceeding are unaudited, and were not prepared in accordance with generally accepted accounting principles. The Kelletts have 15 CON applications currently pending, and 4 have already been approved. They have a 6 to 1 debt to equity ratio. Health Quest On or about January 15, 1987, Health Quest corporation submitted an application for CON number 5046 on behalf of Regents Park of Lake Pointe Woods for the addition of 58 new beds to its existing 53 sheltered bed nursing home at a projected cost of approximately $1.29 million. The existing sheltered nursing home facility is known as Regents Park of Sarasota which is part of the Lake Point Woods Retirement Center containing a 110 bed ACLF and 212 retirement apartment units. The sheltered nursing home opened in November, 1986, and has achieved 90 percent occupancy since October, 1987. It is licensed under Chapter 651, Florida Statutes, as a continuing care facility. Health Quest owns and operates nine nursing centers in three states, and has received CON approval for 12 additional facilities in three states, including four in Florida. One of these Florida CONs is for 180 new community nursing home beds in Sarasota County. Health Quest's existing Regents Park of Sarasota nursing home is located at 7979 South Tamiami Trail, Sarasota, Florida. Although it is a sheltered nursing home, only one or two beds are generally occupied by Lake Point Woods residents at any one time. During 1987, only 26 admissions to Regents Park came from Lake Pointe Woods, and most of these admissions were for episodic illnesses of less than 30 days rather than for longer term care. Thus, the vast majority of admissions at Regents Park have been from the community, including admissions directly from home, hospitals and other nursing homes, rather than from the retirement center, Lake Pointe Woods, of which Regents Park is a part. However, since existing beds at Regents Park are sheltered, community patients will not be able to be admitted there beyond November, 1991, the expiration of five years from its opening. During its year and a half of operation, Regents Park has not shown a profit, despite original projections of profitability after only one year. In response to the Department's omissions letter dated February 19, 1987, Health Quest notified the Department, by letter dated March 27, 1987, of its amendment to CON application 5046. Rather than pursuing its request for 58 new community nursing home beds, Health Quest amended the application to seek conversion of the 53 sheltered beds to community beds and to add 7 new community nursing home beds. Since no new space is proposed for construction under the amendment, and since virtually all equipment is already in place, Health Quest projected no cost associated with the amended project. However, there would be some minor costs to equip seven new beds, as well as legal and consulting costs associated with this application and hearing. Currently, the Regents Park nursing home has approximately 31,000 total gross square feet, which would result in 520 gross square feet per bed if its application is approved. On April 10, 1987, the Department published its notice of completeness regarding Health Quest's amended CON application 5046 at Florida Administrative Weekly, Volume 13, No. 15, p. 1365. The Department reviewed and evaluated Health Quest's amended application, rather than the original application, in preparing its SAAR on the applications at issue in this case dated June 15, 1987. Despite this notice of completeness, the record shows that Health Quest's conversion proposal was incomplete since no balance sheet, profit and loss statement for precious fiscal years of operation, detailed statement of financial feasibility or pro forma were introduced. Although sheltered beds can be certified to accept Medicaid patients, Health Quest has not sought such certification for any of the 53 existing beds at Regents Park. Health Quest proposes to seek Medicaid certification for 5 beds, and to serve 8 percent Medicaid patients if CON 5046 is approved. Health Quest does not propose a separate unit for Alzheimer's patients, but would offer special outdoor activities for these patients as well as an Alzheimer's club for patients with this primary diagnosis. Health Quest specializes in caring for patients with hip fractures, and offers a wheelchair mobility and ambulation program, rehabilitation and occupational therapy, bowel and bladder rehabilitation, as well as physical and horticulture therapy. Regents Park has patients on intravenous therapy and who require hyperalimentation and total parenteral nutrition. LPN and nurse's aide students from Sarasota Vo/Tech School receive training at the Regents Park nursing home. HCR In 1986, HCR purchased, and currently owns and operates a 147 bed nursing home located at 3250 12th Street, Sarasota, Florida, known as Kensington Manor, which holds a standard license. HCR is a wholly owned subsidiary of Owens-Illinois, a publicly held corporation, and has built over 200 nursing homes in the last 25 years. At the present time, HCR operates approximately 125 facilities with approximately 16,000 beds in 19 States. HCR owns and operates a total of 9 nursing homes in Florida, and has about 10 nursing home projects under development which it intends to operate upon completion. On or about January 14, 1987, HCR filed CON application 5049 with the Department. This application seeks approval of 60 new community nursing home beds at Kensington Manor, at a currently projected cost of $1.82 million, which is a reasonable projection. The cost per new bed would be $30,030. HCR proposes to finance to project with a 25 percent equity contribution, and 75 percent internally financed by HCR through its parent company, Owens-Illinois, and this proposal is realistic and reasonable. Throughout 1986, Kensington Manor had an occupancy level of between 85 percent - 95 percent and is currently operating at 95 percent - 96 percent occupancy. HCR reasonably projects 95 percent occupancy for the 60 new beds in the second year of operation. HCR reasonably proposes a patient mix in the new addition of 45 percent Medicaid, 4 percent Medicare and 51 percent private pay. Kensington Manor is currently 75 percent - 80 percent Medicaid, 1 percent Medicare, and the remainder is private pay, but its proposed patient mix for the new addition is realistic because there will be no three-bed wards in the addition, and sub- acute services will be provided, thereby increasing the Medicare percentage. The HCR proposed addition at Kensington Manor provides a distinct 29 bed wing for Alzheimer's patients where a special care program and special staffing can be made available. Additionally, a 12 person Alzheimer's adult day care center will be physically attached to the new addition where a less intense level of care outside the home can be made available to these patients. Respite care and sub-acute care will also be provided. The project will add a 60 bed, single story addition to Kensington Manor, with a special Alzheimer unit consisting of 1 private and 14 semiprivate rooms, an enclosed courtyard and porch. A second dining room will be added, as well as 2 central bathing areas, multipurpose and physical therapy rooms. The addition would total 18,000 gross square feet, or 267 gross square feet per bed in the new addition. Kensington Manor currently has approximately 30,000 gross square feet, with 1 private and 52 semiprivate rooms, and 14 three-bedroom wards. Therefore with the addition, Kensington Manor would have approximately 48,000 gross square feet which would be approximately 223 square feet per bed for the entire facility. Sisters of Bon Secours The Sisters of Bon Secours, a Catholic religious order, are currently responsible for the operation and ownership, through not-for-profit corporations, of a JCAH accredited 272 community bed nursing home in North Miami having a superior license, a nursing home in Port Charlotte, Charlotte County, and they also have a CON for an additional nursing home to be located in Collier County. On or about January 15, 1987, Sisters filed CON application 5039 for a new 120 community bed nursing home to be located in Sarasota County, and to be known as Villa Maria of Sarasota County. Sisters is the only applicant involved in this case which is not already providing services in Sarasota County. The proposal calls for the development of a teaching nursing home to be designated as a center for training and research in the study of gerontology and long term care. Affiliations with schools and universities will be developed to allow health care administrators, social workers, medical and nursing students, and practitioners interested in developing a specialization to fulfill their clinical studies and requirements. There will be an emphasis on restorative and rehabilitative care, with 20 percent of the beds being designated for sub-acute care patients who could return home after 30-45 days of therapy and transitional care. Sisters will develop a continuum of care by networking in the community. It is the only applicant that proposes to provide a site for education and research in Sarasota County. The proposed facility is intended to serve the needs of members of the Venice Diocese who reside in Sarasota County, where there is currently no Catholic nursing home. The Venice Diocese is now served by the Sisters' nursing home in Charlotte County, and will also be served by the facility to be located in Collier County, for which a CON has already been issued. However, treatment at these nursing homes, including the proposed Villa Maria of Sarasota County, is not limited to Catholics; the Sisters accept, treat and care for persons in need from all religions backgrounds and denominational affiliations. Total project costs are estimated at $6.64 million, including $3.86 million for construction, approximately $592,000 for equipment, $762,000 to acquire a seven acre site, $237,000 for professional services, $888,000 for financing costs and approximately $300,000 in other related costs. The project would encompass almost 60,000 gross square feet, and would cost approximately $55,300 per bed and $64.50 per square foot. Almost 500 gross square feet would be available per bed, which represents the most square footage per bed of any application under consideration. The proposed facility would have 8 private and 56 semiprivate rooms, with in-room tubs and showers, 3 patient lounges, and a 100 seat dining room. Due to the large size of the proposal, some patient rooms exceed 120 feet from nurse's stations. However, this licensure requirement can easily be met with minor design modifications during the licensure process. Sisters project a 33.3 percent Medicaid, 17.6 - 19.7 percent Medicare, 4 percent indigent and 43 percent - 45 percent private pay utilization for the 120 bed nursing home in its first two years of operation. While Medicaid utilization in Dade County during 1987 rose to 68 percent as a county-wide average, Sisters' Dade County nursing home experienced a drop in Medicaid to 14.6 percent. The high Medicare utilization level which has been projected is consistent with, and based on, the experience of the Sisters at their Dade County nursing home which currently has 21 percent Medicare utilization. However, due to the greater number of hospital referral sources, as well as the larger population and fewer competing nursing homes in Dade County compared with Sarasota County, Medicare utilization projections may be overstated, and actually fall between the 3-4 percent historical utilization in the Sarasota area and Sisters' projection. It will be somewhat above 3-4 percent due to the fact that this will be a teaching nursing home which will attract more Medicare patients. The project will be funded with an equity contribution of 10.6 percent ($635,455) and the remaining 89.4 percent ($6 million) will be funded through the issuance of tax exempt bonds. This financing proposal is realistic and reasonable. The proposed nursing home is intended to offer services to AIDS patients, adult day care, and a meals-on-wheels program. However, it was not established at hearing that such patients would definitely be served, or that space would be available at this facility for these services until the Sisters can determine the actual level of need for these services in Sarasota County, if this CON is approved. Department of HRS On or before January 15, 1987, the Department received the CON applications at issue in this case for additional community nursing home beds in Sarasota County. As it relates to this case, the Department issued its SAAR on June 15, 1987, in which the application of HCR (CON 5049) for a 60 community nursing home bed addition to Kensington Manor was approved, and all other applications in this case were denied. In addition to the HCR application, the Department also supported at hearing the applications of Manor Care (CON 5050) for a 60 bed addition to Manor-Sarasota and Sisters of Bon Secours (CON 5039) for a new 120 bed community bed nursing home to be known as Villa Maria of Sarasota County. The Department opposed the issuance of a CON to the remaining applicants. It is the position of the Department that changes or updates to CON applications made after an application has been deemed complete and reviewed in a SAAR, cannot be considered at hearing if such changes or updates are the result of matters or events within the control of the applicant, and which therefore could have been foreseen and considered at the time the application or responses to omissions were filed. However, matters involving payor mix, salaries and charges could result from changes in demographics and economic factors outside of the applicants' control. In such instances, updates or changes to an application based upon current demographics or economics can, and should be, considered at hearing. The updated pro forma submitted by Sarasota Healthcare at hearing resulted from the applicant's desire to reflect current salaries in the Sarasota County labor market, which have increased dramatically since the original application was submitted. As a result of updating salary expense projections, Medicaid and Medicare rates also had to be updated. Associated projections throughout the pro forma which are dependent upon these reimbursement rates, as well as salary expense projections, also had to be updated. The updated pro forma presented by Sarasota Healthcare results from a factor outside of the control of the applicant, inflation, which could not have been foreseen or predicated with certainty in January, 1987. To ignore actual, current inflation data in Sarasota County is to ignore reality. This update is permissible and has been considered. Manor-Sarasota's application presented at hearing includes changes in its proposed payor mix, charges and salaries, as well as its pro forma. These updates are permissible since they result from changes in demographics and inflation outside of the applicant's control which could not have been foreseen in January 1987. However, a 21 percent increase in square footage and elimination of three-bed wards, with associated changes in proposed staffing, capital costs and equipment, while certainly having a positive effect on quality of care, is nevertheless a matter totally within the control of the applicant. The desireability of these changes could have been foreseen at the time the application was filed, and therefore these substantial changes in design represent impermissible amendments to Manor-Sarasota's application. Stipulations The appropriate planning area for these applications is Sarasota County, and the appropriate planning horizon is January, 1990. Sarasota County is in subdistrict 6 of the Department's service district 8. The parties have stipulated that there is a need for 240 additional community nursing home beds in the January, 1990, planning horizon in Sarasota County, in accordance with the bed need formula in Rule 10-5.011(1)(k), Florida Administrative Code. The parties have agreed that Section 381.705(1)(d) and (j), Florida Statutes (1987), have been met, or are not applicable to this case. This statutory criteria deals with the adequacy and availability of alternative health care facilities and the special needs and circumstances of health maintenance organizations. All remaining criteria found at Section 381.705(1) and (2), Florida Statutes (1987), are at issue in this case. Further, the parties stipulate that 1987 amendments to Chapter 381, Florida Statutes, relating to the content of applications, are inapplicable in this proceeding since these applications were filed prior to the effective date of said law. Therefore, application content provisions of Section 381.494(4), Florida Statutes, govern. State and Local Health Plans The 1985 Florida State Health Plan, Volume II, Chapter 8, identifies areas of concern relating to the provision of long-term care services in Florida, which traditionally has been synonymous with nursing home care. These concerns include resource supply, cost containment and resource access. The State Health Plan seeks a reduction in the fragmentation of services and encourages development of a continuum of care. These proposals are consistent with, or do not conflict with, the State Health Plan. The 1984 District Eight Local Health Plan for Nursing Home Care is applicable to these applications for community nursing home beds in Sarasota County. The Local Health Plan contains the following pertinent criteria and standards for review of these applications: Community nursing home services should be available to the residents of each county within District Eight. At a minimum community nursing home facilities should make available, in addition to minimum statutory regulation, in the facility or under contractual arrangements, the following services: pharmacy h. occupational therapy laboratory i. physical therapy x-ray j. speech therapy dental care k. mental health visual care counseling hearing care l. social services diet therapy m. medical services New and existing community nursing home bed developments should dedicate 33 1/3 percent of their beds to use for Medicaid patients. Community nursing home (skilled and intermediate care) facilities in each county should maintain an occupancy rate of at least 90 percent. New community nursing home facilities may be considered for approval when existing facilities servicing comparable service areas cannot reasonably, economically, or geographically provide adequate service to these service areas. No new community nursing home facility should be constructed having less than 60 beds. However, less than 60 beds may be approved as part of an established acute care hospital facility. Each nursing home facility should have a patient transfer agreement with one or more hospitals within an hour's travel time, or the nearest hospital within the same community. The proposed project should have a formal discharge planning program as well as some type of patient follow-up services with discharge/transfer made available seven days a week. Community nursing homes should be accessible to residents throughout District Eight regardless of their ability to pay. All community nursing homes and applicants for community nursing homes should document their history of participation in Medicaid and Medicare programs, and provide data on an ongoing basis to the District Eight Local Health Council as requested. The specifically stated goal of the Local Health Plan is to develop new community nursing home facilities in which at least 33 1/3 percent of the total beds should be Medicaid. The impact of this long range recommended action is stated as follows: The provision of Medicaid care beds in existing nursing homes would assure continuity of care for nursing home patients, and should improve placement in appropriate levels of care by hospitals, physicians, social services, health departments, and other referral groups. The provision for Medicaid beds would reduce cost to patients, utilizing skilled care beds, who could adequately be served by Medicaid. With the exception of Health Quest's application, all other applicants meet the above stated standards and criteria contained in the Local Health Plan. Health Quest's application does not conform to the Local Health Plan. All applicants in this proceeding have indicated that they will provide therapies and services recommended in the Local Health Plan. All applicants, except Health Quest, indicate a commitment to dedicate at least 33 1/3 percent of their beds for Medicaid patients. The new nursing home facilities proposed by Sisters and Sarasota Healthcare would each be for 120 beds, consistent with the Local Health Plan standard that new facilities have at least 60 beds. Health Quest has proposed a 60 bed community nursing home through conversion of 53 sheltered nursing home beds and the addition of 7 new community beds. As existing providers, Manor-Sarasota, HCR band Health Quest have patient transfer agreements with one or more hospitals, as well as formal discharge planning programs and patient follow-up services, as recommended in the Local Health Plan. The applications for new facilities of Sarasota Healthcare and Sisters indicate they will also comply with these priorities if approval is granted and their facilities are opened. By virtue of its existing service and transfer agreements through the CSI facility in Sarasota County, Pinebrook Place, Sarasota Healthcare will be able to obtain these necessary agreements. Based upon Sisters' experience in Dade County at Villa Maria, as well as the fact that this will be a teaching nursing home, Sisters will also be able to obtain such agreements. Data has been provided by the existing nursing homes (Manor-Sarasota, HCR and Health Quest) which documents the history of their participation in the Medicaid and Medicare programs. The other applicants (Sarasota Healthcare and Sisters) have provided Medicaid/Medicare data for other existing facilities with which they are affiliated or upon which their application at issue in this case is based. Based upon this data, Pinebrook Place in Sarasota County, which is owned and operated by Sarasota Healthcare's general partners has not met the Medicaid condition on its CON, and the existing Manor-Sarasota facility has had only 24.8 percent Medicaid utilization in fiscal year 1988: Availability, Accessibility and Adequacy of Like and Existing Services HCR and Manor-Sarasota would increase the availability and adequacy of existing services they are now offering with the 60 bed additions each is seeking. The separate 30-bed specialized unit proposed by Manor-Sarasota and the 29-bed wing proposed by HCR for Alzheimer's patients will clearly increase the availability of specialized services for persons with Alzheimer's and related disorders, as well as their families. HCR will also dedicate 10 beds for sub-acute care, while Manor-Sarasota will offer community outreach, as well as respite care. Sarasota Healthcare, Sisters and Health Quest do not propose special units for Alzheimer's patients, but would offer special programs and services for them and their families. It was established that there is a need for additional services and programs to serve nursing home patients with Alzheimer's and related disorders in Sarasota County, as well as a special need for sub-acute, restorative, hospice, respite, and adult day care in the County. It was not established that there is a need for additional Medicare beds in Sarasota County. Sisters have indicated an interest in offering services to patients with AIDS and patients in need of adult day care, for which there is also a need in Sarasota County. In addition, their application will enhance the availability of sub-acute nursing home services, restorative and rehabilitative care, and respite care in Sarasota County. While it would serve patients of all denominations and religious affiliations, it would be the only Catholic nursing home in Sarasota County. The teaching component of the Sisters' application would provide access for students and other health professionals seeking to further their professional training. The Sarasota Healthcare proposal also places special emphasis on increasing the availability of sub-acute services in Sarasota County. Quality of Care The Sisters will seek JCAH accreditation of the proposed facility if their CON is approved, just as their nursing home in North Miami is currently accredited. The proposed affiliation with a college of medicine and nursing school, and the intent to operate this facility as a teaching nursing home will insure quality of care at this nursing home by utilizing state-of-the-art treatment and therapy programs. Florida nursing homes currently owned or operated by each of the applicants or their affiliated corporations have standard or superior licenses which means they meet or exceed State Standards. Licensure status of facilities owned or operated in other states by the applicants, or their affiliated companies, has not been considered since it was not established that licensure standards in other states are similar, or even comparable, to those in Florida. Each applicant has significant experience rendering quality nursing home care, and each has proposed a reasonable and comprehensive quality assurance program which will insure that quality nursing home services will be provided to their residents. The architectural design proposed by each applicant is reasonable and sufficient to allow quality care to be provided at each facility. All instances where an applicant's design fails to meet final construction standards are relatively minor, and can easily be met during the licensure process with slight modifications and adaptations in design. Staffing proposals by each, while different, will all insure that adequate medical, nursing, counseling and therapeutic staff will be trained and available either on-staff or through contract, to implement quality care programs at each facility. Manor-Sarasota's past reliance on temporary nursing services is decreasing and this will have a positive effect on quality of care. HCR has just completed extensive repairs and renovations costing $350,000 at Kensington Manor which will improve the atmosphere, living conditions and overall quality of care at the facility. Sisters' educational affiliations will aid in recruiting and retaining well-trained staff for its facility. Each facility will be equipped to provide quality care. There was extensive testimony about the advantages and disadvantages of central bathing facilities compared with private baths or showers in patient rooms. Sisters and Health Quest would provide private bathing facilities in patient rooms, while the others would have central facilities. Obviously, individual bathing facilities in patient rooms offer more privacy than central facilities, but privacy can also be achieved in a central bathing area by taking only a single, or limited number of patients to a partitioned central facility at any one time. The central facility is less costly than bathing facilities in each room, and also requires less staff time and involvement to assist with, and insure safety in, the patients' bathing. It has not been shown that one type of bathing facility provided in a nursing home, to the exclusion of all others, affects the quality of care in a positive or adverse manner. Quality care can be, and is, provided under both designs. The elimination of 3-bed wards from Manor-Sarasota's application would have a positive impact on quality of care, and be consistent with the Department's position of discouraging the creation of additional 3-bed wards in nursing homes. However, such elimination was proposed after this application was deemed complete by the Department. Patients suffering from Alzheimer's and related disorders can benefit from programs and treatment conducted in separate units, or while comingled with other patients, particularly in the early and middle phases of the disease. In the later phase of the disease it may be less disruptive to other patients if Alzheimer patients reside in a separate wing or unit of the nursing home. Quality care can be rendered through separate or integrated programming, and all applicants in this case that propose to offer specialized services to these patients have proposed programs and facility designs which will provide quality care to persons with Alzheimer's and related disorders. While there are differences in facility design, such as the two-story construction of Manor-Sarasota compared with the single level construction of all other applicants, and the central heating and cooling proposed by Sisters compared with individual wall units to be used by Sarasota Healthcare, the proposed designs of all applicants allow for the rendering of quality care to patients. Access for Chronically Underserved The Health Quest proposal is inconsistent with the Local Health Plan policy that 33 1/3 percent of all nursing home beds should be dedicated for Medicaid patients since it proposes that only 5 of its 60 beds (8 percent) will be certified for Medicaid patients if CON 5046 is approved. Although Medicaid utilization at Manor-Sarasota has not been consistent with the Local Health Plan, it is projected that if CON 5050 is approved Medicaid utilization will rise to 40 percent. Sarasota Healthcare, HCR and Sisters propose to meet or exceed this Local Health Plan policy. HCR has experienced a 75-80 percent Medicaid utilization at Kensington Manor, and proposes a 45 percent Medicaid level in the new addition if CON 5049 is approved. Financial Feasibility The proposals of Manor-Sarasota, HCR and Sisters are financially feasible. Health Quest did not file a pro forma and has not shown a profit in its year and a half of operation at Regents Park. Based upon its actual per patient operating expense at Pinebrook Place, Sarasota Healthcare has underestimated expenses in its second year of operation by approximately $8 per patient day. Its projection of a profit in the second year of operation is questionable due to this underestimation. Manor-Sarasota, HCR and Sisters have established their ability to finance, through equity and debt, the construction, equipment, supplies, and start-up costs associated with their proposals. Health Quest will have no construction costs, and only very minor costs to equip and supply seven new beds it is requesting. The entire financial structure of CSI and Sarasota Healthcare is dependent upon the financial strength of their general partners, the Kelletts, who currently have $76 million in long term debt and $12 million in equity. This is a relatively high debt to equity ratio of 6 to 1 which makes them susceptible to adverse impacts from any downturn in the economy, especially since they have 15 additional CON applications pending in Florida, totaling $60 million in construction costs. In contrast to the Kelletts' high debt to equity ratio, Sisters have $159 million in long term debt and $160 million in equity for a very secure 1 to 1 debt to equity ratio. Projections of revenue and expense, as well as assumptions concerning projected utilization, Medicaid and Medicare rates, private pay rates, and patient mix used by Manor-Sarasota, HCR and Sisters in their pro forma are reasonable, based upon that applicant's experience and the services proposed in their applications at issue. Adequacy of Staffing All proposals have adequate and reasonable staffing patterns, as well as staff training programs, to insure that quality care is provided. Proposed salaries are reasonable and will allow qualified staff to be hired, based upon the recruiting experience and salaries currently offered by Sarasota nursing homes. Adequate staff resources exist in the area. I. Most Effective and Less Costly Alternative Since it is generally not necessary to construct support areas for storage, laundry, kitchen and administration, adding additional beds to existing facilities is a less costly alternative to an entirely new facility. Health Quest, HCR and Manor-Sarasota are, therefore, less costly per bed than Sarasota Healthcare and Sisters' proposals to construct new 120 bed nursing homes. Specifically, there are only minor costs associated with Health Quest's proposal, while the cost per bed of the Manor-Sarasota and HCR proposals are $30,872 and $30,030, respectively, compared with $32,500 per bed for Sarasota Healthcare and $55,295 for Sisters. Health Quest's application is the least costly alternative since it involves no construction costs to add seven beds to the existing 53 sheltered beds which would be converted to community nursing home beds, although minor costs for equipping seven new beds would be incurred. Effect on Costs and Charges Sisters and Health Quest have proposed, or actually experienced, the highest costs and charges of all applicants. Health Quest has not shown any basis upon which it can be reasonably expected that room rates will decrease, as it asserts, if this CON is approved. Due to the large size of its proposed building, higher food costs and number of staff, Sisters projects the highest operating expense per patient day in the second year of operation. Sisters will provide almost 500 gross square feet per bed, while Manor-Sarasota, HCR, and Sarasota Healthcare will provide 278, 267 and 314 gross square feet per bed, respectively. Enhanced Competition Since the other applicants are already represented in the service area, the approval of Sisters' application would enhance competition by adding another provider to Sarasota County. This will provide more choices to nursing home residents, and should increase the quality of long term care in the community with the added emphasis this proposal will place on rehabilitative programming. Costs and Methods of Construction The costs and methods of construction proposed by the applicants are reasonable, as well as energy efficient.

Recommendation Based upon the foregoing, it is recommended that the Respondent enter a Final Order, as follows: Approving HCR's application for CON 5049; Approving Sisters' application for CON 5039; Denying the application of Manor-Sarasota, Sarasota Healthcare and Health Quest for CONs 5050, 5025 and 5046, respectively. DONE AND ENTERED this 9th day of August, 1988, in Tallahassee, Florida. DONALD D. CONN Hearing Officer Division of Administrative Hearings The Oakland Building 2009 Apalachee Parkway Tallahassee, Florida 32399-1550 (904) 488-9675 Filed with the Clerk of the Division of Administrative Hearings this 9th day of August, 1988. APPENDIX TO RECOMMENDED ORDER, CASE NOS. 87-3471, 87-3473, 87-3475, 87-3478 and 87-3491 Rulings on the Department's Proposed Findings of Fact Adopted in Findings of Fact 3, 12, 17, 19, 24, 30, 37. Adopted in Finding of Fact 37. 3-4. Adopted in Finding of Fact 43. 5. Adopted in Finding of Fact 42. 6-10. Rejected as irrelevant and unnecessary since the parties have stipulated to need. Adopted in Findings of Fact 37, 38. Adopted in Findings of Fact 26, 27, 55, 69, 70. Adopted in Findings of Fact 30, 56, 58, 60. Adopted in Findings of Fact 3, 55. Rejected as irrelevant since the parties have stipulated to need. Rejected in Findings of Fact 48, 57. Rulings on Manor-Sarasota's Proposed Findings of Fact: Adopted in Findings of Fact 3, 12, 17, 19, 24, 30. Adopted in Findings of Fact 37, 38, 43. Adopted in Findings of Fact 15, 30, 32. Rejected in Finding of Fact 17 and Adopted in Finding of Fact 19. Adopted in Findings of Fact 3, 5, 24. Adopted in Finding of Fact 38. Adopted in Findings of Fact 13, 14 but Rejected in Findings of Fact 71, 73. Adopted in Findings of Fact 29, 31. Adopted in Finding of Fact 34. Adopted in part in Finding of Fact 35, but otherwise Rejected as unnecessary. Adopted in Finding or Fact 2. Rejected as unsupported and unnecessary. Adopted in Findings of Fact 29, 60, 61 but also Rejected in part in Finding of Fact 60. Adopted in Finding of Fact 31. Adopted and. Rejected in Finding of Fact 60, and otherwise Rejected as irrelevant and unsupported in the record. Adopted in Finding of Fact 29 but otherwise Rejected as unsupported argument on the evidence, without any citation to the record, rather than a proposed finding of fact. Rejected in Findings of Fact 63, 76. Adopted in Findings of Fact 32, 33, 82 but Rejected in part in Finding of Fact 33. Rejected as unsupported by the record. Adopted in Findings of Fact 33, 64 in part, but otherwise. Rejected in Finding of Fact 64 and as not supported by the record. Rejected as unnecessary and without citation to the record. Adopted and. Rejected in Findings of Fact 33, 63. Rejected as cumulative and unnecessary. Rejected in Findings of Fact 33, 63. Rejected in Findings of Fact 17. Adopted in Finding of Fact 17, but otherwise Rejected as irrelevant. Adopted in Finding of Fact 18. Rejected as irrelevant and unnecessary. Adopted in Findings of Fact 17, 18. Rejected as irrelevant and unnecessary. Adopted in Findings of Fact 20, 71. Rejected as cumulative and unnecessary. 33-34. Rejected as irrelevant and unnecessary. 35-36. Adopted in Finding of Fact 81. Adopted in Finding of Fact 21. Rejected as speculative. Adopted in Finding of Fact 18 but otherwise Rejected as irrelevant and unnecessary. Rejected as unnecessary and irrelevant. 41-43. Rejected as not supported by the record and speculative. Adopted in Findings of Fact 19, 80. Adopted in Findings of Fact 48, 51, but Rejected in Finding of Fact 21. Rejected in Findings of Fact 63, 76 and otherwise as unnecessary and irrelevant. Adopted in Findings of Fact 24-26. Adopted in Finding of Fact 23. Adopted in Finding of Fact 79. Adopted in Finding of Fact 27. Adopted in Finding of Fact 1. Adopted in Findings of Fact 61, 63 and otherwise Rejected as unnecessary. Rejected as unnecessary. Adopted in Findings of Fact 5, 81. Adopted in Findings of Fact 71, 75. 56-57. Adopted in Finding of Fact 63, but otherwise Rejected as irrelevant and unnecessary. 58. Adopted in Findings of Fact 3, 55, 56. 59-61. Rejected as irrelevant, unnecessary and cumulative. Rejected in Finding of Fact 66. Rejected as irrelevant and unnecessary. Adopted in Findings of Fact 63, 76. Adopted in Findings of Fact 4, 6. Adopted in Finding of Fact l. Adopted in Finding of Fact 81 but otherwise Rejected as unnecessary. Rulings on HCR's Proposed Findings of Fact: 1-2. Adopted in Findings of Fact 42, 43. 3-4. Rejected as unnecessary and irrelevant. 5. Adopted in Finding of Fact 57. 6-7. Rejected as unnecessary. 8-9. Adopted in Finding of Fact 57. 10-15. Rejected in Finding of Fact 66 and otherwise as unnecessary and cumulative. Adopted in Finding of Fact 57. Adopted in Findings of Fact 27, 55. Rejected as unnecessary. Adopted in Finding of Fact 57. Adopted in Findings of Fact 23, 28, 63. Adopted in Finding of Fact 23. Adopted in Findings of Fact 25, 26, 28. Adopted in Findings of Fact 24, 27, 28. 24-25. Adopted in Finding of Fact 63, but otherwise Rejected as unnecessary. 26-27. Adopted in Finding of Fact 27, but otherwise Rejected as unnecessary. 28-29. Adopted in Finding of Fact 66, but otherwise Rejected as unnecessary. 30. Adopted in Findings of Fact 46-49. 31-37. Adopted in Finding of Fact 63, but otherwise Rejected as unnecessary. Rejected as unnecessary and irrelevant. Adopted in Finding of Fact 24. 40-42. Adopted in Findings of Fact 25, 26, 71, 75. Adopted in Finding of Fact 71. Rejected as unnecessary. 45-46. Rejected as cumulative and unnecessary. Adopted in Findings of Fact 63, 81. Adopted in Finding of Fact 24. Adopted in Finding of Fact 28, but otherwise Rejected as cumulative and unnecessary. Adopted in Finding of Fact 79. 51-54. Adopted in part in Finding of Fact 24, but otherwise Rejected as unnecessary. 55. Adopted in Finding of Fact 37, but otherwise Rejected as unnecessary and cumulative. 56-57. Rejected as unnecessary. Adopted in part in Finding of Fact 17, but otherwise Rejected as unnecessary. Adopted in Finding of Fact 19. Adopted in part in Findings of Fact 18, 42. Adopted in Finding of Fact 18. 62-63. Adopted in Finding of Fact 20. Adopted in Findings of Fact 22, 55. Adopted in Findings of Fact 21, 49, 51. Adopted in Findings of Fact 32, 33. Adopted and. Rejected in Finding of Fact 33. Adopted in Finding of Fact 82. 69-70. Adopted in Finding of Fact 63. Adopted in Finding of Fact 56. Adopted and Rejected in part in Finding of Fact 34. Rulings on Sisters' Proposed Findings of Fact: Adopted in Findings of Fact 3, 12, 17, 19, 24, 30. Rejected as unnecessary as a Finding of Fact. Adopted in Finding of Fact 43. Rejected as unnecessary as a Finding of Fact. Adopted in Finding of Fact 30. Adopted in Findings of Fact 12, 14, but otherwise Rejected as irrelevant. Adopted in Finding of Fact 3. Adopted in Findings of Fact 24, 29. Adopted in Finding of Fact 19, but otherwise Rejected as irrelevant and unnecessary. Adopted in Findings of Fact 37, 38. 11-12. Adopted in Finding of Fact 46. 13-15. Adopted in Findings of Fact 47-54. Rejected as unnecessary and not supported by the record. Adopted in Finding of Fact 30. 18-22. Adopted in Finding of Fact 57, but otherwise Rejected as unnecessary and cumulative. 23. Adopted in Finding of Fact 34. 24-26. Adopted in Finding of Fact 57, but otherwise Rejected as unnecessary and cumulative. Adopted in Finding of Fact 34. Adopted in Finding of Fact 57, but Rejected in Finding of Fact 34. Adopted in part in Finding of Fact 30, but otherwise Rejected as argument unsupported by any citation to the record. 30-38. Adopted in part in Finding of Fact 63, but otherwise Rejected as unnecessary, irrelevant and as argument on the evidence rather than a Finding of Fact. Adopted in Finding of Fact 40. Rejected in Finding of Fact 40. 41-51. Adopted in Findings of fact 60, 63, but otherwise Rejected as unnecessary, irrelevant and as argument on the evidence rather than a Finding of Fact. 52-58. Adopted in Findings of Fact 29, 60, 61, but otherwise Rejected as unnecessary and irrelevant. 59. Adopted in Finding of Fact 11, but otherwise Rejected as irrelevant. 60-75. Rejected as unnecessary irrelevant, and cumulative. Rejected as unnecessary. Adopted in Finding of Fact 82. Rejected as unnecessary. Adopted in Findings of Fact 33, 82. Adopted in Findings of Fact 33, 82. Adopted in Finding of Fact 33, but Rejected in Finding of Fact 64. 82-83. Rejected as unnecessary. 84. Adopted in Finding of Fact 9. 85-86. Rejected as unnecessary. 87-88. Adopted in Findings of Fact 9, 41. 89. Adopted in Finding of Fact 4, but otherwise Rejected as not supported by the record. 90-91. Rejected in Finding of Fact 63 and otherwise not supported by the record. 92-105. Adopted in Finding of Fact 63, but otherwise Rejected as unnecessary, cumulative and irrelevant. Rejected as unsupported in the record and otherwise unnecessary. Adopted in Finding of Fact 29. Adopted in Finding of Fact 11. Rejected as irrelevant, unnecessary and speculative. Rejected as unnecessary. 111-112. Adopted in Finding of Fact 30. 113. Adopted in Finding of Fact 63. 114-115. Rejected as unnecessary and cumulative. 116-120. Adopted in Findings of Fact 60, 63, but otherwise Rejected as unnecessary and cumulative. 121. Adopted in Finding of Fact 30. 122-123. Adopted in Finding of Fact 63, but otherwise Rejected as cumulative. 124. Adopted in Findings of Fact 31, 34, but otherwise Rejected as unsupported in the record. 125-126. Adopted in Finding of Fact 35. 127-129. Rejected as unnecessary and irrelevant since no applicant has locked in interest rates, and therefore these rates will vary and are speculative. Rejected as speculative and irrelevant. Rejected as irrelevant. 132-135. Adopted in Finding of Fact 73. 136. Adopted in Finding of Fact 74. 137-139. Adopted in Finding of Fact 71, but otherwise Rejected as unnecessary and cumulative. 140. Rejected as unnecessary and irrelevant. 141-145. Adopted in Finding of Fact 71. 146-147. Adopted in Finding of Fact 83. Adopted in part in Finding of Fact 71, 84, but Rejected in Findings of Fact 81, 82. Adopted in Finding of Fact 63. Rejected in Finding of Fact 67. Rejected as irrelevant and unnecessary. Rejected as unnecessary and cumulative. Adopted in Finding of Fact 34. Rejected as cumulative and unsupported by the record. 155-158. Adopted in Finding of Fact 54. 159. Rejected as irrelevant and unnecessary. Rulings on Sarasota Healthcare's Proposed Findings of Fact: Adopted in Findings of Fact 3, 12, 17, 19, 24, 30. Rejected as irrelevant and unnecessary. Adopted in Findings of Fact 37, 38, 43. 4-6. Adopted in Finding of Fact 11, but otherwise Rejected as unnecessary and irrelevant. 7-13. Adopted in Findings of Fact 12-16, but otherwise Rejected as unnecessary and irrelevant. 14-17. Adopted in Finding of Fact 46. Adopted in Finding of Fact 47. Adopted in Finding of Fact 49. Adopted in Finding of Fact 63, but otherwise Rejected as cumulative and unnecessary. Adopted in Findings of Fact 11, 61. 22-23. Rejected as cumulative and unnecessary. 24-41. Adopted in Finding of Fact 63, but otherwise Rejected as cumulative and unnecessary. Adopted in part in Findings of Fact 14, 57, but otherwise. Rejected in Finding of Fact 83 and as unsupported in the record. Rejected in Finding of Fact 54, and otherwise as irrelevant. Adopted in Findings of Fact 13, 51, but Rejected in Finding of Fact 54. Adopted in Finding of Fact 13. Adopted in Findings of Fact 14, 57. 47-49. Adopted in Findings of Fact 56, 66. Rejected as irrelevant and unnecessary. Adopted in Finding of Fact 14. Adopted in Finding of Fact 57. 53-58. Adopted in Finding of Fact 63, but otherwise Rejected as irrelevant and unnecessary. Adopted in Finding of Fact 14. Adopted in Finding of Fact 57. Adopted in Finding of Fact 14. Adopted in Finding of Fact 53. Adopted in Finding of Fact 81. Adopted in Finding of Fact 63, but otherwise Rejected as cumulative and unnecessary. 65-78. Adopted in Finding of Fact 63, but otherwise Rejected as unnecessary and cumulative. 79-85. Adopted in Findings of Fact 76, 77, but otherwise Rejected as unnecessary and irrelevant. 86-97. Adopted in Findings of Fact 15, 63, 84, but otherwise Rejected as cumulative and unnecessary. Adopted and. Rejected in Finding of Fact 64. Rejected as unsupported in the record. Rejected as cumulative and unnecessary. 101-103. Adopted in Findings of Fact 15, 84. 104. Rejected as unnecessary and cumulative. 105-109. Adopted in Findings of Fact 63, 84, but otherwise Rejected as irrelevant and unnecessary. Rejected as unsupported in the record. Adopted in part in Finding of Fact 16, but Rejected in Finding of Fact 73. 112-116. Adopted and Rejected in part in Findings of Fact 71, 73, 75, but otherwise. Rejected as irrelevant and unnecessary. 117. Adopted in Finding of Fact 16. 118-119. Adopted in Finding of Fact 75. 120-121. Rejected in Finding of Fact 71. 122-126. Adopted in Finding of Fact 40. 127-128. Adopted in Findings of Fact 30, 32. Rejected as irrelevant and unnecessary. Adopted in Finding of Fact 31. Adopted in Finding of Fact 33. Adopted and Rejected in Finding of Fact 67. 133-135. Adopted and Rejected in part in Findings of Fact 33, 63, and otherwise. Rejected as irrelevant since all licensure requirements can easily be met with minor modifications. Adopted in Finding of Fact 36. Rejected as unsupported in the record. Adopted in Findings of Fact 15, 30, 32, 33. Adopted in Finding of Fact 31, but otherwise Rejected as simply a summation of testimony. 140-142. Adopted in Finding of Fact 36. Rejected as irrelevant. Adopted in Finding of Fact 34, but Rejected in Finding of Fact 51. 145-146. Adopted in Finding of Fact 34, but otherwise Rejected as unnecessary. 147-148. Adopted in Finding of Fact 30, but Rejected in Finding of Fact 57 and as unsupported in the record. 149-150. Adopted in Finding of Fact 34. Adopted in Finding of Fact 57. Rejected as unnecessary and cumulative 153-156. Rejected in Findings of Fact 63, 76, 77 and otherwise not supported in the record. Rejected as unnecessary. Adopted in Finding of Fact 36. Adopted in Finding of Fact 82. Rejected as unnecessary. Adopted in Finding of Fact s. Adopted in Findings of Fact 17, 19. Adopted in Finding of Fact 71, but otherwise Rejected as cumulative and unnecessary. Rejected as cumulative and unnecessary. Adopted in Finding of Fact 18, but otherwise Rejected as irrelevant and unsupported in the record. Adopted in Findings of Fact 17, 18, but otherwise Rejected as cumulative and as argument on the evidence. Adopted in Findings of Fact 48, 49, 51. Rulings on Health Quest's Proposed Findings of Fact: Adopted in Finding of Fact 24. Adopted in Finding of Fact 3. Adopted in Findings of Fact 17, 19. Adopted in Finding of Fact 12. Adopted in Finding of Fact 30. 6-10. Adopted in Finding of Fact 37. Rejected as irrelevant and unnecessary. Adopted in Findings of Fact 42, 43. Adopted in Finding of Fact 20. Adopted in Findings of Fact 19, 20, 39. Adopted in Finding of Fact 18. Adopted in Findings of Fact 61, 63. Adopted in Finding of Fact 61, but otherwise Rejected as irrelevant and unnecessary. Adopted in Finding of Fact 17. Adopted in Finding of Fact 18. Rejected as argument on the evidence rather than a proposed finding of fact. Rejected as speculative and unsupported in the record. Adopted in Findings of Fact 19, 80. Rejected as argument on the evidence rather than a proposed finding of fact. Adopted in Finding of Fact 80. Rejected in Finding of Fact 71. Rejected as irrelevant. 27-34. Adopted in Findings of Fact 22, 63, 76, but otherwise Rejected as unnecessary and cumulative. 35-39. Adopted in Finding of Fact 22. 40. Adopted in Finding of Fact 66. 41-58. Adopted in Finding of Fact 63, but otherwise Rejected as unnecessary and cumulative. Adopted in Finding of Fact 61, but otherwise Rejected as irrelevant. Rejected as simply a statement on the evidence rather than a proposed finding of fact and otherwise irrelevant. Adopted in Finding of Fact 17, but otherwise Rejected as unnecessary. 62-63. Adopted in Finding of Fact 18. Rejected as unnecessary and cumulative. Adopted in Finding of Fact 80. Adopted in Finding of Fact 63. Adopted in Findings of Fact 19, 80. 68-70. Adopted in Finding of Fact 63, but otherwise Rejected as unnecessary and cumulative. 71. Adopted in Finding of Fact 21. 72-74. Rejected in Findings of Fact 48, 49, 51 and otherwise as irrelevant. 75-76. Rejected as unnecessary, although it is agreed that these matters are irrelevant and speculative. Adopted in Findings of Fact 63, 80. Adopted in Finding of Fact 9. Rejected as argument on the evidence rather than a proposed finding of fact. Adopted in Finding of Fact 9. 81-82. Adopted in Finding of Fact 39. 83. Rejected in Finding of Fact 39. 84-88. Adopted in Finding of Fact 41. Adopted in Finding of Fact 9. Rejected as argument on the evidence and as legal argument rather than a proposed finding of fact. Rejected as unnecessary. 92-94. Adopted in Finding of Fact 41. 95. Adopted and. Rejected in part in Finding of Fact 41. 96-101. Rejected in Findings of Fact 63, 76 and otherwise as irrelevant. 102. Rejected as cumulative. 103-104. Adopted in Finding of Fact 1. Rejected in Findings of Fact 61, 63. Rejected as simply a summation of testimony. 107-109. Rejected in Finding of Fact 63. 110-111. Rejected as unsupported in the record and irrelevant. 112-114. Adopted in Finding of Fact 9, but otherwise Rejected as unsupported by the record. 115. Adopted in Finding of Fact 41. 116-117. Rejected as unnecessary. 118-120. Rejected in Finding of Fact 66 and otherwise simply as a summation of testimony. 121-122. Rejected as irrelevant and as argument on the evidence. Adopted in Finding of Fact 38. Rejected as a conclusion of law rather than a proposed finding of fact. 125-127. Rejected as argument on the evidence and as a summation of testimony. 128. Rejected as cumulative. 129-131. Rejected as simply a summation of testimony rather than a proposed finding of fact. 132-134. Rejected in Findings of Fact 61, 63 and otherwise as irrelevant. 135. Rejected in Findings of Fact 43, 48, 57 and otherwise as irrelevant. 136-142. Rejected as irrelevant. The issue in this case is not the accuracy of the SAAR, but rather whether applicants have sustained their burden of establishing entitlement to a CON based on the record established at hearing. COPIES FURNISHED: Richard A. Patterson, Esquire Department of HRS 2727 Mahan Drive, 3rd Floor Tallahassee, Florida 32308 Alfred W. Clark, Esquire Post Office Box 623 Tallahassee, Florida 32302 Donna H. Stinson, Esquire The Perkins House - Suite 100 118 North Gadsden Street Tallahassee, Florida 32301 David Watkins, Esquire Harry F. X. Purnell, Esquire Post Office Box 6507 Tallahassee, Florida 32314-6507 Byron B. Matthews, Jr., Esquire Vicki Gordon Kaufman, Esquire 700 Brickell Avenue Miami, Florida 33131-2802 Steven W. Huss, Esquire 1017 Thomasville Road, Suite C Tallahassee, Florida 32303 Gregory Coler, Secretary Department of Health and Rehabilitative Services 1323 Winewood Boulevard Building One, Room 407 Tallahassee, Florida 32399-0700 John Miller, Acting General Counsel Department of Health and Rehabilitative Services 1323 Winewood Boulevard Building One, Room 407 Tallahassee, Florida 32399-0700 Sam Power, Clerk Department of Health and Rehabilitative Services 1323 Winewood Boulevard Building One, Room 407 Tallahassee, Florida 32399-0700 =================================================================

Florida Laws (3) 120.57400.062651.118
# 4
AMEDEX INTERNATIONAL CORPORATION vs. DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND REHABILITATIVE SERVICES, 87-000713 (1987)
Division of Administrative Hearings, Florida Number: 87-000713 Latest Update: Feb. 25, 1988

Findings Of Fact The parties' stipulation The parties have stipulated to the following facts: Forum and Amedex timely filed their respective letters of intent and applications with the Department and the District Local Health Council for the July 1986 batching cycle. The Department ultimately deemed the applications complete and, following review, published its notice of intent to deny the applications. Forum and Amedex each timely filed a petition requesting a formal hearing on the denial of their application. With regard to the Forum application, the Department contends that there is no need for the proposed facility, that such lack of need will render Forum's project financially unfeasible, that the project is not the best use of Forum's resources, and that Forum fails to meet the local health plan priority relating to the construction of freestanding facilities with a minimum capacity of 120 beds. All other statutory and rule criteria are satisfied, at least minimally, based on Forum's 60-bed proposal. With regard to the Amedex application, the Department contends that there is no need for the proposed facility, that such lack of need will render Amedex's project financially unfeasible, and that the project is not the best use of Amedex's resources. The Department further contends that Amedex has not demonstrated that it can provide quality of care, that it has not demonstrated that its project is financially feasible in the short or long term, that it has not provided long range plans and that, even assuming minimal need, the size of Amedex' proposed project will cause difficulty in meeting projected utilization needs based on Broward County's past utilization rates. All other statutory and rule criteria are satisfied, at least minimally, based on Amedex' 240-bed proposal. As between the applicants, they agree that a comparative review is appropriate to determine the best applicant. Further, they agree for purposes of this proceeding that the other meets all statutory and rule criteria, at least minimally, except the following: need beyond 60 beds, ability to provide quality of care, and availability of funds for project accomplishment and operation. The parties have further agreed that there are no special circumstances existent in this case upon which a certificate of need is being sought. The Amedex Proposal In July 1986 Amedex filed an application with the Department for a certificate of need to construct a 240-bed skilled and intermediate care nursing home in Broward County, Florida. The total project cost is projected to be $9,040,228. At hearing, Amedex failed to offer any competent proof to demonstrate the immediate and long-term financial feasibility of its proposed project, that it could provide quality care, or that it had available the necessary funds for project accomplishment and operation. 1/ While the Department contended that the proposed project was not the best use of Amedex's resources, it offered no proof to demonstrate what other health services would be a more appropriate use of the resources. The Forum Proposal In July 1986, Forum also filed an application with the Department for a certificate of need to construct a skilled and intermediate care nursing home in Broward County, Florida. Forum's application sought leave to construct a 60-bed facility. The estimated cost for construction of Forum's proposed nursing home is $2,39,800. Forum has the necessary resources for project accomplishment and operation. While the Department contended that the proposed project was not the best use of Forum's resources, it offered no proof to demonstrate what other health service would be a more appropriate use of such resources. Forum is a publicly held health services company which owns, develops, and operates retirement living centers and nursing homes on a national basis. Pertinent to this case, Forum proposes to develop a retirement living center in Broward County that would consist of 120 apartments for independent living, a 30-bed adult congregate living facility, and the proposed 60-bed skilled and intermediate care nursing home. Forum has packaged its centers to provide these three levels of service to meet the desires of retired persons they hope to attract to their retirement community. Each of the three components which comprise Forum's retirement living center are physically connected and share some operational functions, such as a central kitchen and heating plant. Such design provides for an efficient operation, as well as an economical distribution of costs facility wide. The nursing facility proposed by Forum would offer a wide range of services for its residents including: 24-hour skilled and intermediate nursing care, physical therapy services, and other restorative services. Additionally, Forum proposes to offer, as needed, subacute services such as: intravenous care, continuous bladder irrigation, oxygen therapy, nastrogastric tube feeding, ventilator care, insulin treatment, sterile dressing changes, and sterile care of tracheotomies. Forum also proposes to offer in the future, if need is identified and if any necessary agreements can be reached, respite care, adult day care, meals on wheels and hospice care. Forum proposes to seek medicare and medicaid certification, and will dedicate 25 of its beds to medicaid patients. Forum has a history of providing quality care at its existing facilities, and will provide quality care at the proposed facility. Forum has demonstrated the immediate and long term financial feasibility of its proposed project. Forum is a national company, with substantial experience in developing and operating nursing homes and retirement living centers. Due to the excellent growth potential in Broward County for retirement living centers, Forum should be able to capture a sufficient share of the nursing home market to render its proposed nursing home financially feasible. However, in view of the lack of numeric need for such facility as discussed infra, Forum's success will be to the detriment of existing and approved facilities. Numeric need The Department has established by rule the methodology whereby the need for community nursing home beds in a service district shall be determined. Rule 10-5.011(1)(k)2, Florida Administrative Code. The first step in calculating need pursuant to the rule methodology is to establish a "planning horizon." Subparagraph 2 of the rule provides: Need Methodology ... the Department will determine if there is a projected need for new or additional beds 3 years into the future according to the methodology specified under subparagraphs a. through i... The Department interprets subparagraph 2, and the applicants concur, as establishing a "planning horizon" in certificate of need proceedings calculated from the filing deadline for applications established by Department rule. This interpretation is consistent with the numeric methodology prescribed by subparagraph 2, and with the decision in Gulf Court Nursing Center v. Department of Health and Rehabilitative Services, 483 So.2d 700 (Fla. 1st DCA 1986). Applying the Department's interpretation to the facts of this case, establishes a "planning horizon" of July 1989. Pertinent to this case, subparagraphs 2 a-d provide the methodology for calculating gross bed need for the district/subdistrict (in this case the district and subdistrict are the same--Broward County) in the horizon year. The first step in the calculation of gross need for the horizon year is to derive "BA," the estimated bed rate for the population age-group 65-74. This rate is defined by subparagraph 2b as follows: BA = LB/ (POPC + (6 x POPD) Where: LB is the number of licensed community nursing home beds in the relevant district. POPC is the current population age 65-74 years. POPD is the current population age 75 years and over. The parties concur that the district licensed bed figure (LB) is calculated based on the number of licensed community nursing home beds as of June 1, 1986, and that there were 3,226 licensed beds in the district on that date. 2/ The parties do not, however, agree as to the date on which POPC and POPD should be derived. The formula mandated by the rule methodology for calculating BA requires that the "current population" for the two age groups be utilized. The rule does not, however, prescribe the date on which the "current population" is to be derived. Forum contends that the appropriate date to establish the "current population" for POPC and POPD is January 1, 1986. The Department contends that the appropriate date is the date of application. In the opinion of David Warner, which opinion is credited, the base for POPC and POPD should correspond to the period for which the average occupancy rate (OR) is calculated. For the July batching cycle, OR is based upon the occupancy rates of licensed facilities for the months of October through March preceding that cycle. January 1, 1986, as the midpoint of that date, is the appropriate date to derive POPC and POPD. Supportive of Dr. Warner's opinion are the past practices of the Department. Between December 1984 and December 1986, the Department routinely used a three and one half year spread between the base population period and the horizon date for "current population" in its semiannual nursing home census report and bed need allocation. That three and one half year spread was adopted by the Department for the same reasons expressed by Dr. Warner. In the batching cycle of January 1987, which cycle immediately followed the cycle at issue in this case, the Department utilized a three and one half year spread between the base population period and the horizon date for "current population" when it awarded beds in that cycle. The Department offered no explanation of why, in this case, it proposed to use a three year spread between the base population period and the horizon date for "current population" in calculating POPC and POPD. Application of the methodology prescribed by subparagraph 2b to the facts of this case produces the following calculation: BA = 3,226 / (158,878 + (6 x 110,217) BA = 3,226 / (158,878 + 661,302) BA = 3,226 / 820,180 BA = .0039332 The second step in the calculation of gross need for the horizon year is to derive "BB," the estimated bed rate for the population age group 75 and over. This methodology is defined by subparagraph 2c, and calculated in this case as follows: BB = 6 x BA BB = 6 x .0039332 BB = .0235992 The third step in the calculation of gross need for the horizon year is to derive "A," the district's "age-adjusted number of community nursing home beds" at the horizon year. This methodology is defined by subparagraph 2a as follows: A = (POPA x BA) + (POPB x BB) Where: POPA is the population age 65-74 years in the relevant departmental district projected three years into the future. POPB is the population age 75 years and older in the relevant departmental district projected three years into the future. The parties concur that POPA and POPB are, respectively, 165,533 and 128,250 for the horizon year. Accordingly, application of the methodology prescribed by subparagraph 2a produces the following calculation: A = (165,533 x .0039332) + (128,250 x .0235992) A = 651.07439 + 3,026.5974 A = 3,677.67 The final step in the calculation of gross need in the horizon year is to derive "SA," the "preliminary subdistrict allocation of community nursing home beds" (gross bed need in this case. 3/ This calculation is defined by subparagraph 2d as follows: SA = A x (LBD/LB) x (OR/.90) Where: LBD is the number of licensed community nursing home beds in the relevant subdistrict. OR is the average 6 month occupancy rate for all licensed community nursing homes within the subdistrict of the relevant district. Occupancy rates established prior to the first batching cycle shall be based upon nursing home patient days for the months of July 1 through December 31; occupancy rates established prior to the second batching cycle shall be based upon nursing home patient days for the months of January 1 through June 30. The batching cycle in which these applications were filed occurred before the Department amended its rule to include the fixed need pool concept. Accordingly, the parties agree that the six month period on which the average occupancy rate is calculated is not as set forth in subparagraph 2d, but, rather is defined by former rule 10-5.11(21)(b)4 as follows: OR is the average occupancy rate for all licensed community nursing homes within the subdistrict of the relevant district. Review of applications submitted for the July batching cycle shall be based upon occupancy data for the months of October through March preceding that cycle... In Broward County (District X) LB and LBD are the same since the county has not been divided into subdistricts. Application of the foregoing methodology to the facts of this case produces a gross need in July 1989 of 3,453 beds, computed as follows: 4/ SA = 3,677.67 x (3226/3226) x (.845/.9) SA = 3,677.67 x 1 x .938888 SA = 3452.92 The net need calculation The final step in the numeric need methodology is to derive net reed from gross need. According to subparagraph 2i, this need is calculated as follows: The net bed need allocation for a subdistrict, which is the number of beds available for certificate of need approval, is determined by subtracting the total number of licensed and 90 percent of the approved beds within the relevant departmental sub- district from the bed allocation determined under subparagraphs 2.a. through f. Notably, former rule 10-5.11(21)(b)9 comports with the new rule in all material respects. While the rule requires that net need be calculated by subtracting "the total number of licensed and 90 percent of the approved beds" in the subdistrict from the gross need previously calculated, it is silent as to the date that inventory should be calculated. The Department asserts, through application of "policy," that the number of licensed beds should be calculated as of June 1, 1986 (the date established by former rule 10-5.11(21)(b)7 for calculating LB and LBD), and the number of approved beds as of December 1, 1986 (the date the Department's supervisory consultant signed the state agency action report). Forum would likewise calculate licensed beds as of June 1, 1986, but would also calculate approved beds as of that date. The Department offered no proof to expose and elucidate its policy choice. As discussed below, the dates used by the Department and Forum for purposes of calculating net need were facially unreasonable. 5/ The inventory of licensed and approved beds under subparagraph 2i, as well as former rule 10-5.11(21)(b)9, are inextricably linked. As approved beds are licensed, the approved bed inventory decreases and the licensed bed inventory increases. The Department's policy choice concerning the dates at which licensed and approved beds are to be counted is neither logical nor rational since it could result in some nursing home beds not being counted as either licensed or approved. For example, if beds were approved and not yet licensed in June 1, 1986, but licensed before the supervisory consultant signed the state agency action report (SAAR), they would not be counted in either inventory. Since the purpose of subparagraph 2i is to calculate a realistic estimate of the net bed need for the horizon year, it is appropriate to use the most current inventory of licensed and approved beds at the point a decision is rendered on an application. This assures, to the greatest extent possible, that the horizon population will not be over or underserved. In those circumstances where the SAAR becomes final agency action, the Department's approach of calculating inventory on the date the supervisory consultant signs the SAAR, assuming that inventory includes licensed and approved beds on that date, might be reasonable. However, where, as here, the SAAR constitutes only preliminary agency action, and a de novo review of the application is undertaken, there is no rational basis for subsuming that inventory. The rule methodology considered, the only rational conclusion is that net need be derived on the date of de novo review, and that it be calculated by reducing the gross need calculation by the inventory of licensed and approved beds, from previous batching cycles, existent on that date. As of the date of administrative hearing, there were 3,226 licensed beds and 695 approved beds in the district/subdistrict. Applying the methodology prescribed by subparagraph 2i to the facts of this case calculates a surplus of 399 community nursing home beds in the district for the June 1989 planning horizon. Consistency with State and local health plans The parties have stipulated that both proposals are consistent with the State and local health plans except for Forum's facial failure to comply with the local health plan priority relating to the construction of freestanding facilities with a minimum capacity of 120 beds. Pertinent to this issue, the local health plan provides: In addition to controlling capacity in order to discourage the construction of unneeded beds, the certificate of need program addresses cost containment by encouraging efficiencies in operation as a criteria to certificate of need approval. A number of operational models have historically proven to be positive influences on efficiency. Licensure laws, for instance, require nursing home staffing patterns to be structured in minimum modules of 30 bed configurations. As a result, the construction of nursing homes with beds totalling numbers not divisible by 30, has the capability of encouraging over staffing. Similarly, experience has shown that freestanding nursing homes constructed at less than 120 beds also are less cost efficient compared to larger facilities. Likewise, since construction and corresponding debt service retirement is greater for freestanding facilities than for new construction on existing facilities, expansion and conversion as an alternative to new construction frequently acts to reduce costs. The basis for the 120-bed minimum size for a "freestanding" facility in the local health plan is to insure efficiency and economy of scale. The 60- bed project proposed by Forum is not "freestanding" but is an integral part of a retirement center which also includes 120 independent living units and a 30-bed adult congregate living facility. Under the circumstances, the economies and efficiencies contemplated by the local health plan will be achieved, and Forum's proposal is consistent with such plan. The local health plan also provides, as a recommendation, that: ... applications for certificates of need to construct additional nursing home beds should be approved so as to support the State policy of 27 beds/1000 population over age 65 in Broward County. Considering the population over age 65 at the applicants' planning horizon, as well as the number of licensed and approved beds in the district, calculates a 14.36 beds/1000 population over age 65 for July 1989. Accordingly, the applicants' proposal is consistent with state and local health plans regarding bed to population ratio. Comparative Review As between the competing applicants, the proof demonstrates that Forum is the superior applicant, and that were the award of a certificate of need appropriate in this case that its application would be the one of choice. Under no circumstance does the proof support an award to Amedex, since it failed to demonstrate the immediate and long-term financial feasibility of its project, failed to demonstrate that it would provide quality care, and failed to demonstrate that it had sufficient resources for project accomplishment and operation. The criteria on balance In evaluating the applications of Amedex and Forum, none of the criteria established by Section 381.705, Florida Statutes (1987), or Rule 10- 5.011(k), Florida Administrative Code, have been overlooked. In the case of Amedex, the lack of need in the district, as well as its failure to demonstrate compliance with relevant criteria as discussed in paragraph 46, demonstrates that, on balance, its application should be denied. In the case of Forum, its application meets all relevant statutory and rule criteria except need. Need is the key criteria in the instant case. Forum's failure to satisfy that criterion by proof of numeric need or special circumstances is dispositive of its application for licensure, and such failure is not outweighed by any other, or combination of any other, criteria.

Recommendation Based on the foregoing findings of fact and conclusions of law, it is RECOMMENDED that the applications for certificate of need filed by Amedex and Forum be DENIED. DONE AND ENTERED in Tallahassee, Leon County, Florida, this 25th day of February, 1988. WILLIAM J. KENDRICK Hearing Officer Division of Administrative Hearings The Oakland Building 2009 Apalachee Parkway Tallahassee, Florida 32399-1550 (904) 488-9675 Filed with the Clerk of the Division of Administrative Hearings this 25th day of February, 1988.

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NATIONAL HEALTHCORP vs. DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND REHABILITATIVE SERVICES AND HOSPITAL CARE COST CONTAINMENT BOARD, 88-001836 (1988)
Division of Administrative Hearings, Florida Number: 88-001836 Latest Update: Jun. 01, 1989

Findings Of Fact Procedural. 1. Meridian, National, HBA and ten other applicants filed certificate of need applications with the Department in the October, 1987, nursing home bed certificate of need review cycle of the Department for Subdistrict 4 of District This area includes Flagler and Volusia Counties, Florida. Each of the applicants involved in these cases filed a letter of intent with the Department and the District 4 Local Health Council within the time required for the filing of letters of intent for the October, 1987, nursing home bed certificate of need review cycle. Each of the applicants involved in these cases filed their certificate of need applications within the time required for the filing of certificate of need applications for the October, 1987, nursing home bed certificate of need review cycle. The applications were deemed complete by the Department. The Department comparatively reviewed the applications of the applicants involved in these cases and those of ten other applicants. Based upon this review the Department issued a State Agency Action Report for the October, 1987, nursing home bed review cycle (hereinafter referred to as the "SAAR") on February 18, 1988. The SAAR was published by the Department in the Florida Administrative Weekly on March 4, 1988. In the SAAR the Department proposed to approve the certificate of need application filed by HBA and to deny all other applications. Ten of the applicants whose certificate of need applications were denied by the Department filed Petitions pursuant to Section 120.57(1), Florida Statutes, challenging the Department's proposed action. All of the Petitioners except the two Petitioners in these cases and HCR withdrew their Petitions prior to the formal hearing of these cases. HCR participated in the formal hearing of these cases but withdrew its Petition prior to the issuance of this Recommended Order. The Parties. The Department. The Department is the agency responsible for reviewing certificate of need applications for nursing home beds to be located in Flagler and Volusia Counties. Meridian. Meridian, Inc., is a corporation headquartered in Towson, Maryland. The stock of Meridian, Inc., is owned by five individuals. Volusia Meridian Limited Partnership (hereinafter referred to as the "Partnership") is a Maryland limited partnership authorized to conduct business in Florida. Meridian, Inc., is the Partnership's general partner. The Partnership owns a nursing home in Ormond Beach, Florida. The Ormond Beach nursing home is leased to Meridian Nursing Centers, Inc. For the past twenty years, Meridian has owned, operated, developed and managed long-term health care facilities, retirement communities and other health care services for the elderly. Meridian owns and operates thirty-three facilities, in five States. These facilities have approximately 4,800 beds. In Florida, Meridian owns nursing homes in Lakeland, Plantation and Ormond Beach. As of the date of the formal hearing, Meridian had two other facilities under construction in Florida: one located in Longwood, Florida; and the other located in Melbourne, Florida. National. National is a publicly traded Delaware limited partnership, authorized to conduct business in Florida. National's principal offices are located in Murfreesboro, Tennessee. National was created in 1971 with the purchase of fourteen existing nursing homes located in Tennessee, Kentucky, and Georgia. National now operates seventy nursing homes and health care centers in ten different States. Twenty-two of these homes and health care centers are managed, but not owned, by National. National also operates four retirement complexes, eighteen home health agencies and seven to ten specialized Alzheimer's units. In Florida, National owns two health care centers and manages eighteen centers owned by other companies. None of these facilities are located in Flagler or Volusia Counties. HBA. HBA is a Florida corporation engaged in the business of developing, constructing and operating nursing homes. The principals of HBA have owned and operated nursing homes for approximately twenty years and in Florida for approximately fifteen years. HBA's corporate headquarters are located in Ft. Lauderdale, Florida. HBA owns or operates twenty-four nursing homes located in Florida, New Jersey, Pennsylvania and Washington D.C. In Florida, HBA owns or operates six nursing homes. They are located in New Smyrna Beach, Ft. Lauderdale, Plantation, Tamarac and Miami. The New Smyrna Beach nursing home, Ocean View Nursing Home (hereinafter referred to as "Ocean View"), is located in southern Volusia County. The Proposals. Meridian's Proposal. Meridian's Ormond Beach nursing home is located in northeast Volusia County. This facility consist of 60 nursing home beds. It began operation in November, 1987. In this proceeding, Meridian is seeking approval of the addition to its Ormond Beach nursing home of an additional 60 nursing home beds. Meridian is proposing the construction of a 14,531 square foot (329 square feet per bed) addition to its existing Ormond Beach nursing home. The total size of the Ormond Beach facility will be 39,000 gross square feet if Meridian's proposal is approved. The total proposed cost of Meridian's project is $1,247,800.00. The total project cost of the resulting 120-bed Ormond Beach facility will be $4,262,361.00. National's Proposal. In this proceeding, National is seeking approval of a certificate of need authorizing the construction and operation of an 80-bed nursing home to be located in the Palm Coast area of Flagler County, Florida. The exact location of the facility has not been identified by National. National is proposing the construction of a facility consisting of approximately 44,183 gross square feet (552 square feet per bed). The total proposed cost of National's project is $3,786,846.00. HBA'S Proposal. HBA currently owns and operates Ocean View. Ocean View is located in southeast Volusia County. Ocean View currently is licensed to operate 179 nursing home beds. In this proceeding, HBA is seeking approval of the addition to Ocean View of 60 nursing home beds. HBA is proposing the construction of an 18,000 gross square foot (263 square feet per bed) addition to Ocean View. The total size of Ocean View will be 63,000 gross square feet if HBA's proposal is approved. The total proposed cost of HBA's project is Section 381.705(1)(a), Florida Statutes. Numeric Need. Numeric need for additional nursing home beds is determined pursuant to the need methodology provided in Rule 10-5.011(1)(k), Florida Administrative Code (hereinafter referred to as the "Need Methodology"). The Department determines the need for additional nursing home beds by applying the Need Methodology for "planning horizons" three years into the future from the certificate of need batching cycles. For the batching cycle involved in these cases, the Department published pursuant to Rule 10-5.008(2), Florida Administrative Code, the net number of additional nursing home beds, the "fixed need pool," in the Florida Administrative Weekly, for the first time. In these cases, the Need Methodology must be applied to determine the fixed need pool for the July, 1990, planning horizon for Flagler and Volusia Counties. These Counties make up Subdistrict 4 of the Department's District 4. Initially the Department determined that the fixed need pool involved in these cases was zero. Pursuant to Department policy, the Department published a corrected fixed need pool during the grace period of Rule 10- 5.008(1)(b), Florida Administrative Code, on September 18, 1987. Based upon the corrected fixed need pool, the Department determined that there was a need for 80 additional nursing home beds for Subdistrict 4 of District 4. No point of entry was provided by the Department for challenging this fixed need pool. The Department's calculation of a fixed need pool of 80 nursing home beds was based upon a misapplication of the Need Methodology by the Department. Based upon a proper application of the Need Methodology there is a need for 68 additional nursing home beds for the planning horizon at issue in these cases. The applicants involved in these cases filed their applications in reliance upon the Department's published fixed-need pool of 80 additional nursing home beds. The proper components of the Need Methodology for determining the gross number of nursing home beds needed for District 4 in July, 1990, are as follows: The projected population age 65-74 in District 4 for July, 1990, is 125,990 (POPA); The projected population age 75 and older in District 4 for July, 1990, is 91,109 (POPB); The population age 65-74 in District 4 in July, 1987, was 113,083 (POPC); The population age 75 and older in District 4 in July, 1987, was 77,867 (POPD); The number of licensed beds in District 4 as of July 1, 1987, was 6,005 (LB); The estimated bed rate for the population aged 65-74 of District 4 is 0.01034836 (BA); The estimated bed rate for the population aged 75 and older of District 4 is 0.06209018 (BB); and The total number of nursing home beds needed for District 4 in July, 1990, is 6,961 beds (A). The proper components of the Need Methodology for allocating the gross number of nursing home beds needed for District 4 in July, 1990, to Subdistrict 4 are as follows: The number of licensed beds in Subdistrict 4 as of July 1, 1987, was 2,290 beds (LBD); The number of licensed beds in District 4 as of July 1, 1987, was 6,005 beds (LB); The occupancy rate of Subdistrict 4 was 85.83% (OR); and The gross number of nursing home beds allocated to Subdistrict 4 is 2,532 beds (SA). Rule 10-5.011(1)(k)2.g., Florida Administrative Code, provides the following with regard to determining the number of licensed nursing home beds to be taken into account in calculating gross bed need for the batching cycle involved in these cases: [B]ed rates established prior to the second batching cycle letter of intent deadline shall be calculated on the number of licensed community nursing ads and the population projections as of July 1... Once the gross number of nursing home beds needed in Subdistrict 4 for July, 1990, is determined, the net number of beds needed is determined by subtracting the total number of licensed beds and 90 percent of approved beds in the Subdistrict from the gross number of beds needed. Rule 10-5.011(1)(k)2.i., Florida Administrative Code, provides the manner in which net bed need is to be determined. In particular, this Rule provides the following: The number of approved and licensed nursing home beds for the second batching cycle in 1987 shall be based on the number of approved and licensed beds as of August 1, 1987; ... The number of licensed beds in Subdistrict 4 as of August 1, 1987, was 2,410 beds. The number of approved licensed beds in Subdistrict 4 as of August 1, 1987, was 60 beds. The increase in licensed beds in Subdistrict 4 from 2,290 beds as of July 1, 1987, to 2,410 beds as of August 1, 1987, was caused by the licensing of the approved 120-bed Indigo Manor nursing home owned by Health Care and Retirement Corporation of America on July 21, 1987. It is not inconsistent for the Department to use the number of licensed nursing home beds as of July 1 for purposes of determining gross bed need and August 1 for calculating net bed need. The use of these dates by the Department is consistent with good health planning and the requirements of the Need Methodology. The State Health Plan. The Florida State Health Plan contains the general goals of fostering cost containment and developing an adequate supply of accessible and appropriately utilized long-term care health services. Each of the applicants will increase the accessibility of nursing home beds and are proposing appropriate utilization of health services. HBA's proposal will enhance the accessibility of nursing home beds in southeast Volusia County. The District Health Plan. The 1987 update to the 1986 district health plan for Subdistrict 4 of the Department's District 4, contains recommendations to be considered in determining community nursing home care bed need. These recommendations, and their application, are as follows: If the state determines that Subdistrict 4 is eligible for additional beds, these beds should be awarded to the Flagler Beach/Palm Coast area of Flagler County if the occupancy rate of Meadowbrook Manor meets or exceeds 85 percent occupancy at the time of CON decision and if it could be shown that the level of occupancy is likely to continue. The average occupancy rate for Meadowbrook Manor for the period of January 1, 1987, through June 30, 1987, was 58 percent. Meadowbrook has never achieved an 85 percent occupancy rate as of the date of the formal hearing of these cases. At the time of the "CON decision" in these cases, Meadowbrook had not achieved an 85 percent occupancy. This recommendation, therefore, does not apply. If a high rate of occupancy at Meadowbrook Manor in Flagler County does not materialize and if the occupancy rate at Ocean View Nursing Home in southeast Volusia County continues at 85 percent or higher and it could be verified that it will remain at a high rate, then 60 nursing home beds should be awarded in the New Smyrna Beach/Edgewater area of southeast Volusia County. The CON applicant must be willing to accept 50 percent Medicaid patients. The remaining portion should be awarded in West Volusia County. The average monthly occupancy of Ocean View for the period of January 1, 1987, through June 30, 1987, was 86 percent. Since September, 1987, the occupancy rate at Ocean View has been 94 percent or higher. This high rate of occupancy should continue. HBA proposes to accept 50 percent Medicaid patients and proposes to add its sought after nursing home beds to the New Smyrna Beach/Edgewater area of southeast Volusia County. HBA is the only applicant that meets this recommendation. If the conditions in Nos. 1[a] and 2[b] are not met, the state should award all beds to West Volusia. The conditions of 2[b] have been met. Therefore, this recommendation does not apply. No nursing home beds should be awarded to East Volusia County out of the New Smyrna Beach/Edgewater area. Refer to recommendation 2[b] above. The Meridian proposal seeks to add beds to its facility located in East Volusia County outside of the New Smyrna/Edgewater area. Meridian's proposal is, therefore, inconsistent with this recommendation. HBA's proposal is consistent with the recommendations of the updated 1986 district health plan. Meridian's and National's proposals are not consistent with these recommendations. The 1988 district health plan does not contain the specific recommendations concerning the allocation of nursing home beds within Subdistrict 4 of District 4, quoted above. The specific recommendations concerning where beds should be located within Subdistrict 4 of District 4 were eliminated in response to a suggestion by the Department that the recommendations were too specific and did not allow more flexibility. Need for Services. All of the applicants propose to provide a full range of services to their residents, including sub-acute care. The evidence did not prove that any of the applicants are proposing services not being provided in Subdistrict 4 of District 4. Section 381.705(1)(b), Florida Statutes. The evidence in this case failed to prove that like and existing health care services in Subdistrict 4 (consisting of Flagler and Volusia Counties) of District 4 are not available, efficient, appropriate, accessible, adequate or providing quality of care, except to the extent that existing services cannot meet the need for additional nursing home beds in the subdistrict. The accessibility of nursing home beds in southeast Volusia County has been restricted since September, 1987. Ocean View's occupancy during this period of time has been at or above 95 percent. Nursing home beds in eastern Volusia County have been at 75 percent occupancy. Meadowbrook Manor, located in Bunnell, Flagler County, has not achieved an occupancy rate of 75 percent since it opened in November, 1985. Meadowbrook Manor is a 100-bed nursing home. It has been experiencing one of the lowest, if not the lowest, occupancy rates of all nursing homes in Subdistrict 4. Although the evidence proved that Meadowbrook Manor has experienced difficulties in attracting residents, the evidence failed to prove that Meadowbrook Manor is not an appropriate, available and accessible nursing home or that the difficulties experienced by Meadowbrook Manor will continue in the future. Section 381.705(1)(c), Florida Statutes. Meridian. Meridian's licensed nursing home facility in Plantation, Florida, is currently rated superior. Meridian has been informed by the Department that its nursing home facility in Ormond Beach will be rated superior. Meridian's facility in Lakeland has not been in operation long enough to be eligible for a superior rating. Therefore, the Lakeland nursing home has been rated standard. Meridian will provide extensive training for its staff at its Ormond Beach nursing home. Meridian will provide staff for the Ormond Beach facility in excess of the staffing levels required by the Department. Meridian has an extensive quality assurance program, including its Quality of Life Program. Meridian's findings of fact numbers 5-12 and 14-22 are hereby adopted and incorporated herein by reference. Meridian proposes to provide sufficient services, safeguards and staff. Meridian should be able to provide adequate quality of care in its facility. National. Four of National's fourteen existing nursing home facilities in Florida have been rated superior. The other ten facilities have be rated standard. National has a policy of seeking accreditation by the Joint Commission for Accreditation of Health Care Organizations. National will provide staff for its proposed facility in excess of the staffing levels required by the Department. National has an extensive quality assurance program. National's finding of fact number 24a-g and k is hereby adopted and incorporated herein by reference. National proposes to provide sufficient services, safeguards and staff. National should be able to provide adequate-quality of care in its proposed nursing home facility. HBA. Four of HBA's seven nursing home facilities in Florida have been rated superior. The other three facilities have been rated standard. Ocean View has been rated a superior facility by the Department for the past five years. HBA will provide extensive training and development for its staff at Ocean View. HBA proposes to provide sufficient services, safeguards and staff. HBA should be able to provide adequate quality of care at Ocean View. Section 381.705(1)(e), Florida Statutes. All three of the applicants in these cases operate a number of nursing homes and other health care facilities in Florida and other areas. Each will enjoy the benefits, including joint purchasing power, which inure to multi- facility organizations. None of the applicants, however, proved that they will provide joint, cooperative or shared health care resources more effectively than the other applicants. Section 381.705(1)(h), Florida Statutes. All of the applicants' proposals will be accessible to all of the residents of Flagler and Volusia Counties. Meridian has proposed to provide 53% and 51% of its patient days during its first year and its second year of operation, respectively, to the care of Medicaid patients. Meridian has proposed to provide 4% of its patient days during its first two years of operation to the care of Medicare patients. National has proposed to provide 57% of its patient days during its first two years of operation to the care of Medicaid patients. National has proposed to provide 10% of its patient days during its first two years of operation to the care of Medicare patients. National has not determined, however, how many nursing home beds it will dedicate to the care of Medicare patients. National has indicated that it will dedicate fourteen to twenty-four beds as a Medicare certified distinct-part unit. Nationally, 8% of National's total patient days for the fiscal year ending September 30, 1986, were Medicare patient days. HBA has proposed to provide 60% of its patient days during its first two years of operation to the care of Medicaid patients. HBA has proposed to provide 5% of its patient days during its first two years of operation to the care of Medicare patients. Section 381.705(1)(i), Florida Statutes. Immediate Financial Feasibility. The parties have stipulated to the following with regard to immediate financial feasibility of the proposals in these cases: All applicants are ready, willing and capable of raising all the required capital and obtaining all financing at the rates, conditions and amortizations shown in the applicants' certificate of need applications submitted in this cause. Long-term Financial Feasibility. (1). Meridian. Meridian has projected a profit of $67,976.00 on revenue of $2,536,518.00 for the first year of operation of its proposed 120-bed Ormond- Beach facility and a profit of $136,712.00 on revenue of $2,881,804.00 for the second year of operation of its proposed 120-bed Ormond Beach facility. Meridian has also projected a profit from the operation of its proposed 60-bed addition for the first two years of operation. Meridian has projected a payor mix of 49% Medicaid, 4% Medicare, 44% private pay and 3% other during the first year of operation and 46% Medicaid, 4% Medicare, 46% private pay and 4% other during the second year of operation. These projections are reasonable. Meridian's Ormond Beach facility opened in November, 1987. Although it was projected to fill up in twelve months, it only took five months. The facility had a waiting list of twenty people when it opened. Meridian's projected fill up rate for the additional 60 beds is reasonable. Meridian's projected patient charges are reasonable. Meridian's proposed Medicare charges are the lowest of the three applicants. Meridian's projected revenue and expenses are reasonable. Meridian's project is financially feasible in the long term. (2). National. National has projected a loss of $96,990.00 on revenue of $986,598.00 for the first year of operation of its proposed facility and a profit of $269,603.00 on revenue of $1,847,865.00 for the second year of operation of its proposed facility. National has projected a payor mix of 52% Medicaid, 12% Medicare, 31% private pay and 4% other during the first year of operation and 48% Medicaid, 13% Medicare, 33% private pay and 5% other during the second year of operation. These projections are reasonable. National's projected fill up rate is reasonable. National's projected patient charges are reasonable. National's projected revenue and expenses are reasonable. National's project would be financially feasible in the long term if there was a need for 80 nursing home beds. (3). HBA. HBA has projected a profit of $127,542.00 on revenue of $5,658,984.00 for the first year of operation of its proposed 239-bed facility and a profit of $188,614.00 on revenue of $6,213,164.00 for the second year of operation of its proposed 239-bed facility. HBA has projected a payor mix of 53% Medicaid, 6% Medicare, 34% private pay and 7% other during the first two years of operation. These projections are reasonable. HBA's projected fill up rate for the additional 60 beds is reasonable. HBA's projected patient charges are reasonable. HBA's projected revenue and expenses are reasonable. HBA's project is financially feasible in the long term. Section 381.705(1)(k), Florida Statutes. The evidence failed to prove that this criterion applies in this proceeding. Section 381.705(1)(l), Florida Statutes. Generally, all of the applicants will improve competition if their projects are approved. Based upon projected Medicaid and Medicare rates, Meridian will have the least adverse impact on patient charges. HBA will have the least adverse impact on private-pay patient charges. Section 381.705(1)(m), Florida Statutes. The cost of constructing Meridian's proposed addition is $932,100.00. This amounts to a per square foot cost of $64.14. Meridian's existing Ormond Beach nursing home is located on a 5.5 acre wooded site. The existing building was constructed with sufficient ancillaries for a 120-bed nursing home. Site plans, road work, sewer, utility connections and zoning have been designed and approved for a 120-bed facility. The cost per bed for Meridian's proposed 60-bed addition is $20,797.00, based upon the total projected project cost. The cost per bed for the existing 60-bed facility was $51,242.00. The cost per bed for the proposed 120-bed facility will be $35,519.00. Meridian's projected costs of construction are reasonable. Meridian's proposed methods of construction, including the costs and methods of energy provision, are reasonable. The facility will comply with code and regulatory requirements. The cost of constructing National's proposed facility is $2,789,346.00. This amounts to a per square foot cost of $63.13. The cost per bed for National's proposed 80-bed nursing home is $47,355.00. National's projected costs of construction are reasonable. National's proposed methods of construction, including the costs and methods of energy provision, are reasonable. The facility will comply with code and regulatory requirements. The cost of constructing HBA's proposed addition is $1,145,000.00. This amounts to a per square foot cost of $63.61. The cost per bed for HBA's proposed facility is $25,000.00, based upon the total projected project cost. HBA's projected costs of construction are reasonable. HBA has proposed construction of its 60-bed addition as a second floor addition to an existing first floor 60-bed wing at Ocean View. The second floor will be constructed by a method of construction which uses twin T concrete planks. These planks support the second floor. When the planks are placed over the existing wing patients in the existing wing will have to be displaced for a portion of one day. The existing dining room will not be used for approximately 4 to 6 weeks. The construction of HBA's addition will not endanger patients at Ocean View. HBA has successfully constructed second floor additions over existing facilities in the past. Although there will be some inconvenience, quality of care should still be provided during construction. The other applicants have raised a number of questions concerning the appropriateness of HBA's proposed addition. Those questions do not, however, prove that HBA will not provide an adequately designed and constructed addition or cannot provide quality of care. HBA's proposed methods of construction, including the costs and methods of energy provision, are reasonable. The facility will comply with code and regulatory requirements. The evidence failed to prove that there are alternative, less costly or more effective methods of construction to the construction methods proposed by Meridian, National or HBA available. Section 381.705(1)(n), Florida Statutes. None of the applicants presented evidence concerning past or proposed care of the medically indigent, other than their care of Medicaid patients. Meridian has committed to provide 55% of its patient days in its Ormond Beach nursing home for the care of Medicaid patients. Meridian has not yet reached this level of care of Medicaid patients, however. At the time of the formal hearing Meridian was providing 46% Medicaid care. Meridian has not declined to serve Medicaid patients if a bed was available. During its fiscal year ending September 30, 1986, National provided 20.6% of its company-wide patient days to skilled Medicaid patients and 38.5% to intermediate Medicaid patients. HBA has been providing approximately 65% of its patient days at Ocean View to the care of Medicaid patients. All of the applicants propose to provide adequate care to Medicaid patients. The projected percentages of Medicaid patient days and revenue have been listed in previous findings of fact. Section 381.705(2), Florida Statutes. To the extent applicable, all of the applicants comply with the requirements of Section 381.705(2), Florida Statutes.

Recommendation Based upon the foregoing Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law, it is RECOMMENDED that the Department issue a Final Order granting HBA's application for a certificate of need authorizing the addition of 60 nursing home beds to Ocean View and denying Meridian's and National's applications for certificates of need. DONE and ENTERED this 1st day of June, 1989, in Tallahassee, Florida. LARRY J. SARTIN Hearing Officer Division of Administrative Hearings The DeSoto Building 1230 Apalachee Parkway Tallahassee, FL 32399-1550 (904) 488-9675 Filed with the Clerk of the Division of Administrative Hearings this 1st day of June, 1989. APPENDIX CASE NUMBERS 88-1836 88-1839 The parties have submitted proposed findings of fact. It has been noted below which proposed findings of fact have been generally accepted and the paragraph number(s) in the Recommended Order where they have been accepted, if any. Those proposed findings of fact which have been rejected and the reason for their rejection have also been noted. All of the parties have filed proposed findings of fact which pertain to HCR. HCR also filed a proposed recommended order. In light of the fact that HCR has voluntarily dismissed its case, those proposed findings of fact have not been considered in this Appendix. Meridian's Proposed Findings of Fact Proposed Finding Paragraph Number in Recommended Order of Fact Number of Acceptance or Reason for Rejection 1 9, 11-12 and 46. 2 19-20. 3 90. The last two sentences are hereby accepted. 4 70. 5-12 See 49. 13 The parties stipulated that the criterion to which this proposed finding of fact relates has been met by all the parties. 14-22 See 49. 23 67-73. 24-27 These proposed findings of fact fail to take into account the fact that some of the costs attributable to the additional 60 nursing home beds sought by Meridian in this proceeding have been included in the cost of the existing facility. 28 107. 29 The proposed construction cost per square foot is $64.14. See finding of fact 89. 30-33 90. Hereby accepted. 34-41 Proposed findings of fact pertaining to HCR. 42 16-17. 43 23-25. 44 101 and hereby accepted. 45-49 See 103. Although there was evidence that supported these proposed findings of fact generally, the proposed findings of fact overlook the fact that HBA's drawings are preliminary and will be revised as needed to comply with the Department's requirements. The weight of the evidence supports a conclusion that HBA's proposed methods of construction and costs are reasonable despite the necessary corrections in its preliminary plans. The proposed finding of fact concerning parking spaces is not relevant to this proceeding because the weight of the evidence failed to prove that any costs associated with additional parking spaces which may be needed have been left out of HBA's projected costs. The availability of parking spaces is not a consideration under the criteria of Section 381.705, Florida Statutes, except to the extent that costs associated with parking spaces should be taken into account. The first sentence is hereby accepted. The rest of the proposed finding of fact is not supported by the weight of the evidence. The first two sentences are not relevant to these proceedings. The rest of this proposed finding of fact is not supported by the weight of the evidence. 52-53 Not supported by the weight of the evidence. The evidence did prove that, as of the date of the hearing of these cases, HBA should have filed a different pro forma which takes into account changes in its projected Medicaid revenue and its salary projections if this proceeding was a completely de novo proceeding. The Department has, however, taken the position that applicants cannot "amend" their applications between the date that an application is reviewed and a formal administrative hearing concerning the application. Therefore, HBA did not change its pro forma to reflect the most current information concerning Medicaid and salaries. HBA's financial expert was aware of the changes in Medicaid and salary expenses. Despite this knowledge, he testified that HBA's proposed facility is financial feasible. This testimony was accepted. 54 14-15. 55 21-22 and 95. Not relevant to this proceeding. 64. The last sentence is not supported by the weight of the evidence. 58 51. 59 Not supported by the weight of the evidence. National presented evidence that it would designate a portion of its proposed facility as a dedicated Medicare unit. 60 18, 21, 24 and 27. 61 26-29. 29. The last sentence is not relevant to this de novo proceeding. Not relevant to this de novo proceeding. 64-65 Contrary to the stipulation of the parties. 66 Contrary to the stipulation of the parties and not relevant. National's Proposed Findings of Fact Proposed Finding Paragraph Number in Recommended Order of Fact Number of Acceptance or Reason for Rejection 1 2 and 21. 2 1 and 3. 3-4 Hereby accepted. 5 4-6. 6 13-14. 15 and hereby accepted. Hereby accepted. 21 and 64 and hereby accepted. 10 21-22. 11 26. 12 27. See 28. Not supported by the weight of the evidence. 31-32 and hereby accepted. Not supported by the weight of the evidence and erroneous conclusion of law. See 34-35. 17 35. Not supported by the weight of the evidence and erroneous conclusion of law. The first sentence is accepted in finding of fact 34. The rest of the proposed finding of fact is not supported by the weight of the evidence or is an erroneous conclusion of law. 20 28. See 37-38 and 45. National's proposal is not consistent with the 1987 district health plan. Subparagraph A. is not relevant to this de novo proceeding. Subparagraph B. is not relevant or not supported by the weight of the evidence. The last sentence of subparagraph C. is not relevant to this de novo proceeding. The last sentence of subparagraph D. and subparagraphs e-h are not supported by the weight of the evidence. Although subparagraph I. is generally correct, it is not sufficient to justify locating the nursing home beds to be awarded in this case in Flagler County. Subparagraph j. is not supported by the weight of the evidence. The first and last sentences are hereby accepted. The second sentence is not supported by the weight of the evidence. Hereby accepted. 49 and 51-55. Subparagraph h. is not supported by the weight of the evidence. See 59. Stipulated by the parties as true of all of the applicants. 27 60 and 63. 28 67 and see 75-79. 29 86. Section 381.705(1)(l), Florida Statutes, is to be applied to all of Subdistrict 4 of District 4 and not just Flagler County. 22, 94, 97 and hereby accepted. 32 64 and 108. 33 See 111. Not supported by the weight of the evidence. Hereby accepted. HBA's Proposed Findings of Fact Proposed Finding Paragraph Number in Recommended Order of Fact Number of Acceptance or Reason for Rejection 1 1 2 2-3. 3 4. 4 5. 5 6. 6 7. 7 8. 8 9-12. 9 14-15. National does not have a corporate headquarters since it is not a corporation. 10, 14, 21, 25, 32 and 35 Proposed findings of fact pertaining to HCR. 11 16-17. The evidence proved that HBA owns 6, not 7, nursing homes in Florida. 12 18-20. 13 21-22. 15 23-24. 28, 30 and 34-35. Subparagraph b) is a statement of arguments advanced by Meridian and National. 27, 38 and hereby accepted. Subparagraph's c)1)-4) and 7) pertain to HCR. 18 See 42-45. 19 See 46-47 and 50. Subparagraph b) is not supported by the weight of the evidence. 20 20, 51 and 54. 22 56-58 and hereby accepted. 23 59. 24 60. 26 Stipulated. 27 67. 28 85. See, however, 79. 29-30 Hereby accepted. 31 See 89. 33 18-20, 89 and 93. 34 22 and 96-97. 36 24-25, 101-104 and hereby accepted. 37 111. The Department's Proposed Findings of Fact Proposed Finding Paragraph Number in Recommended Order of Fact Number of Acceptance or Reason for Rejection 1-2 28. 3 30. 4 2-3 and 7. 4 and 6. Not relevant to this proceeding. 7 26 and 28. 8-15 Although there is evidence to support these proposed findings, they are not relevant to this proceeding. As a matter of law, the Department cannot through agency policy circumvent the requirements of the Need Methodology of Rule 10-5.011(1)(k), Florida Administrative Code, by publishing a "fixed need pool" for which no point of entry to challenge has been provided. Not relevant to this de novo proceeding. Hereby accepted. Not relevant because the parties have stipulated that Section 381.705(1)(a), Florida Statutes, applies to these cases. Not supported by the weight of the evidence. 20 32 and 36. 21 Hereby accepted. 22 32. 23 34. 24 33. 25 36. 26 29. 27 28. 28 Hereby accepted. COPIES FURNISHED: Gerald B. Sternstein, Esquire Darrell White, Esquire Post Office Box 2174 Tallahassee, Florida 32316-2174 Charles D. Hood, Jr., Esquire Post Office Box 15200 Daytona Beach, Florida 32015 Lee Elzie, Esquire Post Office Box 82 Tallahassee, Florida 32302 Thomas W. Stahl, Esquire 817 North Gadsden Street Tallahassee, Florida 32303-6313 Sam Power, Agency Clerk Department of Health and Rehabilitative Services 1323 Winewood Boulevard Tallahassee, Florida 32399-0700 Gregory L. Coler, Secretarey Department of Health and Rehabilitative Services 1323 Winewood Boulevard Tallahassee, Florida 32399-0700 =================================================================

Florida Laws (1) 120.57
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FIRST AMERICAN CORPORATION, D/B/A SPRING HILL HEALTH vs. DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND REHABILITATIVE SERVICES, 84-002206 (1984)
Division of Administrative Hearings, Florida Number: 84-002206 Latest Update: Apr. 01, 1985

The Issue The issue presented for determination herein is whether or not F.A.C. Health Care, Inc., d/b/a Spring Hill Health Facility (Petitioner) is entitled to a Certificate of Need to establish a 60-bed nursing home to serve Hernando County.

Findings Of Fact Upon consideration of the oral and documentary evidence adduced at hearing, including the pre-hearing stipulation, the following relevant facts are found. F.A.C. Health Care, Inc. is a wholly-owned subsidiary of First American Corporation. First American Corporation has owned, operated and developed approximately 75 long-term care and retirement facilities over the past 15 years. These operations are primarily located in the southeastern United States. At present, First American Corporation operates 20 facilities and has seven Certificates of Need in the developmental stages. (TR. 35, Fulmer) On January 14, 1984, Petitioner filed an application with the Respondent for a Certificate of Need to construct and operate a community nursing home in the City of Spring Hill in Hernando County, at a total cost of $3,180,000. (Petitioner's Exhibit 1) The letter of denial accompanying the state agency action report dated April 30, 1984, noted the basis for denial as follows: Existing and approved bed capacity in Citrus/Hernando Counties is sufficient to satisfy projected need for 1986. There are 60 nursing home beds that have been approved but have not been constructed at the present time, which, when added to the existing nursing home bed supply in Citrus/Hernando Counties, will serve to satisfy a portion of the projected need for skilled nursing home beds in the sub-district through 1986. The proposed 120 beds are in excess of the 37 beds needed to reduce the prospective base utilization rate to a reasonable level by 1986. (TR. 36, Fulmer; Petitioner's Exhibit 2) On September 26, 1984, Petitioner amended its original application to reflect a reduction from 120 to 60 nursing home beds. Documents reflecting the corresponding reduction in project costs from 53,180,000 to 51,780,000 were submitted with the amended proposal. (Petitioner's Exhibit 3) FINANCIAL FEASIBILITY OF THE PROPOSED SPRING HILL FACILITY The immediate and long-term financial feasibility of a project is one criteria considered during the Certificate of Need review process. Section 381.494(6)(c)9., Florida Statutes. The total cost of the project of 51,780,000 appears reasonable and in line with similar projects. Funds for full 100 per cent financing of the project are available through industrial revenue bonds at 14 per cent interest over 30 years. In order to acquire an industrial revenue bond application, Petitioner would maintain a $150.000 debt service reserve fund. (Petitioner's Exhibit 3) Other methods of financing available to finance the subject project include conventional financing, syndicated equity programs and insurance investment programs. (Testimony of Fulmer at TR. 39-40) Due to the largely rural setting, projected utilization for the first year would be 81 per cent Medicaid, 5 per cent Medicare and 14 per cent private pay. Occupancy is projected to reach 97 per cent by the fifth full month of operation and would be supported in part by the increased utilization of nursing home beds as a direct result of the implementation of diagnostic related groupings. Pro forma statements for the first and second years of operation show a net operating profit beginning in the ninth month and continuing through the second year. The equipment costs, staffing patterns and personnel budget also appear reasonable for this type of project. METHODS AND CONSTRUCTION COSTS Another issue in this proceeding was whether Spring Hill satisfied the criteria in Section 381.494(6)(c)13., Florida Statutes, regarding the cost and methods of construction. Spring Hill's proposed facility will provide 11,981 square feet devoted to patient care and 9,710 square feet for administrative and common service areas at a construction cost of $41.50 per square foot. (Petitioner's Exhibit 3) Proposed construction costs and methods of construction efficiently minimize square footage space requirements and related construction costs and will permit the most efficient operation of the facility at a low per diem cost. The construction cost appears reasonable and is also supportive of a primarily Medicaid based facility. Finally, Respondent offered no evidence to controvert the reasonableness of construction costs and methods proposed by Petitioner. IMPACT ON HEALTH CARE COSTS Section 381.494(6)(c)12., Florida Statutes provides that as part of the Certificate of Need review, probable impact of the proposed project on the cost of providing health care services be considered. Petitioner's expert, Fulmer, urges that there would either be no impact on the cost of care or due to the availability of additional Medicaid beds, costs would be reduced since the private pay demands of family and relatives having to pay for the care of an individual rather than participating in the Medicaid program would reduce the costs of health care to the community rather than increase the financial burden. In this regard, Petitioner offered no evidence to substantiate the claim that the demand for Medicaid beds exceeded the supply, or that Medicaid patients had been refused health services by the available Medicaid health care providers. AVAILABILITY AND ACCESSIBILITY OF EXISTING SERVICES Hernando County lies within HRS District III which is composed of 16 counties in north-central Florida, stretching from the Gulf of Mexico north of Tampa to the Georgia border. (Petitioner's Exhibit 6) The District is further divided into sub-districts. Hernando County represents a separate sub-district. Petitioner's facility is proposed to be located in the City of Spring Hill, located in the fastest growing area of Hernando County. (Petitioner's Exhibits 1 and 2) The latest bulletin (No. 69) from the University of Florida, Bureau of Economic and Business Research, shows a 90 per cent projected growth between 1980 and 1990. Much of the population in the Spring Hill area falls in the 65 and older age bracket. County age group projections released by HRS on September 24, 1984, reveal that the elderly population of 65 and over in Hernando County in 1985 is projected as 17,616, or approximately 27 per cent of total population. By 1990, those projections will grow to 24,887 or approximately 29 per cent of total population. (Respondent's Exhibit 2) The growth trend in Hernando County is an extension of the rapid coastline development occurring in the New Port Richey- Clearwater areas and the counties to the south of Hernando. Previously, the only major development in Hernando County was centered in Brooksville, the middle of the county. Consequently, the existing community nursing home services in Hernando County are concentrated in the Brooksville area. Although Petitioner, through its expert (Konrad) testified that there is a mal-distribution of existing beds and community nursing home services which renders them neither available nor accessible to the rapidly growing elderly population in the southwestern Hernando County corridor and that high occupancy rates in existing community nursing homes in the area and the existence of waiting lists corroborates the lack of availability and accessibility of community nursing home services in the area, the evidence introduced herein failed to establish either the existence of waiting lists or that the existing community nursing homes in the area were overcrowded. SHELTERED VERSUS COMMUNITY NURSING HOME BEDS Petitioner contends that certain nursing home beds associated with the adult congregate living facility at Evergreen Woods in the Spring Hill area are not actually available and accessible to the general public but instead are functioning as sheltered nursing home beds. Respondent, on the other hand, considers the 60 nursing home beds associated with Evergreen Woods to be available and accessible to the general public. A review of the entire record compiled herein failed to substantiate Petitioner's claim that those beds at Evergreen Woods are unavailable and/or inaccessible to the general public. DETERMINATION OF NEED, SECTION 381.494(6)(c)1., FLORIDA STATUTES. In determining need for nursing home beds, a Certificate of Need project is reviewed on a 3-year planning horizon. In this case, predicted need for nursing home beds in District III and the sub-district of Hernando County is calculated through 1987. Hernando County is a single county sub-district located within in HRS planning District III in north central Florida. HRS has determined the overall nursing home bed need for District III as well as sub-district allocations by applying the uniform nursing home bed need methodology for community nursing home services contained in Florida Administrative Code Rule 10- 5.11(21). (Petitioner's Exhibit 5) Respondent provided a step-by-step application of the community nursing home bed need rule and introduced their exhibits supporting the calculation period (Testimony of expert medical facilities consultant, R. Jaffe and Respondent's Exhibits 1 and 2). Briefly stated, application of the pertinent rules reveals an extrapolated need for 31 beds which are available for CON approval based on data available to Respondent on June 29, 1984 and that 36 beds are available based on later data released on September 24, 1984. (TR. 91, Conrad; TR. 130, Jaffe and Petitioner's Exhibit 6) The census report applicable herein reflects that there were 360 licensed beds in the Hernando sub-districts and no approved beds for a total of 360 beds. 2/ Application of the nursing home bed need methodology is not the sole factor used in determining whether a CON application should be granted. Other factors, such as access, high occupancy rates, chronically underserved population and high Medicaid utilization are definite factors in approval of additional beds in cases where the rule shows either no need or only slight need. Respondent has, on several occasions, granted 60-bed applications where accessibility issues justified the grant of a minimum-sized facility in spite of the lesser numerical need indicated under the rules. 3/ Petitioner referred to instances wherein Respondent had granted approval for CON's in other districts where there were unusual circumstances such as accessibility issues as referred to herein above. A review of those cases reveals that a departure from the usual bed-need methodology is warranted in cases of extremely high occupancy rates (95 per cent or higher) or the facilities with lower occupancy rates, e.g. 85.7 per cent for homes in Sarasota County, which were located in inaccessible distances away from the population concentration. Petitioner has not demonstrated sufficient basis herein to warrant a departure from the usual bed need rule methodology. The instances wherein a departure from the usual bed need rule methodology has occurred are distinguishable, inasmuch as in the instant case, there are three existing facilities presently in Hernando County offering 360 nursing home beds. Current occupancy rate has been shown to be reasonable and is standing at or below average for District III. Additionally, Respondent introduced a "Stipulation of Settlement" dated September 28, 1984 which was entered into by and between Evergreen Woods Health Care Center and Respondent. The substance of that stipulation reveals that during October of 1983, Evergreen Woods Health Care Center (EWHCC) as Petitioner, filed an application with Respondent for a Certificate of Need to add 60 beds to its existing 60-bed nursing home located in Spring Hill, Hernando County, Florida. The application sought 45 community beds and 15 sheltered beds. As a means of amicably resolving that proceeding and based on available need data based on applicable quarterly census reports and application of the need criteria, EWHCC, as Petitioner in that proceeding, amended its Certificate of Need application filed October, 1983, to add a total of 60 beds to its existing facility; 31 beds to be designated as community beds and 29 to be designated as sheltered beds. A review of the public records reveal that the Certificate of Need has been issued (amended CON No. 2959 issued early October, 1984) pursuant to that stipulation of settlement. 4/

Recommendation Based on the foregoing Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law, it is hereby RECOMMENDED that: The application of First American Corporation d/b/a Spring Hill Health Facility for establishment of a 60-bed nursing home facility in Hernando County, Florida, be DENIED. RECOMMENDED this 14th day of February, 1985, in Tallahassee, Florida. JAMES E. BRADWELL Hearing Officer Division of Administrative Hearings The Oakland Building 2009 Apalachee Parkway Tallahassee, Florida 32301 (904) 488-9675 Filed with the Clerk of the Division of Administrative Hearings this 14th day of February, 1985.

Florida Laws (1) 120.57
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HEALTH CARE AND RETIREMENT CORPORATION OF AMERICA, D/B/A HEARTLAND OF MANATEE vs. DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND REHABILITATIVE SERVICES, 84-003336 (1984)
Division of Administrative Hearings, Florida Number: 84-003336 Latest Update: Aug. 02, 1985

The Issue Whether there is a need for a 120 bed nursing home in Manatee County?

Findings Of Fact HCR is a health care corporation. Its sole business is designing and constructing nursing homes. During the twenty years it has been in the business, HCR has built approximately 180 nursing homes. HCR currently operates approximately 10,000 nursing home beds in twelve states including Florida. HCR filed an application for a certificate of need to construct a 120 bed nursing home in Manatee County. The Department denied this request. The only issue in this case is whether there is a need for a 120 bed nursing home facility in Manatee County. If such a need exists, the Department has agreed that HCR "meets all applicable statutory and rule criteria." The need for nursing home beds is determined under Rule 10-5.11(21), Florida Administrative Code. Rule 10-5.11(21)(a), Florida Administrative Code, contains the following Department goal: The Department will consider applications for community nursing home beds in context with applicable statutory and rule criteria. The Department will not normally approve applications for new or additional community nursing home beds in any departmental service district if approval of an application would cause the number of community nursing home beds in that departmental service district to exceed the number of community nursing home beds calculated by the methodology described in subsections (21)(b), (c), (d), (e), (f), (g), and (h) of this rule. Rule 10-5.11(21)(b), Florida Administrative Code, provides for a determination of bed need three years into the future "according to the methodology specified under subparagraphs 1 through 10." Under the methodology provided in subparagraphs 1 through 10, need is determined on a subdistrict basis if a departmental service district has been divided into subdistricts. Manatee County is located in District 6. District 6 has been divided into subdistricts for purposes of determining nursing home bed need. Manatee County has been designated as a subdistrict. Rule 10-17.018, Florida Administrative Code. Therefore, nursing home bed need is to be determined under the methodology of Rule 10-5.11(21), Florida Administrative Code, for Manatee County. The parties have agreed and the evidence proves that there is no need for nursing home beds in Manatee County based upon an application of the methodology of Rule 10-5.11(21), Florida Administrative Code (hereinafter referred to as the "Formula"). In fact, an application of the Formula indicates that there will be an excess of 105 nursing home beds in Manatee County three years into the future based upon the following: 876 nursing home beds needed - (765 existing beds + 90 percent of 240 approved beds) = (105). Based upon an application of the Formula, there is clearly no need for any additional nursing home beds in Manatee County. This determination, however, does not totally resolve the issue in this case. Rule 10-5.11(21)(b), Florida Administrative Code, provides that the Department is to determine bed need according to the Formula "[i] n addition to other statutory and rule criteria . . . " Also, Rule 10-5.11(21)(b)10, Florida Administrative Code, provides in relevant part, the following: In the event that the net bed allocation is zero, the applicant may demonstrate that circumstances exist to justify the approval of additional beds under the other relevant criteria specifically contained in the Department's Rule 10-5.11. Based upon these provisions of the Department's rules, it appears clear that if no nursing home bed need is shown to exist based upon an application of the Formula, other statutory and rule criteria should be considered, i.e., are there adequate like and existing services in the subdistrict? Rule 10-5.11(21)(b)10, Florida Administrative Code, however, goes on to provide: Specifically, the applicant may show that persons using existing and like services are in need of nursing home care but will be unable to access nursing home services currently licensed or approved within the subdistrict. Under this provision, the applicant must demonstrate that those persons with a documented need for nursing home services have been denied access to currently licensed but unoccupied beds or that the number of persons with a documented need exceeds the number of licensed, unoccupied and currently approved nursing home beds. Existing and like services shall include the following as defined in statute or rule, adult congregate living facilities, adult foster homes, homes for special services, home health services, adult day health care, adult day care, community care for the elderly, and home care for the elderly. Patients' need for nursing home care must be documented by the attending physicians' plans of care or orders, assessments performed by staff of the Department of Health and Rehabilitative Services, or equivalent assessments performed by attending physicians indicating need for nursing home care. As discussed under the Conclusions of Law, infra, this portion of the Department's rule (hereinafter referred to as the "Specific Exception") is not the only alternative method of demonstrating a need for nursing home beds when there appears to be no need based upon an application of the Formula. A need for nursing home beds can be demonstrated even if there is no need indicated under the Formula and the Specific Exception is not complied with based upon a consideration of other statutory and rule criteria. The Specific Exception is, however, the only method by which an applicant can demonstrate the need for a new nursing home facility based upon an access problem in the relevant service district. HCR has attempted to prove there is a need for its proposed 120 bed facility based in part upon a consideration of Rule 10-5.11(3)(a)-(d), Florida Administrative Code. This rule provides generally for a consideration of the extent to which all residents of the service area and, in particular, low income persons, the elderly and others, can access existing nursing home beds. In particular, HCR has attempted to prove that there is a need for a 120 bed nursing home because of alleged access problems under Rule 10- 5.11(3)(a)-(d), Florida Administrative Code, during the "peak season" in Manatee County and alleged access problems of Medicaid patients, Alzheimer patients and respite care patients. As discussed under Conclusions of Law, infra, HCR has failed to comply with the Specific Exception in attempting to demonstrate need for its proposal under Rule 10- 5.11(3)(a)-(d), Florida Administrative Code. Therefore, any evidence concerning access problems cannot be considered. HCR has also attempted to demonstrate need for its proposal based upon an application of Rules 10-5.11(4) and (6), Florida Administrative Code. These rules require a consideration of the availability of alternative, less costly, or more effective methods of providing the proposed health services and the availability, quality of care, efficiency, appropriateness, accessibility, extent of utilization and adequacy of like and existing services. In particular, HCR has attempted to prove that like and existing services in Manatee County are not meeting the needs of Alzheimer patients and respite care patients and that there are no alternative, less costly or more effective methods of providing HCR's proposed services. If HCR had succeeded in demonstrating need for its proposal under these rules, a certificate of need would have been recommended even though the Specific Exception was not complied with. HCR has agreed that its proposed facility will meet the alleged need for Medicaid patients, Alzheimer patients and respite care patients in Manatee County by dedicating a thirty- bed wing to the care of Alzheimer patients, a thirty-bed wing to respite care patients and guaranteeing access to fifty percent of its beds to Medicaid patients. The following findings of fact are made with regard to the specific categories of persons allegedly in need of nursing home care. Although HCR's proposed findings of fact concerning access problems of these groups are not relevant because of its failure to comply with the Specific Exception, findings are made in an abundance of caution in case the Department or a Court ultimately determines that need can be demonstrated based upon access problems even when the Specific Exception is not complied with. Medicaid Patients. Manatee County generally experiences a "peak season" from November to March during which time nursing home bed use increases. The peak season in 1984-1985, however, was only about seven weeks. During the peak season there is some difficulty in placing Medicaid patients in nursing home beds in Manatee County. Between January, 1985 and March, 1985, the Department's Manatee County office placed twenty-two Medicaid patients in nursing home beds located outside of Manatee County. Some Medicaid patients have also been placed in adult congregate living facilities even though such placements are contrary to the prohibition against placing patients in need of skilled nursing home services in such facilities. L. W. Blake Memorial Hospital has also had to place patients in nursing homes on a temporary basis outside of Manatee County. During the past year, only twenty-four patients were placed in nursing homes outside Manatee County. The evidence does not establish how many of those patients were Medicaid patients, however. Alzheimer Patients. Alzheimer's disease is a disease which primarily afflicts persons in their 50's and 60's. It can, however, afflict younger persons also. The disease progresses through three stages and has no cure. During the first stage, the afflicted person experiences forgetfulness, impairment of judgement and inability to perform routine tasks. During the second stage, the afflicted person begins to wander. During the third and final stage, the afflicted person becomes dependent and incontinent. Currently there are approximately 160 Alzheimer patients in the five existing nursing homes in Manatee County. None of these nursing homes has a special program designed for Alzheimer patients. The evidence does not, however, support a finding that Alzheimer patients are not being adequately cared for. The evidence also does not establish how many persons in Manatee County are afflicted by Alzheimer's disease or the number of persons so afflicted who are in need of nursing home care. Generally, it is not until the third stage of the disease that nursing home care becomes necessary. Even then some Alzheimer patients are cared for in the home, private boarding facilities, or mental hospitals. The evidence does establish that no person afflicted with Alzheimer's disease has been refused admittance to a nursing home bed in Manatee County. The evidence also establishes that there is a 303 bed nursing home located in neighboring Hillsborough County which treats only Alzheimer patients. Hillborough County is located in District 6. Finally, the evidence demonstrates that Alzheimer patients would benefit from a special wing dedicated to the care of Alzheimer's disease in its final stages. Respite Care Patients. Respite care is the placement of a person in need of care under the supervision of another person for a short period of time. One purpose of this care is to free-up the primary care giver for a short period of time. The patient needs supervision or may need skilled nursing care. The length of the care can vary from a few hours to several weeks. HCR has proposed to establish a thirty-bed wing in its proposed facility that will be dedicated solely to the care of respite care patients in need of skilled nursing care for a period of one to eight weeks. None of the existing nursing homes in Manatee County provides the type of specialized wing HCR in proposing. The evidence establishes that there is a need for such a service in Manatee County. The evidence does not establish, however, how many nursing home beds are needed. There was testimony that there was a need for fifty nursing home beds. This testimony was, however, purely a "guess". Additionally, this estimate was not limited to the type of respite care HCR proposes to provide; the respite care giving rise to this guess included respite care for as short a period as three to five days. Short-term respite care needs are currently being met by existing programs in Manatee County. DHRS Exhibit 4 does not corroborate the fifty bed estimate because it is not at all clear what the data on this Exhibit means. Based upon the foregoing, there is a need for nursing home beds for Medicaid patients during the "peak season" and for respite care patients in need of skilled nursing care for a period of one to eight weeks because of an access problem. The need of these patients, however, has not been properly demonstrated pursuant to the Specific Exception and therefore cannot be considered. If this need could be considered even though the Specific Exception has not been complied with, the evidence fails to demonstrate how many additional beds are needed. Additionally, two new nursing homes have been approved for construction which will add 240 nursing home beds in Manatee County. The addition of these beds will eliminate some, if not all, of the need of Medicaid patients. There is a need for nursing home beds for respite care patients in need of skilled nursing care for a period of one to eight weeks because of the lack of adequate like and existing services. HCR has, however, failed to prove that this need is sufficient to justify its proposal. The evidence fails to demonstrate a need for Alzheimer patients sufficient to justify HCR's proposal based upon the care presently being given to Alzheimer patients in Manatee County. Although the ability of Alzheimer patients to access beds is not relevant because of HCR's failure to comply with the Specific Exception, the evidence also fails to demonstrate any access problem of Alzheimer patients. Alzheimer patients would benefit from a dedicated nursing home wing. This finding, however, based upon the other findings of fact in this case, does not justify HCR's proposal. Even if it were concluded that HCR does not need to comply with the Specific Exception in this case, the evidence does not support a finding that a 120 bed facility should be approved. The only evidence as to the total number of nursing home beds allegedly needed in Manatee County was presented by Mr. Jay Cushman, an expert in the field of health planning. According to Mr. Cushman there is a need for a minimum of 193 additional nursing home beds in Manatee County. Mr. Cushman's opinion was based upon the criteria of Rules 10- 5.11(3)(a)-(d), (4) and (6), Florida Administrative Code. In particular, Mr. Cushman relied upon the effect on nursing home bed use of Manatee County's peak season and the needs of Alzheimer patients, respite care patients and Medicaid patients. Mr. Cushman's opinion was based upon his determination that there is a need for a total of 1,174 nursing home beds in Manatee County. This figure was arrived at by adding Mr. Cushman's projected need for Medicaid patients (40 beds), Alzheimer patients (121 beds), respite care patients (50 beds) and the current peak census of nursing homes in Manatee County (718 beds). The sum of these figures was multiplied by 1.137 (to account for population growth in Manatee County over the next three years) and the result was divided by ninety percent (to account for a maximum occupancy rate of ninety percent). Mr. Cushman's determination of need, to the extent his figures are based upon purported access problems associated with Medicaid patients, Alzheimer patients, respite care patients and persons in need of care during the peak season, should not and cannot be considered because of the lack of compliance with the Specific Exception. Since Mr. Cushman did take into account alleged access problems without complying with the Specific Exception in arriving at his conclusion that 193 nursing home beds are needed in Manatee County, Mr. Cushman's opinion of need is rejected. Even if it was proper for Mr. Cushman to consider access problems despite the failure to comply with the Specific Exception, the weight of the evidence does not support Mr. Cushman's opinion. In arriving at his estimate of the need for Medicaid patients, Mr. Cushman relied in part upon the fact that twenty-four patients (twenty-five according to Mr. Cushman) had been placed in nursing homes located out of Manatee County by L. W. Blake Memorial Hospital personnel. The evidence, however, does not prove that all of these patients were Medicaid patients. Mr. Cushman's determination that 50 beds are needed for respite care patients was based upon on the opinion of Mr. Russell Kitching. Mr. Kitching's estimate was rejected, supra. The most significant problem with Mr. Cushman's determination of bed need is his estimate of the need for Alzheimer's patients. The evidence does not support a conclusion that there is a need for additional nursing home beds for Alzheimer's patients. The evidence proved that no Alzheimer's patient in Manatee County has been denied access to a nursing home. Finally, Mr. Cushman's opinion is contrary to, and did not take into account, the fact that Manatee County is projected to have an excess of 105 nursing home beds under the Formula. Based upon the foregoing, it is concluded that HCR has failed to prove that there is a need for a 120 bed nursing home in Manatee County.

Recommendation Based upon the foregoing Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law, it is RECOMMENDED that the certificate of need application filed by HCR for a 120-bed nursing home to be located in Manatee County be denied. DONE and ENTERED this 2nd day of August, 1985, in Tallahassee, Florida. LARRY J. SARTIN Hearing Officer Division of Administrative Hearings The Oakland Building 2009 Apalachee Parkway Tallahassee, Florida 32301 (904) 488-9675 Filed with the Clerk of the Division of Administrative Hearings this 2nd day of August, 1985. COPIES FURNISHED: Jean Laramore, Esquire G. Steven Pfeiffer, Esquire LARAMORE & CLARK, P.A. The Bowen House 325 N. Calhoun Street Tallahassee, Florida 32301 John F. Gilroy, Esquire CULPEPPER, TURNER & MANNHEIMER P. O. Drawer 11300 Tallahassee, Florida 32302 David Pingree, Secretary Department of Health and Rehabilitative Services 1323 Winewood Boulevard Tallahassee, Florida 32301

Florida Laws (1) 120.57
# 8
HEALTH CARE AND RETIREMENT CORPORATION OF AMERICA, D/B/A HEARTLAND OF HILLSBOROUGH vs. DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND REHABILITATIVE SERVICES, 85-003217 (1985)
Division of Administrative Hearings, Florida Number: 85-003217 Latest Update: Nov. 03, 1986

The Issue The issue to be determined in this case is whether Respondent, Department of Health and Rehabilitative Services, should grant the application of Health Care and Retirement Corporation of America, d/b/a Heartland of Hillsborough (HCR), Petitioner in Case No. 85-3217, or Forum Group, Inc., sponsor of Retirement Living of Hillsborough County (Forum), Petitioner in Case No. 85-3376, or both, for a certificate of need to construct and operate a 60-bed nursing home in Hillsborough County. Paddock Meadows Convalescent Centers, Florida Convalescent Centers, Inc., and Angel1 Care, Inc., petitioners in Case Nos. 85-3362, 85-4124 and 86-0905, respectively, voluntarily dismissed their petitions shortly before the final hearing in this case. (Health Quest Corporation and Health Quest Realty (Hillsborough County), petitioners in Case No. 85-2923, voluntarily dismissed their petition on or about April 1, 1986.

Findings Of Fact The HCR Proposal. Health Care and Retirement Corporation of America, d/b/a Heartland of Hillsborough (HCR), Petitioner in Case No. 85-3217, has been in the business of nursing home construction and operation for over 20 years. HCR currently operates approximately 10,000 beds in 17 states. It has developed over 200 facilities. HCR's proposed project would benefit financially to some extent from economies of scale of having a network of similar facilities. HCR originally applied for a certificate of need to construct and operate a 120-bed nursing home in Hillsborough County. During the pendency of this proceeding, HCR down-sized its proposed project to 60 beds and made other amendments. The down-sizing and amendments are reflected in a supplemental application which was served on Respondent, Department of Health and Rehabilitative Services (HRS), but was not filed with the local health council. It is not clear whether the supplemental application was filed with HRS's Office of Community Medical Facilities. The supplemental application adopts by reference but does not re-type certain portions of the original application. Those portions of the original application were not introduced in evidence or otherwise made a part of the record of this proceeding. In HCR's supplemental application, the down-sized 60-bed nursing home is accompanied by a 60-bed adult congregate living facility housed in the part of the building originally proposed to house another 60 nursing home beds. In addition, the supplemental application reflects a new emphasis on treatment of patients with Alzheimer's and related diseases (dementia). HCR proposes a facility which will include a 60-bed nursing home, an adult congregate living facility, and an adult day-care component. The facility will offer programs specially designed for Alzheimer's disease victims, and, in its adult day care and assisted living areas, will provide programs which are designed to delay institutionalization as long as possible. The facility will provide staffing and special capabilities to accommodate the unique characteristics of dementia (Alzheimer's) patients, to allow the wandering Alzheimer's patient more freedom, and to shelter the non-dementia (non-Alzheimer's) patient from unnecessary contact with the dementia (Alzheimer's) patient. Alzheimer's disease is a progressive, organic brain disease which causes brain cells to die at a rate much more rapid than in the normal aging process. As the brain slowly dies and degenerates, other functions of the body dependent upon the brain's messages begin to deteriorate. The initial effects of the disease, such as forgetfulness and disorientation, are subtle, but the disease progresses through several stages where, increasingly, the disease victim is unable to perform normal daily functions or care for himself and, ultimately, loses the ability to control basic bodily functions and becomes bedridden. Alzheimer's disease is a disease of the elderly victims at two levels of the disease require inpatient care. Some victims develop psychiatric manifestations of the disease and short-term hospitalization or stabilization to enable the family caregiver to manage the patient still in the home setting. As victims reach the later stages of the disease, caregivers must consider institutional placement in a setting where there is a 24-hour-a-day care, seven days a week. In these later stages, the patients require total care which usually cannot be managed on a full-time basis at home, particularly by persons without significant resources. The primary caregiver of Alzheimer's disease patients is an older spouse, but in some instances it may. be an adult child. Ideally, inpatient programs for Alzheimer's disease victims would be designed with a continuum of care to minimize frequent changes in the victim's environment. In other words, the Alzheimer's care program would offer a range of care for patients who move through the various stages of Alzheimer's disease, from ambulatory to bed bound. Day care is an important component of the continuum development of Alzheimer's components for day-care programs in of care in an Alzheimer's program, because it offers rest to the family by placing the victim in a special care facility for a full day. The State of Florida allocated resources for the 1985 legislative session. Sophisticated, high-tech nursing care is required for patients in the later stages of the disease who have lost the ability to swallow, feed themselves, and perform other necessary/ bodily functions. Providing care from day care through high-tech care in the same facility minimizes frequent relocation of the Alzheimer's patient and facilitates the family coming to terms with the final outcome of the disease, where the family must relinquish total care to an institution. Alzheimer's disease victims in the middle and late stages of the disease who are still ambulatory exhibit the tendency to wander aimlessly. Nursing home care for such victims must provide a safe and secure environment in which the Alzheimer's patients may wander without endangering themselves or others. Otherwise, these patients will wander away from the facility and get lost or wander into dangerous traffic situations. Alzheimer's victims often disrupt the routine of non- Alzheimer's patients and the staff of the facilities by their constant wandering and by entering other patients' rooms and going through other patients' belongings. Special Alzheimer's units expect this behavior and make provisions to control it without physical or chemical constraint. In state-of-the-art Alzheimer's care, the physical nature of the decor and design of a nursing home appropriate for Alzheimer's care ideally would provide a safe and secure environment for the wandering, unstable Alzheimer's victim and provide a pleasant, therapeutic environment which copes with the patient's lost ability to synthesize data. Fixtures in the nursing home would be appropriately designed to enable the Alzheimer's patient to distinguish between significant fixtures, such as commodes, sinks, and wastebaskets. Ideally, activity areas for Alzheimer's patients would be separate from other nursing home patients, because of the Alzheimer's patient's disruptive wandering, absence of inhibitions and short attention spans which require a variety of activities and programs to accommodate. The staff of an Alzheimer's care program must be able to deal with the Alzheimer's patient. The staff will seldom see any improvement in the condition of the patient and will seldom get any positive feedback from the patient. Staffing patterns in Alzheimer's programs need to be more intense than average because the staff must deal with patients who have lost the ability to care for themselves. There is a need for closer supervision than is needed by the typical nursing home patient. Such a program also requires a social worker to develop the individual treatment plan for the patient and an occupational therapist to teach the patients those functions which the patients are continually losing. An Alzheimer's program within an adult congregate living facility is within the continuum of care required for some patients. The care provided here is less intense than that provided in a nursing home. However, once the victim loses basic bodily functions and begins wandering, the adult congregate living facility is no longer able to deal with these patients. Adult congregate living facilities and boarding homes in Hillsborough which accept Alzheimer's victims are frequently required to discharge such victims when the care becomes too difficult. In Hillsborough County, there are no nursing homes which provide state-of-the-art inpatient care designed for the care and treatment of Alzheimer's disease patients. Although there are two adult congregate living facilities in Hillsborough County which accept Alzheimer's disease patients, these facilities do not have safeguards for the wandering patient. Nursing homes traditionally deal with wandering Alzheimer's patients by physically restraining the patients or by chemically restraining the patients through the use of drugs. A state-of-the-art program designed to meet the special needs of Alzheimer's disease victims eliminates or reduces the need for physical and chemical restraints. HCR intends to offer a service, from day care through inpatient nursing care, that is designed for the needs of the typical Alzheimer's patient. In addition to the Alzheimer's patient, many patients not diagnosed as Alzheimer's disease victims but who are cognitively impaired (suffering from dementia) would also benefit from the service designed for the Alzheimer's patient. The adult day-care portion of the facility will allow the Alzheimer's victim to remain at home much of the day but allow the family and the well spouse to have time to provide for their own personal needs. The assisted living (adult congregate living) portion of the facility would be available for Alzheimer's victims not requiring advanced nursing care and would be available as a facility where the well spouse and the Alzheimer's victim could live together and both benefit from support services. The nursing home portion of the facility would offer special designs and programs to meet the needs of a maximum of 15 Alzheimer's patient in the middle stages, where wandering is a particular problem, as well as the needs of patients in the latter stages and death. The care available for the Alzheimer's disease victim in the latter stages of the disease (high-tech care) will also be available and appropriate for patients discharged from acute care hospitals who still need nursing care prior to returning home. The level of staffing provided in the HCR facility is higher than one would expect to find in the typical nursing home. The staffing proposed assumes that 15 of the patients will be Alzheimer's wanderers. HCR proposes a staffing higher than the typical nursing home because of the personal attention required for state-of-the-art Alzheimer's patient care and HCR's intent to reduce the amount of medication and physical restraint imposed upon the Alzheimer's patient. Increased staffing will encourage the Alzheimer's patient to retain whatever cognitive capabilities they have for as long as possible and will reduce the disruption experienced in a normal nursing home when the Alzheimer's disease patients wander, disrupt other patients, and generally disrupt the nursing home. The HCR facility will provide an area for wandering patients and a fenced courtyard which will allow wandering patients to have outside activity without danger of leaving the facility. The facility includes a therapeutic kitchen important to the Alzheimer's patient who retains some cognitive recognition of kitchen activities. A separate dining room for the Alzheimer's patient will be provided in order to accommodate the increased spillage experienced by Alzheimer's patient and the risk of incontinence, which is very disruptive and disturbing to non-Alzheimer's patients. wandering patients will be continuously monitored through the use of an electronic wristband which will prevent the patient from wandering outside of the facility and those areas where the wandering patient could cause problems. Dementia patients are now being cared for and treated in existing nursing homes in Hillsborough County. There was no persuasive evidence that patients have been denied access to nursing home beds in Hillsborough County. The features proposed in HCR's supplemental application would allow HCR to provide better quality care and treatment for those patients. However, HCR has only committed to treat up to 15 Alzheimer's patients in the "wandering" stage. That degree of commitment and the extent to which those special features for the care and treatment of dementia patients are needed would not themselves justify the proposed project absent an overall need for additional nursing home beds. HCR is in the process of purchasing four existing. nursing homes from Care Corporation. HCR did not prove that it has studied whether renovation of those facilities to accommodate special features for the care and treatment of Alzheimer's patients would not be less costly, more efficient or more appropriate alternatives to this proposed project or that they are not practicable. The project proposed in HCR's supplemental application is immediately and long-term financially feasible. HCR is a subsidiary of Owens-Illinois. On December 31, 1985, Owens- Illinois had total assets of approximately $3.3 billion, total current assets of approximately $903 million, and cash of approximately $47 million. Meanwhile, current liabilities were approximately $723 million and total shareholders' equity was approximately $1,559,000,000. In addition, HCR proved that it would be able to finance the approximately $2.2 million total project costs by borrowing 75% at favorable interest rates and funding the remaining 25% out of HCR's equity. Making reasonable, conservative assumptions--including an 11.5% interest rate, a January 1989 opening of the facility, and 40% Medicaid utilization on a patient day basis--the project can be anticipated to break even during year two of operation and earn approximately $158,000 during year two of operations. The nursing home portion of the facility and the day- care element adjacent to the nursing home portion will comprise 25,000 square feet; the nursing home portion alone will contain 23,000 gross square feet, or 383 gross square feet per bed. The construction costs for the nursing home and day-care portion of the facility will be $1,458,000, or $58.32 per square foot for the 25,000 square foot area; the cost of construction for the 23,000 gross square foot for the nursing home portion is $1,341,360. The cost per bed for construction of the nursing home portion of the facility is $22,356. The total project costs for the facility estimated by HCR and the cost per bed of the facility includes both the nursing home and adult day-care portion of the facility; when the adult day-care portion of the facility (8 percent of the construction costs) is taken into consideration, the total project cost becomes $2,083.360, at a cost per bed of $34,722. The estimated project cost for the nursing home portion of HCR's proposed facility is as follows: Feasibility studies $15,000; legal and accounting fees $32,000; plan review $8,000; subtotal of project development costs (the foregoing three items) $55,000; costs for financing $120,000; architectural and engineering fees $15,000; site survey and soil investigation $5,000; subtotal of the foregoing professional services $20,000; construction costs $1,458,000 (which includes the day-care portion of the facility but would be reduced to $1,341,360 for the nursing home portion alone); equipment costs $222,000; land acquisition costs $200,000; interest during construction $125,000; total project costs $2,200,000 ($2,083,360 when the adult day-care portion of the facility is excluded). All 60 of the nursing home beds in HCR's proposed facility will be certified both for Medicare and Medicaid utilization. However, in its supplemental application, HCR limits its commitment to serve Medicaid patients to 40% of its patient days. The increased cost of special features for Alzheimer's patients influenced HCR's financial decision not to commit to a higher percentage of Medicaid utilization. HCR has received approximately 13 certificates of need to develop nursing homes in Florida. HCR has completed three nursing homes, and HCR has seven projects under construction. Various difficulties prevented HCR from initiating construction of three projects for which it received certificates of need in 1981 and 1982. HCR has experienced no problems in initiating construction of its certificates of need obtained since that time, and its experience in Florida renders it unlikely that its previous failure to commence construction of facilities will reoccur. HCR acknowledges that it has previously sold and does not now operate nursing homes for which it had obtained certificates of need in Florida. However, these sales were facilities in the same building as the nursing home. A dietician and central kitchen and central laundry will serve all three levels. Housekeeping, building supervision, building plant, and other building maintenance operations will be centralized, saving some expenses. The Forum Proposal. Forum Group, Inc., sponsor of Retirement Living of Hillsborough County (Forum), Petitioner in Case No. 85-3376, is a general partner in a Florida partnership named Retirement Living of Hillsborough County. Forum originally applied for and continues to apply for a certificate of need to construct and operate a 60-bed nursing home. Like the project proposed in HCR's supplemental application, Forums proposal includes aspects in addition to the nursing home. Forum's proposed nursing home would be connected to a 15-bed wing of private rooms for patients who need assistance in their personal care and access to some of the capabilities of a nursing home on an intermittent basis but do not need nursing home care full-time. This is-bed wing would have separate dining facilities. This "personal care unit" will cost patients approximately $40 to $60 a day. In Forum's proposed nursing home, three wings, like the "personal care unit," would radiate from a hub where the nursing station would be located. Twenty of the sixty beds would be in private rooms occupied by private patients. Ten of those beds would be designated for skilled nursing care and ten for intermediate care. Of the 40 beds located in 20 semi-private rooms, 36 would be certified for Medicaid use, leaving 4 to be certified for Medicare use. Eighteen of the 40 beds would be for intermediate care, and 22 of the 40 beds would be for skilled nursing care. Forum's skilled nursing care would include "hi- tech" skilled nursing comparable to HCR's. A central corridor with central kitchen facilities and building maintenance facilities connects the three nursing home wings and the personal care unit wing with a retirement living center. The retirement living center will be able to accommodate 120 residents. Residents will be under a one year lease arrangement instead of an endowment-type arrangement. Monthly lease payments will probably fall between $950 and $1700 per month. The rental includes one meal a day in the retirement living center's dining room, weekly house cleaning, 24-hour security, transportation by automobile to appointments, banks, and doctor's offices and by mini-bus to shopping and theatres, availability of an on-call nurse, utilities, taxes, and the. services of a social director. The retirement living center will be marketed as a luxury facility to elderly persons approximately 75 years of age with an annual income of between $15,000 and $35,000. Forum projects initial utilization of all 36 Medicaid certified beds by Medicaid patients, resulting in 60% Medicaid utilization by patient day. However, that percentage would change with time. At first, residents of the retirement living apartments would not be expected to move immediately to the nursing home portion of the facility. The projected fill-up for the nursing home portion initially would not be derived from the initial fill-up of the retirement living apartments. Eventually, however, 10 to 15% of the residents of the retirement living apartments would require nursing home care, and approximately 50% of the patients in the nursing home will be, former residents of the retirement living section. In 10 to 12 years, the percentage of Medicaid utilization can be expected to drop, with a floor of approximately 45% Medicaid utilization by patient day. Like HCR's proposed project, Forum's proposal will benefit financially to some extent from the location of other facilities in the same building as the nursing home. A dietician and central kitchen and central laundry will serve all three levels. Housekeeping, building supervision, building plant, and other building maintenance operations will be centralized, saving some expenses. Like HCR, but probably not to the same extent, Forum would be able to benefit financially to some extent from the economies of scale of having a network of similar facilities (including approximately 11 facilities like the proposed project and approximately 20 free-standing nursing homes.) Location of the retirement center and the personal care unit in the same building with the nursing home will afford Forum some advantages in caring for its nursing home patients. First, some of the patients can be expected to use two or all three of the levels of care available in the complex as their medical condition worsens or, in some cases, improves. This would aid in the continuity of Forum's care and reduce the emotional strain of changing levels of care (since the patients do not have to move to a totally new location and environment.) Second, to the extent nursing home patients continue to have an independent means to pay to reside in the retirement living center or the personal care unit, those patients will have an incentive to improve their health so as to be able to move back to the retirement living center or personal care unit from the nursing home unit. (Obviously, these benefits would not apply to Medicaid patients in the nursing home.) Third, general education in health and hygiene of persons residing in the retirement living center and personal care unit will help to some degree in keeping them out of the nursing home or aiding their recovery if in the nursing home for short-term care. Like HCR, Forum also has the ability to provide quality nursing home care. However, Forum's proposal does not have the special features for care of Alzheimer's disease and other dementia patients proposed by HCR in its supplemental application. While some of those state-of-the-art special features could be incorporated by Forum during construction of its proposed nursing home, others could not, and Forum does not have the overall emphasis or commitment to provide those special features that HCR does. The total cost of Forum's nursing home proposal is approximately $2,200,000. This includes no interest cost during construction since Forum has decided to, and has the financial ability to, pay for the construction entirely out of its cash reserves. Forum has approximately $40,272,000 in cash assets. It has approximately $69,210,000 worth of current assets and only approximately $23,192,000 worth of current liabilities. Its total assets are approximately $290,747,000 and it has approximately $151,155,000 worth of common shareholders' equity. Its net income for the fiscal year ending March 31, 1986, was approximately $15,012,000. As a result, Forum's nursing home proposal is immediately financially feasible. Making reasonable, conservative assumptions including 13% interest on borrowed capital, late 1987 or early 1988 occupancy and 60% Medicaid utilization by patient day, Forum's nursing home proposal probably will break even in mid-year two and will earn approximately S69,000 net income in year two of operations. The following are Forum's final project development costs: feasibility studies $20,000, legal and accounting fees $30,000, development expenses $10,000, subtotal of the foregoing three categories $60,000; architectural and engineering fees $70,000, site survey and soil investigation $15,000, for a total cost for professional services total of $85,000; site preparation work $40,000, construction costs of $1,345,598, and contingency fees of $45,661, for a total construction cost of $1,390,258; fixed equipment cost of $65,998, moveable equipment cost of $128,850, tax-freight contingency and escalation provisions of $44,160 for a subtotal of equipment costs of $239,000; land acquisition of costs of $400,000, no interest costs during construction, pre-opening expenses' of $25,000, and, finally, a total project cost of $2,199,258. The expected construction cost per bed comes to approximately $23,171, and the total cost per bed comes-to approximately $36,165. HRS Rule Need Methodology. Rule 10-5.11(21)(b), Florida Administrative Code, provides the HRS bed need rule methodology for determining projected need for new or additional community nursing home beds. The methodology provided in Rule 10-5.11(21) is as follows: Departmental Goal. The Department will consider applications for community nursing home beds in context with applicable statutory and rule criteria. The Department will not normally approve applications for new or additional community nursing home beds in any departmental service district if approval of an application would cause the number of community nursing home beds in that departmental service district to exceed the number of community nursing home beds calculated by the methodology described in subsections (21)(b), (c), (d), (e), (f), (g), and (h) of this rule. Need Methodology. In addition to other relevant statutory and rule criteria to be used in considering the allocation of new or additional community nursing home beds, the Department will determine if there is a projected need for new or additional beds three years into the future according to the methodology specified under subparagraphs 1 through 10. This methodology provides for adjustments to current community nursing home bed rates based upon expected changes in the proportion of district residents age 75 + and the current utilization of community nursing home beds in the subdistricts designated by local health councils. In districts with a high proportion of elderly residents living in poverty, the methodology specifies a minimum bed rate. A = (POPA X BA) + (POPB X BB ): Where: A is the district's age-adjusted Number of community nursing home beds for the review cycle for which a projection is being made. POPA is the population age 65-74 years in relevant departmental district projected three years into the future. BA is the estimated current bed rate for the population age 65-74 years and over in the relevant district. BB is the estimated current bed rate for the population age 75 years and over in the relevant district. BA=LB/POPC + (6 X POPD): Where: LB is the number of licensed community nursing home beds in the relevant district. POPC is the current population age 65-74 years. POPD is the current population age 75 years and over. BB = 6 X BA SAA X (LBD/LB) X (OR/.90): Where: SA is the preliminary subdistrict allocation of community nursing home beds. LBD is the number of licensed community Nursing beds in the relevant subdistrict. Or is the average occupancy rate for all licensed community nursing homes within the subdistrict of the relevant district. Review of applications submitted for the July batching cycle shall be based upon occupancy rate data for the months of October through March preceding that cycle; applications submitted for the January batching cycle shall be based upon occupancy rate data for the months of April through September preceding that cycle. For the purposes of this rule, the occupancy data to be considered shall be that collected by the Department's Office of Healthcare Planning and Development or a contractor assigned to collect the data. In departmental districts where the percentage of persons age 65 and older living in poverty, according to the latest available U.S. census, exceeds the statewide average poverty rate for the 65 and older population and the sum of the currently licensed and certificate of need approved beds for community nursing homes within a district is less than 27 beds per thousand residents age 65 and older, the district shall be allocated a total of 27 community nursing home beds per thousand residents age 65 and older in the current year. This allocation is expressed as follows: If (Ls + AB ) /POPE is less than 27/1000 and PBD is greater than PBS, then: PA(27 X POPE)/1000 Where: AB is the number of certificate of need approved beds for community nursing homes in the relevant district. PBD is the percentage of persons age 65 and older below the poverty level within the district. PBS is the percent of persons age 65 and older below the poverty level within the state. PA is the poverty-adjusted number of beds in the relevant district. POPE is the sum of POPC and POPD. * * * 9. The net bed allocation for a sub-district which is the number of beds available for Certificate of Need approval, is determined by subtracting the total number of licensed and 90% of the approved beds within the relevant departmental subdistrict from the bed allocation determined under subparagraphs 1 through 9 unless the subdistrict's average estimated occupancy rate for the most recent six months is less than 80%, in which case the net bed allocation is zero. Prior to August 20, 1985, HRS had a long-standing policy interpreting the methodology as requiring use of population and occupancy rate at the time of the formal administrative hearing, if any, as the current population (POPC and POPD) and occupancy rate (OR) in the formula. HRS also subtracted the number of nursing home beds licensed and approved as of the date of the formal administrative hearing, if any, from the gross number of nursing home beds needed to determine the net need for nursing home beds proposed in a pending certificate of need application. Since the decision in Gulf Court Nursing Center vs. Department of Health and Rehabilitative Services, 483 So. 2d 700 (Fla. 1st DCA 1985), modified on rehearing (Fla. 1st DCA 1986), HRS adopted a new policy interpreting its rule methodology and the Gulf Court decision. HRS now interprets Gulf Court's reference to a "fixed pool of beds.' available in a given certificate of need application batching cycle to fix the health planning horizon in the rule methodology at three years into the future from the filing deadline for the certificate of need application batching cycle in question. Accordingly, POPA and POPB under the rule methodology represents the most current projection of population in the respective age cohorts on the fixed planning horizon. As before the Gulf Court decision, all other elements of the methodology including the figures for POPC, POPD, and OR are updated to the time of the formal administrative proceeding. Under its policy interpreting the rule methodology and the Gulf Court decision, HRS obtains the subdistrict occupancy rate (OR), by taking the average occupancy rate during the most recent six-month period for which data is available--in this case, from October 1, 1985 through March 31, 1986. However, the current population figures (POPC and POPD) HRS uses are the figures available closest to the date of the formal administrative hearing in this case on July 1, 1986. Under its policy, the occupancy rate (OR) does not relate to the figures for current population (POPC and POPD) to which it logically should relate. HRS did not satisfactorily explain the rationality of its policy. Meanwhile, there was ample evidence supporting the rationality of using as POPC and POPD the population at the midpoint of the time period used force determining occupancy rate (OR). In this case, since occupancy rate (OR) is determined by averaging the occupancy rates during the period from October 1, 1985 through March 31, 1986, the current population (POPC and POPD) should be the populations of the respective age cohorts on January 1, 1986. Otherwise, HRS' policy interpreting its rule methodology and the Gulf Court decision is a rational effort to reconcile the Gulf Court decision with the certificate of need statute, other conflicting court decisions and principles of sound health planning. It suffices here to say that, notwithstanding the Gulf Court decision, the evidence in this case does not establish the existence of a "fixed pool" of needed nursing home beds for which the applicants in this case applied. See Conclusions of Law 1 through 13 below. In addition, sound health planning not only dictates the use of the most recently available population projections (POPA and POPB) and the most current data (POPC, POPD, and OR) for determining current bed rates (BA and BB) under the rule methodology, but also would counsel against relying on state or district health plan determinations of a "fixed pool of beds" based upon inferior data and evidence. Departure from these sound health planning principles is likely to result in certificates of need for nursing home beds that are not needed or, in some cases, the denial of certificates of need for nursing home beds that are needed. See Appendix, paragraph B.4, below. For purposes of calculating need under the HRS rule need methodology, the appropriate health planning district is District VI, and the appropriate subdistrict is Hillsborough County. There currently are 5,617 licensed nursing home beds in District VI (LB). The District VI population for persons aged 65 to 74 on January 1, 1986 (POPC) is 131,501. The District VI population for persons aged over 75 for January 1, 1986 (POPD) is 91,433. The bed rate for the portion of the current population aged 65 to 74 (BA) is 0.008259. The bed rate for the portion of the current population aged over 75 (Bs) is 0.049554. The projected District VI population for persons aged 65 to 74 on January 1, 1988 (POPA) is 139,903. The projected District VI population for persons aged over 75 on January 1, 1988 (POPD) is 100,175. Using the bed rates for the two age cohorts (BA and BB) and the projected populations for those age cohorts on January 1, 1988 (POPA and POPB), the gross projected District VI nursing home bed need for January 1, 1988 (A) is 6,119.6. The occupancy rate for District VI nursing home beds between October 1, 1985 and March 31, 1986 (OR) was 93.3646%. This was the most current figure available at the time of the hearing. At the time of the formal administrative hearing, there were 2,512 licensed beds in Hillsborough County (LBD). At the time of the formal administrative hearing, there were 368 approved nursing home beds for the Hillsborough County subdistrict (AB). Using the figures for projected District VI bed need (A), licensed beds in District VI (LB), licensed beds for the Hillsborough County subdistrict (LBD) and the occupancy rate (OR), the allocation of nursing home beds for the Hillsborough County subdistrict (SA), is 2,839. The beds that will be available in Hillsborough County on January 1, 1988, is 2,843 (LBD plus .9 AB), leaving a surplus of 4 nursing home beds in Hillsborough County on January 1, 1988 under the HRS rule need methodology, as properly interpreted. In District VI, the percentage of persons aged 65 and older living in poverty, according to the latest available. U.S. census, exceeds the statewide average poverty rate for the 65 and older population, but the sum of the currently licensed and certificate of need approved beds for community nursing homes within District VI is approximately equal to 27 beds per thousand persons aged 65 and older, and no poverty adjustment is required under Rule 10-5.11(21)(b)5., Florida Administrative Code. State Health Plan. The State Health Plan endorses the concept of an integrated continuum of long-term care services. Forum's proposal integrates retirement living with minimal skilled nursing care needs, skilled and intermediate nursing care in a nursing home setting, and personal assistance care a middle ground between the two. Similarly, HCR's proposal integrates (1) adult congregate living with minimal requirement for skilled nursing care to limited nursing care provided to an Alzheimer's patient being primarily cared for by a spouse, and (2) skilled and intermediate nursing care in a nursing home setting, and (3) a range of specialized nursing services for the Alzheimer's patient in the second and third stages of the disease. The HCR proposal also integrates day care and respite services for Alzheimer's patients being cared for primarily for by relatives in their own homes. Addressing a related concern, the State Health Plan also endorses pre-admission screening to determine the level of care needed by a potential nursing home patient. This serves to foster a system of health care that seeks to promote "wellness" and independence of the patient. Both applicants will have some type of pre-admission screening process. Both applicants' proposals include on-site non-nursing home living facilities, and a decision would have to be made which of those two environments are appropriate for a particular patient. Forum also has personal assistance care which would require more precise screening, and Forum appeared more intent on establishing effective pre-admission screening procedures and cooperating with the state-sponsored CARES (Comprehensive Assessment and Review for Extended services) program aimed at diverting potential patients who do not truly need nursing home services. Both proposals also seek to promote "wellness" and independence of the patient. Both include less restrictive settings than nursing home care for patients who do not yet need full-time nursing services. For some patients, the less restrictive setting can serve as an incentive to recover from illnesses and shorten short-term nursing home stays. Again, Forum's proposal, with its three levels of care and more attractive retirement living setting, better fosters these objectives. Finally, the State Health Plan highlights the elderly's need for information on providers' charge structures and acceptance of Medicaid/Medicare assignment. It expresses a goal of availability of services to the medically indigent, and recommends adherence to the applicable local health plan's expectations. See Finding Of Fact 61 below. District VI Health Plan. As its second priority, the District VI Health Plan states that applicants for a certificate of need for nursing home services in the Northwest subdivision of the Hillsborough County subdistrict should commit, at minimum, 18.6% of its services to the care of Medicaid eligible patients. Forum's application commits 60% of its patient days to Medicaid during the first year of operation. HCR's commitment is only 40%. However, HCR's commitment is on a permanent basis, and Forum's actual Medicaid utilization can be expected to drop over the first ten years of operation with a floor of approximately 45%. The actual percentage of Medicaid days for the period January to March 1986, for Hillsborough County was 70%. The District VI Health Plan also ranks the Northwest subdivision of the Hillsborough County subdistrict as the first priority for location of new or additional nursing home services when needed in District VI. Both applicants propose to locate their projects in the Northwest subdivision of the Hillsborough County subdistrict. Another priority in the District VI Health Plan is to give preference to applicants with a documented history of implementing their certificates of need within the statutory time frames. Forum had no history in Florida but a good record of follow-through elsewhere. HCR has a history of mixed results in Florida but offered good explanations for the instances of delay in implementing certain certificates of need in earlier years, and the evidence was not persuasive that either Forum or HCR should be given a competitive advantage regarding this priority. The District VI Health Plan sets a 90% occupancy threshold for the continuous period of six months before additional beds are approved. This threshold has been met in Hillsborough County for at least three years. Current occupancy in Hillsborough County is 93.3646%. The District VI Health Plan states that applications for additional nursing home beds in a subdistrict should be considered against the availability of alternative forms and settings for long-term care. In this case, there was no evidence of alternatives to nursing home services other than the alternatives within the proposed projects. However, neither of the applicants will go forward with the retirement living or personal assistance care or adult congregate living alternatives without the attached nursing home. No specialized state-of-the- art Alzheimer's disease programs are now available in District VI. See Finding Of Fact 71 below. The District VI Health Plan states that applications should be reviewed with the goal that nursing home services be within 30 minutes travel time of 90% of urban residence and 45 minutes of 90% of rural residents. There was no evidence in this case regarding geographic access of the urban and rural populations or that the proposed projects would make Finally, the District VI Health Plan states that applicants should be evaluated as to their achievement of superior quality ratings by HRS and other indications of quality as available. Both applicants adequately establish that they will be able to provide quality nursing home services. It can be anticipated that both will seek and obtain a superior rating for its proposed facility. Other Pertinent Criteria. Both applicants propose projects which will be accessible to schools for health professions in Hillsborough County, such as colleges and trade schools for training and teaching purposes. In addition to its Medicaid utilization commitment previously discussed. Forum will establish a $10,000 fund, to be replenished annually, for indigent patients to draw upon as necessary for payment of nursing home services. This fund is intended to address, for example, the circumstance that could arise if a private pay nursing home patient runs out of money and all 36 Medicaid-certified nursing home beds are occupied. Unless the fund pays for the patient, the patient would have to be transferred to another nursing home. However, Forum does not yet nursing home services accessible to residents now outside the applicable travel time have any guidelines or criteria for the operation of the fund. Both Forum and HCR propose facilities to provide nursing home services. Neither applicant seeks to justify the need for its proposed nursing home on need for services that can be provided other than through a nursing home. No applicant in this batching cycle seeks to add beds as an alternative to new construction. Existing nursing home beds are alternatives to the proposals only if there is no need for additional nursing home beds. There is no existing alternative to the special Alzheimer's program proposed by HCR. Existing nursing homes serve Alzheimer's patients but not with state-of-the-art nursing home care. However, renovation of facilities HCR is in the process of purchasing from Care Corporation to accommodate special features for the treatment of Alzheimer's patients might be an alternative to the construction of a new nursing home for the purpose of providing those services. HCR did not prove that it has studied those alternatives and found either that they would not be less costly, more efficient or more appropriate or that they would not be practicable. Both HCR and Forum, through their network of retirement centers and nursing homes, generate economies of scale in centralized operations and management functions and in acquisition of equipment. As a larger nursing home company, HCR's economies of scale would be greater than Forum's. In addition, by combining different levels of care on one campus, both applicants can enjoy further economies in dietary, laundry, medical supply and bookkeeping operations. Both HCR and Forum can adequately meet manpower requirements for their proposed facilities with a combination of in-house transfers and recruiting from the local community. There was no evidence that approval of a new 60-bed nursing home facility in Hillsborough County would have a significant negative impact on the financial viability of existing nursing homes. Current occupancy rates are high, reducing patients' choice in the selection of a nursing home. The last 240 nursing home beds opened to patients in Hillsborough County quickly were absorbed by the demand for those services. Neither HCR nor Forum now own or operate a nursing home in the Tampa Bay area. However, HCR is in the process of acquiring four nursing homes from Care Corporation. As a result, HCR would have more control over the market than Forum and would have the potential eventually to use its market power to decrease competition. But at this time, it can be anticipated that either proposal would foster competition and promote quality assurance and effectiveness. Balanced Consideration of the Criteria. HCR and Forum are worthy applicants who have conceived and proposed nursing home projects worthy of consideration. However, balancing consideration of all of the criteria, and giving due weight to the HRS rule need methodology, it is found that there is no need at this time for a new 60-bed nursing home in Hillsborough County. There is no numeric need under the rule, and no special circumstances were proved by documentation of denied access to currently licensed but unoccupied beds or of need exceeding the number of licensed unoccupied and currently approved nursing home beds. Meanwhile, the special Alzheimer's program HCR proposes does not independently support construction of a new 60-bed nursing home. Renovation of the four nursing homes HCR is in the process of purchasing from Care Corporation might be a less costly, more efficient and more appropriate alternative to construction of a new 60-bed nursing home to provide special Alzheimer's programs in Hillsborough County. However, if there were a need for 60 additional nursing home beds, HCR's Alzheimer's program would be enough to give it a competitive advantage over Forum's proposal.

Recommendation Based upon the foregoing Findings Of Fact and Conclusions Of Law, it is recommended that Respondent, Department of Health and Rehabilitative Services, enter a final order denying the applications of both Health Care and Retirement Corporation of America, Petitioner in Case No. 85-3217, CON Action No. 3818, and Forum Group, Inc., Petitioner in Case No. 85-3376, CON Action No. 3817, for a certificate of need to construct and operate a new 60-bed nursing home in Hillsborough County. RECOMMENDED this 3rd day of November, 1986, in Tallahassee, Florida. J. LAWRENCE JOHNSTON, Hearing Officer Division of Administrative Hearings The Oakland Building 2009 Apalachee Parkway Tallahassee, Florida 32301 (904) 488-9675 Filed with the Clerk of the Division of Administrative Hearings this 3rd day November, 1986.

Florida Laws (2) 120.57120.68
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WILLIAM CRANE GRAY INN, INC. vs. DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND REHABILITATIVE SERVICES, 85-002758 (1985)
Division of Administrative Hearings, Florida Number: 85-002758 Latest Update: Mar. 14, 1986

The Issue Whether Petitioner's application for a Certificate of Need ("CON") authorizing establishment of a 60-bed sheltered nursing home adjacent to a 75-unit life care residential facility in HRS Health District IX, Palm Beach County, Florida, should be granted (in whole or in part), or denied.

Findings Of Fact I. The Proposal Petitioner is a not-for-profit Florida corporation organized to provide retirement and nursing home services to aged Episcopalians in the three Episcopal Dioceses in Florida: Central, Southwest and Southeast. Since 1951, Petitioner has operated a life care facility or community, with adjacent nursing home, in Davenport, Florida. It has 71 residential (well-care) units and 60 nursing home beds, operates at nearly full capacity, and has a 3-to-5 year waiting list. There are 128 residents at the facility, 57 of whom live in the nursing home. Petitioner now seeks to replicate the (Davenport) Crane Gray Inn in Lake Worth, Palm Beach County, Florida, in order to better serve the needs of older Episcopalians. The life care community, consisting of a 60-bed skilled nursing home and a 75- unit retirement facility, would be convenient to the residents of the Southeast Florida diocese, but is expected to draw residents throughout Florida. The 60-bed skilled nursing home, for which a CON is required, would be a one-story building measuring 19,100 square feet. Initially estimated to cost $1,705,515, or $68.06 per square foot to construct and equip, actual bids subsequently received have reduced the expected cost to $60.00 per square foot. The total cost of the entire project, including the well- care and nursing-care facilities, is estimated to be $3,600,000. Petitioner intends to obtain certification of the entire project as a continuing care facility in accordance with Chapter 651, Florida Statutes. In March, 1985, the State of Florida Department of Insurance and Treasurer issued Petitioner a provisional license to operate the proposed facility as a continuing care facility.2 Petitioner intends to comply with the reporting and escrow requirements which Chapter 651, Florida Statutes, imposes on life-care facilities. The admission requirements for the proposed life care facility are the same as those which have applied to the Davenport Crane Gray Inn ("Inn"). Before admission, a resident must execute a continuing care or "Resident's Agreement" with the Inn. Under that agreement, in exchange for the future maintenance and support of the resident at the Inn for the remainder of the applicant's life, the applicant transfers all of his or her real and personal property to the Inn. The resident also agrees to execute a will to the Inn to effectuate the transfer of property then owned or later acquired. No entrance fee is charged. The Inn promises to provide the resident with a personal living unit (including all utilities); three meals a day; health care (including medicine, physician fees, dental care, and hospitalization); recreational, educational, social and religious programs; funeral and burial costs; a monthly allowance for personal expenses; weekly maid service and laundry facilities; and transportation for shopping trips and other activities. Either party may terminate the agreement under specified conditions. On termination, the Inn will transfer back to the resident the property previously conveyed, or a sum equal to the value thereof, without interest and deducting therefrom an amount sufficient to compensate the Inn for the resident's care and support while at the Inn. If the resident becomes eligible for social security or government assistance, such assistance is paid to the Inn for the support of the resident. If the resident dies while at the Inn, all property transferred to the Inn on admission is considered to have been earned and becomes the property of the Inn. (Joint Exhibit I) There is no requirement that a prospective resident have any assets and applicants are ostensibly admitted without regard to their financial condition. (However, in the past ten years, only two Medicaid patients or indigent residents have been admitted to the Davenport Inn.) An account for each resident is maintained, to which earnings are transferred and costs of care deducted. Residents without assets are treated the same as those with assets and the account information is treated confidentially. Over time, the accounts of residents are depleted. Currently, 68% of the patients at the Davenport nursing home are Medicaid patients. The per diem rate reimbursed by Medicaid is $51.25. No resident has ever been transferred for lack of funds. However, the average resident, when admitted, transfers assets worth approximately $24,000 to the Inn. Prospective residents of the proposed nursing home will ordinarily come from the adjacent well-care retirement units. The purpose of the nursing home is to serve the individuals residing in the life care community who, as their needs intensify, require skilled nursing care. Only on rare occasions will an individual be admitted directly to the nursing home without first residing in the well-care portion of the life care community. At the Davenport Inn, this has happened only once. Petitioner acknowledges that prospective nursing home patients may come from eligible Episcopalians who reside in nursing homes in the local community. Actual residence in the well-care units will not be a prerequisite to admission to the nursing home. However, no person has been, or will be, admitted to the nursing home without first executing a continuing care agreement. Direct admission of nursing home patients from outside the life care center is permissible under "sheltered nursing home" rules, as construed by HRS officials. Robert E. Maryanski, Administrator of HRS' Community Medical Facilities Office of Health Planning and Development (which implements the CON licensing process) advised Petitioner's counsel on September 20, 1985, that under HRS rules, patients may--if necessary--be admitted directly to the proposed nursing home without first residing in the well-care units. Individuals who have paid for membership with the particular life care center, finding themselves in immediate need of nursing home care, may be directly admitted into the nursing home. (Petitioner's Ex. No. 11) If HRS rules were interpreted otherwise, perfunctory stops in well-care units "on the way to the nursing home" would be encouraged, a practice which would burden patients and serve no useful purpose. Although Petitioner's CON application does not specify a minimum age for admission to the life care community, Petitioner's life care centers are oriented toward members of the Episcopal Protestant Churches who are at an advanced age and "need a place to go for their last days... [In] a lot of cases they have outlived their own children." (TR-34) The average age of the patients in the Davenport nursing home is 89; in the well-care retirement units, 82. The average overall age of members of the Davenport life care community is 84 or 85. Approximately one-half of the residents eventually need nursing care. At Davenport, the minimal age for admission is 71. (TR- 12) According to a member of the Board of Directors of Petitioner, only patients 70 or over will be admitted to the life care community proposed for Palm Beach County. (TR-35) There is already a waiting list of ninety (90) qualified persons for the proposed life care community in Palm Beach County. Out of that figure, only five people currently require nursing home services. After executing the standard continuing care agreement, these five people would be admitted directly to the nursing home facility, without first residing in a well-care unit. Waiting lists are compiled six times a year, with the most recent completed only a week prior to hearing. Petitioner does not intend to utilize all the nursing home beds, since it must keep some beds open to meet the needs of well-care residents. Nursing home beds at the Palm Beach facility would be filled gradually, approximately two per week, so it would take six months to reach optimum capacity. The parties stipulate that all criteria for evaluating CON applications under Section 381.494(6)(c) and Rule 10-5.11, Florida Administrative Code, have been met or are inapplicable except for the following: The long-term financial feasibility of the project, the availability of operating capital, and the economic impact on other providers (Section 381.494(6) (c)8, 9, Fla. Stat.); The cost of construction (Section 381.494(6) (c)13, Fla. Stat.); The ratio of beds to residential units (Rule 10-5.11(22)(a), Fla. Admin. Code). II. Financial Feasibility The historical track record of the Davenport facility over the last 13 years and projections for the proposed facility demonstrate that the proposed nursing home is financially feasible and that Petitioner has, or can obtain sufficient funds to meet its operating costs. Moreover, as a licensed Chapter 651 life care facility, the financial viability of the entire operation will be monitored by the Department of Insurance. Assets available to support the costs of operating the life care community include income and assets derived from incoming residents; estates and bequests; and a fund of 1,300,000.00, functioning as an endowment, to be placed in escrow. The cost for a resident in the well-care units is approximately $27 per day; the cost in the nursing home is approximately $54 per day. Although there is a deficit of approximately $300 per month in the well-care section of the Davenport facility, there is no deficiency in the nursing home. Medicaid payments are sufficient to cover the costs of providing nursing care. Philanthropy should not be required to sustain the operation of the proposed nursing home. Petitioner has never had difficulty in obtaining financial support for its Davenport well-care units. More than one-half of the operating deficit for the well-care units was met by funds at work and did not depend on philanthropy. There are over 200 Episcopal Churches in the three Florida dioceses with 90-100,000 parishioners, who have been responsive to fund- raising efforts in the past. Last year, Petitioner raised $693,000 from fund raising drives. It is reasonably expected that this source of financial support will also be available to support the proposed life care facility, including the nursing home. An endowment fund of $1,300,000 is also available. These funds will be made available to support the proposed life care community. In addition, each new resident contributes an average of $24,000, which is used to defray operating costs. Barnett Bank will finance construction of the project at one-half percent over prime. Petitioner intends to pay off the capital debt in two or three years. The land has already been acquired and some land preparation costs have been paid. Petitioner has expended over $800,000, to date, on the proposed life care community. Petitioner has $120, 000 on hand for the project, in addition to escrowed reserves. An HRS health care planner has misgivings about the financial viability of the project since Petitioner has relied on philanthropy to support its Davenport facility, and would rely on it to some extent to support the proposed facility. However, Petitioner projects that 77% of the nursing home patients at the proposed facility will be Medicaid eligible. Due to efficiencies in operation, Medicaid payments should be sufficient to cover the costs of nursing home patients at the proposed facility, just as they have been at the Davenport nursing home. The various sources of funds available to Petitioner--proven wholly adequate in the past--should be sufficient to cover the other costs of operation and ensure the continued financial viability of the nursing home, as well as the associated well-care units. III. Cost of Construction HRS contends that the initial estimate of construction costs for the proposed nursing home ($68.00 per square foot) is excessive when compared to other 60-bed nursing facilities, where the cost is approximately $10.00 less per square foot. But, through various cost-cutting measures, the cost of the project has now been reduced to approximately $60.00 per square foot, which is reasonable and in line with the other nursing home projects. IV. Ratio of Nursing Rome Beds to Residential Units Rule 10-5.11(22)(a), Florida Administrative Code, provides that HRS "will not normally approve an application for new or additional sheltered nursing home beds if approved would result in the number of sheltered nursing home beds that exceed one for every four residential units in the life care facility." The parties stipulate that, absent unusual or exceptional circumstances, this rule would preclude approval of more than 19 of Petitioner's 60 proposed nursing home beds. The proposed nursing home, like the Davenport facility it duplicates, will be unique, unusual or extraordinary, when compared with other nursing homes in Florida, due to the advanced age of its patients. No one under 70 will be admitted. The average age of its patients is expected to approach 89 with the average age of well-care residents approaching 82. Approximately one-half of the well-care residents will eventually require transfer into the nursing home. People of advanced age are more likely to require nursing home care. Based on Petitioner's historical experience at its Davenport facility, it is likely that 60 nursing home beds will be required to meet the needs of residents of the proposed well- care units. It has been shown that the proposed 60 nursing beds will be needed to serve the needs of well-care residents as they age and their health care needs intensify. That has been the case at the Davenport facility, where rarely has a patient been admitted to the nursing home who did not first reside in the well-care units. The proposed nursing home and life care center will draw patients and residents similar to those drawn by the Davenport facility--the state-wide applicant "pool" of both is expected to be the same. For this reason, the proposed nursing home should have no significant impact on the census of, or need for, community nursing homes in Palm Beach County. It appears that the rationale behind the four-to-one (residential units to nursing home beds) ratio of the HRS rule is that, under normal or ordinary conditions, only one nursing home bed will be required to serve the residents of four well- care units. In the instant case, actual experience has shown this assumption to be patently erroneous. If only 19 nursing home beds were allowed Petitioner--because of the ratio cast in HRS rules--it is likely that many well-care residents at the proposed life care center would be forced to find nursing care outside of the center. Displaced, placed in nursing homes distant from the life care community, such patients would lose close contact with spouses and friends. The HRS rule, embracing a numerical ratio for the norm, allows flexibility in particular situations which are shown to be abnormal. The circumstances of the instant case show it to be an abnormal situation, fully justifying approval of 60-beds sought, rather than the 19 otherwise permitted by the HRS rule.

Recommendation Accordingly, based on the foregoing, it is RECOMMENDED: That Petitioner's application for a CON authorizing establishment of a 60-bed nursing home in Palm Beach County be GRANTED; and that the CON, on its face, state that issuance is predicated on Petitioner's statement of intent (during Section 120.57(1) licensing proceedings) that (i.) no one under 70 years of age will be admitted to the life care community (including both well-care and nursing-care sections) and (ii.) that, only in relatively rare and unusual cases, will patients be directly admitted to the nursing home without first residing in the well- care residential units of the life care communities.3 See, Section 381.494(8)(g), Florida Statutes (1985). DONE and ORDERED this 14th day of March, 1986, in Tallahassee, Florida. R. L. CALEEN, Hearing Officer Division of Administrative Hearings The Oakland Building 2009 Apalachee Parkway Tallahassee, Florida 32399 (904) 488-9675 Filed with the Clerk of the Division of Administrative Hearings this 14th day of March, 1986.

Florida Laws (2) 120.57651.022
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