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TIMOTHY ROBINSON vs DEPARTMENT OF CHILDREN AND FAMILY SERVICES, 97-001669 (1997)
Division of Administrative Hearings, Florida Filed:Miami, Florida Apr. 01, 1997 Number: 97-001669 Latest Update: Oct. 12, 1998

The Issue Whether the Respondent's certification under the Home and Community Based Services Medicaid Waiver Program should be suspended.

Findings Of Fact Based on the oral and documentary evidence presented at the final hearing and on the entire record of this proceeding, the following findings of fact are made: The Department of Children and Family Services is the state agency responsible for administering what is known as the Home and Community Based Services Medicaid Waiver Program ("Waiver Program") for the developmentally disabled. Chapter 393, Florida Statutes. The Department is specifically charged with the responsibility for establishing by rule procedures for carrying out the mandates of Sections 393.001-.501. Section 393.501(1), Florida Statutes. William L. "Timothy" Robinson is certified by the Department as a behavior analyst, which means he is qualified to "design[] and implement[] . . . behavioral programs for persons who are developmentally disabled." Section 393.165. Only persons who are certified behavior analysts may be certified to provide services to clients in the Waiver Program. As part of its procedure for certifying behavior analysts to provide services under the Waiver Program, the Department requires that applicants execute a contract consisting of several parts. Part III of the contract is entitled Assurances, and, by his or her signature, the applicant agrees to comply with state and federal laws, rules, and policies. On July 19, 1995, Mr. Robinson applied in his individual capacity for certification to provide behavior analyst services to clients in the Waiver Program administered in the Department's District 11. He signed Part III of the application, and, at some point after July 19, 1995, Mr. Robinson was certified to provide services to clients in the Waiver Program. Subsequently, Mr. Robinson incorporated his business, and, on November 18, 1996, as Executive Director of Behavior Management Training Systems, Inc., he again executed Part III of the application, which contains the same provisions as the document Mr. Robinson signed as an individual on July 19, 1995. On November 17, 1996, as part of the application process, Mr. Robinson executed on behalf of Behavior Management Training Systems, Inc., a document entitled "Agency for Health Care Administration, Electronic Claims Submission Agreement." Paragraph 8 of this document states that "[p]rovider shall abide by all Federal and State statutes, rules, regulations and manuals governing the Florida Medicaid Program and those conditions as set out in the Medical Assistance Provider Agreement entered into previously." Mr. Robinson was retained by several support coordinators5 to provide behavior analyst services to clients in the Waiver Program. He submitted his monthly invoices and reports to the support coordinators, who forwarded them to Unisys, the Department's billing agent, for payment. During the fall of 1996, Kirk Ryon, the Medicaid Waiver Coordinator for District 11, received complaints from at least one support coordinator alleging that Mr. Robinson's documentation was not adequate to support his invoices for services.6 On December 17, 1996, Mr. Robinson met with Mr. Ryon and several other individuals employed by the Department to discuss the complaints that had been made regarding Mr. Robinson's billing practices and the behavior analyst services he provided to clients paid both through the Waiver Program and through general revenue.7 During this meeting, Mr. Robinson was asked to provide backup documentation to support his invoices for services. On December 17, after the meeting, Mr. Ryon wrote a letter to Mr. Robinson following up on the discussion at the meeting and requesting backup documentation for services provided to ten clients, four of whom received services under the Waiver Program. The remaining six clients received services from Mr. Robinson that were paid from general revenue. Although Mr. Robinson may not have received the December 17 letter,8 he wrote a letter that he dated January 14, 1996, 9 to Dr. Michael Wesolowski, an employee of the Department who attended the December 17 meeting. Mr. Robinson sent with the letter to Dr. Wesolowski monthly reports for June, July, August, and September 1996 for Felicia's House, one of the facilities at which he provided behavioral analyst services. Mr. Robinson acknowledged in the January 14 letter that he sent these documents in response to the Department's request for backup documentation for his billings and that the Department's request was made in response to complaints received by the Department and discussed at the December 17 meeting. Dr. Wesolowski did not provide Mr. Ryon with a copy of this letter or the attached documentation.10 Mr. Robinson provided no other documentation to the Department prior to February 5, 1997, when Mr. Ryon notified Mr. Robinson that his certification to provide services under District 11's Waiver Program was suspended. After he requested a formal hearing to contest the allegations in the February 5 letter, Mr. Robinson provided the Department during the course of discovery all of the documents in his possession relating to the services provided to the four clients in the Waiver Program. These documents, together with the documents provided by Mr. Robinson to Dr. Wesolowski in January 1997, were provided to Mr. Ryon by the Department's counsel two days before the formal hearing in this case commenced. Mr. Ryon reconciled the documents with the invoices Mr. Robinson had submitted and found that the documentation provided did not support many of the units11 of service for which Mr. Robinson had been paid.

Recommendation Based on the foregoing Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law, it is RECOMMENDED that the certification of William L. "Timothy" Robinson to provide services under the Home and Community Based Services Medicaid Waiver Program be suspended until February 5, 1998, one (1) year from the effective date of his suspension on February 5, 1997. DONE AND ENTERED this 22nd day of January, 1998, in Tallahassee, Leon County, Florida. PATRICIA HART MALONO Administrative Law Judge Division of Administrative Hearings The DeSoto Building 1230 Apalachee Parkway Tallahassee, Florida 32399-3060 (850) 488-9675 SUNCOM 278-9675 Fax Filing (850) 921-6847 Filed with the Clerk of the Division of Administrative Hearings this 22nd day of January, 1998.

Florida Laws (5) 120.57393.501409.913812.03590.202
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AGENCY FOR HEALTH CARE ADMINISTRATION vs AMWILL ASSISTED LIVING, INC., 13-003377MPI (2013)
Division of Administrative Hearings, Florida Filed:Lauderdale Lakes, Florida Sep. 10, 2013 Number: 13-003377MPI Latest Update: Jan. 02, 2014

Findings Of Fact The PROVIDER received the Final Audit Report that gave notice of PROVIDER'S right to an administrative hearing regarding the alleged Medicaid overpayment. The PROVIDER filed a petition requesting an administrative hearing, and then caused that petition to be WITHDRAWN and the administrative hearing case to be CLOSED. PROVIDER chose not to dispute the facts set forth in the Final Audit Report dated August 15, 2013. The facts alleged in the FAR are hereby deemed admitted, including the total amount of $14,569.69, which includes a fine sanction of $2,419.26. The Agency hereby adopts the facts as set forth in the FAR including the amount of $14,569.69 which is now due and owing, from PROVIDER to the Agency.

Conclusions THIS CAUSE came before me for issuance of a Final Order on a Final Audit Report (“FAR”) dated August 15, 2013 (C.1. No. 13-1386-000). By the Final Audit Report, the Agency for Health Care Administration (“AHCA” or “Agency”), informed the Respondent, Amwill Assisted Living, Inc., (hereinafter “PROVIDER’), that the Agency was seeking to recover Medicaid overpayments in the amount of $12,096.28, and impose a fine sanction of $2,419.26 pursuant to Sections 409.913(15), (16), and (17), Florida Statutes, and Rule 59G- 9.070(7)(e), Florida Administrative Code, and costs of $54.15 for a total amount of $14,569.69. The Final Audit Report provided full disclosure and notice to the PROVIDER of procedures for requesting an administrative hearing to contest the alleged overpayment. The PROVIDER filed a petition with the Agency requesting a formal administrative hearing on or about September 5, 2013. The Agency forwarded PROVIDER'S hearing request to the Division of Administrative Hearings (Division) for a formal administrative hearing. The Division scheduled a formal hearing for November 22, 2013. On November 12, 2013, the PROVIDER filed a Motion with the Administrative Law Judge, requesting AHCA vs. Amwill Assisted Living, Inc. (AHCA C.I, No.: 13-1386-000) Final Order Page 1 of 4 Filed January 2, 2014 10:59 AM Division of Administrative Hearings withdrawal of their Petition for Formal Hearing, and the Administrative Law Judge issued an Order Closing File on November 12, 2013, relinquishing jurisdiction of the case to the Agency.

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AGENCY FOR HEALTH CARE ADMINISTRATION vs MARIO RUB, M.D., 13-000129MPI (2013)
Division of Administrative Hearings, Florida Filed:Miami, Florida Jan. 10, 2013 Number: 13-000129MPI Latest Update: May 08, 2013

Conclusions THE PARTIES resolved all disputed issues and executed a Settlement Agreement. The parties are directed to comply with the terms of the attached settlement agreement. Based on the foregoing, this file is CLOSED. DONE and ORDERED on this the" day of le , 2013, in Tallahassee, Leon County, Florida. ‘LM, fo: ABETH DUDEK, SECRETA “Agency for Health Care Administration 1 Filed May 8, 2013 11:26 AM Division of Administrative Hearings A PARTY WHO IS ADVERSELY AFFECTED BY THIS FINAL ORDER IS ENTITLED TO A JUDICIAL REVIEW WHICH SHALL BE INSTITUTED BY FILING ONE COPY OF A NOTICE OF APPEAL WITH THE AGENCY CLERK OF AHCA, AND A SECOND COPY ALONG WITH FILING FEE AS PRESCRIBED BY LAW, WITH THE DISTRICT COURT OF APPEAL IN THE APPELLATE DISTRICT WHERE THE AGENCY MAINTAINS ITS HEADQUARTERS OR WHERE A PARTY RESIDES. REVIEW PROCEEDINGS SHALL BE CONDUCTED IN ACCORDANCE WITH THE FLORIDA APPELLATE RULES. THE NOTICE OF APPEAL MUST BE FILED WITHIN 30 DAYS OF RENDITION OF THE ORDER TO BE REVIEWED. Copies furnished to: Mario Rub, M.D. Pediatric Pulmonologist 20776 W. Dixie Highway Aventura, Florida 33180 (Via U.S. Mail) Errol H. Powell Administrative Law Judge Division of Administrative Hearings The DeSoto Building 1230 Apalachee Parkway Tallahassee, Florida 32399-3060 Willis F. Melvin Assistant General Counsel Agency for Health Care Administration Office of the General Counsel (Via Electronic Mail) Ken Yon, Acting Bureau Chief, Medicaid Program Integrity Finance and Accounting Health Quality Assurance (via email) DOH (via email) License number ME69331 CERTIFICATE OF SERVICE I HEREBY CERTIFY that a true and correct copy of the foregoing has been furnished to the above named addressees by U.S. Mail, Laserfiche or electronic mail on this the 5 day of By » 2013. —) Richard Shoop, Esqu: Agency Clerk State of Florida Agency for Health Care Administration 2727 Mahan Drive, MS #3 Tallahassee, Florida 32308-5403 (850) 412-3630/FAX (850) 921-0158 ire STATE OF FLORIDA AGENCY FOR HEALTH CARE ADMINISTRATION STATE OF FLORIDA, AGENCY FOR HEALTH CARE ADMINISTRATION, Petitioner, vs. DOAH Case No.: 13-0129MPI AHCA CLI. No.: 12-1694-000 MARIO RUB, M.D., Respondent. / SETTLEMENT AGREEMENT STATE OF FLORIDA, AGENCY FOR HEALTH CARE ADMINISTRATION (“AHCA” or “the Agency”), and MARIO RUB, M.D. (“PROVIDER”), by and through the undersigned, hereby stipulates and agrees as follows: 1. This Agreement is entered into for the purpose of memorializing the final resolution of the matters set forth in this Agreement. 2. PROVIDER is a Medicaid provider (Medicaid Provider No. 256291000) and was a provider during the audit period, September 1, 2008 to February 28, 2011. 3. In its final audit report (FAR) dated November 13, 2012 for the case referenced as C.I. No. 12-1694-000, AHCA notified PROVIDER that review of Medicaid claims performed by Medicaid Program Integrity (MPI) indicated that, in its opinion, some claims in whole or in part had been inappropriately paid. The Agency sought recoupment of this overpayment in the amount of $14,039.92. In response to the FAR, PROVIDER filed a petition for a formal administrative hearing. It was assigned DOAH Case No. 13-0129MPI. 4. Subsequent to the original audit, and in preparation for trial, AHCA re-reviewed the PROVIDER’s claims and evaluated additional documentation submitted by the PROVIDER. As a result of the additional review, AHCA determined the overpayment should be adjusted to $5,752.06 plus $1,154.41 in fines and $1,659.66 in costs for a total due of $8,566.13. 5. In order to resolve this matter without further administrative proceedings, PROVIDER and the AHCA expressly agree as follows: (1) AHCA agrees to accept the payment set forth herein in settlement of the overpayment issues arising from the captioned audit. (2) The amount in dispute that is now being resolved is five thousand seven hundred fifty-two dollars and six cents ($5,752.06) on the indebtedness, one thousand one hundred fifty-four dollars and forty-one cents ($1,154.41) in fines, plus one thousand six hundred fifty-nine dollars and sixty-six cents ($1,659.66) in investigative costs for a total of eight thousand five hundred sixty-six dollars and thirteen cents ($8,566.13). PROVIDER will make an initial payment of one thousand seven hundred thirteen dollars and twenty-three cents ($1,713.23) followed by eleven (11) monthly payments of six hundred two dollars and forty- eight cents ($602.48) and one final payment of six hundred two dollars and forty- six cents ($602.46). The first payment will be due beginning thirty (30) days after the Final Order date. This amount due will be offset by any amount already received by the Agency in this matter. Furthermore, PROVIDER is advised that pursuant to Section 409.913, Florida Statutes, failure to pay in full, or enter into and abide by the terms of any repayment schedule set forth by the Agency may result in termination from the Medicaid program, withholding of future Medicaid payments, or other such remedies as provided by law. Any outstanding balance accrues at 10% interest per year. Full payment will fully and completely settle all claims in these proceedings before the Division of Administrative Hearings (DOAH Case No. 13-0129MPI). Should the provider’s enrollment with Medicaid be terminated, the full amount owed will be due within 30 days of termination. (3) In the event any interim payments are received or withheld, by whatever means, prior to the entry of the Final Order, Medicaid Accounts Receivable shall make the adjustment to credit such amounts, dollar for dollar, as quickly as is practicable. (4) Compliance with this repayment agreement fully and completely settles all claims in these proceedings before the Division of Administrative Hearings (DOAH Case No. 13-0129MPI). Should the provider’s enrollment with Medicaid be terminated, the full amount owed will be due within 30 days of termination. (5) PROVIDER and AHCA agree that full payment, as set forth above, resolves and settles this case completely. It will release both parties from any administrative or civil liabilities or claims arising from the findings in audit C.I. 12-1694-000. (6) PROVIDER agrees that it will not rebill the Medicaid Program in any manner for claims that were not covered by Medicaid, which are the subject of the audit in this case. 6. Questions regarding procedures for submitting payment should be directed to Medicaid Accounts Receivable, (850) 412-3901. The C.J. number listed on the first page of this agreement must be legibly entered on the check to assure proper credit. Please mail payment to: AGENCY FOR HEALTHCARE ADMINISTRATION Medicaid Accounts Receivable — MS # 14 2727 Mahan Drive, Bldg. 2, Suite 200 Tallahassee, Florida 32308 7. PROVIDER agrees that failure to pay any monies due and owing under the terms of this Agreement shall constitute PROVIDER’S authorization for the Agency, without further notice, to withhold the total remaining amount due under the terms of this agreement from any monies due and owing to PROVIDER for any Medicaid claims. 8. AHCA reserves the right to enforce this Agreement under the laws of the State of Florida, the Rules of the Medicaid Program, and all other applicable rules and regulations. 9. This settlement does not constitute an admission of wrongdoing or error by either party with respect to this case or any other matter. 10. Each party shall bear its own attorneys’ fees and costs, with the exception that the Respondent shall reimburse, as part of this settlement, $1,659.66 in Agency costs and $1,154.41 in fines. This amount is included in the calculations and demand of paragraph 5(2). 11. The signatories to this Agreement, acting in a representative capacity, represent that they are duly authorized to enter into this Agreement on behalf of the respective parties. 12. | This Agreement shall be construed in accordance with the provisions of the laws of Florida. Venue for any action arising from this Agreement shall be in Leon County, Florida. 13. This Agreement constitutes the entire agreement between PROVIDER and AHCA, including anyone acting for, associated with or employed by them, concerning all matters and supersedes any prior discussions, agreements or understandings; there are no promises, representations or agreements between PROVIDER and the AHCA other than as set forth herein. No modification or waiver of any provision shall be valid unless a written amendment to the Agreement is completed and properly executed by the parties. 14. This is an Agreement of settlement and compromise, made in recognition that the parties may have different or incorrect understandings, information and contentions, as to facts and law, and with each party compromising and settling any potential correctness or 4 incorrectness of its understandings, information and contentions as to facts and law, so that no misunderstanding or misinformation shall be a ground for rescission hereof. 15. PROVIDER expressly waives in this matter its right to any hearing pursuant to sections 120.569 or 120.57, Florida Statutes, the making of findings of fact and conclusions of law by the Agency, and all further and other proceedings to which it may be entitled by law or rules of the Agency regarding this proceeding and any and all issues raised herein. PROVIDER further agrees that it shall not challenge or contest any Final Order entered in this matter which is consistent with the terms of this settlement agreement in any forum now or in the future available to it, including the right to any administrative proceeding, circuit or federal court action or any appeal. 16. | This Agreement is and shall be deemed jointly drafted and written by all parties to it and shall not be construed or interpreted against the party originating or preparing it. 17. To the extent that any provision of this Agreement is prohibited by law for any reason, such provision shall be effective to the extent not so prohibited, and such prohibition shall not affect any other provision of this Agreement. 18. This Agreement shall inure to the benefit of and be binding on each party’s successors, assigns, heirs, administrators, representatives and trustees. 19. All times stated herein are of the essence of this Agreement. THE REMAINDER OF THIS PAGE IS LEFT INTENTIONALLY BLANK MARIO RUB, M.D. Printed Representativé$ Name BY. Nacio buh, 305 0060381 DEA BR 4969664 20776 W. DDGE HWY. AVENTURA, FL 33180 (905) 931-1812 + FAX (305) 931-1632 FLORIDA AGENCY FOR HEALTH CARE ADMINISTRATION 2727 Mahan Drive, Mail Stop #3 Tallahassee, Florida 32308-5403 Wl « CC mMmActeR General Counsel Aoegack dll Chief Medicaid Counsel hy. Willis F. Melvin, Jr. Assistant General Counsel Dated: Dated: Dated: Dated: Dated: 2| \3 , 2013 S/3 ,2013 r// 2 ,2013 3 5 2013 Februany LF ,2013 RICK SCOTT FLORIDA AGENCY FOR HEALTH CARE ADMINISTRATION GOVERNOR Better Health Care for all Floridians CERTIFIED MAIL No.:7009 2820 0001 5671 9368 November 13, 2012 Provider No: 2562910-00 NPI No: 1790889996 License No.:ME69331 Mario Rub, M.D. 20776 West Dixie Highway North Miami Beach, Florida 33180 In Reply Refer to FINAL AUDIT REPORT C.L: No. 12-1694-000 Dear Provider: ELIZABETH DUDEK SECRETARY The Agency for Health Care Administration (Agency), Office of Inspector General, Bureau of Medicaid Program Integrity, has completed a review of claims for Medicaid reimbursement for dates of service during the period September 1, 2008, through February 28, 2011. A preliminary audit report dated July 16, 2012, was sent to you indicating that we had determined you were overpaid $279,132.60. Based upon a review of all documentation submitted, we have determined that you were overpaid $14,039.92 for services that in whole or in part are not covered by Medicaid. A fine of $2,807.98 has been applied. The cost assessed for this audit is $1,359.66. The total amount due is $18,207.56. Be advised of the following: (1) In accordance with Sections 409.913(15), (16), and (17), Florida Statutes (F.S.), and Rule 59G- 9.070, Florida Administrative Code (F.A.C.), the Agency shall apply sanctions for violations of federal and state laws, including Medicaid policy. This letter shall serve as notice of the following sanction(s): e A fine of $2,807.98 for violation(s) of Rule Section 59G-9.070(7) (e), F.A.C. (2) Pursuant to Section 409.913(23) (a), F.S., the Agency is entitled to recover all investigative, legal, and expert witness costs. 2727 Mahan Drive, MS# 6 Tallahassee, Florida 32308 Visit AHCA online at http://ahca.myflorida.com Mario Rub, M.D. Provider ID: 2562910-00 CI. No.:12-1694-000 Page 2 This review and the determination of overpayment were made in accordance with the provisions of Section 409.913, F.S. In determining the appropriateness of Medicaid payment pursuant to Medicaid policy, the Medicaid program utilizes procedure codes, descriptions, policies, limitations and requirements found in the Medicaid provider handbooks and Section 409.913, F.S. In applying for Medicaid reimbursement, providers are required to follow the guidelines set forth in the applicable rules and Medicaid fee schedules, as promulgated in the Medicaid policy handbooks, billing bulletins, and the Medicaid provider agreement. Medicaid cannot pay for services that do not meet these guidelines. Below is a discussion of the particular guidelines related to the review of your claims, and an explanation of why these claims do not meet Medicaid requirements. The audit work papers are attached, listing the claims that are affected by this determination. REVIEW DETERMINATION(S) Medicaid policy defines the varying levels of care and expertise required for the evaluation and management procedure codes for office visits. The documentation you provided supports a lower level of office visit than the one for which you billed and received payment. This determination was made by a peer consultant in accordance with Sections 409.913 and 409.9131, F.S. The difference between the amount you were paid and the correct payment for the appropriate level of service is considered an overpayment. Medicaid policy requires that services performed be medically necessary for the diagnosis and treatment ofan illness. You billed and received payments for services for which the medical records, when reviewed by a Medicaid physician consultant, were insufficient to justify billing for code indicated. The documentation failed to meet the Medicaid criteria for medical necessity. The claims were either disallowed or adjusted by the peer to reflect service documented. OVERPAYMENT CALCULATION A random sample of 35 recipients respecting whom you submitted 173 claims was reviewed. For those claims in the sample, which have dates of service from September 1, 2008, through February 28, 2011, an overpayment of $846.51 or $4.89312139 per claim, was found. Since you were paid for a total (population) of 3,994 claims for that period, the point estimate of the total overpayment is 3,994 x 4,89312139 = $19,543.13. There is a 50 percent probability that the overpayment to you is that amount or more. We used the following statistical formula for cluster sampling to calculate the amount due the Agency: E- oe) ses 4 - -YB,y Where: N N E = point estimate of overpayment = SA, > B | Mario Rub, M.D. Provider ID: 2562910-00 CI. No.:12-1694-000 Page 3 U F = number of claims in the population = s B is] A, = total overpayment in sample cluster B, = number of claims in sample cluster U =number of clusters in the population N = number of clusters in the random sample N N Y = mean overpayment per claim = > A, > B, i=] j= t = t value from the Distribution of ¢ Table All of the claims relating to a recipient represent a cluster. The values of overpayment and number of claims for each recipient in the sample are shown on the attachment entitled “Overpayment Calculation Using Cluster Sampling.” From this statistical formula, which is generally accepted for this purpose, we have calculated that the overpayment to you is $14,039.92, with a ninety-five percent (95%) probability that it is that amount or more. If you are currently involved in a bankruptcy, you should notify your attorney immediately and provide a copy of this letter for them. Please advise your attorney that we need the following information immediately: (1) the date of filing of the bankruptcy petition; (2) the case number; (3) the court name and the division in which the petition was filed (e.g., Northern District of Florida, Tallahassee Division); and, (4) the name, address, and telephone number of your attorney. If you are not in bankruptcy and you concur with our findings, remit by certified check in the amount of $18,207.56, which includes the overpayment amount as well as any fines imposed and assessed costs. The check must be payable to the Florida Agency for Health Care Administration. Questions regarding procedures for submitting payment should be directed to Medicaid Accounts Receivable, (850) 412-3901. To ensure proper credit, be certain you legibly record on your check your Medicaid provider number and the C.J. number listed on the first page of this audit report. Please mail payment to: Medicaid Accounts Receivable - MS # 14 Agency for Health Care Administration 2727 Mahan Drive Bldg. 2, Ste. 200 Tallahassee, FL 32308 Pursuant to section 409.913(25)(d), F.S., the Agency may collect money owed by all means allowable by law, including, but not limited to, exercising the option to collect money from Medicare that is payable to the provider. Pursuant to section 409.913(27), F.S., if within 30 days following this notice you have not either repaid the alleged overpayment amount or entered into a satisfactory repayment agreement with the Agency, your Medicaid reimbursements will be withheld; they will continue to be withheld, even during the pendency of an administrative hearing, until such time as the overpayment amount is satisfied. Pursuant to section 409.913(30), F.S., the Agency shall terminate your participation in the Medicaid program if you fail to repay an overpayment or enter into a satisfactory repayment agreement with the Agency, within 35 days after the date of a final order which is no longer subject to further appeal. Pursuant to sections 409.913(15)(q) and 409.913(25)(c), F.S., a provider that does not adhere to the terms of a repayment agreement is subject to termination from the Medicaid program. Mario Rub, M.D. Provider ID: 2562910-00 C.J. No.:12-1694-000 Page 4 Finally, failure to comply with all sanctions applied or due dates may result in additional sanctions being imposed. You have the right to request a formal or informal hearing pursuant to Section 120.569, F.S. Ifa request for a formal hearing is made, the petition must be made in compliance with Section 28-106.201, F.A.C. and mediation may be available. If a request for an informal hearing is made, the petition must be made in compliance with rule Section 28-106.301, F.A.C. Additionally, you are hereby informed that ifa request for a hearing is made, the petition must be received by the Agency within twenty-one (21) days of receipt of this letter. For more information regarding your hearing and mediation rights, please see the attached Notice of Administrative Hearing and Mediation Rights. Any questions you may have about this matter should be directed to: : Jennifer Ellingsen, Investigator, Agency for Health Care Administration, Office of Inspector General, Medicaid Program Integrity, 2727 Mahan Drive, Mail Stop #6, Tallahassee, Florida 32308-5403, telephone (850) 412- 4600, facsimile (850) 410-1972. Sincerely, Se Be Fred Becknell AHCA Administrator Office of Inspector General Medicaid Program Integrity FB/jse Enclosure(s) Copies furnished to: Finance & Accounting (Interoffice mail) Health Quality Assurance (E-mail) Department of Health (E-mail) Mario Rub, M.D. Provider ID: 2562910-00 C.J. No.:12-1694-000 Page 5 NOTICE OF ADMINISTRATIVE HEARING AND MEDIATION RIGHTS You have the right to request an administrative hearing pursuant to Sections 120.569 and 120.57, Florida Statutes. If you disagree with the facts stated in the foregoing Final Audit Report (hereinafter FAR), you may request a formal administrative hearing pursuant to Section 120.57(1), Florida Statutes. If you do not dispute the facts stated in the FAR, but believe there are additional reasons to grant the relief you seek, you may request an informal administrative hearing pursuant to Section 120.57(2), Florida Statutes. Additionally, pursuant to Section 120.573, Florida Statutes, mediation may be available if you have chosen a formal administrative hearing, as discussed more fully below. The written request for an administrative hearing must conform to the requirements of either Rule 28- 106.201(2) or Rule 28-106.301(2), Florida Administrative Code, and must be received by the Agency for Health Care Administration, by 5:00 P.M. no later than 21 days after you received the FAR. The address for filing the written request for an administrative hearing is: Richard J. Shoop, Esquire Agency Clerk Agency for Health Care Administration 2727 Mahan Drive, Mail Stop #3 Tallahassee, Florida 32308 Fax: (850) 921-0158 Phone: (850) 412-3630 The request must be legible, on 8 % by 11-inch white paper, and contain: 1. Your name, address, telephone number, any Agency identifying number on the FAR, if known, and name, address, and telephone number of your representative, if any; 2. An explanation of how your substantial interests will be affected by the action described in the FAR; 3. A statement of when and how you received the FAR; 4. Fora request for formal hearing, a statement of all disputed issues of material fact; 5. Fora request for formal hearing, a concise statement of the ultimate facts alleged, as well as the rules and statutes which entitle you to relief; 6. Fora request for formal hearing, whether you request mediation, if it is available; 7. For a request for informal hearing, what bases support an adjustment to the amount owed to the Agency; and 8. A demand for relief. A formal hearing will be held if there are disputed issues of material fact. Additionally, mediation may be available in conjunction with a formal hearing. Mediation is a way to use a neutral third party to assist the parties in a legal or administrative proceeding to reach a settlement of their case. If you and the Agency agree to mediation, it does not mean that you give up the right to a hearing. Rather, you and the Agency will try to settle your case first with mediation. If you request mediation, and the Agency agrees to it, you will be contacted by the Agency to set up a time for the mediation and to enter into a mediation agreement. If a mediation agreement is not reached within 10 days following the request for mediation, the matter will proceed without mediation. The mediation must be concluded within 60 days of having entered into the agreement, unless you and the Agency agree to a different time period. The mediation agreement between you and the Agency will include provisions for selecting the mediator, the allocation of costs and fees associated with the mediation, and the confidentiality of discussions and documents involved in the mediation. Mediators charge hourly fees that must be shared equally by you and the Agency. If a written request for an administrative hearing is not timely received you will have waived your right to have the intended action reviewed pursuant to Chapter 120, Florida Statutes, and the action set forth in the FAR shall be conclusive and final. FLORIDA AGENCY FOR HEALTH CARE ADMINISTRATION Provider: 256291000 - MARIO RUB Overpayment Calculation Using Cluster Sampling by Recip Name Dates Of Service: 9/1/2008 through 2/28/2011 Number of recipients in population: Number of recipients in sample: Total payments in population: No. of claims in population: Totals: Using Overpayment per claim method Overpayment per sample claim: Point estimate of the overpayment: Variance of the overpayment: Standard error of the overpayment: Half confidence interval: Overpayment at the 95 % Confidence level: Overpayment run on 11/9/2012 COON ADH RWHNA 600 35 $1,083,860.97 3,994 $4.89312139 $19,543.13 $10,592,145.98 $3,254.56 $5,503.21 $14,039.92 33 FP NN FB HOMER ANNA aNWaAn = =a nN 173 Case ID: Confidence level: t value: $228.96 $145.15 $281.20 $121.92 $153.25 $68.64 $747.83 $228.96 $121.92 $168.96 $28,469.80 $76.70 $87.60 $236.70 $2,803.99 $229.95 $297.69 $171.41 $87.60 $129.39 $259.20 $3,257.45 $234.17 $87.60 $251.87 $75.97 $57.55 $34.32 $693.77 $87.60 $173.92 $87.60 $20,625.31 $121.92 $75.97 $60,981.84 Page 4 of 4 NPI: 1790889996 12-1694-000 95 % 1.690924 $0.00 $0.00 $117.70 $0.00 $0.00 $52.55 $194.73 $0.00 $0.00 $0.00 $126.76 $19.16 $0.00 $38.32 $0.00 $0.00 $38.30 $0.00 $0.00 $41.79 $54.28 $0.00 $68.75 $0.00 $0.00 $0.00 $0.00 $0.00 $94.17 $0.00 $0.00 $0.00 $0.00 $0.00 $0.00 $846.51 Page 1 of 1) ( | SENDER: COMPLETE THIS SECTION ® Complete Items 1, 2, and 3. 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OSCAR SANSONI vs AGENCY FOR HEALTH CARE ADMINISTRATION, 97-001328 (1997)
Division of Administrative Hearings, Florida Filed:Tampa, Florida Mar. 12, 1997 Number: 97-001328 Latest Update: Feb. 27, 1998

The Issue The issue in this case is whether the Agency for Health Care Administration (AHCA) should enroll the Petitioner, Oscar Sansoni, as a Medicaid provider of support coordination services.

Findings Of Fact In 1990, the former Department of Health and Rehabilitative Services (HRS) preliminarily confirmed a report of abuse or neglect against the Petitioner, Oscar Sansoni (report No. 90-045389). The Petitioner asked that the report be expunged and asked for formal administrative proceedings when HRS denied his request (DOAH Case 90-4332C). Upon commencement of the hearing in DOAH Case 90-4332C, the Petitioner withdrew his request for expunction "upon condition that such withdrawal would not prejudice his right to request, at a later date, further proceeding on the issue of an exemption from disqualification for employment." A Recommended Order of Dismissal was entered in the case on October 26, 1990, on the basis of the Petitioner's withdrawal of his expunction request. On August 6, 1991, a Final Order was entered on the basis of the Recommended Order of Dismissal; it denied the expunction request and confirmed the report. The Petitioner was initially certified by HRS to provide support coordination services under Florida's Medicaid waiver program in November 1993. He provided those services in District 6 and in District 14, but not without some problems in both districts. The first survey of the Petitioner conducted in District 14 on September 21, 1994, revealed five major areas of concern: support plans did not authorize services; (2) cost plans (plans of care) did not authorize purchase of services; (3) case notes did not substantiate billing; (4) case notes were not in sufficient detail; and (5) planning prior to changing client support was inadequate. As a result, District 14 withdrew the Petitioner's ability to process billings for 90 days. The first survey of the Petitioner conducted in District 6 on October 21, 1994, revealed most of the same concerns as in District 14. (The exception was that the Petitioner was not criticized for inadequate planning.) To the Petitioner's credit, he improved following the initial surveys. A follow-up survey conducted in District 14 on January 24, 1995, revealed that the Petitioner was in full compliance. A follow-up survey in District 6 also revealed progress, but the Petitioner was not considered to be providing better than adequate services there. On December 29, 1994, the Petitioner signed a verification that he had obtained or would soon be obtaining a background screening, as required of all HRS Developmental Services Medicaid waiver support coordinators. During a routine review on or about May 24, 1995, HRS discovered that the Petitioner had not yet obtained or even applied for a background screening. HRS conducted a background screening of the Petitioner which revealed the confirmed report of abuse or neglect, report No. 90-045389. As a result, HRS took action to revoke the Petitioner's Medicaid waiver certification. The outcome of the revocation proceeding is not clear from the record, but it appears from the evidence that the Petitioner was required to relinquish 34 District 6 case files for handling by other support coordinators. Review of those files revealed that 15 of the 34 had no support plans or overdue support plans. Most of the case files had no case notes. The Petitioner asked for an extension of time until June 5, 1995, to submit missing case notes and support plans. On June 9, 1995, he submitted some but not all of the missing case notes and support plans. More missing case notes and support plans were submitted on July 27, 1995, along with billings for support services. Still more missing case notes and support plans with additional billings for support services were submitted on January 12, 1996. The Petitioner let it be known that he was spacing the submission of these documents to optimally serve his cash-flow needs. District 6 reviewed the Petitioner's case notes and support plans after January 12, 1996, and found them to be extremely unprofessional, contrary to state statute and rule relative to confidentiality, and lacking in substance relative to the implementation of goals on the support plan. Many support plans were late. The Petitioner failed to comply with many of the assurances required of Medicaid waiver support coordinators. At a later date, the Petitioner applied for Medicaid waiver certification on behalf of Dare to Dream, Inc. HRS denied the application, and the Petitioner requested formal administrative proceedings. The case was referred to DOAH, where it was given Case No. 96-3199. Case No. 96-3199 was set for final hearing on September 20, 1996, but HRS filed a Motion for Suggestion of Mootness on September 17, 1996. In the motion, HRS conceded that the Petitioner met all of the certification criteria set out in Florida Administrative Code Rule 59G-8.200(12)(b)20 and that there was no valid, legal ground for denying certification. It gave assurance that HRS would issue the Medicaid waiver certification letter "within the next week." The Petitioner initially opposed the motion "out of frustration" but withdrew his opposition at a telephone hearing held on the motion on September 18, 1996, and an Order Dismissing Proceeding, Relinquishing Jurisdiction, and Closing File was entered on September 19, 1996, returning jurisdiction to HRS for issuance of the Medicaid waiver certification. HRS issued a one- year Medicaid waiver certification to Dare to Dream, Inc., on September 18, 1996. The letter transmitting the one-year certification to Petitioner explained that, effective January 1, 1995, all providers of Developmental Services/Home and Community Based Services of Support Coordination were required to have a Medicaid provider number. HRS agreed to forward the Petitioner's completed application for a provider number to the Agency for Health Care Administration (AHCA). When HRS forwarded the Petitioner's application for enrollment as a Medicaid provider, HRS included its evaluation of the Petitioner's previous performance and a strong recommendation that the application be denied. AHCA received the Petitioner's application on October 31, 1996. On January 9, 1997, AHCA advised the Petitioner that it intended to deny the application: (1) because, contrary to representations in the application, the Petitioner's Medicaid waiver certification had been revoked, not suspended, by HRS in May 1995; (2) because the Medicaid waiver certification had not been restored; (3) because the Petitioner had on his record a confirmed report of abuse or neglect; and (4) because, for the foregoing reasons, as well as the Petitioner's performance history as a provider of support coordination services for HRS, AHCA concurred with HRS' recommendation that the application be denied. The Petitioner, in his rebuttal, explained: (1) that he understood his Medicaid waiver certification to have been suspended, not revoked; and (2) that, besides, it was restored by the time of his application. He also had admitted in evidence documentation relating to DOAH Case Nos. 90-4332C and 96-3199 (which provide some of the support for Findings 1 and 10-13, supra.) However, the Petitioner put on no evidence contrary to the other grounds for HRS' recommendation that the application be denied.

Recommendation Based upon the foregoing Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law, it is RECOMMENDED that the Agency for Health Care Administration enter a final order denying the Petitioner's application for enrollment as a Medicaid provider. RECOMMENDED this 15th day of January, 1998, at Tallahassee, Leon County, Florida. J. LAWRENCE JOHNSTON Administrative Law Judge Division of Administrative Hearings The DeSoto Building 1230 Apalachee Parkway Tallahassee, Florida 32399-3060 (850) 488-9675 SUNCOM 278-9675 Fax Filing (850) 921-6847 Filed with the Clerk of the Division of Administrative Hearings this 15th day of January, 1998. COPIES FURNISHED: Jack B. Pugh, Esquire Suite 1080 1645 Palm Beach Lakes Boulevard West Palm Beach, Florida 33401 Gordon Scott, Esquire Agency for Health Care Administration Building 3, Suite 3431 2727 Mahan Drive Tallahassee, Florida 32308 Sam Power, Agency Clerk Agency for Health Care Administration Fort Knox Building 3, Suite 3431 2727 Mahan Drive Tallahassee, Florida 32308 Jerome W. Hoffman, General Counsel Agency for Health Care Administration 2727 Mahan Drive Tallahassee, Florida 32308

Florida Laws (1) 409.907
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SCHOOL BOARD OF OSCEOLA COUNTY AND G.F., ON BEHALF OF MINOR CHILD G.F. vs DEPARTMENT OF CHILDREN AND FAMILY SERVICES, 04-000879RU (2004)
Division of Administrative Hearings, Florida Filed:Tallahassee, Florida Mar. 15, 2004 Number: 04-000879RU Latest Update: Aug. 10, 2006

The Issue Whether a provision contained in a Settlement Agreement of a federal lawsuit is the statement the Department of Children and Family Services (Respondent) relied upon to deny Petitioner, G.F., on behalf of minor child G.F. (Student G.F.), Medicaid waiver benefits and constitutes an invalid exercise of delegated legislative authority on the grounds that the statement in question was not promulgated as a rule; and Whether Petitioners can challenge a provision which is contained in the Developmental Services Waiver Services Florida Medicaid Coverage and Limitations Handbook, October 2003, in Florida Administrative Code Rule 59G-8.200(12), as an invalid exercise of delegated legislative authority when the agency which adopted the rule is not a party to this proceeding.

Findings Of Fact Medicaid is a cooperative federal/state program in which Florida participates in partnership with the national government. Medicaid provides medically necessary health care. In addition to shouldering administrative and regulatory responsibilities, Florida partially funds the Florida Medicaid Program, contributing about 42 percent of the money budgeted for the program's operation. Federal funds make up the balance. The Florida Retail Federation, Inc. v. Agency for Health Care Administration, Case No. 04-1828RX (DOAH July 19, 2004). Under the statutory scheme, states who participate in Medicaid are required to have a state plan. See 42 C.F.R. § 430.10. A participating state may also grant waivers to their state plan pursuant to Section 1915(c) of the Social Security Act. See 42 C.F.R. § 430.25. Each participating state must designate a single-state agency to administer or supervise administration of the state plan. The state plan must also specify whether the agency that determines eligibility is the Medicaid agency or the single-state agency for the financial assistance program under Title IV-A. See 42 C.F.R. § 431.10. The State of Florida has identified AHCA as the single-state agency to administer the plan and the previously identified Respondent to determine eligibility. § 409.902, Fla. Stat. (2002).2/ AHCA is required to enter an interagency agreement with Respondent and other agencies "to assure coordination and cooperation in serving special needs citizens." § 408.302(1), Fla. Stat. It is required that Respondent approve and have input with regard to AHCA's rules when the rules directly impact the mission of Respondent. Access to quality healthcare is "an important goal" for all citizens in Florida. § 408.301, Fla. Stat. Persons served by Respondent are citizens with special needs, and it is the policy of Florida that persons with special needs are adequately and appropriately served. The Florida Legislature recognizes that the Medicaid program is "an intricate part of the service delivery system for the special needs citizens" in Florida. AHCA is not a service provider and does not develop or direct programs for special needs citizens, such as Student G.F. § 408.301, Fla. Stat. In fact, it is Respondent that plays the vital role to assure that "the needs of special citizens are met." Under the Medicaid program in Florida, AHCA is the "single state agency authorized to make payments for medical assistance and related services." § 409.902, Fla. Stat. However, Respondent is responsible for "Medicaid eligibility determinations, including, but not limited to, policy, rules, . . . as well as the actual determination of eligibility." Specifically, Respondent administers the Developmental Disabilities Home and Community-Based Services Medicaid Waiver Program (HCBS Medicaid Waiver Program) in Florida, and under Section 409.919, Florida Statutes, is authorized and required to enact administrative rules, as necessary, to fulfill its obligation to comply with federal and state Medicaid law. Student G.F. is a developmentally disabled child with multiple developmental disabilities, including autism, mental retardation, and profound deafness. Student G.F.'s combination of disabilities have resulted in significant cognitive impairment, social withdrawal, violence, and self-injurious behavior. This has resulted in extreme challenges in communication and acquisition of skills related to daily living. In 2000, Student G.F. was placed at the NDA in Mount Dora, Lake County, Florida, as a day student under the treatment of Dr. Cohen, as part of Student G.F.'s Individual Education Plan under the Federal Individual with Disabilities Education Act. Approximately five months later, Dr. Cohen determined that residential placement of Student G.F. was medically necessary. Petitioner asserts that the NDA in Mount Dora, Florida, is the only facility that could provide residential habilitation services for Student G.F. and treat her complex array of disabilities. The NDA is a certified Medicaid waiver provider for Respondent in District 10. On or about August 1, 2001, Deloris Battle, an independent contractor who provides support coordination services to recipients under the HCBS Medicaid Waiver Program, prepared the Florida Status Tracking Survey for Student G.F. Respondent's surveyor concluded that Student G.F. was in a state of crisis and required residential placement for habilitation services. Petitioner School Board reached an understanding with Battle whereby the parties would share in the cost of services for Student G.F. at the NDA. Petitioner School Board would fund the cost of educational services, and Respondent would fund the cost of medical and residential habilitation services. Respondent's share of the cost of the services would be funded by the HCBS Medicaid Waiver Program. Student G.F. qualifies as developmentally disabled and is eligible for Medicaid services pursuant to Chapter 409, Florida Statutes. Student G.F. is also eligible for services under the HCBS Medicaid Waiver Program. Battle submitted a cost plan to Respondent's district's office that requested HCBS Medicaid Waiver Program funding for Student G.F.'s residential placement at NDA. Battle had no authority to commit Respondent to expend any Medicaid waiver funds without approval. The cost plan submitted by Battle was not sent to Tallahassee for approval. Approval was delayed at the district level until it was learned that Petitioner School Board agreed to pay for the residential placement of Student G.F. In May 2002, Petitioner School Board and G.F. were advised that Medicaid waiver funding for Student G.F.'s residential placement at the NDA was denied. Respondent offered no other options for service. Petitioner School Board agreed to fund Student G.F.'s residential placement at the NDA for a trial period. Such funding by Petitioner School Board has continued, because Petitioners believed that the NDA is the only facility that can treat Student G.F.'s array of disabilities. Petitioner School Board elected to fund the entire cost of Student G.F.'s residential placement under protest. The Dispute Petitioners brought this instant proceeding because they believe that Respondent's denial of Medicaid waiver funding for Student G.F.'s residential placement was (and continues to be) based on an agency statement by Respondent that was not adopted as a rule, in violation of Sections 120.54 and 120.56, Florida Statutes (2004). In 1998, Prado-Steinman v. Bush, Case No. 98-6496-CIV- FERGUSON, was filed in the United States District Court for the Southern District of Florida. One of the defendants was the Florida Department of Children and Family Services. On June 27, 2000, a settlement agreement was signed by the parties to the Prado-Steinman litigation. Petitioners allege that the initial basis for Respondent's denial of funding for Student G.F.'s placement was an agency statement purportedly based entirely upon Respondent's interpretation of the settlement agreement reached in Prado- Steinman, that Medicaid waiver funding is unavailable for facilities with a capacity to house more than 15 persons. Specifically, page 16 of the Settlement Agreement dated June 29, 2000, paragraph (F)(1), "Group Home Placement" reads as follows: The parties agree that they prefer that individuals who are enrolled in the Waiver live and receive in smaller facilities. Consistent with this preference, the parties agree to the following: The Department will target choice counseling to those individuals, enrolled on the Waiver and who presently reside in residential habilitation centers (where more than 15 persons reside and receive services). The focus of this choice counseling will be to provide information about alternative residential placement options. The Department will begin this targeted choice counseling by December 1, 2000, and will substantially complete this choice counseling by December 1, 2001. See generally Prado-Steinman v. Bush, 221 F.3d 1266 (11th Cir. 2000). At paragraph 24 of the Amended Petition, Petitioners assert that the alleged agency statement, which has not been adopted as a rule, are the statements by Respondent that the agency will not authorize Medicaid waiver funding for facilities with a greater number of beds than specified in the agreement and that the NDA is not an eligible Medicaid waiver facility under the agreement. The settlement agreement does not prohibit placement of individuals who are enrolled in the HCBS Medicaid Waiver Program with specific facility sizes. The portion of the agreement that refers to residential facilities concerns Group Home Placements, as quoted in paragraph 19 above, and provides that Respondent will (1) counsel residents of residential habilitation centers where more than 15 persons reside about alternative residential placements; (2) will develop alternative residential placements; (3) will encourage the use of client advocates for residents of residential habilitation centers who have no family, friends, or guardian to advocate on their behalf; and (4) will not fill vacancies in residential habilitation centers with individuals enrolled on the waiver. Paragraph J of the Settlement Agreement, found on page 25, provides that Respondent will continue to develop residential program models that encourage an environment for self- determination. Further, Respondent will emphasize to support coordinators that the annual needs assessment for waiver recipients should include an assessment of the need for alternative placement. The focus of the language is to move more clients into residences meeting the policy and philosophy of Chapter 393, Florida Statutes. Parents were given the opportunity to take their children out of institutions and into less restrictive environments. At paragraph 27, the Amended Petition alleges that the use of the Settlement Agreement "to adversely affect the interests of the Petitioners is an invalid exercise of delegated legislative authority" as defined in Subsection 120.56(4), Florida Statutes (2004). The Amended Petition makes no allegation that the alleged agency statement, which has not been adopted as a rule is arbitrary or capricious, even if that standard were applicable to a petition under Subsection 120.56(4), Florida Statutes (2004), nor does the Amended Petition allege that the alleged agency statement is in violation of federal law. The Amended Petition does not include AHCA as a party and does not mention Florida Administrative Code Rule 59G-8.200, although, Petitioners have been aware of the rule since early in this rule-challenge proceeding. The Amended Petition does not cite any proposed or existing rule or delineate a challenge to any proposed or existing rule, regardless of the promulgating agency. The Amended Petition does not allege that Florida Administrative Code Rule 59G-8.200 somehow violates federal law. AHCA began rule-making to adopt a handbook for the HCBS Medicaid Waiver Program in October 2001. Rule-making was initiated to meet the requirements of the federal Center for Medicare and Medicaid Services. It requires the states who participate to promulgate handbooks. AHCA published its notice of rule development in Volume 27, No. 52 of the Florida Administrative Weekly dated December 28, 2001. AHCA held seven rule workshops concerning the Medicaid Handbook: two in Tallahassee (January 14, 2002, and February 14, 2002); one in Pensacola (February 27, 2002); one in Jacksonville (February 19, 2002); one in Tampa; one in Orlando (February 22, 2002); and one in Fort Lauderdale (February 15, 2002). The workshops were attended by a large number of persons and representatives of advocacy groups. The rule notice was published in Volume 28, No. 18 of the Florida Administrative Weekly dated May 3, 2002. A public hearing was held on May 28, 2002. Subsequent to the public hearing, a notice of change was filed and a second public hearing was held on August 19, 2002. Florida Administrative Code Rule 59G-8.200, and the Medicaid Handbook incorporated therein by reference, were originally adopted on October 27, 2002. It has since been amended. Florida Administrative Code Rule 59G-8.200(12) currently provides in pertinent part: (12) Developmental Services Waiver – General. This rule applies to all Developmental Services Waiver Services providers enrolled in the Medicaid program. All Developmental Services Waiver Services providers enrolled in the Medicaid program must comply with the Developmental Services Waiver Services Florida Medicaid Coverage and Limitations Handbook, October 2003, incorporated by reference, and the Florida Medicaid Provider Reimbursement Handbook, Non-Institutional 081, October 2003. Both handbooks are available from the Medicaid fiscal agent. The Developmental Disabilities Waiver Services Provider Rate Table, November 2003, is incorporated by reference. The Developmental Disabilities Waiver Services Provider Rate Table is available from the Medicaid fiscal agent. Chapter 1 of the Handbook is entitled, "Purpose, Background and Program Specific Information," and contains general definitions. "Licensed Residential Facility" is defined at pages 1-3 as: Facilities providing room and board, and other services in accordance with the licensing requirements for the facility type. Community-based beneficiaries with developmental disabilities may receive DS waiver services while residing in: Group and foster homes licensed by the Department of Children and Families in accordance with Chapter 393, Florida Statutes, and Chapter 409, Florida Statutes. Comprehensive, transitional education program facilities, licensed by the Department of Children and Families in accordance with Chapter 393, Florida Statutes. Assisted Living Facilities, and Transitional Living Facilities, licensed by the Agency for Health Care Administration in accordance with Chapter 400, Florida Statutes. Residential Habilitation Centers and any other type of licensed facility not mentioned above, having a capacity of 16 or more persons, if the beneficiary has continuously resided at the facility since August 8, 2001, or prior to this date. "Institution" is generally understood by persons in the disabilities profession as a facility with more than 15 beds that is self-contained, providing all the needs of its residents, as opposed to a more home-like environment. The "best practice" model for developmental disabilities services is a group home with six beds. Respondent interprets these provisions to mean that Medicaid waiver funding is unavailable for a residential placement if the facility has a capacity of 16 or more persons, unless the beneficiary has continually resided at the facility since August 8, 2001, or prior to that date. The Medicaid Handbook is incorporated by reference in AHCA's rule. (Fla. Admin. Code R. 59G-8.200) Respondent has not promulgated a separate administrative rule pursuant to Chapter 120, Florida Statutes (2004), that incorporates the Medicaid Handbook or any part of it into its own rules. However, it did cooperate and coordinate with AHCA when the rule and Medical Handbook were adopted, as required by Subsection 408.302(1), Florida Statutes. AHCA and Respondent have entered into an agreement by which Respondent has agreed to implement the HCBS Medicaid Waiver Program. AHCA retains the authority and responsibility to issue policy, rules, and regulations concerning the HCBS Medicaid Waiver Program, and Respondent is required to operate the program in accordance with those policies, rules, and regulations. Section 409.919, Florida Statutes, and AHCA's rule incorporating the Medicaid Handbook by reference, supplied Respondent with the necessary rule authority to deny the funding. Petitioners have failed to prove that page 96 of the Settlement Agreement dated June 29, 2000, paragraph (F)(1) in the Prado-Steinman case, was relied upon to deny Student G.F. Medicaid waiver benefits. Petitioners have failed to prove that page 16 of the Settlement Agreement was an unpromulgated rule. Petitioners cannot challenge a provision in the Medicaid Handbook, which has been adopted by reference in Florida Administrative Code Rule 59G-8.200(12), when the agency which adopted the rule is not a party to this proceeding.

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AGENCY FOR HEALTH CARE ADMINISTRATION vs MARIA D. GONZALEZ, 10-000262MPI (2010)
Division of Administrative Hearings, Florida Filed:Miami, Florida Jan. 19, 2010 Number: 10-000262MPI Latest Update: Feb. 04, 2011

The Issue The issue for determination is whether Respondent was overpaid $312,773.67 for claims which, according to Petitioner, did not comply with Medicaid requirements.

Findings Of Fact Petitioner Agency for Health Care Administration ("AHCA") is the state agency responsible for administering the Florida Medicaid Program ("Medicaid"). At all relevant times, Respondent has been a Home and Community Based (HCB) Medicaid provider that is authorized to receive reimbursement for covered services rendered to Medicaid recipients. Developmental Disability Home and Community Based Services Waiver Program The alleged overpayment in this case relates to services Respondent provided through the Medicaid Developmental Disability Home and Community Based Waiver Program ("the Program"). As explained during Ms. Olmstead's final hearing testimony, the Program was established to help developmentally- disabled individuals remain in their homes or home-like settings within the community, as opposed to institutions such as nursing homes or intermediate care facilities. Medicaid recipients that desire to receive services through the Program undergo an initial evaluation performed by a waiver support coordinator. The support coordinator is a Medicaid provider that is selected by the Medicaid recipient or his or her guardian. To determine the services needed by the recipient to remain in the home, the support coordinator assesses the recipient by conducting an in-home visit. Upon completion of this initial assessment, the support coordinator formulates a "support plan," a document which describes the recipient's personality, likes, dislikes, strengths, and weaknesses, as well as the recipient's existing support system, such as family, friends, and neighbors. In addition, the support plan details the services the recipient needs to stay in the home and identifies who will provide the services. The expected costs of the proposed services are described on a form titled "cost plan," which, combined with the support plan, comprise the plan of care for the recipient. The support coordinator is required to submit the plan of care, as detailed in the support plan and cost plan, to the Department of Children and Families ("DCF"). If the plan of care is approved, DCF staff will create a "service authorization form." This form, which the support coordinator forwards to the service provider, describes the services to be rendered, as well as the duration and frequency of each service. Without the service authorization form, a provider cannot be assured payment from Medicaid. At least one time per year, the support coordinator must assess the recipient's needs, complete updated support and cost plans, and submit the updated plans for approval. If the updated plan of care is approved, DCF will draft a new service authorization form, which is forwarded to the provider by the support coordinator, along with copy of pertinent support plan information. Should the recipient's services or support require modification, the support coordinator is required to update the cost report and submit it for approval. Communication between the support coordinator and providers such as Respondent is encouraged, as the support coordinator reviews with the provider the goals to be achieved for the recipient. A service provider is expected to assist in establishing support plan outcomes for a recipient's goals and participate in the personal outcome process. Moreover, a service provider expressly consents to such communication by virtue of the provider's contract with Medicaid, which includes an agreement to participate in discussions with the support coordinator on matters such as a recipient's progress, the extent to which a recipient's needs are being met, and modifications to the recipient's support plan. The Preliminary Audit and Final Audit Exercising its statutory authority to oversee the integrity of Medicaid, Petitioner conducted a review or audit of Respondent's records to verify that claims paid by Medicaid during the period from January 1, 2003, through December 31, 2004 (the "audit period"), were billed and paid in accordance with Medicaid statutes, rules, and policies. As the average number of claims per recipient during the audit period was substantial, Petitioner utilized "two stage cluster sampling." This first stage involved a random selection of 34 receipts for whom Respondent submitted claims during the audit period. Next, from those 34 recipients, a total of 255 claims was randomly selected. On October 7, 2005, AHCA requested that Respondent provide "the documentation for services paid by the Florida Medicaid Program" in connection with the 255 claims that comprised the random sample. On or about October 21, 2005, Respondent submitted 37 packages of documents in response to Petitioner's request. Respondent also executed an affidavit which alleged that the documents were true and correct copies, and that the records were made at or near the time that the services were rendered. The documents submitted by Respondent were initially examined by Ms. Effie Green, a program analyst employed by Petitioner. Ms. Green immediately noticed that the records from at least some of the packages were covered in dust with a crystal-like appearance. Law enforcement officers called to the scene ultimately determined that the substance was harmless. There is no evidence that any of the records were tampered with or removed from Petitioner's offices during the investigation. On the contrary, the evidence demonstrates that the documents remained in Ms. Green's office until the dust was analyzed. Following the events described above, the audit of Respondent's records was delayed for approximately one year while an appeal, which involved a different Medicaid provider, was completed. The appeal, which was resolved in AHCA's favor, concerned the validity of the statistical formula utilized in calculating probable Medicaid overpayments.4 The responsibility of reviewing the documents provided by Respondent was later transferred to Ms. Robin Satchell, an investigator employed by Petitioner in the Bureau of Program Integrity. Prior to her employment with AHCA, Ms. Satchell worked for eight years as an HCB Medicaid provider. Ms. Satchell fully reviewed the records previously submitted on October 20, 2005, and also examined additional records subsequently provided by Respondent to verify that the claims paid during the audit period were billed and paid in accordance with Medicaid statutes, rules, and policies. Rules applicable to the claims reviewed in this case are enumerated in the Florida Medicaid Developmental Services Waiver Services Coverage and Limitations Handbook, and include: Only those services that have been identified in a recipient's plan of care and which have been approved and authorized prior to delivery are covered. Providers are limited to the amount, duration, and scope of the services described on the recipient's support plan and current approved cost plan. Only those services that are medically necessary are covered. Services furnished through the developmental disability waiver program are deemed to be medically necessary only if certain elements are present, including but not limited to the following: the service is not in excess of the recipient's needs; and, the service is furnished in a manner not primarily intended for the convenience of the recipient, the recipient's caregiver, or the provider. In order to receive payment for services, the provider must document the service appropriately. Documentation is a written record that supports the fact that a service has been rendered. Depending upon the particular service provided (e.g., Personal Care Assistance, Homemaker Services, Chore Services), the documentation requirements may vary and are detailed in the Florida Medicaid Developmental Services Waiver Services Coverage and Limitations Handbook. On May 24, 2007, AHCA issued a Final Agency Audit Report, which alleged that Respondent was overpaid $1,647,960.81 during the audit period for services that were not covered by Medicaid. Following the issuance of the Final Agency Audit Report, and as announced at the outset of the final hearing in his matter, Petitioner now alleges that Respondent was overpaid $312,773.26. The manner in which AHCA reached the alleged overpayment of $312,773.67 is as follows: of the 255 claims examined by Ms. Satchell, 197 were allowed.5 Ms. Satchell made downward adjustments to 52 claims, and 6 were denied outright. Based upon the adjustments and denials, Ms. Satchell concluded that Respondent had received $1,287.26 in reimbursement of claims in the sample for services not covered by Medicaid, either in whole or in part. Having discovered this "empirical overpayment" of $1,287.26, AHCA employed a statistical formula to ascertain the "probable total overpayment" that Respondent received from Medicaid in connection with the total number of claims made during the Audit Period.6 As noted above, Petitioner contends that the "probable total overpayment" is $312,773.67. In her Proposed Recommended Order, Respondent asserts that with respect to the entire sample of claims, only one instance of incorrect billing occurred. In particular, Respondent concedes that that services provided to Recipient number 24 on September 2, 2003, were inadvertently overbilled in the amount of $0.96. Respondent disputes the remaining 51 downward adjustments and six outright denials, which are discussed separately below by recipient.7 Recipient No. 1 The support plan for this recipient authorized Personal Care Assistance, which is described in the Florida Medicaid Developmental Services Waiver Services Coverage and Limitations Handbook as follows: service that assists a beneficiary with eating and meal preparation, bathing, dressing, personal hygiene, and activities of daily living. The service also includes activities such as assistance with meal preparation, bed marking and vacuuming when these activities are essential to the health and welfare of the beneficiary and when no one else is available to perform them . . . . Personal Care Assistance is limited to the amount, duration and scope of the services described in the beneficiaries [sic] support plan and current approved cost plan.[8] (Emphasis added). The support plan indicates that this recipient lived with his mother and three siblings, all but one of whom were capable of completing homemaker tasks. AHCA alleges that of the five claims examined during the audit, one is problematic. In particular, AHCA contends that six of the activities performed on November 12, 2004, constituted unauthorized homemaker tasks, and therefore overbilling occurred in the amount of $12.90. According to AHCA, the unauthorized activities included organizing clothes, cleaning the kitchen, washing dishes, cleaning tables, cleaning the living room, and washing laundry. The undersigned finds that four of the six activities were unauthorized homemaker tasks: organizing clothes, cleaning the living room, washing laundry, and cleaning tables. The undersigned cannot agree, however, that Respondent inappropriately billed for washing dishes and cleaning the kitchen. Notably, and as demonstrated by the service log, meal preparation was one of the services provided to the recipient on November 12, 2004. There is no allegation that meal preparation was unauthorized, and the various exhibits submitted by AHCA plainly reveal that the service was appropriate (i.e., meal preparation was not included in AHCA's list of unauthorized activities for that date). In the undersigned's judgment, if a service provider is authorized to cook a meal for a beneficiary, it necessarily follows that the provider be permitted, and indeed expected, to wash the dishes and clean the kitchen. The undersigned's conclusion that Respondent appropriately billed for cleaning the kitchen and washing dishes is supported by the notes made by Ms. Satchell in one of AHCA's exhibits. In particular, page 3 of Petitioner's Exhibit H indicates that with respect to the October 17, 2004, services provided to Recipient No. 6 (who likewise received Personal Care Assistance), one unit of service was deducted for cleaning the kitchen because there was "no meal prep that day." The obvious implication of this notation is that cleaning the kitchen would not have been considered improper if a meal had been prepared. As Respondent was authorized to prepare a meal for the recipient on November 12, 2004, Respondent properly billed for the services of washing the dishes and cleaning the kitchen. Accordingly, the $12.90 alleged overpayment should be adjusted, as only four unauthorized activities (organizing clothes, cleaning the living room, washing laundry, and cleaning tables) were billed. Recipient No. 3 The service authorization for Recipient No. 3 provided for four hours of Homemaker Services per week. The service authorization further indicated that the Homemaker Services were intended to achieve the support plan goal of providing "the beneficiary with [a] clean environment. General household activities, such meal [sic] preparation, vacuuming, and routine cleaning." It appears from the support plan that the Homemaker Services were authorized due to the poor health of the recipient's mother. Homemaker Services are defined in the Florida Medicaid Developmental Services Waiver Services Coverage and Limitations Handbook as follows: Homemaker services are those general household activities such as meal preparation, laundry, vacuuming and routine household cleaning provided by a trained homemaker, when the person who usually handles these tasks is unable to perform them. The intent of this service is to ensure that the beneficiary's home environment remains clean, safe, and sanitary. Homemaker services are provided only when there is no one else capable of accomplishing the household tasks . . . . * * * Homemaker services shall be provided in the beneficiary's own home or family home. This service is available in the family home only when there is documentation as to why the family cannot provide the support If approved, homemaker services will be limited to the beneficiary's primary living areas such as bedroom and bathroom. This includes the kitchen and a common area, if regularly utilized by the beneficiary. (Emphasis added). On December 11, 2004, Respondent provided four hours of Homemaker Services, which were billed in the amount of $59.20. AHCA concedes that nine of the services provided on December 11, 2004, were authorized and therefore appropriately billed: making the bed; changing the bed sheets; throwing garbage away; cleaning the room; organizing the room; organizing the clothes; cleaning the bathroom; changing the towels; organizing the bathroom; vacuuming; cleaning the rugs; and meal preparation. However, AHCA contends that ten other activities provided on December 11, 2004, were unauthorized: cleaning the kitchen; washing the dishes; cleaning the tables; cleaning / organizing the cabinets; cleaning the stove; cleaning the refrigerator; cleaning the living room; washing laundry; ironing; and cleaning windows. It is evident from Ms. Satchell's notes (in the "MPI worksheet") that she found these tasks unnecessary because they occurred "outside of recipient's bedroom / bathroom."9 As a consequence, Ms. Satchell concluded that Respondent was overpaid for one hour of services in the amount of $14.80 Once again, the undersigned cannot agree that Respondent inappropriately billed for cleaning the kitchen, washing dishes, and cleaning the stove. Cooking was permitted by the service authorization, and there is no allegation that Respondent should not have billed for the meal that was prepared for the recipient on December 11, 2004. If a provider is authorized to prepare a meal, it is only logical that he or she clean up afterward and bill for the time. Nor can the undersigned agree that Respondent should not have billed for cleaning the living room, tables, windows, and refrigerator. These four activities plainly fall within the services contemplated by the service authorization, which directed Respondent to provide "the beneficiary with [a] clean environment" and carry out "general household activities . . . such as routine cleaning." Moreover, these activities are comparable to "cleaning rugs," an activity performed on the same date that was not alleged to be improper. Although, as AHCA point out, these activities may have occurred outside of the recipient's bedroom and bathroom, that fact is not controlling, as the Florida Medicaid Developmental Services Waiver Services Coverage and Limitations Handbook provides that Homemaker Services extend to "the kitchen and a common area, if regularly utilized by the beneficiary."10 The undersigned also finds that washing laundry was not an unauthorized activity, as it falls within the definition homemaker services. Further, in light of the recipient's incontinence, washing laundry is obviously essential to achieving the support plan goal of providing "the beneficiary with [a] clean environment." The undersigned does agree with AHCA that ironing and "cleaning / organizing cabinets" were unauthorized because these activities were not related to the support plan goals. Based on the findings herein that only two of the activities were unauthorized (ironing and "cleaning / organizing" cabinets), an adjustment should be made to the alleged overpayment of $14.80. Recipient No. 6 This recipient was authorized to receive six hours of Personal Care Assistance per day. Pursuant to the support plan, Respondent was authorized to provide bathing, dressing and eating assistance to the recipient. On October 17, 2004, Respondent provided six hours of services to the recipient, at a cost of $120.96. AHCA alleges, correctly, that one of the services provided on that date, cleaning the kitchen, was unauthorized because the service documentation provided by Respondent reflects that no meal was prepared. Accordingly, the undersigned finds that Respondent was overpaid $5.04. Although Respondent has suggested that cleaning the kitchen may have been necessary due to the recipient (who is incontinent) defecating on the kitchen floor, no documentation has been provided that would support such a finding. In the absence of appropriate documentation, AHCA appropriately found that an adjustment of one unit was required for the October 17, 2004, services. Respondent also provided six hours of services to the recipient on November 26, 2004, at a cost of $120.96. With respect to this date, AHCA contends, and the undersigned agrees, that overbilling for one unit in the amount of $5.04 occurred, as one of the activities performed, "organizing clothes," constituted an unauthorized homemaker service. For the reasons expressed above, AHCA demonstrated by a preponderance of the evidence overbilling totaling $10.08 with respect to this recipient. Recipient No. 7 This recipient was authorized to receive Personal Care Assistance. Significantly, the recipient's support plan clearly indicated that her mother prepared meals for her. The service logs indicate that Respondent provided four hours of services to the recipient on the following dates: September 4 and November 25, 2003, and February 10 and April 26, 2004. AHCA contends that on each of the four dates listed above, Respondent provided the unauthorized service of meal preparation, and as a result, Respondent was overpaid a total of $18.68. As the recipient's support plan clearly indicated that meals were prepared by a parent, AHCA has demonstrated an overpayment of $18.68 by a preponderance of the evidence. Recipient No. 8 Recipient No. 8 was authorized to receive Personal Care Assistance and Companion Services, both of which were provided by Respondent. AHCA alleges that of the eleven claims reviewed pursuant to the audit, two were problematic. Specifically, AHCA contends the service logs associated with the personal care assistance provided on October 26 and November 19, 2004, were obvious photocopies of Respondent's service log from March of 2004 for the same recipient. Accordingly, AHCA asserts that the records submitted by Respondent in connection with the October 26 and November 19 services were not contemporaneous and therefore inadequate. As no contemporaneous records document the services provided on October 26 and November 19, 2004, AHCA contends that Respondent was overpaid $275.20 ($137.60 for each of the dates). The undersigned has examined the service logs for October and November 2004 for this recipient and finds that they do not constitute contemporaneous records. As such, Respondent was overpaid in the amount alleged by AHCA. Recipient No. 9 This recipient was authorized to receive Homemaker Services. AHCA alleges, and the undersigned agrees, that of the five claims audited, two involved overpayments. In particular, Respondent's service log reveals that on April 29, 2003, the unauthorized activity of "shopping" was performed. As such, Respondent was overpaid in the amount of $3.70. Further, Respondent's service log indicates that on January 7, 2004, homemaker activities were provided from 9:00 a.m. through 11:00 a.m., which included shopping and meal preparation. As noted above, shopping is an unauthorized activity. In addition, the support plan indicates that the recipient's mother was responsible for preparing meals. Accordingly, an overpayment of $3.70 occurred with respect to this date of service. For these reasons, AHCA has demonstrated a total overpayment of $7.40 in connection with this recipient. Recipient No. 10 Recipient No. 10 was authorized to receive Companion Services, which, pursuant to the support plan, were intended to help the recipient "continue to be exposed to different options in the community." AHCA contends that two of the five claims examined during the audit are problematic. First, with respect to the July 29, 2003, claim, Respondent provided no documentation to support the $49.44 billed for the four hours of service. As such, AHCA correctly determined that Respondent was overpaid in that amount. In addition, AHCA properly found that Respondent was overpaid $3.70 in connection with the September 26, 2003, services. Specifically, the service log indicates that a meal was prepared, which is an activity unrelated to the specific goals identified in the support plan. Based on the above findings, Respondent was overpaid a total of $53.14 with respect to this recipient. Recipient No. 12 Recipient No. 12 was authorized to receive eight hours of Companion Services per week. Pursuant to the support plan and service authorization, the services were intended to help the recipient be "socially active in the community." The support plan further indicated that the recipient was able to "clean her room, clean the bathroom . . . wash dishes and help her mother with chores." AHCA correctly alleges that of the five claims examined, three involved overpayments. First, for the 32 units of service provided on December 28, 2003, Respondent was overpaid $3.70 because the service log indicates that dishwashing was provided. This was obviously inappropriate because, as noted above, the support plan expressly provided that the recipient was capable of washing dishes. Next, Respondent's service log indicates that dishwashing was performed for the recipient on April 24, 2004. As such, Respondent was overpaid $3.70. An overpayment of $3.70 was also proven in connection with the July 3, 2004, services, as the service log demonstrates that the unauthorized activities of dishwashing and "organizing the bathroom" were performed. For these reasons, AHCA appropriately determined that Respondent was overpaid in the total amount of $11.10 for the services provided to this recipient during the audit period. Recipient No. 17 This recipient was authorized to receive Personal Care Assistance and Homemaker Services. Of the twelve claims reviewed concerning this recipient, AHCA alleges that only the November 11, 2004, services are problematic. In particular, a review of the service logs demonstrates that seven activities billed as homemaker services for November 11, 2004, were also provided and billed as personal care assistance for the same date. Based upon this unauthorized duplication of services, AHCA has proven that an overpayment of $14.80 occurred. Recipient No. 18 This recipient was authorized to receive forty hours of Personal Care Assistance per week. According to the support plan, the recipient lived alone with her father (who worked full time) and had little contact with her mother, who lived "far away" and visited only occasionally on weekends. The support plan further provided that the personal care assistance was intended to provide assistance with "bathing, dressing, grooming, food preparation, feeding, and transportation to . . . therapy." AHCA determined, following a review of the service logs and other documentation, that Respondent was overpaid in connection with two of the seven claims reviewed during the audit. First, AHCA alleges that Respondent was overpaid $7.72 by performing unauthorized homemaker tasks on September 19, 2003, which included shopping, washing dishes (although no meal was prepared), and assisting with household activities that would not typically be completed by an eight-year-old child. The undersigned agrees that the activities identified by AHCA in connection with the services rendered on September 19, 2003, were unauthorized, and that Respondent was overpaid in the amount of $7.72. AHCA also contends that Respondent was overpaid $7.72 in connection with the services provided on February 27, 2004. Specifically, AHCA asserts that three of the activities (shopping, laundry, and washing dishes) were unauthorized homemaker tasks. It is critical to note that in contrast to the services provided on September 19, 2003, the provider prepared a meal (as authorized by the support plan) for the recipient on February 27, 2004. As such, and for the reasons expressed previously in this Recommended Order, dishwashing should not be deemed an unauthorized activity. However, the undersigned concludes that shopping and laundry, the other two questionable activities performed on February 27, 2004, were indeed unauthorized. In light of the undersigned's finding that meal preparation was not an unauthorized activity, AHCA should make an appropriate adjustment to the February 27, 2004, overpayment. Recipient No. 19 Of the eight claims examined for Recipient No. 19, who was authorized to receive Companion Services, AHCA found fault with only one. In particular, AHCA determined that of the $59.20 billed on November 26, 2004, Respondent was overpaid $3.70 by performing the unauthorized homemaker activity of "organizing bathroom." The undersigned agrees with AHCA's finding, as organizing the recipient's bathroom is a homemaker activity that does not fall within the ambit of companion services. As such, an overpayment of $3.70 occurred. Recipient No. 20 This recipient was authorized to receive twenty hours of Companion Services per week, which were typically provided in four hour blocks from 1:00 p.m. to 5:00 p.m. Companion Services are defined in the Florida Medicaid Developmental Services Waiver Services Coverage and Limitations Handbook as follows: Companion services consist of non-medical care, supervision, and socialization activities provided to an adult on a one-on- one basis. This service must be provided in direct relation to the achievement of the beneficiary's goals per his or her support plan. A companion provider may also assist the beneficiary with such tasks as meal preparation, laundry and shopping . . . . Providers may also perform light housekeeping tasks, incidental to the care and supervision of the beneficiary. (Emphasis added). Significantly, the support plan expressly provided that the recipient "receive[d] assistance from her companion in some house chores, like cleaning the kitchen and meal preparation to avoid risky situations in the kitchen." (Emphasis added). AHCA contends that overpayments occurred with respect to four of the five claims audited. First, AHCA alleges that with regard to the November 11, 2003, services, Respondent was overpaid $3.70 by performing the unauthorized activity of "light housekeeping." The undersigned cannot agree, as the support plan plainly allowed the provider to assist the recipient with "some house chores," which is indistinguishable from "light housekeeping." Further, and as noted above, companion services may include "light housekeeping tasks, incidental to the care and supervision of the beneficiary." The service log for November 11, 2003, demonstrates that supervision was provided to the recipient. Accordingly, Respondent did not overbill in the amount of $3.70 for this date of service. Next, AHCA contends that with respect to the services provided on December 10, 2003 (which included non-medical care, supervision, shopping, and "goals and support plan assistant"), one activity was unauthorized: meal preparation. As such, AHCA alleges that an overpayment of $3.70 occurred. The undersigned concludes, based on the unambiguous language of the support plan, that meal preparation was authorized. As detailed above, the recipient "receive[d] assistance from her companion in some house chores, like cleaning the kitchen and meal preparation to avoid risky situations in the kitchen." (Emphasis added). Accordingly, an overpayment of $3.70 did not occur with respect to the December 10, 2003, services. Turning to the services provided on May 6, 2004, AHCA contends that the unauthorized activity of washing laundry resulted in an overbilling of $3.70. As referenced in the definition of companion services previously quoted, laundry may only be performed "in direct relation to the achievement of the beneficiary's goals per his or her support plan." In this instance, the documentation submitted by Respondent fails to make such a showing. As a result, AHCA correctly found that $3.70 was overbilled for this date. Finally, with respect to the May 12, 2004, services, AHCA alleges that Respondent was overpaid $3.70 for the unauthorized activity of "dishwashing." The undersigned does not agree that dishwashing was unauthorized, since the support plan contemplated that the recipient would receive assistance from a "companion in some house chores, like cleaning the kitchen." As washing dishes is integral to the process of cleaning a kitchen, Respondent was not overpaid in connection with this date of service. Based on the above findings, the total overbilling for this recipient was $3.70, which related to the May 6, 2004, services. Respondent was not overpaid in connection with the services provided on November 11 and December 10, 2003, and May 12, 2004. Recipient No. 21 This recipient was authorized to receive 20 hours of Personal Care Assistance per week, which was typically provided from 2:00 p.m. through 6:00 p.m. The support plan for this recipient, who is incontinent, reads in relevant part as follows: Food requires modification. Food needs to be blend [sic] or puree [sic] at all times to avoid choking . . . . [Recipient] arrives home around 2:00 p.m. Personal Care service changes her diaper. Then she prepares her a snack. She is [sic] assists with eating. AHCA contends that Respondent was overpaid in connection with three of the four dates of service examined during the audit. First, with respect to the services provided on April 14, 2004, AHCA asserts that two unauthorized activities were performed (organizing clothes and performing a massage), which resulted in overbilling of $3.86. Having reviewed the support plan carefully, the undersigned agrees that these activities were unauthorized and that an overpayment occurred in the amount alleged. Turning to the services provided on October 14, 2004, AHCA alleges that five unauthorized activities (providing a massage, washing dishes, changing sheets, organizing the bathroom, and cleaning a table) resulted in overbilling of $11.58. The undersigned concurs with AHCA's assertion that the activities of "massage," change sheets, organize bathroom, and clean table were unauthorized. However, overbilling did not occur for washing dishes, as the service log reveals that a meal was prepared for the recipient on October 14, 2004, an activity that was expressly authorized by the support plan. As meal preparation was permitted, washing the dishes constituted a permissible activity. In light of the above findings, AHCA should make an appropriate adjustment to the overpayment associated with the October 14, 2004, services. Finally, AHCA contends that with regard to the December 24, 2004, services, Respondent was overpaid $7.72 by providing four unauthorized activities: performing a massage, making the bed, changing towels, and cleaning the living room. The undersigned agrees that these activities were not approved and that an overpayment occurred in the amount alleged. Recipient No. 23 Recipient No. 23 was authorized to receive Personal Care Assistance, which was typically provided multiple times each week for eight hours. AHCA contends that Respondent was overpaid in connection with eight of the nine claims examined during the audit. Six of the claims involve identical issues. In particular, with respect to the services provided on August 29, 2003, and February 2, February 17, April 5, May 28, and September 13, 2004, AHCA asserts that the unauthorized activities of "make bed, meal prep, [and] clean table" resulted in overbilling totaling $60.48 (i.e., $10.08 for each of the six dates). As it appears from a review of the support plan that the recipient's mother was able to complete these activities, the undersigned agrees that overbilling occurred in the amount alleged. AHCA also alleges, and has demonstrated by a preponderance of the evidence, that $10.08 was overbilled in connection with the services provided on August 8, 2003. In particular, the activities of "played outside, played with castle set, and lunch" are beyond the scope of the services contemplated by the support plan. Finally, AHCA has met its burden with respect to the alleged $5.04 in overbilling associated with the September 10, 2003, services, as "went to pool" and "watered deck flowers before dinner" plainly constitute unauthorized activities. Recipient No. 24 As noted previously, Respondent concedes that an overpayment of $0.96 occurred with respect to this recipient. Recipient No. 25 Recipient No. 25 was authorized to receive 16 hours of Companion Services each week to assist with socialization and supervision. Of the six claims examined during the audit, AHCA contends that two are problematic. First, with regard to the services provided on January 29, 2003, AHCA contends that the entire billing for that date ($24.72) should be denied due to inadequate documentation. In particular, AHCA notes that the service log provided during the preliminary audit and final audit was different than a log submitted by Respondent in April of 2009. Further, the earlier log is vague (it merely indicates "assist household, escort activities, other") and fails to address any specific support plan activities. AHCA also points out that the later log was incomplete and failed to indicate the date of the activities. AHCA has demonstrated by a preponderance of the evidence that the services provided on January 29, 2003, were not adequately documented, and therefore Respondent was overpaid in the amount of $24.72. Next, AHCA alleges that the services provided on March 25, 2004, were not adequately documented, and therefore the entire billing of $44.40 should be denied for that date. Specifically, AHCA points out that the service log only reads "supervision" and "escort activities" and failed to address any of the activities enumerated in the support plan. Although a later service log was submitted, it was incomplete, vague, and failed to delineate which activities were performed on March 25, 2004, as opposed to the other nine dates of service during that month. For the reasons detailed above, AHCA demonstrated by a preponderance of the evidence that the March 25, 2004, services were not properly documented, and therefore the $44.40 payment should be denied. Recipient No. 26 AHCA contends that of the nine claims examined during the audit concerning this recipient, one should be fully denied due to the lack of proper documentation. Specifically, AHCA alleges that the $74.00 payment for the services rendered on May 31, 2004, should be denied outright, as the service log for May of 2004 was created by photocopying the service log for the previous month and changing the date. The undersigned has examined the documents11 and concludes that the May 2004 service log was not contemporaneously prepared. As a result, AHCA has demonstrated by a preponderance of the evidence that the $74.00 payment associated with the May 31, 2004, services should be denied. Recipient No. 28 This recipient was authorized to receive Personal Care Assistance to address daily needs such as grooming and dressing. Significantly, the support plan also indicates that meal preparation was authorized. AHCA contends that with respect to the services provided on May 15, 2003, four unauthorized homemaker activities were performed: cleaning the bathroom, washing laundry, cleaning the kitchen, and washing dishes. As a result, AHCA alleges an overpayment of $12.00, which represents four units of service. AHCA has demonstrated by a preponderance of the evidence that cleaning the bathroom and washing laundry were unauthorized. However, AHCA has failed to prove that dishwashing and cleaning the kitchen were unauthorized, as the provider prepared a meal (as indicated by the service log) for the recipient on May 15, 2003, an activity that was authorized by the support plan. As explained previously in this Recommended Order, if a provider is authorized to prepare a meal, then it is entirely reasonable for the provider to wash the dishes and clean the kitchen afterward. This is particularly true with respect to this recipient, who lived alone with her stepfather (who, according to the support plan, worked "intensive hours"), and was incapable of performing basic tasks (e.g., grooming and dressing) without assistance. Accordingly, AHCA should make an appropriate adjustment to the alleged $12.00 overpayment based on the above findings that cleaning the kitchen and washing dishes were not unauthorized. Recipient No. 29 Recipient No. 29 was authorized to receive Personal Care Assistance in the amount of two hours each weekday and five hours on weekends. Pursuant to the support plan, the recipient required assistance with basic activities such as dressing, bathing, brushing teeth, and preparing meals. AHCA contends that overbilling occurred with respect to four of the eight dates of service examined during the audit. First, AHCA alleges, and has demonstrated by a preponderance of the evidence that $10.08 was overbilled for the October 6, 2004, services, as the following unauthorized homemaker activities were performed: cleaning the recipient's room, cleaning the bathroom, organizing the room, organizing the bathroom, and changing towels. In addition, AHCA has proven an overpayment of $10.08 in connection with the November 24, 2004, services, where the service log demonstrates that unauthorized homemaker activities (identical to the services identified in the previous paragraph) were performed on that date. With regard to the services rendered on December 14, 2004, AHCA has demonstrated overbilling of $10.08 for the unauthorized homemaker services of cleaning the room and changing towels. Finally, AHCA alleges, and has demonstrated by a preponderance of the evidence, a $5.04 overpayment in connection with the December 29, 2004, services. In particular, the service logs demonstrate that the unauthorized homemaker activities of vacuuming, organizing the bathroom, and taking out garbage were performed. Recipient No. 31 This recipient was authorized to receive Personal Care Assistance, which was provided eight hours per day, Monday through Friday, and ten hours on both Saturday and Sunday. As the recipient is a quadriplegic, personal care assistance was obviously necessary for feeding and maintaining personal hygiene. Of the nine claims examined during the audit concerning this recipient, AHCA alleges that overbilling occurred with respect to two. First, with regard to the October 27, 2003, services, AHCA contends that insufficient documentation was provided by Respondent to support ten hours of billing. In particular, AHCA asserts that "ate well" is the only activity described in the contemporaneous service log.12 As a result, AHCA argues that one hour of billing should be permitted for meal prep, and that the remaining billing in the amount of $181.44 should be disallowed. Contrary to AHCA's contention, "ate well" is not the only event described in the contemporaneous service log. Significantly, the log also reads, "Incontinent B & B." Given the recipient's physical condition, this notation obviously means that the service provider was required to address at least one episode of bladder and bowel incontinence during the ten hours of service. As such, billing should be permitted for toileting. Based on the above finding that services were documented for toileting, AHCA should make an appropriate adjustment to the October 27, 2003, overpayment. Next, AHCA contends that that due to inadequate documentation, overbilling of $161.28 occurred with regard to the ten hours of services provided on February 16, 2004. In particular, AHCA contends that the documentation submitted by Respondent supports only two hours of billing, as bathing was the only activity described in the contemporaneous service log. Once again, however, the contemporaneous service log also indicates that the service provider was required to address the recipient's bladder and bowel incontinence. Accordingly, additional billing should be permitted for toileting, and AHCA should make an appropriate adjustment to the February 16, 2004, overpayment. Recipient No. 32 Recipient No. 32 was authorized to receive Personal Care Assistance and Companion Services. AHCA contends that Respondent was overpaid in connection with eight of the fifteen claims examined pursuant to the audit. With respect to the services provided on March 21 and 23, 2003, AHCA has demonstrated by a preponderance of the evidence that Respondent was overpaid $61.80 in connection with each of the two dates (totaling $123.60) where the documentation does not support the units of service billed. Next, AHCA contends, and the undersigned agrees, that Respondent inappropriately billed for recreational activities in connection with the personal care assistance services provided on August 13, 2003, and December 1, 2003. As a result, $3.86 was overbilled for each date, for a total of $7.72. AHCA also alleges, and has demonstrated by a preponderance of the evidence, that unauthorized homemaker activities were billed in connection with the companion services rendered on October 7 and 11, 2003, and December 2, 2003, which resulted in overbilling of $11.10, $11.10, and $7.40, respectively. In particular, the service logs indicate that meal prep, laundry, and housekeeping were performed on October 7 and 11, 2003, and that laundry and housekeeping were provided on December 2, 2003. Finally, AHCA has proven an overpayment of $15.44 with respect to the personal care assistance services provided on March 25, 2004. Specifically, the service log indicates that the service provider "walked the dog" and "checked live bait," tasks which do not fall within the scope of personal care assistance. Based on the above findings, AHCA demonstrated a total overpayment of $176.36 with respect to this recipient. Recipient No. 33 This recipient was authorized to receive three hours per week of Companion Services, which were intended to "increase awareness of community resources and increase community integration skills." AHCA alleges that Respondent was overpaid in connection with one of the two claims examined during the audit. Specifically, with respect to the services provided on July 15, 2003, the only activities described in the service log are "shopping" and "exercise." AHCA contends, and the undersigned agrees, that neither shopping nor exercise constitute goal oriented activities in under the circumstances of this recipient. Accordingly, AHCA has demonstrated an overpayment of $15.44, which represents one hour of billing. Recipient No. 34 This recipient was authorized to receive Personal Care Assistance. Pursuant to the support plan, the recipient lived with her able-bodied mother and older brother. Of the five claims examined during the audit, AHCA contends that Respondent was overpaid with respect to two. First, AHCA alleges that $5.29 was overpaid in connection with the August 4, 2004, services, where the service log suggested that the provider took the recipient to the park. The undersigned has examined the monthly summary, and agrees with AHCA's assessment of the documentation. Accordingly, AHCA has demonstrated an overpayment in the amount alleged. Turning to the services provided on December 9, 2004, AHCA has demonstrated an overpayment of $5.29 by a preponderance of the evidence, as "cleaning the living room" is an activity that could have been performed by the recipient's mother.

Recommendation Based on the foregoing Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law, it is Recommended that AHCA: Make appropriate adjustments to the empirical overpayment; Recalculate the probable total overpayment using the adjusted empirical overpayment and the statistical formula previously employed, and enter a final order requiring Respondent to repay AHCA the amount determined through such recalculation; The final order should further require Respondent to pay interest at the rate of 10 percent per annum on the recalculated total overpayment. DONE AND ENTERED this 23rd day of November, 2010, in Tallahassee, Leon County, Florida. S Edward T. Bauer Administrative Law Judge Division of Administrative Hearings The DeSoto Building 1230 Apalachee Parkway Tallahassee, Florida 32399-3060 (850) 488-9675 SUNCOM 278-9675 Fax Filing (850) 921-6847 www.doah.state.fl.us Filed with the Clerk of the Division of Administrative Hearings this 23rd day of November, 2010.

Florida Laws (3) 120.569120.57409.913
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DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND REHABILITATIVE SERVICES vs LEONEL MEDEROS, D/B/A LAS AMERICAS SUPPORT SERVICES, 95-002130 (1995)
Division of Administrative Hearings, Florida Filed:Miami, Florida May 04, 1995 Number: 95-002130 Latest Update: Jun. 12, 1997

The Issue Whether Respondent's certification as a support coordinator under the Medicaid waiver program should be renewed.

Findings Of Fact The Department is the state agency charged with the responsibility of regulating persons to be certified as support coordinators under the home and community based services program. At all times material to the allegations in this case, Respondent, Leonel Mederos, was certified as a support coordinator and did business through his company, Las Americas Support Services. For the period 1992 through 1995, Karlene Peyton was the program administrator for the Department's developmental services program which was responsible for the support coordinators under the home and community based services program. The developmental services program provides services to clients developmentally disabled, e.g., persons who are mentally retarded, have autism, cerebral palsy or spina bifida. Developmentally disabled persons are entitled to receive benefits such as supportive living services, employment services, training services, residential services, and case management services. The Department administers such services pursuant to Chapter 393, Florida Statutes, and Chapter 10F-13,Florida Administrative Code. As part of the system to provide services to the developmentally disabled, the home and community based services program (HCBSP) was established under the Medicaid program. This program adds a support coordinator who is not employed by the Department but who serves as a case manager for the client. In order to qualify under the HCBSP, clients must be Medicaid eligible and have the specified range of disability. For example, a client who is mentally retarded would be evaluated based upon their IQ level and deficiencies in activities of daily living. In the instant case, the persons providing assistance or case management to the developmentally disabled client are designated as waiver support coordinators. The waiver support coordinators are Medicaid providers. When the Department established the waiver support coordinators program, it promulgated statewide policies and written guidelines to regulate the system. It also developed district specific guidelines or policies. One policy, for example, is the limitation on the number of cases assigned to each support coordinator. A waiver support coordinator may not have more than thirty-five (35) clients. Respondent had been an employee with the Department at the time the waiver support coordinators program was established in Dade County. He left the agency to become, and was certified as, a Medicaid waiver support coordinator under the home and community based services program. Respondent qualified Las Americas Support Services as an entity through which waiver support coordinators might work. In order to become certified Respondent was required to complete training requirements related to statewide and district training. Topics covered in the training included Department rules and policies related to the Medicaid waiver program, support plans, plan implementation, services, record keeping, documentation of services and billing, and the use of the Department's computer system. As part of the application package completed on or about May 20, 1993, Respondent executed assurances which are part of the Medicaid provider agreement. The assurances are Respondent's representation to the Department that he will comply with specific conditions. These assurances provided, in pertinent part: 3. All individuals employed as support coordinators will meet the minimum require- ments of a bachelors degree in a human service field and two years of experience with individuals who have a developmental disability. Evidence of these qualifications will be maintained in each individual's employee personnel file. * * * 6. The provider shall maintain financial records in accordance with a recognized system of accounting to accurately reflect the details of the business and shall undergo an annual financial audit of its support coordination program, which may be part of an agency-wide audit. * * * 21. The provider assures that it will maintain the client central record in accordance with 393, F.S. * * * 24. The provider assures compliance with requirements of Chapter 393, F.S. and the proposed DS/Home and Community Based Services Waiver Rule, 10F-13, F.A.C. * * * 27. The provider assures that no more [than] thirty-five individuals will be assigned to a support coordinator who is serving Developmental Services HCBS waiver clients. * * * 29. The provider understands that payment for independent support coordination services is made from state and federal funds and that any falsification or concealment of a material fact may be prosecuted under state and federal laws. The provider further understands that such falsification or concealment is a breach of the DS/HCBS certification and may result in cancellation of same by the department. * * * 31. The provider agrees to return to the department any overpayments received that were disbursed to the provider by the depart- ment. In the event that the department discovers an overpayment has been made, the department will notify the provider of such a finding. Except for provided in No.32 below, the provider agrees to make repayment within thirty (30) days of recipt (sic) of such notification unless the parties are able to agree upon an alternative schedule. Respondent attended and completed the statewide training portion for certification in June, 1993. He completed the district training (with information pertinent specifically to District 11) in July, 1993. He was fully certified to perform as a support coordinator from July 1, 1993 through July 1, 1994. In June, 1994, as part of the recertification process, Respondent executed another assurances agreement. Subsequently, his certification was renewed for the period September 1, 1994 through February 28, 1995. This second assurances agreement, while not identical to the first, in substance had the same provisions as those outlined above in paragraph 17 above. For each client to be served by a waiver support coordinator, a support plan must be developed that identifies the specific services needed by the client. Such plan is developed with input from the client, the client's family, as well as the service providers who are to provide the needed services. The driving force to establish the support plan must be the client's individual needs. Once the support plan is in place the services coordinator must verify that the services are properly and satisfactorily delivered to the client. The coordinator must keep accurate case notes reflecting the date, time, and description of all services provided to the client. The documentation maintained by the services coordinator serves to verify that the services were delivered. As part of the process, the coordinator must also have a cost plan which identifies the expenses budgeted for each service the client is to receive. Every cost plan must be submitted to the Department for approval, and only services which have been approved may be billed by the service coordinator. Every support coordinator is required to maintain case notes of all activities performed on behalf of a client. No activity may be billed to the Medicaid waiver program which is not supported by case notes reflecting the identity of the client, the date of the service, the time of the service and the description of the service. At all times material to this case, the support coordinators billed time based upon quarter hour increments. For example, one through fifteen minutes was billed as one unit, sixteen through 30 minutes as two units, and so on for a total of 4 units per hour. Each support coordinator was responsible for logging their billing units directly into the Department's computer system. Only services which have been approved may be billed and may not include administrative duties such as faxing, copying, transferring case records or other office functions which are included in the rate paid to support coordinators. Each support coordinator is subject to a review wherein Department personnel audit client records to determine compliance with the Medicaid program policy requirements. In November, 1994, Department personnel were reviewing the qualifications of two persons employed as support coordinators through Respondent's company. When Respondent could not produce either the original degrees or authenticated transcripts for the two coordinators (which would evidence the requisite degree required for the coordinators), Respondent was instructed to return all case records assigned to the two workers to the Department. When the case records were returned, the Department discovered billing discrepancies. For example, it discovered Respondent had overbilled for certain clients and had billed for services not allowed. When this was uncovered, the Department elected to perform an in-depth review of the Respondent's business record keeping. The materials reviewed were from Respondent who was responsible for their origin and accuracy. From November 1994 through February 1995, the Department attempted to reconcile Respondent's case records with the billing which had been submitted to the agency by the Respondent. As a result of this audit, it is found the Respondent overbilled by billing more units that were documented. The Respondent overbilled by billing for services which are not allowed and had not been approved. The Respondent overbilled by billing for services provided by an unqualified services coordinators for whom appropriate documentation has not been provided. The Respondent overbilled by exceeding the amount of an authorized payment thereby making a payment not approved by the Department. In addition to the foregoing, the Respondent attempted to serve seventy (70) clients. Such number exceeds the number of clients a services coordinator is authorized to have. Based upon the foregoing, the Department decided on March 1, 1995 not to renew Respondent's certification. Respondent timely challenged that decision. The application and assurances executed by Respondent provided a notice that the failure to comply with the Medicaid waiver policies constitutes grounds for denying or cancelling certification in the program.

Recommendation Based on the foregoing, it is, hereby, RECOMMENDED: That the Department of Health and Rehabilitative Services enter a final order affirming the agency action letter of March 1, 1995, which determined not to renew the Respondent's certification. DONE AND ENTERED in Tallahassee, Leon County, Florida, this 28th day of January, 1997. JOYOUS D. PARRISH Administrative Law Judge Division of Administrative Hearings The DeSoto Building 1230 Apalachee Parkway Tallahassee, Florida 32399-3060 (904) 488-9675 SUNCOM 278-9675 Fax Filing (904) 921-6847 Filed with the Clerk of the Division of Administrative Hearings this 28th day of January, 1997. APPENDIX Rulings on the proposed findings of fact submitted by Petitioner: Paragraphs 1 through 12, 14 through 23, 25 through 31, and 33 are accepted. With regard to paragraph 13, the assurances contained, in substance, the same provisions but were not identical to the first ones executed by Respondent. With regard to paragraph 24, it is accepted that Respondent received a warning regarding soliciting clients otherwise rejected as irrelevant or not supported by the record. With regard to paragraph 32, it is accepted that Respondent was offered assistance for remediation purposes and was not singled-out for disparate treatment; otherwise rejected as irrelevant or argument or comment. Rulings on the proposed findings of fact submitted by Respondent: 1. Paragraphs 1 and 2 are rejected as argument, comment, or contrary to the weight of the credible evidence. COPIES FURNISHED: Myron M. Gold, Esquire FOX AND GOLD, P.A. 2900 South West 28th Terrace Miami, Florida 33133 Hilda A. Fluriach, Esquire Department of Health and Rehabilitative Services 401 Northwest 2nd Avenue, N-1014 Miami, Florida 33128 Gregory D. Venz, Agency Clerk Department of Children and Families Building 2, Room 204 1317 Winewood Boulevard Tallahassee, Florida 32399-0700 Richard A. Doran, General Counsel Department of Children and Families Building 2, Room 204 1317 Winewood Boulevard Tallahassee,Florida 32399-0700

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AGENCY FOR HEALTH CARE ADMINISTRATION vs ALTERNATIVE CARE STAFFING, INC., 13-004642MPI (2013)
Division of Administrative Hearings, Florida Filed:Tallahassee, Florida Nov. 26, 2013 Number: 13-004642MPI Latest Update: Aug. 18, 2015

The Issue Are the Medicaid payment claims of Respondent Alternative Care Staffing, Inc. (Alternative), for companion care services authorized by support plans and waiver support coordinators and provided in the community to recipients residing in group homes reimbursable services under the Home and Community-Based Wavier (HCB Waiver) program? Are Alternative’s Medicaid service claims for allegedly unauthorized activities reimbursable under the HCB Waiver program, or may the Agency for Health Care Administration (Agency) recoup payment for the claims? Did Alternative receive payment for services provided by ineligible staff? Are Alternative’s allegedly overlapping Medicaid service claims actually overlapping? Did the Agency meet: (1) its burden of proof for imposing fines, and (2) its statutory obligations before imposing fines? Whether or how much, due to mitigating factors, the Agency can fine Alternative for the items identified as overpayments in Agency’s Exhibit 6, Amended Final Audit Report dated May 25, 2011; subsequently, modified in Agency’s Exhibit 7, Current Overpayment Calculations and Agency Work Papers; and finally modified during the hearing as shown in Exhibit A to the proposed recommended orders and this Recommended Order.

Findings Of Fact Background The Medicaid program is a federal and state partnership that pays the costs of providing health care and related services to qualified individuals, including people with developmental disabilities. The Agency is the single state agency authorized to make payments for medical assistance and related services under Florida’s Medicaid program. § 409.902, Fla. Stat. (2013). The Legislature charged the Agency with overseeing the activities of Medicaid recipients and their providers and with recouping overpayments. §§ 409.913 and 409.913(1)(e), Fla. Stat. Florida law defines an “overpayment” as “any amount that is not authorized to be paid by the Medicaid program whether paid as a result of inaccurate or improper cost reporting, improper claiming, unacceptable practice, fraud, abuse, or mistake.” During the relevant time period, Florida law defined “abuse” as “provider practices that are inconsistent with generally accepted business or medical practices and that result in an unnecessary cost to the Medicaid program or in reimbursement for goods or services that are medically unnecessary, upcoded, or fail to meet professionally recognized standard of health care.” § 401.913(1)(a), Fla. Stat. “Abuse may also include a violation of state or federal law, rule or regulation.” (Pet. Ex. 11, Provider General Handbook (Jan. 2007), p. 1083; Pet. Ex. 11, Provider General Handbook (July 2008), p. 1092). This definition is much broader than the everyday definition of abuse as a “corrupt practice or custom.”1/ “Overpayment includes any amount that is not authorized to be paid by the Medicaid program whether paid as a result of inaccurate or improper cost reporting, improper claims, unacceptable practices, fraud, abuse or mistake.” (Pet. Ex. 11, Provider General Handbook (Jan. 2007), p. 1083; Pet. Ex. 11, Provider General Handbook (July 2008), p. 1092). As part of the Agency’s fulfillment of the statutory directive to investigate overpayments, the Bureau of Medicaid Program Integrity (MPI) in the Office of the Inspector General routinely conducts audits. A Medicaid provider is a person or entity that has voluntarily chosen to provide and be reimbursed for goods or services provided to eligible Medicaid recipients. A provider’s participation requires an agreement with the Agency to provide services. Alternative has been a Medicaid provider since 2004. Florida’s Medicaid program includes a program for people with developmental disabilities. It uses the state and federal Medicaid funds for home and community-based services. The program is known as the Home and Community-Based Waiver or HCB Waiver. Florida’s Agency for Persons with Disabilities (APD) administers the HCB Waiver pursuant to statute. APD is responsible for the day-to-day operation of the HCB Waiver. APD is the primary point of contact and source of information for HCB Waiver providers, such as Alternative. The Interagency Agreement (Agreement) between the Agency and APD establishes the relationship between the two agencies and their obligations and roles in this mutual undertaking. Alternative and other providers are not parties to the Agreement The Agreement’s Delegation of Authority for Waiver Operation, Section B(2) (R. Ex. B), states: Pursuant to the approved development disabilities home and community-based waivers, [the Agency] has authorized [APD] to operate the waivers on a day-to-day basis, in accordance with this agreement. This agreement memorializes an arrangement under which APD will operate and make appropriate decisions based upon approved policy on behalf of and under the oversight of [the Agency]. The Agreement obligates both agencies to operate the waiver in accordance with laws, rules, regulations, and handbooks. Section B(4)(c) of the Agreement requires the Agency to coordinate with APD “on all [waiver] administrative rules, amendments to rules, policies or regulations that pertain to the waiver.” Section B(4)(g) places responsibility for recouping overpayments to HCB Waiver providers on the Agency. Section B(4)(a) reserves to the Agency “final authority on all policies, procedures, rules, regulations, manuals, handbooks, and statewide quality assurance monitoring procedures pertaining to the development disabilities waivers.” Section B(5)(e) requires APD to advise the Agency in advance of any proposed regulations or manuals developed by APD. Section 5(g) obligates APD to assure payments to “providers are reconciled based upon individual cost plans in the DD [Developmental Disability] and F/SL [Family and Support Living] Waiver programs and are within the annual program budgets.” Under the HCB Waiver, recipients working with independent waiver service coordinators plan their services according to the recipient’s needs. The result is a detailed support or cost plan. The support plan articulates the services and the goals for each type of service needed. It is updated annually. A service authorization is developed from each support plan to specify the amount, by time and dollars, approved for each type of service. The service authorization documents also identify which Medicaid-contracted providers will provide each of the approved services. APD reviews and approves the support plans. The 2007 and 2008 versions of the Developmental Disabilities Services Coverage and Limitations Handbook (DD Handbook) specify in chapter 2-5 that in order for a recipient to receive a service, the service must be identified on the recipient’s support plan approved by APD. Providers, like Alternative, rely upon the support plans and service authorizations to determine what services to provide and if the services are authorized for payment. At all times material to this case, Alternative has been a provider of HCB Waiver services to Medicaid recipients, pursuant to a Medicaid provider contract with the Agency and a Medicaid Waiver Services Agreement with APD. Alternative provides most services through independent contractors. The complex requirements governing providers in the Medicaid program are explicated in rules of the Agency and in the Medicaid Provider General Handbook, adopted by rule. More requirements for providers in the HCB Waiver are imposed by rules of APD and the DD Handbook, developed by APD and the Agency, and adopted by Agency rule. For the time period in this case, the June 2007 and June 2008 versions of the Medicaid Provider General Handbook were in effect. For the time period of this case, the June 2007 and December 2008 versions of the DD Handbook were in effect. The Chase The Medicaid payment process differs from a typical commercial transaction. Robi Olmstead, administrator for the Agency’s Office of the Inspector General, Medicaid Program Integrity, described the process as “pay and chase.” The Agency accepts claims for payment at face value with very little review and promptly pays them. But the Agency has the authority to review claims long after payment and seek recoupment, “chase,” if it determines the claim was not proper. The Agency’s MPI office does the “chasing” by conducting provider audits. In 2011, the Agency audited Alternative’s claims for the period January 1, 2008, through June 30, 2009. Kristen Koelle, who conducted the audit, selected the time period to take into account the fact that Alternative was a relatively new provider and had a 12-month window of opportunity to submit new claims or void submitted claims. Typically, the Agency audits a two-to-three year period of payments for providers with a longer history. On November 4, 2010, the Agency sent a letter requesting records from Alternative and advising that it was conducting an audit. The letter sought records for 35 of Alternative’s 85 Medicaid recipients to use as a cluster sample. Alternative responded promptly and provided very organized records. The majority of issues identified in the audit involved documentation, not a failure to provide services. The Agency uses a statistical formula to extrapolate overpayments from the records and claims of the samples. The Agency issued a Preliminary Audit Report concluding that Alternative owed $719,680.09 for overpayments for wrongly made and paid claims. After a typical process of communication, supplementation of records, and review of documents, the Agency issued a Final Audit Report reducing the amount to $452,821.65. By the time the hearing started, the Agency had reduced the amount in an Amended Final Audit Report to $155,747.97 and had reduced the proposed fine from $90,564.33 to $31,149.59. By law, the Agency’s audit report creates prima facie proof of overpayments, which a provider has a right to dispute. In this case, there is no dispute about the acceptability or application of the Agency’s statistical formula for extrapolation. The disputes are about which representative claims are properly input into the extrapolation formula. During the hearing, Alternative agreed to several additional claims. The parties jointly prepared an Appendix to their proposed recommended orders identifying the remaining disputed claims. It is attached as Exhibit A to this Recommended Order and adopted by reference. These are the claims the Agency maintains should be used in the formula to determine the full amount of the asserted overpayments. Alternative disagrees. The remaining claims fall into four categories. They are: (1) companion services provided to recipients living in group homes; (2) unauthorized activities; (3) overlapping of support services; and (4) ineligible staff. Services are measured in “units of service” of 15 minutes each. Companion Services for Recipients Living In Group Homes During the time period when the June 2007 DD Handbook was in effect, Alternative collectively provided and was paid for 640 units of service to four waiver recipients who resided in licensed residential facilities or group homes. The recipients are identified in this record as Recipients 7, 13, 14, and 25. Companion services are non-medical care supervision and socialization activities provided to an adult individually. They may be activities such as assistance with grocery shopping, housekeeping, or visiting the library. (DD Handbook, 2007, Chap. 2-27). The June 2007 version of the DD Handbook states: “Recipient’s [sic] living in licensed residential settings, excluding foster homes, are not eligible to receive these [companion] services.” (DD Handbook, 2007, Chap. 2-28). The December 2008 version of the DD Handbook states that companion care services may be provided to residents of a licensed group or foster home. APD approved the support plans for Recipients 7, 13, 14, and 25. The plans plainly stated that each recipient lived in a residential living facility (group home). The support plans also plainly identified companion services among the services to be provided. (Pet. Ex. 8, pp. 491-501; 591-604; 628-636; and 857-864.) In addition, each recipient’s waiver support coordinator provided a service authorization for the companion services. Alternative provided companion services as indicated in the APD approved support plans and the service authorizations. Alternative’s consistent experience with providing companion services to residents in living facilities was that APD approved and paid for providing those services under the June 2007 DD Handbook. Because of the issues raised in the audit, in an e-mail dated May 19, 2011, Joyce Rowe, president of Alternative, wrote Denise Oetinger, regional program supervisor for APD, asking about authorized services during the period January 2008 to June 2009. Ms. Oetinger was an APD liaison to providers who Alternative relied upon to explain the many requirements and conditions of the DD Handbook. Ms. Rowe’s e-mail said: In our preliminary [Agency audit] review we had four individuals which Alt Care received services authorizations for that lived in a group home [stet]. We provided the services out in the community. Kristen Koelle with AHCA Audit Recovery stated in the handbook of limitations up to 12/3/2008 we were not allowed to provide companion services to any individual living in a licensed facility. Of course they wanted to recoup thousands of dollars from our company. Do we have any special provisions or documentation why we were getting these service authorizations sent to us and getting paid for a service which was unauthorized? I called one of the support coordinators because they are responsible in a sense for sending the authorizations. I was told to e-mail you in hope for some answers. Ms. Oetinger replied2/: Ms. Rowe, Companion can be provided to an individual living in a licensed facility, but it must be delivered in the community. So they must leave the home they live in and do something outside the home. This has not changed from handbook to handbook. I will ask that our inter-agency liaison communicate with Kristen Koelle. Thank you for bringing this to our attention and I will get back to you as I have more information. In light of the Agreement, the way in which the Agency and APD held themselves out to providers, the relationship between APD and providers, the practice of relying upon APD for guidance about the HCB Waiver, the approval of the support plans, and the subsequent issuance of service authorizations, Alternative reasonably relied upon APD-approved support plans and the waiver support coordinator-provided service authorizations when providing and obtaining payment for companion services to Recipients 7, 13, 14, and 25. In addition, the weight of the persuasive evidence establishes that Recipients 7, 13, 14, and 25 are the only recipients living in a licensed residential facility for which Alternative received payments for companion services provided during the audit period. Consequently, using those claims to extrapolate to a recipient-wide population is not factually supported. Ineligible Staff Alternative employee Ben Alvarez provided personal care assistance and companion services to Recipient 3. He also provided in-home support services to Recipient 15. For the time period during which Mr. Alvarez provided personal care assistance services, the December 2008 DD Handbook was in effect. Chapter 1-25 required individuals providing the service to “have at least one year of experience working in a medical, psychiatric, nursing or childcare setting or working with recipients who have a developmental disability.” It permitted substitution of specified educational achievements for the experience. Alternative did not have documentation that Mr. Alvarez had the specified alternative educational achievements. It did not have documentation that Mr. Alvarez had worked in a medical, psychiatric, nursing, or childcare setting. Alternative did have documentation that Mr. Alvarez had six years’ experience caring for an adult with developmental disabilities, providing services, including personal care, hygiene, grooming, bathing, and feeding. This individual was a relative of Mr. Alvarez. Nothing in the documentation establishes that the relative Mr. Alvarez was caring for was a Medicaid recipient. Deposition testimony establishes that the individual was a waiver recipient at the time of the deposition, February 13, 2014. But it does not establish that he was a recipient at the time Mr. Alvarez provided services. The deposition is also not part of the documentation maintained by Alternative. In sum, the weight of the persuasive evidence shows Alternative did not have documentation that Mr. Alvarez met the experience or substitute educational requirements of chapter 1-25. For the time period during which Mr. Alvarez provided companion services, the December 2008 DD Handbook was in effect. Chapter 1-18 required individuals providing the service to “have at least one year of experience working in a medical, psychiatric, nursing or childcare setting or working with recipients who have a developmental disability.” It also permitted substitution of specified educational achievements for the experience. The weight of the persuasive evidence shows that Alternative did not document that Mr. Alvarez met the experience or substitute educational requirements of chapter 1-18. Chapter 1-23 of the DD Handbook imposes the same experience and substitution education requirements for providers of in-home support services as required for companion and personal care services. As with them, the weight of the persuasive evidence shows that Mr. Alvarez did not meet the experience or substitute educational requirements. An Alternative employee, known as Ora or Paul Richmond, provided 16 units of companion services to Recipient 11 on March 2, 2009. At that time, the December 2008 DD Handbook was in effect. Chapter 1-18, above, established the experience and requirements for providers of the service. Alternative’s documentation establishes that Mr. Richmond lived with, and helped care for, his disabled father from 2006 to 2008. Among other things, he helped his father with cooking, cleaning, laundry, and bill paying. Alternative’s documentation does not identify what disability Mr. Richmond’s father had, and it does not indicate that Mr. Richmond’s father was a Medicaid recipient. The weight of the persuasive evidence shows Alternative did not document that Mr. Richmond met the experience or substitute educational requirements of chapter 1–18. The Agency paid Alternative for companion services provided by Christopher Rose to Recipients 13 and 14. Mr. Rose provided the services during a period governed by the 2007 DD Handbook. The companion provider requirements of chapter 1-18 of that DD Handbook are the same as those of chapter 1-18 of the 2008 version. Alternative’s documentation for Mr. Rose showed that he had worked as a private-duty companion for an individual with retardation for approximately three years. The documentation did not indicate who the individual was, whether the individual was a Medicaid recipient, or where the services were provided. The weight of the persuasive evidence shows Alternative did not document that Mr. Rose met the experience or substitute educational requirements of chapter 1-18. Documented Activity Support for Billing The Agency paid Alternative for 16 units of service for companion services provided to Recipient 6 on March 27, 2008. The sole documented description for the activity involved was “enjoyed attending alternative office party.” It does not document what the activities were or where the party was. Ms. Rowe testified that the party was not accurately described and that the office social was held in Bradenton, Florida, at Bayshore Gardens. But that is not what the documentation shows. The support plan for Recipient 6 provided that the companion provider “will help [the recipient] participate in activities outside of his home. [Recipient] will also explore volunteer opportunities available to him.” This is in support of the larger goal of teaching him to interact in the community. The documentation for the office party does not document a connection between the support plan and the activity. The Agency paid Alternative for 14 units of companion services provided to Recipient 12 on April 16, 2008. The support plan goals for Recipient 12 are to stay home, be active with his family, identify someone to care for him, go out into the community, be involved in community activities, maintain a healthy weight, and maintain good dental health. Alternative’s documentation for the services on April 16 reports only “[a]ss. with indoor activities.” It provides no other descriptions of the activities. The information is not sufficient to determine what relationship, if any, the activities had to the recipient’s goals. Ms. Rowe testified that the recipient had gone to his community clubhouse that day. But that is not what the entry says, in contrast to an April 17, 2008, entry which specified clubhouse activities. In addition, Ms. Rowe was not the service provider and did not provide information about how she knew what that individual did that day. Her testimony was not persuasive. The Agency paid Alternative for 14 units of service for companion services provided to Recipient 12 on April 30, 2008. Alternative’s documentation for the services on April 30, 2008, reports only “[a]ss. with activities at home.” It provides no other descriptions of the activities. The information is not sufficient to determine what relationship, if any, the activities had to the recipient’s community-oriented goals. The Agency paid Alternative for 20 units of service for companion services provided to Recipient 18 on January 7, 2008. The recipient’s support plan for companion services focuses on going out into the community to eat, visit parks, go to places of interest, and attend parties. Alternative’s documentation for the services describes the activities from 1:30 p.m. to 4:30 p.m., as “[p]repare lunch, ate 100%, change underwear, small walk, watch some TV by request, lie for a rest on sofa.” Lunch preparation and changing clothes are not companion services. They are personal care assistance services. The Agency reasonably deducted two units of service for these claims. Also on January 7, 2008, a different provider of companion services describes the activities from 4:30 p.m. to 6:30 p.m., as “watched t.v. [and] chilled out today.” These activities are not activities related to the companion services of the support plan. There is no documentation supporting the claim for payment for the time between 4:30 p.m. and 6:30 p.m. The Agency reasonably denied payment for two units of service for this time period. The Agency paid Alternative for 20 units of service for companion services provided to Recipient 18 on March 1, 2009. The documentation for those services states only: “We stayed in due to weather.” It provides no information about the weather, what activities the recipient engaged in while “in,” or why the weather precluded all community activities. The documentation does not support the claim for billing 20 units of service. Unauthorized Activities The Agency paid Alternative for 12 units of service for in-home support services provided to Recipient 15 on February 21, 2008. The recipient’s support plan described his goals to be advanced by in-home support services as “learn how to better take care of his apartment, cook for himself, clean his apartment, do his laundry, and learn to make independent life decision[s].” Alternative’s documentation describes the day’s activities as “[Recipient] and I went to the library. Then watch [sic] a little TV. I left early because he said he was tired.” Watching television is not an activity within the authorized in-home support services. It is reasonable to reduce the claimed units of service by one to adjust for the time spent providing an unauthorized service. The Agency paid Alternative for 20 units of service for in-home support services provided to Recipient 15 on April 2, 2008. Alternative’s documentation from the caregiver describing the services states: “[Recipient] and I went to the store to pick up several items. Then came back to his place and played dominos.” The weight of the persuasive evidence establishes that there is no connection between playing dominos and the services for which in-home support was authorized. Deducting one unit of service from the services paid for to account for time spent playing dominos is reasonable. The Agency paid Alternative for 20 units of service for in-home support services provided to Recipient 15 on June 25, 2009. The caregiver provided multiple services that day. The documented activities included watching two movies, Bolt and the Spiderwick Chronicles. The weight of the persuasive evidence establishes that there is no connection between watching the movies and the services for which in-home support was authorized. Deducting the claimed units of service to Recipient 15 by one, as the Agency recommends, is a reasonable accounting for the time spent watching the movies. On February 20, 2008, Alternative billed for 32 units of service for companion services for Recipient 26. The support plan for Recipient 26 identifies Alternative as providing the companion services for his goal to “want to do some volunteer work and learn how to socialize with others [sic] people that will not take advantage of me.” Alternative’s documentation for the companion services on February 26, 2008, includes “doing laundry at home and babysitting nephew.” These activities are not within the scope of the support plan for companion services or directed to a related goal. Deducting a unit of service for Recipient 26 on February 20, 2008, by one to account for the laundry and babysitting is reasonable. On January 22, 2008, Alternative billed for 24 units of service for companion services for Recipient 33. The recipient’s support plan lists the following goals that require companion services: “work on building practical skills, making choices, and verbally communicating opinions, wants and needs to others. I want to continue learning to be safe within [t]his community.” Alternative’s documentation to support payment describes the day’s activities as “[t]ook [Recipient] to the Library, [illegible] Target, Dollar, [illegible], watched a movie at his house.” Watching television at the recipient’s house does not fall within the scope of the Recipient’s companion services. Deducting a unit of service for that day by one to account for the time spent watching a movie is reasonable. Overlapping and Unsupported Claims The Agency paid Alternative for respite care to Recipient 16 from noon to 6:00 p.m., 34 units of service, on March 3, 2009. The narrative by Van Greenlaw for the respite care log entry on March 3, 2009, reports: “I arrived today got lunch ready, he went to the gym, came back, plays some of his games, after that he got ready to go to church with [illegible], day ends.” The work hours are changed by strike-throughs to 1:30 p.m. to 6:00 p.m. on another copy of the log. The log does not show the date of the change or who made the change. The personal care assistance service log for March 3 shows Mr. Greenlaw as working from noon to 6:00 p.m. Another copy of the personal care assistance log shows a struck-through revision indicating that personal care services were provided between noon and 1:30 p.m. The log does not show the date of the change or indicate who made the change. The revised service logs and the invoice for the week’s services by Mr. Greenlaw do not reconcile. The invoice shows a total of 2.5 hours (10 units of service) of companion services from 12:30 p.m. to 2:30 p.m. and 4.5 hours (18 units of service) respite care from 2:30 p.m. to 6:00 p.m. (Pet. Ex. 8, p. 752). There are no logs documenting provision of companion care services. Alternative billed for 18 units of respite service for March 3, 2009, and six units of service for companion services, not the personal care assistance services identified in the log. (Koelle, Tr. at 148-149, Pet. Ex. 752). In addition to the reconciliation inconsistency, the invoice has a math error. The actual amount of time between 2:30 p.m. and 6:00 p.m. is only 3.5 hours (14 units of service) for respite care, not the invoiced 4.5 hours. Alternative concedes one hour of overbilling. It offers no explanation for billing for companion services when the only record of services is for personal care and respite care. The documentation only supports billing for 14 units of respite care service on March 3, 2009, for Recipient 16. Therefore, the billable units of service for Recipient 16 on March 3, 2009, should be reduced by 20, from 34 to 14, when applying the Agency’s extrapolation formula. Training of Ora Richmond Alternative hired Ora (Paul) Richmond as a caregiver on February 7, 2009. The first date that there is a record of him providing recipient services is March 2, 2009. Mr. Richmond received his zero tolerance training on March 10, 2009. He received his “Core Competency” training on January 10, 2010. The Agency maintains that Mr. Richmond did not have the training required by the applicable DD Handbook when he provided services on March 2, 2009, and that the 16 units of service for that day should be disallowed. The Agency refers to the December 3, 2008, DD Handbook. The handbook took effect on December 3, 2008. The provision, section 2.1(H), imposing the new zero tolerance training requirement, provided: “All direct service providers hired after 90 days from the effective date of this rule are required to complete the Agency for Persons with Disabilities developed Zero Tolerance Training course prior to rendering direct care services (as a pre-service training activity).” Mr. Richmond was hired less than 90 days from the effective date of the requirement. Section 2.1(G) of the provision requiring “Core Competency” training stated: “All direct service providers are required to complete training in the APD’s Direct Care Core Competencies Training, or an equivalent curriculum approved by APD within 90 days of employment or enrollment to provide the service.” The 90th day after Mr. Richmond’s employment was May 8, 2009. Therefore, he was not in violation of the core competency requirement when he provided services to Recipient 11 on March 2, 2009. However, as determined in Findings of Fact 50 through 52, he did not have the experience required to serve as a caregiver.

Recommendation Based on the foregoing Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law, it is RECOMMENDED that the Agency for Health Care Administration recalculate the amounts to be recouped applying the Procedure Codes, units of service, and amount per unit of service, as shown in the Appendix, with the following adjustments: The Agency will not include in recoupment calculations, for the reason that Alternative provided the services to residents of a licensed residential facility, any payments made for companion services provided to Recipients 7, 13, 14, and 25. The Agency will include in recoupment calculations the amounts and units of service paid to Alternative for Mr. Alvarez’s companion and personal care assistance services to Recipient 3 and his in-home support services to Recipient 15, as shown in the Appendix. The Agency will include in recoupment calculations the amounts and units of service paid to Alternative for Mr. Richmond’s services to Recipients 11, as shown in the Appendix. The Agency will include in recoupment calculations the amounts and units of service paid to Alternative for Mr. Rose’s companion services to Recipients 13 and 14, as shown in the Appendix. The Agency will include in recoupment calculations the amounts and units of service paid to Alternative for the 16 units of service shown in the Appendix, as provided to Recipient 6 on March 27, 2008. The Agency will include in recoupment calculations the amounts and units of service paid to Alternative for 14 units of companion service provided to Recipient 12 on April 16, 2008, as shown in the Appendix. The Agency will include in recoupment calculations the amounts and units of service paid to Alternative for 14 units of companion service provided to Recipient 12 on April 30, 2008, as shown in the Appendix. The Agency will include in recoupment calculations the amounts and units of service paid to Alternative for four units of service on January 7, 2008, to Recipient 18. The Agency will include in recoupment calculations the amounts and units of service paid to Alternative for 20 units of service on March 1, 2009, to Recipient 18, as shown in the Appendix. The Agency will include in the recoupment calculations the amounts and units of service paid to Alternative for one unit of in-home support service provided on February 21, 2008, to Recipient 15. The Agency will include in the recoupment calculations the amounts and units of service paid to Alternative for one unit of in-home support service provided on April 2, 2008, to Recipient 15. The Agency will include in the recoupment calculations the amounts and units of service paid to Alternative for one unit of service of in-home support services provided on June 25, 2009, to Recipient 15. (This should not be cumulative to the inclusion in the calculation of all 20 units of service that day due to an ineligible staff providing the services.) The Agency will include in the recoupment calculations the amounts and units of service paid to Alternative for one unit of companion service provided on February 20, 2008, to Recipient 26. The Agency will include in the recoupment calculations the amounts and units of service paid to Alternative for one unit of companion service provided on January 22, 2008, to Recipient 33. The Agency will include in the recoupment calculations the amounts and units of service paid to Alternative for 20 hours of service provided on March 3, 2009, for Recipient 16. The Agency will not impose a sanction upon Alternative. Jurisdiction is reserved to determine costs and interests, if the parties are not able to agree upon them and to consider a challenge, if any, to the extrapolation based upon the findings and conclusions of this Recommended Order. DONE AND ENTERED this 28th day of July, 2014, in Tallahassee, Leon County, Florida. S JOHN D. C. NEWTON, II Administrative Law Judge Division of Administrative Hearings The DeSoto Building 1230 Apalachee Parkway Tallahassee, Florida 32399-3060 (850) 488-9675 Fax Filing (850) 921-6847 www.doah.state.fl.us Filed with the Clerk of the Division of Administrative Hearings this 28th day of July, 2014.

Florida Laws (7) 120.569120.57409.902409.907409.913414.095812.035
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