COURT OF APPEALS OF VIRGINIA
Present: Judges Elder, Kelsey and Alston
Argued at Richmond, Virginia
PETERSBURG HOSPITAL COMPANY, LLC, d/b/a
SOUTHSIDE REGIONAL MEDICAL CENTER
MEMORANDUM OPINION * BY
v. Record No. 0052-11-2 JUDGE ROSSIE D. ALSTON, JR.
FEBRUARY 28, 2012
KAREN REMLEY, M.D., M.B.A., F.A.A.P.,
STATE HEALTH COMMISSIONER, AND
CHIPPENHAM & JOHNSTON-WILLIS HOSPITALS, INC.
FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE CITY OF PETERSBURG
Jane Marum Roush, Judge Designate
Jeannie A. Adams (Thomas F. Hancock, III; Hancock, Daniel,
Johnson & Nagle, P.C., on briefs), for appellant.
Ishneila I.G. Moore, Assistant Attorney General (Kenneth T.
Cuccinelli, II, Attorney General; David E. Johnson, Deputy
Attorney General, on brief), for appellee Karen Remley, M.D.,
M.B.A., F.A.A.P., State Health Commissioner.
Nathan A. Kottkamp (J. William Boland; Thomas J. Stallings;
Jeffrey D. McMahan, Jr.; McGuire Woods, LLP, on brief), for
appellee Chippenham & Johnston-Willis Hospitals, Inc.
Petersburg Hospital Company, d/b/a Southside Regional Medical Center (Southside
Regional), appeals from a circuit court ruling affirming the decision of Karen Remley, the State
Health Commissioner (the Commissioner). The Commissioner’s decision denied Southside
Regional’s application for a Certificate of Public Need (COPN) to establish an open heart
surgery service at its hospital.
*
Pursuant to Code § 17.1-413, this opinion is not designated for publication.
On appeal, Southside Regional makes claim to five assignments of error relating to the
Commissioner’s denial of a COPN for the project: (1) the Commissioner failed to consider the
project in relation to the most recent State Medical Facilities Plan (SMFP), as required by Code
§ 32.1-102.3(A) and (B)(2); (2) the Commissioner erred by failing to identify evidence in the
record relating to the twenty-one criteria for determining public need, as required by Code
§ 32.1-102.3(B); (3) the Commissioner erred in basing her decision on evidence outside the
record; (4) the Commissioner’s decision is not based on substantial evidence in the record and a
reasonable mind would necessarily come to a different conclusion; and (5) the Commissioner
erred in basing her decision on findings from a previous COPN decision in 1997. 1
Finding no error, we affirm for the following reasons.
1
Southside Regional’s precise assignments of error on appeal are:
1. The Commissioner committed an error of law and failed to
comply with her statutory authority when, contrary to [Code]
§§ 32.1-102.3(A) and (B)(2) (2008), she failed to consider [the
project] in relation to the most recent applicable State Medical
Facilities Plan [(SMFP)] and failed to consider the standards of the
applicable SMFP as they relate to a determination of public
need. . . .
2. The Commissioner committed an error of law, failed to comply
with her statutory authority, and acted arbitrarily and capriciously
when she denied [the project] and failed to identify evidence in the
record relating to the required 21 criteria for determining need
under [Code] § 32.1-102.3(B) (2008), when the Commissioner
expressly rejected the findings, analysis, and recommendations of
her Adjudication Officer and health planning staff to approve [the
project]. . . .
3. The Commissioner committed procedural error that was not
harmless when she failed to provide notice of the factual basis in
the record upon which she relied in denying [the project], and her
decision rests on evidence not in the record, including but not
limited to, the potential effect of [the project] on the accreditation
status and volumes of other institutions outside of the statutorily
defined planning district. . . .
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I. Background 2
Southside Regional submitted an application for a COPN on July 31, 2008, seeking to
establish open heart surgery services at its hospital by adding two additional operating rooms
(ORs). Southside Regional’s proposed project was to serve patients from multiple planning
districts within the Commonwealth. 3 There is no open heart surgery services provider within
Southside Regional’s planning district, although open heart surgery services are available in
nearby planning districts within the health planning region.
In October 2008, the Central Virginia Health Planning Agency (CVHPA) held a public
hearing regarding the project. CVHPA issued its recommendation on November 5, 2008,
recommending “partial conditional approval” of the project, limited to the opening of one OR for
open heart surgery services. CVHPA also made factual findings regarding the likely number of
open heart surgeries that Southside Regional would perform if the project were approved and the
project’s effect on other nearby hospitals. More specifically, CVHPA reviewed Southside
4. The Commissioner committed an error of law because her
decision is not based on substantial evidence in the record and a
reasonable mind would necessarily come to a different
conclusion. . . .
5. The Commissioner committed an error of law and failed to
comply with her statutory authority when she departed from
statutorily required standards and her decision was not based on
substantial evidence in the record in that she arbitrarily and
capriciously relied upon findings from a prior COPN decision
denying [Southside Regional’s] 1997 request to establish an open
heart surgery program that was decided under different SMFP
standards and different facts and circumstances. . . .
2
As the parties are fully conversant with the record in this case and because this
memorandum opinion carries no precedential value, this opinion recites only those facts and
incidents of the proceedings as are necessary to the parties’ understanding of the disposition of
this appeal.
3
Virginia is divided into “health planning regions” and smaller “planning districts.” See
Code § 32.1-102.1; 12 VAC 5-220-10.
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Regional’s projections that it will perform, per OR, “170 open heart surgeries during the first
year, 250 the second, and 400 the third.” However, CVHPA found it “highly unlikely” that
Southside Regional would perform this number of surgeries “given that there are only about 300
open heart surgeries in [Southside Regional’s] ambitious open heart service area.”
Subsequent to CVHPA’s issuance of its recommendation, the Division of Certificate of
Public Need (DCOPN) issued its recommendation pertaining to the project on November 19,
2008. DCOPN noted that Southside Regional operated below capacity in its current ORs and
stated that adding two ORs at Southside Regional would not be justified. DCOPN also noted
that 90% of the patients Southside Regional proposed to serve through the project received care
at either Chippenham & Johnston-Willis Medical Center (CJW) or Virginia Commonwealth
University Health System (VCU). DCOPN recommended “conditional and partial approval” of
the project, limited to opening one OR.
Subsequently, CJW petitioned for and received good cause party status in the instant
case. CJW and Southside Regional presented evidence before the Commissioner’s
“Adjudication Officer” during two informal fact-finding conferences. Among other evidence,
CJW presented the testimony and affidavit of Dr. Vigneshwar Kasirajan, the chair of cardiac
surgery at VCU’s open heart surgery program. He testified that there had been a significant
decline in cardiac surgery volume throughout the Commonwealth as other treatments have
become more popular. Thus, Dr. Kasirajan did not believe that there were a sufficient number of
patients requiring open heart surgery to support an additional open heart surgery program “in the
area.” According to Dr. Kasirajan, the VCU cardiothoracic surgery program’s accreditation
“was withdrawn in 2003 based on low patient volumes.” Dr. Kasirajan stated that “adequate
volumes of diverse patients” is a requirement for accreditation and that “any decrease in open
heart surgery volumes” at VCU would jeopardize its ability to regain accreditation.
-4-
Conversely, Southside Regional submitted, among other evidence, data regarding the
number of patients traveling from its planning district to other planning districts and North
Carolina for open heart surgery services in recent years.
While Southside Regional’s application was pending, but before the record for the
informal fact-finding conference closed, the SMFP was amended, altering the requirements for
drive times, utilization rates, and staffing in considering whether to grant a COPN. The revised
SMFP provisions became effective February 15, 2009. 4
On June 2, 2009, the adjudication officer recommended granting a COPN for one open
heart OR. The adjudication officer’s decision contained individual consideration of each of the
twenty-one factors listed in the applicable version of Code § 32.1-102.3 and the drive times,
utilization rates, and staffing criteria under the revised SMFP.
Subsequently, on June 29, 2009, the Commissioner issued her decision denying
Southside Regional’s request for a COPN. The Commissioner stated in her determination:
As required by Subsection B of [Code] § 32.1-102.3, I have
considered all 21 matters, listed therein, that must be taken into
account in making this determination of public need.
I have reviewed the findings, conclusions and
recommended decision of the [adjudication officer] who convened
the informal fact-finding conference held to discuss this
application and who analyzed the administrative record pertaining
to the proposed project.
. . . Notwithstanding those reasons [cited by the
adjudication officer in recommending the project], I have
identified countervailing reasons, contained in the record or
otherwise arising from evidence in the record, which provide a
strong rationale for denying the project. Based on my review of
4
In 2009, after the record for the informal fact-finding conference closed, the legislature
amended Code § 32.1-102.3, which sets forth the factors the Commissioner must consider in
determining whether to grant a COPN. Neither party has appealed the Commissioner’s
application of Code § 32.1-102.3 as it existed before the 2009 amendments or the circuit court’s
finding that the pre-2009 version of the statute is applicable in the instant case. Therefore, we
apply Code § 32.1-102.3 as it was at the time the administrative record closed, and all citations to
that section herein are to Code § 32.1-102.3 (2008).
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the project, including my review of the required considerations set
forth in [Code] § 32.1-102.3, and in exercise of my statutory
authority and discretion “[i]n determining whether a public need
for a project has been demonstrated,” as stated therein, I am
rejecting the recommended decision of the adjudication officer and
denying the application. I find the project unnecessary to meet a
public need.
(Footnotes omitted). The Commissioner also noted in a footnote that “[t]he law applied in
review of this project is that which was in effect on the date the administrative record relating to
the project closed, i.e., March 4, 2009. The law has since been amended.”
The Commissioner then detailed seven reasons for denying the application, including:
(1) the project “stands to reduce utilization of, and otherwise harm the academic viability and
quality of, the open heart surgery program” at VCU; (2) the demand for open heart surgery
programs in Health Planning Region IV has fallen nearly 9% from 2004 to 2006 because of the
availability of new medical treatments and is likely to continue to fall; (3) the project “stands to
reduce utilization of the open heart surgery programs” at four other hospitals in Health Planning
Region IV; (4) any improvement in driving times for residents in Health Planning Region IV as a
result of the project are “much less important than the public interest in maintaining and
protecting the volume-sensitive quality of existing open heart surgery programs”; (5) Southside
Regional has a number of staff vacancies and unused surgical capacity, suggesting that
recruiting, training, and retaining proficient staff to support hospital services may be difficult;
(6) “[t]he physician group identified as the one slated to provide cardiothoracic surgical expertise
and direction to the [project] is located primarily on the campuses of two hospitals in [Planning
District] 15, and is not advocating for another open heart surgery program that would be located
in the area but in a separate planning district”; and (7) “the scale of the project is greater than
necessary to meet any need” shown by Southside Regional and the project would be “likely to
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face low volume and a limited prospect of success in reliably generating positive patient
outcomes and safety and in gaining sustained operational efficiency.”
Following the Commissioner’s decision, Southside Regional appealed to the circuit court.
The circuit court affirmed the Commissioner’s decision. The circuit court concluded that the
Commissioner correctly considered the applicable SMFP pursuant to Code § 32.1-102.3(A) and
Code § 32.1-102.3(B)(2), and the twenty other factors contained in Code § 32.1-102.3(B). The
circuit court also rejected Southside Regional’s allegation that the Commissioner had considered
evidence outside the record. Moreover, the circuit court found that evidence in the record
supported the Commissioner’s decision and that the decision was not arbitrary and capricious.
This appeal followed.
II. Motion to Dismiss
Following Southside Regional’s appeal to this Court, appellees moved jointly to dismiss
the appeal for failing to allege a circuit court error. We deny appellees’ motion to dismiss.
Southside Regional appeals from a final decision of the circuit court. However, it frames
its assignments of error to allege errors in the Commissioner’s decision. “In an appeal from an
administrative agency, a circuit court acts in an appellate posture and is, in essence, the first
appellate court to review the agency’s determination.” Loudoun Hosp. Ctr. v. Stroube, 50
Va. App. 478, 492, 650 S.E.2d 879, 886 (2007). Thus, “it matters not whether the trial court
committed an error of law” but “only whether the Commissioner erred.” Id. (emphases added).
Asserting error only by the Commissioner is not fatal to this Court’s authority to consider an
appellant’s assignments of error on appeal. See, e.g., Doctors’ Hosp. of Williamsburg v.
Stroube, 52 Va. App. 599, 603, 665 S.E.2d 862, 863-64 (2008) (expressly addressing appellant’s
“argu[ment that] the Commissioner erred by considering a staff report and other evidence
submitted by EVHSA” (emphasis added)); Chippenham & Johnston-Willis Hosps., Inc. v.
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Peterson, 36 Va. App. 469, 478, 553 S.E.2d 133, 137 (2001) (addressing appellant’s “challenge[
to] the Commissioner’s denial of [its] request to participate in the proceedings . . .” (emphasis
added)). Therefore, we deny appellees’ motion to dismiss.
III. Analysis of Southside Regional’s Assignments of Error
A. Standard of Review
Code § 2.2-4027 governs judicial review of the Commissioner’s decision. Loudoun
Hosp. Ctr., 50 Va. App. at 490, 650 S.E.2d at 885. Under the Code, this Court’s review of issues
of fact is “limited to ascertaining whether there was substantial evidence in the agency record
upon which the agency as the trier of the facts could reasonably find them to be as it did.” Code
§ 2.2-4027; see also Loudoun Hosp. Ctr., 50 Va. App. at 490, 650 S.E.2d at 885 (quoting Avante
at Lynchburg, Inc. v. Teefey, 28 Va. App. 156, 160, 502 S.E.2d 708, 710 (1998)). Moreover, the
Code requires that this Court “take due account of the presumption of official regularity, the
experience and specialized competence of the agency, and the purposes of the basic law under
which the agency has acted.” Code § 2.2-4027.
“The reviewing court may set the agency action aside, even if it is supported by
substantial evidence, if the court’s review discloses that the agency failed to comply with a
substantive statutory directive.” Browning-Ferris Indus. of S. Atl. v. Residents Involved, 254
Va. 278, 284, 492 S.E.2d 431, 434 (1997). However, “[w]here the agency has the statutory
authorization to make the kind of decision it did and it did so within the statutory limits of its
discretion and with the intent of the statute in mind, it has not committed an error of law” by
acting outside the scope of its authority. Johnston-Willis, Ltd. v. Kenley, 6 Va. App. 231, 242,
369 S.E.2d 1, 7 (1988). Moreover, “‘[w]here . . . the issue concerns an agency decision based on
the proper application of its expert discretion, the reviewing court will not substitute its own
independent judgment for that of the agency but rather will reverse the agency decision only if
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that decision was arbitrary and capricious.’” Loudoun Hosp. Ctr., 50 Va. App. at 491, 650
S.E.2d at 886 (quoting Holtzman Oil Corp. v. Commonwealth, 32 Va. App. 532, 539, 529 S.E.2d
333, 337 (2000)).
B. Issue I: Consideration of the SMFP
Southside Regional alleges that the Commissioner erred by failing to consider the most
recent applicable SMFP. Code § 32.1-102.3 governs the Commissioner’s authority to issue a
COPN. Code § 32.1-102.3(A) provides: “No [COPN] may be issued unless the Commissioner
has determined that a public need for the project has been demonstrated. . . . Any decision to
issue or approve the issuance of a [COPN] shall be consistent with the most recent applicable
provision of the [SMFP] . . . .” Code § 32.1-102.3(B) lists twenty-one factors the Commissioner
must consider in determining whether a public need for a project has been demonstrated,
including “[t]he relationship of the project to the applicable health plans of the Board and the
health planning agency,” Code § 32.1-102.3(B)(2). Thus, both Code § 32.1-102.3(A) and (B)(2)
instruct the Commissioner to consider the SMFP in determining whether to issue the COPN. See
Code § 32.1-102.1 (defining the SMFP as “the planning document adopted by the Board of
Health”).
It is well-settled that the Commissioner is not required to grant a COPN even if all
requirements of the SMFP are met. State Health Comm’r v. Sentara Norfolk Gen. Hosp., 260
Va. 267, 273, 534 S.E.2d 325, 329 (2000). “[C]ompliance with the SMFP is only one factor in
the decision.” Id. The Commissioner must also consider whether “‘a public need for the project
has been demonstrated.’” Id. (quoting Code § 32.1-102.3(A)). Thus, while a proposed project
must meet the SMFP’s requirements before a COPN may issue, the Commissioner may decline
to grant a COPN even if the proposed project meets the SMFP’s requirements if she determines
that there is no public need for the project.
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Southside Regional argues that the Commissioner’s decision indicates that she failed to
consider the most recent applicable SMFP because the decision made no reference to the SMFP
standards and her reasons for denial relied on outdated SMFP standards regarding drive times,
utilization rates, and staffing requirements.
We conclude from the record before us that the Commissioner did indeed consider the
most recent applicable SMFP. In particular, the Commissioner stated in her decision that she
considered “all 21 matters” listed in Code § 32.1-102.3(B) and “the required considerations set
forth in [Code] § 32.1-102.3.” As has been previously noted herein, these provisions necessarily
include consideration of the “most recent applicable provision of the [SMFP].” See Code
§ 32.1-102.3(A), (B)(2). While we recognize that a “conclusional recitation” that the factors of
Code § 32.1-102.3(B) have been considered is generally insufficient, the Commissioner here
stated that she “reviewed the findings, conclusions and recommended decision” of the
adjudication officer and that she had “considered and . . . reflected upon the reasons cited therein
for his recommendation to approve the project.” 5 The adjudication officer’s report contained an
exhaustive consideration of the most recent applicable SMFP factors. Thus, the record shows the
Commissioner considered the most recent applicable SMFP in reaching her decision.
Moreover, the Commissioner’s failure to expressly reference the SMFP standards is not
fatal to her decision, as Southside Regional alleges. “While [Code § 32.1-102.3(B)] requires the
Commission to consider all [of the] factors, it does not require specific findings on each.”
Bio-Medical Applications of Arlington, Inc. v. Kenley, 4 Va. App. 414, 427, 358 S.E.2d 722,
5
Although the Commissioner rejected the adjudication officer’s recommendation, it was
still appropriate for the Commissioner to consider the findings and conclusions of the
adjudication officer while still rejecting his ultimate recommendation.
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729 (1987). 6 The Commissioner considered the most recent applicable SMFP in her decision;
this consideration, even without thorough discussion of each SMFP standard, was sufficient.
Southside Regional points to the Commissioner’s consideration of utilization rates, drive
times, staffing, and the project’s impact on the health planning region rather than within the
planning district in arguing that the Commissioner relied on outdated SMFP standards instead of
the most recent applicable SMFP. We disagree. Again, the SMFP is but one factor the
Commissioner must consider under Code § 32.1-102.3(B). In the instant case, the
Commissioner’s findings regarding the likelihood that the project would face low volume, the
risk that the project would reduce utilization of open heart surgery programs at other hospitals in
the health planning region, the insignificance of improved driving times compared to the need to
maintain volume-sensitive quality of existing open heart surgery programs, and the difficulties
posed by Southside Regional’s staff vacancies were all appropriate considerations under the
twenty other factors found in Code § 32.1-102.3(B). Therefore, we conclude that the
Commissioner did not err in discussing these factors as part of her consideration of whether “a
public need for the project has been demonstrated,” Code § 32.1-102.3(A), and not as part of her
consideration of the most recent applicable SMFP.
6
In this regard, we compare and contrast Code § 32.1-102.3 to Code § 20-107.3(E),
which requires consideration of specific factors in determining spousal support, and Code
§ 20-124.3, which requires consideration of specific factors in determining custody and visitation
arrangements. Significantly, this Court has held that neither Code § 20-107.3(E) nor Code
§ 20-124.3 requires the trial court to “‘quantify or elaborate exactly what weight or consideration
it has given to each of the statutory factors.’” See Alphin v. Alphin, 15 Va. App. 395, 405, 424
S.E.2d 572, 578 (1992) (quoting Woolley v. Woolley, 3 Va. App. 337, 345, 349 S.E.2d 422, 426
(1986), superseded on other grounds as stated in Robinson v. Robinson, 50 Va. App. 189, 195,
648 S.E.2d 314, 317 (2007)); Piatt v. Piatt, 27 Va. App. 426, 434, 499 S.E.2d 567, 571 (1998)
(quoting Sargent v. Sargent, 20 Va. App. 694, 702, 460 S.E.2d 596, 599 (1995)).
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C. Issue II: Identification of Evidence in the Record
Relating to Code § 32.1-102.3(B)
Southside Regional next alleges the Commissioner erred by failing to identify evidence in
the record relating to the twenty-one criteria for determining need under Code § 32.1-102.3(B).
Code § 2.2-4019(A)(v) requires that a party “be informed, briefly and generally in
writing, of the factual . . . basis for an adverse decision.” In this regard, we find the facts and
holding of Bio-Medical, 4 Va. App. at 418, 427-28, 358 S.E.2d at 724, 729-30, instructive. In
Bio-Medical, the Commissioner gave four reasons for denying the appellant’s application for a
COPN for end stage renal disease (ESRD) services. Id. at 418, 358 S.E.2d at 724. The
Commissioner found that (1) the appellant did not demonstrate that the services were “the best
alternative to increasing the facility’s capacity”; (2) the proposal was not consistent with the
applicable SMFP standards; (3) the proposal was not “the best alternative for establishing
additional ESRD capacity within Planning District 8”; and (4) the proposal was not consistent
with ESRD need projections once a competing application was approved. Id. The appellant
appealed, arguing that the Commissioner erred in failing to make the required, specific findings
on all of the factors in Code § 32.1-102.3(B). This Court affirmed, stating:
[w]hile [Code § 32.1-102.3(B)] requires the Commissioner to
consider all [of the] factors, it does not require specific findings on
each. Indeed, not all [of the] factors may be relevant to every
application for a [COPN]. It is sufficient that the Commissioner’s
decision “briefly state or recommend the findings, conclusions,
reasons, or basis therefor upon the evidence presented by the
record and relevant to the basic law under which the agency is
operating.” The Commissioner’s decision must show that due
consideration was given to the evidence bearing upon those factors
which were relevant to the application under consideration.
Id. at 427-28, 358 S.E.2d at 729-30 (quoting Code § 9-6.14:12(E), the predecessor statute to
Code § 2.2-4020).
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We find that the Commissioner did not err in the instant case as her decision adequately
discussed the basis therefor, including her findings and conclusions based upon evidence in the
record. In her decision, the Commissioner explicitly listed seven specific “reasons for [denying
the COPN].” While the Commissioner did not cite specific provisions of Code § 32.1-102.3 in
explaining her decisions, each of her seven reasons related to the Code § 32.1-102.3(B) factors.
The Commissioner’s explanation of her rationale was sufficient to allow a reviewing court to
consider whether her decision complied with the law. See SEC v. Chenery Corp., 332 U.S. 194,
196-97 (1947) (justifying the requirement that an agency explain its decision because “[i]f the
administrative action is to be tested by the basis upon which it purports to rest, that basis must be
set forth with such clarity as to be understandable”). Therefore, we hold that the Commissioner
adequately explained her rationale based on evidence in the record.
D. Issue III: Reliance on Evidence Outside the Record
Southside Regional alleges that the Commissioner relied on evidence outside the record
in reaching her decision, including the project’s potential effects on the accreditation status and
volumes of other institutions outside the planning district. We hold that the Commissioner did
not rely on evidence outside the record when she concluded that the project would have a
negative effect on VCU, including its ability to gain accreditation, and other open heart surgery
programs in Health Planning Region IV or when she concluded that the project “would be likely
to face low volume.”
Evidence in the record amply supports the Commissioner’s finding that the project would
have a negative effect on VCU’s efforts to regain accreditation. Dr. Kasirajan’s affidavit and
testimony support the Commissioner’s findings regarding VCU. Dr. Kasirajan testified that an
insufficient number of patients requiring open heart surgery existed to support an additional open
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heart surgery program “in the area” and that VCU’s training program lost accreditation in 2003
because of low patient volumes.
In addition, statistical evidence in the record supports the finding that the project would
have negative effects on other open heart programs in Health Planning Region IV by rerouting
patients from those programs to Southside Regional’s program. For example, CVHPA found
that based on 2006 market share data, “it is possible that CJW and VCU could lose 16.2% and
11.6%, respectively, of their cardiac surgery patients due to the introduction of open heart
services at [Southside Regional]. This could negatively impact the operating costs at these
facilities and health care costs in the region.”
Similarly, evidence in the record supported the Commissioner’s finding that the project
would likely face low volumes, including CVHPA’s finding that “there are only about 300 open
heart surgeries in [Southside Regional’s] ambitious open heart service area” and that “the
number of open heart procedures performed in [Health Planning Region] IV has decreased by
8.9% from 2004 to 2006.” Dr. Kasirajan’s testimony also supported this finding. Moreover,
statistics showed CJW and VCU, the two highest-volume established open heart surgery centers
in the health planning region, performed below revised SMFP plan levels in 2006. CJW, which
had four open heart surgery ORs, performed 552 open heart procedures in 2006, for an average
of 138 procedures per operating room, below even the SMFP’s “year 1” requirement of 150
procedures for a new facility, and significantly below the “year 2” requirement of 200
procedures. Similarly, VCU, which had two open heart surgery ORs, performed 353 open heart
procedures in 2006, for an average of 176 procedures that year, above the SMFP’s “year 1”
requirement of 150 procedures but below the “year 2” requirement of 200 procedures.
Because evidence in the record supported the Commissioner’s findings, we hold that the
Commissioner did not err in reaching these conclusions.
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E. Issue IV: Substantiality of the Evidence in the Record
Southside Regional alleges that the Commissioner’s decision is “not based on substantial
evidence in the record and a reasonable mind would necessarily come to a different conclusion.”
“Among the issues of law subject to review is ‘the substantiality of the evidential support
for findings of fact.’” Bio-Medical, 4 Va. App. at 427, 358 S.E.2d at 729 (quoting Code
§ 9-6.14:17(4), the predecessor statute to Code § 2.2-4027). “The scope of review is limited to
whether there was ‘substantial evidence in the agency record’ to support the decision.” Id.
(quoting State Bd. of Health v. Godfrey, 223 Va. 423, 433, 290 S.E.2d 875, 879-80 (1982)).
“In considering whether the record evidence is sufficient to support a factual finding
made by an agency, we apply the substantial evidence standard of review.” Sentara, 260 Va. at
275, 534 S.E.2d at 330 (citing Va. Real Estate Comm’n v. Bias, 226 Va. 264, 268-69, 308 S.E.2d
123, 125 (1983)). “Under that standard, substantial evidence is ‘such relevant evidence as a
reasonable mind might accept as adequate to support a conclusion.’” Id. (quoting Bias, 226 Va.
at 269, 308 S.E.2d at 125 (citations omitted)). “An agency’s factual findings should only be
rejected if, ‘considering the record as a whole, a reasonable mind would necessarily come to a
different conclusion.’” Id. at 275-76, 534 S.E.2d at 330 (quoting Bias, 226 Va. at 269, 308
S.E.2d at 125). “In addition, the court must review the facts in the light most favorable to
sustaining the [Commissioner’s] action and ‘take due account of the presumption of official
regularity, the experience and specialized competence of the agency, and the purposes of the
basic law under which the agency has acted.’” Bio-Medical, 4 Va. App. at 427, 358 S.E.2d at
729 (quoting Code § 9-6.14:17, the predecessor statute to Code § 2.2-4027).
As discussed throughout this opinion, evidence in the record supports the
Commissioner’s decision that the project would likely face low volumes and have negative
effects on other open heart surgery providers in Health Planning Region IV by decreasing the
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number of procedures they perform. Even if the Commissioner was faced with conflicting
evidence on these issues, a conflict in evidence is not enough to show that “‘considering the
record as a whole, a reasonable mind would necessarily come to a different conclusion.’”
Sentara, 260 Va. at 275-76, 534 S.E.2d at 330 (quoting Bias, 226 Va. at 269, 308 S.E.2d at 125).
Substantial evidence in the record supported the Commissioner’s findings and her ultimate
conclusion that there is no public need for the project. Thus, we hold the Commissioner did not
err.
F. Issue V: The Commissioner’s Reliance on the 1997 COPN denial
Finally, Southside Regional argues that the Commissioner erred by relying on findings
from a prior COPN decision denying Southside Regional’s request to establish an open heart
surgery program in 1997. We find no basis in the record for this allegation. While some of the
Commissioner’s reasoning in the instant case may be similar to that undertaken in the 1997
denial, it is not identical or “verbatim” as Southside Regional argues. Moreover, the
Commissioner’s decision in the instant case acknowledges the change in the statutory and
regulatory provisions since 1997. Once again, evidence in the current record supports the
Commissioner’s decision. Therefore, we hold that the Commissioner did not rely on the 1997
COPN denial in the instant case and thus did not err.
IV. Conclusion
For the above reasons, we find that the Commissioner did not err in any respect argued
by Southside Regional. Accordingly, we affirm.
Affirmed.
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