IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF DELAWARE
EDWARD and PAMELA PRUNCKUN, as §
parents and legal guardians of ROBERT §
PRUNCKUN, § No. 93, 2018C
§
Plaintiffs-Below, § On appeal from the Superior Court
Appellants, § of the State of Delaware
§
v. §
§ C.A. No. N16A-05-010
DELAWARE DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH §
AND SOCIAL SERVICES, §
§
Defendant-Below, §
Appellee. §
________________________________________________________________________
MALCOLM and DOMINICA OLDHAM, as §
parents and legal guardians of ASHLEE §
OLDHAM, § No. 94, 2018C
§
Plaintiffs-Below, § On appeal from the Superior Court
Appellants, § of the State of Delaware
§
v. §
§ C.A. No. N16A-05-009
DELAWARE DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH §
AND SOCIAL SERVICES §
§
Defendant-Below, §
Appellee. §
Submitted: November 28, 2018
Decided: January 3, 2019
Before STRINE, Chief Justice; VALIHURA, VAUGHN, SEITZ, and TRAYNOR,
Justices, constituting the Court en Banc.
Upon appeal from the Superior Court. AFFIRMED.
Francis G.X. Pileggi, Esquire, Brian D. Ahern, Esquire, Eckert Seamans Cherin & Mellott,
LLC, Wilmington, Delaware. Of Counsel: Michael P. Flammia, Esquire, Eckert Seamans
Cherin & Mellott, LLC, Boston, Massachusetts; Christopher E. Torkelson, Esquire
(Argued), Eckert Seamans Cherin & Mellott, LLC, Princeton, New Jersey, for Appellant.
Lauren E. Maguire, Esquire (Argued), Adria B. Martinelli, Esquire, Delaware Department
of Justice, Wilmington, Delaware, for Appellee.
2
VALIHURA, Justice:
I. Overview
Ashlee Oldham (“Ashlee”) and Robert Prunckun (“Robert”) (collectively,
“Recipients”) are the only two Delaware Medicaid recipients housed at Judge Rotenberg
Center (“JRC”), a facility in Massachusetts and the only facility in the United States known
to use a skin-shocking device, namely a graduated electronic decelerator (“GED”), on its
residents.1 GED delivers an electric current to an individual’s skin, producing a voltage of
66v through the skin. Side effects, aside from the shock, include reddening of the skin,
potentially lasting for days, blisters, and anxiety. For years since the mid-2000s, while at
JRC, Recipients’ comprehensive behavioral treatment plans included GED and these
services were covered by Medicaid with the knowledge and approval of Delaware’s
Department of Health and Social Services (“DHSS”).
But in 2012, the Center for Medicare and Medicaid Services (“CMS”), the federal
agency charged with promulgation and enforcement of Medicaid regulations and the
approval of certain waivers relevant here, advised the Massachusetts state agency
responsible for Medicaid administration that continued use of GED by JRC would place
that state’s waiver program in jeopardy of losing federal funding. That waiver is part of a
program Congress has authorized in order for certain persons with developmental
disabilities to receive Medicaid services in a community setting, rather than in an
1
Although these are two separate appeals, the legal arguments presented in Appellants’ separate
opening briefs are identical. The State has filed nearly identical briefs in the two appeals. This
Court, sua sponte, consolidated the appeals.
3
institutional facility. It is known as the Home and Community Based Services (“HCBS”)
waiver program and it has provided such services to Recipients at issue here. Before a
state can participate in the HCBS waiver program, it must first apply for a waiver from
CMS. Thus, the use of GED by JRC threatened Massachusetts’ waiver program.
Following CMS’s letter to Massachusetts, Delaware took measures to avoid placing
its own HCBS waiver program at risk. In October 2013, Delaware, through DHSS,
instructed JRC to cease using GED on the Recipients. It sought and received clarification
from Delaware’s own CMS region that the use of GED was prohibited. DHSS finally
terminated JRC as a qualified provider after JRC refused to cease using GED. According
to DHSS, both federal and state entities charged with enforcing Medicaid laws have
deemed the use of GED unacceptable in the HCBS community-based context and generally
unacceptable in modern day society.
Although the procedural history is complex, as explained below, the gist of
Appellants’ challenge on appeal is that they were denied due process because Delaware’s
administrative hearing officer bifurcated proceedings to address what she concluded was a
threshold issue, namely, whether GED is a covered Medicaid service under the Medicaid
Home and Community Based Waiver (“HCBS Waiver”) program. Instead, Recipients
contend that they should have been allowed to introduce evidence that GED is medically
necessary, and that by removing GED services, DHSS has threatened Recipients’ ability
to remain in a community-based setting—a conclusion they desired to prove through
evidence and expert testimony. Accordingly, Recipients, by and through their parents and
guardians (“Guardians”) (collectively, “Appellants”), appeal from a January 15, 2016
4
decision (the “Final Decision”) of Delaware’s Medicaid Fair Hearing Officer (“Hearing
Officer”). Appellants contend that the Hearing Officer violated their due process rights in
bifurcating the Fair Hearing and in concluding that aversive treatment was no longer a
“covered” service under Delaware’s Medicaid waiver program.
Pending this appeal, as a result of transition agreements entered into by the parties,
Recipients continue to receive community-based services, including the availability of
GED, at JRC to this day.2 CMS has prohibited the use of federal funding to JRC, and
although the State of Delaware thereafter picked up the tab, it ceased making payments to
JRC in 2014 after Delaware’s contract with JRC expired.3 But the State of Delaware agreed
to pay JRC in full once the Recipients’ transition out of JRC is complete.
II. Facts and Procedural Background
Recipients are adult Medicaid beneficiaries and Delaware citizens with uniquely
severe, behavioral, developmental, and emotional disorders, disabilities, and autism. They
both require intensive behavioral health services in order to treat their violent, self-
injurious, and potentially life-threatening conditions. Both received medical assistance
benefits pursuant to the Delaware Home and Community Based Services Medicaid Waiver
(“HCBS Waiver”), a Medicaid option available to states under Section 1915(c) of the
2
See App. to Opening Br. at A782–83 (No. 93). Appellants state that Ashlee no longer receives
GED applications. See Reply Br. at 18, n. 4 (No. 93).
3
The Hearing Officer’s Final Decision states that “[s]ince CMS has prohibited JRC from receiving
any federal funding as long as GED is in effect, DDDS is using state funds until the transition to a
qualified Delaware provider is complete.” App. to Opening Br. at A956.
5
Social Security Act (the “Act”).4 HCBS waivers allow states to offer services to
individuals who are elderly or have disabilities and live in a community setting in lieu of
institutionalization. In Delaware, the Division of Developmental Disabilities Services
(“DDDS”), a division within Delaware’s Department of Health and Human Services
(“DHSS”), administers Delaware’s HCBS Waiver program.
The Recipients are adult males and both have extensively documented histories of
self-injurious, aggressive, and destructive behavior. For example, Robert’s behavior
included throwing chairs, destroying property, kicking and biting others, smearing his
feces, urinating on the floor and in electrical outlets, banging his head on objects, refusing
medical care, and jumping out of a second story window twice, which caused severe
orthopedic injuries, including a broken pelvis. He has been diagnosed with intermittent
explosive disorder, impulse control disorder, pervasive developmental disorder, and
personality change secondary to brain injury.
Ashlee’s behavior included banging his head, causing severe head injury, self-
induced vomiting, dangerous weight loss, biting others, kicking and spitting, scratching
and biting himself, inappropriate urination and defecation, refusing medical care, and
violently attacking staff. When he was enrolled in the Delaware’s Autism Program, twenty
workers’ compensation claims were filed by staff members injured by Ashlee’s
unpredictable lunging and biting—all within a fifteen-month period.
4
42 U.S.C. § 1396n(c) (2018).
6
After a long history of unsuccessful treatment and institutionalization for their
severe behaviors and disabilities, both Ashlee and Robert, in 2004 and 2005, respectively,
entered the JRC in Massachusetts where they remain. It is one of the few facilities in the
country to employ aversive treatment procedures. JRC is the only facility in the United
States that utilizes a graduated electronic decelerator device.
A Probate and Family Court in Massachusetts, in considering Robert’s Proposed
Medical Behavior Modification Treatment Plan dated June 11, 2013, explained that JRC
uses the Graduated Electronic Decelerator 4 device (“GED-4”), which is manufactured by
JRC. That device “consists of a transmitter operated by the JRC staff, a battery-operated
receiver/stimulator worn by the JRC client and an electrode that is connected to the
receiver/stimulator by a cable.”5 The receiver/stimulator delivers a two-second “low-level
surface application of electrical current to the client’s skin upon command from the
transmitter.”6 The GED-4 “produces a current of 41 mA RMS, with a voltage of 66v when
applied to typical skin resistance of 1.6 kilohms.”7 “One or more electrical stimulations,
(depending on the client’s particular treatment program) are administered to the client after
he engages in a targeted behavior.”8 The side effects include reddening of the skin, blisters,
and anxiety “during the brief period of time between the point in time when the teacher or
5
App. to Opening Br. at A188 (No. 93).
6
Id.
7
Id.
8
Id.
7
aide announces that the client has engaged in a targeted inappropriate behavior and the
point at which the skin shock is administered.”9
Appellants maintain that as a result of their ongoing treatment at JRC, the Recipients
no longer require any restraint, and have avoided highly restrictive institutional or isolated
settings and debilitatingly high dosages of psychotropic drugs that once were the norm for
them. They point out that the use of GED is part of their individualized treatment plans
approved by a Massachusetts Probate and Family Court judge who issued orders on their
plans following an evidentiary process. They also point out that until 2013, DHSS assented
to the Recipients’ treatment plans at JRC. Although Appellants claim the aversive
treatment has been the most successful thus far, it is, by far, the most controversial. As the
State aptly observed, this case is largely about the use of GED, and changes to the federal
and state rules that have impacted the issue of whether GED is an acceptable and
appropriate treatment modality. That leads us to explaining the relevant regulatory and
legal backdrop, and the evolving views of GED and aversive treatment as reflected in the
Medicaid regulatory system.
Overview of the Medicaid Waiver Program
Both sides appear to acknowledge that federal and state standards have evolved over
time in response to clinical practice and societal norms. But they disagree as to whether
certain of these regulatory changes actually prohibited GED, whether those various
regulatory changes and pronouncements have the force and effect of law, what deference
9
Id. at A189. Ashlee’s treatment program, including GED, was also approved by the
Massachusetts Probate and Family Court. Id. at A42–43 (Sept. 13, 2013 Order).
8
they deserve by hearing officers and courts, and whether Appellants were given proper
notice of them. One of the issues we have to unravel concerns Appellants’ contention that
when the State of Delaware sent letters to JRC in October 2013 demanding discontinuation
of certain aversive treatments, including GED, that demand was based upon
correspondence from the federal government sent to Massachusetts, which is Region I, not
Region III, which encompasses Delaware. Appellants contend that correspondence did not
prohibit GED in that it did not have the force of law, was not sent to the Guardians, and
that by the time Delaware explicitly did prohibit GED, Appellants had already asserted
their right to a Fair Hearing. Accordingly, Appellants contend the regulatory changes were
a post hoc manufactured litigation maneuver targeting them, as opposed to a generalized
prohibition, and as such, violated their due process rights.
DHSS responds that the 2013 CMS correspondence did prohibit GED, and in any
event, Appellants are not prejudiced because Recipients presently continue to have the
controversial GED treatment available to them at Delaware’s eventual expense by virtue
of transition agreements entered into between DDDS and the Guardians on April 28, 2015.
DHSS further contends that by the time of the Fair Hearing, the prohibition at both the
federal and state levels had become clear if it was not before, and so it made sense to
determine, as a threshold matter, whether GED is now a covered Medicaid service.
By way of regulatory background, under the Medicaid regime, states and CMS enter
a contract called the State Medicaid Plan. CMS is the federal agency charged with
promulgation and enforcement of Medicaid regulations. Region I of CMS included
Massachusetts and the JRC. Delaware is in Region III. Under a state’s Medicaid Plan, the
9
state must provide all federally mandated Medicaid services, as well as any optional
services it elects to cover at its discretion. Both the mandatory and optional components
comprise the state’s Medicaid Plan. CMS funds a percentage of the costs. In return for
federal funds, the state must comply with requirements imposed by Title XIX of the Act.10
CMS will not fund or reimburse a state for prohibited services. In Delaware, the Medicaid
program is generally overseen by DHSS. DHSS contends GED is now a prohibited service.
CMS has the authority to waive certain provisions of the Medicaid laws.11 The
HCBS Waiver is a Medicaid option available to states under Section 1915(c) of the Act.12
Nearly all states, including Delaware, offer services to persons with intellectual and
developmental disabilities through a Section 1915(c) HCBS Waiver. This allows such
persons to live in a community setting in lieu of institutionalization. The DDDS
administers Delaware’s HCBS Waiver.
The HCB Setting Rule sets forth requirements governing the criteria and
characteristics of settings eligible for reimbursement for home and community-based
services provided under Sections 1915(c), 1915(i), and 1915(k) of the Medicaid statute.
The HCB Setting Rule defines person-centered planning requirements for individuals in
Medicaid-funded community settings under HCBS Waivers. The rule seeks to ensure
10
See 42 U.S.C. § 1396 (2014); 42 U.S.C. § 1396r (2011).
11
Specifically, under § 1915(c) of the Act, the Secretary of the Department of Health and Human
Services is authorized to waive § 1902(a)(10)(B) of the Act, allowing States to target an HCBS
waiver program to a specified Medicaid-eligible group of individuals who would otherwise require
institutional care.
12
See 42 U.S.C. § 1396n (c).
10
individual rights of privacy, dignity, respect, and freedom from coercion and restraint in
home and community-based settings. The State has argued that the move to eliminate
electric shock as a covered Medicaid service began in 2010 with the passage of the
Affordable Care Act13 and the Setting Rules proposed and promulgated thereunder.14 On
April 15, 2011, CMS published proposed HCB Setting Regulations.15 CMS published the
proposed HCB Setting Regulations again on May 3, 2012.16
The HCB Setting Rule was published as a final regulation on January 16, 2014.17 It
became effective on March 17, 2014 and, consistent with the May 2012 proposed version,
it bans the use of coercion and restraint in community settings. The final HCB Setting
Rule provides in relevant part:
Home and community based settings must have all of the following qualities,
and such other qualities as the Secretary determines to be appropriate, based
on the needs of the individuals indicated in their person-centered service
plan:
...
13
Affordable Care Act: Patients Protection and Affordable Care Act of 2010, Pub. L. No. 111-148
(codified as amended by the Health Care and Education Reconciliation Act of 2010, Pub. L. No.
111-152).
14
App. to Opening Br. at A1035 (No. 93).
15
Medicaid Program; Home and Community-Based Services (HCBS) Waivers, 76 Fed. Reg.
21311 (proposed Apr. 15, 2011) (to be codified at 42 C.F.R. pt. 441).
16
Medicaid Program; State Plan Home and Community-Based Services, 5-Year Period for
Waivers, Provider Payment Reassignment, and Setting Requirements for Community First Choice,
77 Fed. Reg. 26362 (proposed May 3, 2012) (to be codified at 42 C.F.R. pts. 430, 431, 435, 436,
440, 441, 447).
17
Medicaid Program; State Plan Home and Community-Based Services, 5-Year Period for
Waivers; Provider Payment Reassignment, and Home and Community-Based Setting
Requirements for Community First Choice and Home and Community-Based Services (HCBS)
Waivers, 79 Fed. Reg. 2948, 3032 (Jan. 16, 2014); 42 C.F.R. § 441.530(a)(1)(iii) (2014).
11
Ensures an individual’s rights of privacy, dignity and respect, and freedom
from coercion and restraint.18
The adoption of the HCBS Setting Rule was preceded by a lengthy public comment
process.19
The DDDS waiver was set for renewal in 2014 in Delaware. In its revised waiver
application submitted to CMS in March 2014, DHSS inserted a provision in its Waiver
application explicitly stating that “[t]he use of averse conditioning defined as the
contingent application of startling, painful or noxious stimuli is prohibited.”20 On April 1,
2014, Delaware’s Medicaid division published notice of the waiver in the Delaware
Registry as a proposed regulation.21 A public comment period of thirty days followed.
Delaware’s HCBS Waiver was published in the June 2014 Delaware Registry as a final
regulation.22
18
42 C.F.R. § 441.530(a)(1)(iii) (emphasis added). This provision appeared in the May 3, 2012
version of the proposed rule. Medicaid Program; State Plan Home and Community-Based
Services, 5-Year Period for Waivers, Provider Payment Reassignment, and Setting Requirement
for Community First Choice, 77 Fed. Reg. 26362, 26378-79 (proposed May 3, 2012) (to be
codified at 42 C.F.R. pts. 430, 431, 435, 436, 440, 441, 447).
19
Medicaid Program, 77 Fed. Reg. at 26382-83 (describing the public comment process up to and
including the 2012 proposed rule). The summary of the 2014 final HCBS Setting Rule states that
1,653 comments were received in response to publication of the April 15, 2011 proposed rule, and
401 timely comments were received “from state agencies, advocacy groups, health care providers,
employers, health insurers, health care associations, and the general public” in response to the May
3, 2012 proposed rule. Medicaid Program; State Plan Home and Community-Based Services, 5-
Year Period for Waivers, Provider Payment Reassignment, and Home and Community-Based
Setting Requirements for Community First Choice and Home and Community-Based Services
(HCBS) Waivers, 79 Fed. Reg. 2948, 2949, 2952, 3003 (Jan. 16, 2014) (to be codified at 42 C.F.R.
pts. 430, 431, 435, 436, 440, 441, 447).
20
App. to Opening Br. at A670 (No. 93) (emphasis added).
21
17 Del. Reg. 950 (Apr. 2014).
22
17 Del. Reg. 1179 (June 2014).
12
DDDS also published notice of the Delaware HCBS Waiver renewal application on
its website.23 Public meetings were held on March 4, 5, and 6, 2014 in each of the three
counties. A written summary of the proposed changes (the same document available on
the DDDS website) was provided to the public at the meetings, and the complete waiver
application was available for public view. The Delaware HCBS Waiver was approved by
CMS and became effective July 1, 2014.24
On October 7, 2015, DDDS amended its policies to incorporate the definition of
“aversive” developed and adopted by the National Association of State Directors of
Developmental Disabilities Services (“NASDDDS”). This revised Delaware Behavior and
Support Plan prohibits a number of practices, including Averse Interventions.25 The
definition of “Averse Interventions” is:
Interventions intended to inflict pain, discomfort and/or social humiliation or
any intervention as perceived by the person to inflict pain, discomfort, or
social humiliation in order to reduce behavior. Examples of aversive
interventions include, but are not limited to, electric skin shock, liquid spray
to one’s face and strong, non-preferred tastes applied in the mouth.26
DHSS contends that there is also a contract-based prohibition on the use of GED.
By contract with DDDS, all Delaware-qualified Medicaid providers who serve individuals
23
App. to Opening Br. at A402 (No. 93).
24
See State of Delaware: Statewide Transition Plan for Compliance with Home and Community-
Based Setting Rule at 14, 39 (last updated Mar. 30, 2016),
http:/dhss.delaware.gov/dhss/dmma/files/statewidetransitionplan.pdf.
25
App. to Answering Br. at B2 (No. 93). Delaware’s HCBS Waiver also bans the use of corporal
punishment. See App. to Opening Br. at A499 (No. 93) (“DDDS Policy on Behavior and/or Mental
Health support policy prohibits the use of mechanical restraints; corporal punishment or threat of
corporal punishment . . . .”).
26
App. to Answering Br. at B4 (No. 93) (emphasis added).
13
through DDDS programming agree to comply with all statutes, regulations, policies and
procedures of DDDS.27 In DDDS’s contract with JRC, JRC agreed to comply with “all
State and Federal licensing standards and all other applicable standards as required to
provide services under this Contract.”28 DDDS’s contract with JRC expired on September
30, 2014, when JRC refused to cease use of GED on Recipients.29
Overview of the Procedural Backdrop
It is against the evolving regulatory framework that we consider the issues raised
here. Although Appellants largely base their due process challenge on alleged flaws in the
administrative process, in the end, both the Hearing Officer and the Superior Court viewed
the principal and threshold issue as an issue of Medicaid coverage, and specifically,
whether GED aversive treatment is a covered Medicaid service.
The most direct impetus for changes in Delaware’s HCBS Waiver leading to the
prohibition on GED treatment appears to stem from correspondence sent to Massachusetts
by the federal government in 2012. On December 14, 2012, Richard McGreal, a CMS
Associate Regional I Administrator, issued a letter to the Secretary of Massachusetts’
Office of Health and Human Services (“Region I Letter”) enclosing a draft report assessing
Massachusetts’ HCBS Waiver. The Region I Letter stated in relevant part:
Residential and service settings operated by the Judge Rotenberg Educational
Center (JRC) are of particular concern. The State indicated that JRC is the
only provider currently using Level III interventions, described in the
September 14th response letter as, “painful, aversive stimuli and deprivation
27
App. to Opening Br. at A121 (No. 93).
28
Id. at A109.
29
DDDS last renewed the contract with JRC on July 1, 2013.
14
procedures.” Level III interventions include use of an electronic shock
device known as a graduated electronic decelerator, or GED, in use solely by
JRC. . . .
Residential facilities and the use of aversive interventions including GED
and the use of food deprivation procedures are regulated by the State. The
State has described its movement toward positive behavioral reinforcement
processes. However, as reasonable people will agree that electronic shock
and withholding of meals have no place in their homes or communities, we
therefore request that the State provide immediate assurance that the use of
Level III aversive interventions have been eliminated for any and all
individuals enrolled in the HCBS waiver. . . . At a minimum, the settings in
which waiver participants are served must not include any in which State
regulation authorizes the use of Level III interventions. This condition must
be met no later than the effective date of the waiver renewal. In the interim
the State should cease all billing for FFP for HCBS services provided to
individuals residing in residences practicing these procedures.30
In light of the CMS directive to Massachusetts, and in preparation for its application
to CMS for its own HCBS Waiver set for renewal in 2014, DDDS met with the Guardians
to explain that JRC would no longer be permitted to use GED on the Recipients.31
30
App. to Opening Br. at A812–13 (No. 93). Level III intervention is defined in Massachusetts’
state regulations, in relevant part, as “[a]ny Intervention which involves the contingent application
of physical contact aversive stimuli such as spanking, slapping, hitting or contingent skin shock.”
115 CMR 5.14 (3)(d)(1). Delaware’s HCBS waiver also bans the use of corporal punishment. See
App. to Opening Br. at A499–500; see also Judge Rotenberg Educ. Ctr. v. Office of Admin.
Hearings, 2009 WL 162066, at *5 (Cal. Ct. App. Jan. 26, 2009) (affirming decision by
administrative hearing officer that GED used by JRC constitutes corporal punishment). Notably,
the California Court of Appeal notes in this decision that “JRC does not contest on appeal the
ALJ’s factual finding that JRC employs corporal punishment.” Id. at *3 n.3.
31
See App. to Opening Br. at A291 (No. 93). The following exchange occurred during the March
12, 2014 Clarification Conference:
Ms. Woolfolk: I want the record to be clear that DDDS met with both sets of parents
in Delaware and explained to them exactly the next steps in the process that was
going on.
Hearing Officer: When was this approximately? Was this before or after the
October 2013 letters?
Ms. Woolfolk: I believe it was just about at the same time.
15
In letters dated October 8 and 13, 2013 to the JRC, DHSS advised JRC that it was
aware of the Region I Letter. The DDDS also cited to language of Delaware’s HCBS
Waiver and attached a copy of Delaware’s Policy on Behavior and/or Mental Health
Supports which prohibited “the use of mechanical restraints, corporal punishment or
threat of corporal punishment . . . physical interventions which cause pain . . . .”32 It
warned JRC that services provided to Delaware’s two residents at JRC must comply with
Delaware’s HCBS Waiver standards. Accordingly, it directed JRC to submit a plan to
DDDS “outlining a timeframe for the discontinuance of the use of all aversive[s],” and
stated that “discontinuation of all aversive[s] must be completed within 60 days from
receipt of this letter.”33
In response, on November 27, 2013, Appellants filed a Request for a Fair Hearing
with DHSS, arguing that GED treatment services should continue uninterrupted.34 In
response to this request, on December 16, 2013, DHSS filed a Fair Hearing Summary
which stated that “[n]o action was taken,” and that assistance was being continued.35
Hearing Officer: Just about the same, okay go ahead.
Ms. Woolfolk: We met with them in Delaware each of them did . . . . There was
certainly no blindsiding here of parents. And I want the record to be clear on that.
Id. Ms. Woolfolk represents DHSS in her capacity as Deputy Attorney General for the State of
Delaware’s Department of Justice.
32
Id. at A14 (emphasis added).
33
Id.
34
Id. at A18.
35
Id. at A46–47. The Fair Hearing Summary (id. at A46–95) attached the Delaware HCBS §
1915(c) waiver; 42 C.F.R. §§ 441.302, 441.303; and the DDDS Policy: Behavior and/or Mental
Health Supports. It states that “[a] granted HCBS waiver may be terminated if the health and
welfare assurances approved in the DE waiver are not met,” and that “Delaware is pursuing
16
DDDS filed a Motion to Dismiss this request on March 6, 2014. A clarification conference
was thereafter conducted to discuss procedural and substantive issues and DDDS filed a
supplemental Motion to Dismiss. The hearing was set for July 15, 2014. The
administrative proceedings were stayed while Appellants pursued an appeal in the Superior
Court of the Hearing Officer’s disposition of April 25, 2014, and specifically, her
determination that the reasonableness and necessity of using Level III interventions was
not at issue.36 The appeal was dismissed on February 10, 2015 as an improper interlocutory
appeal and remanded. The hearing was reset for June 30, 2015. Again, the parties
requested clarification on the scope of the hearing and DHSS renewed its Motion to
Dismiss. Appellants expressed concern that they were not given the opportunity to fully
brief the issues raised by DHSS in its Motion in Dismiss and that they were entitled to an
evidentiary hearing, including evidence of medical necessity of the GED, prior to oral
argument on DHSS’s Motion to Dismiss.37
In the midst of the procedural wrangling over the scope of the continued Fair
Hearing, Delaware’s Medicaid director, Stephen Groff, sought clarification from Region
compliance with its waiver regulations.” Id. at A47. It also identified who was expected to testify
for the State, including “[o]fficials of DHSS with knowledge of the laws, practices and regulations
of the Center of Medicare and Medicaid Services.” Id. at A47.
36
Id. at A358–59; see also id. at A350 (“Based on . . . (1) letters of [DDDS] sent in October 2013
to [JRC] . . . (2) [DHSS’s] Motion to Dismiss Fair Hearing Request for [Recipients] dated March
6, 2014, and (3) the clarification conference, reasonableness and necessity of using aversive
behavioral interventions . . . including [GED], on [Recipients] is not an issue in this fair hearing
proceeding.”).
37
See id. at A593.
17
III on the use of the GED on December 23, 2014 since Delaware is in Region III, not
Region I. CMS responded on March 10, 2015 to Mr. Groff (the “2015 CMS Letter”). In
that letter from Ralph Lollar, Director, Division of Long Term Services and Support of
CMS, Lollar confirmed to DDDS that electric shock treatment is inconsistent with HCBS
settings. He wrote:
Residential facilities and the use of aversive interventions including electrical
shock using a graduated electronics decelerator (GED) are regulated by the
State. The State asserts that the use of aversive interventions is prohibited in
the state’s HCBS programs. The State has requested clarification from
[CMS] regarding the use of GED devices and denial of nutritionally adequate
diets in home and community-based settings. Electric shock therapies and
withholding of meals are not characteristic of HCBS settings; we therefore
request that the State provide immediate assurance that the use of these
aversive interventions has been eliminated for any and all settings in which
individuals enrolled in Medicaid live or receive services.
Additionally, per the State’s letter, procedures that include physical
interventions which cause pain are considered aversive interventions
prohibited by the State. Therefore, this condition must be met immediately
and these practices must cease and desist. The State should cease all billing
for FFP [federal financial participation] for individuals receiving Medicaid
services through providers practicing any of the above referenced
procedures.38
Following briefing and oral argument on DHSS’s Motion to Dismiss Appellants’
Fair Hearing request, the Hearing Officer issued an order on November 30, 2015 (the
“Bifurcation Order”). The Hearing Officer determined that “both the federal regulations
and even more narrowly, DHSS’s own policy require a Fair Hearing to go forward.”39 She
38
Id. at A576 (emphasis in original).
39
Id. at A853. In support of her determination, the Hearing Officer cited to 42 C.F.R. § 431.200(b),
42 C.F.R. § 431.201 and 16 Del. Admin. C. § 5100(1).
18
further ruled that “before considering whether the GED treatment services are medically
necessary, the first issue that must be decided is whether these services are indeed
covered . . . .”40 Accordingly, the Hearing Officer ruled that “the Fair Hearing shall
proceed as a bifurcated process considering the issue of Medicaid coverage first, followed
by the medical necessity of GED treatment services, if Medicaid coverage is sustained.” 41
Appellants thereafter filed a Motion in Limine arguing that they should be able to
present evidence related to the reasonableness and necessity of aversive services at the Fair
Hearing. That issue, along with the primary coverage issue, was considered at the Fair
Hearing which occurred on January 13, 2016. The Hearing Officer admitted 209 exhibits
into evidence without objection from either party.
Following the Fair Hearing, on April 21, 2016, the Hearing Officer issued a final
decision (the “Final Decision”).42 The Hearing Officer first explained her decision to deny
Appellants’ Motion in Limine wherein Appellants had sought to present evidence that GED
was a medically necessary treatment for Appellants. Appellants also had contended that
the issue of coverage was, in part, dependent upon the issue of medical necessity. DHSS
had countered that while all covered services must be medically necessary, not all
medically necessary treatments are covered.
The Hearing Officer ruled that “[i]f the GED treatment services at issue are indeed
prohibited services under Delaware’s Medicaid program, medical necessity simply cannot
40
App. to Opening Br. at A853 (No. 93).
41
Id.
42
Id. at A952–82.
19
be reached.”43 However, “if the GED treatment services are covered services under
Delaware Medicaid, then arguably, the state erred in instructing JRC to discontinue the
services and medical necessity should be considered.”44 Accordingly, the Hearing Officer
ruled that “contrary to Appellants’ assertions, a medically necessary treatment does not
automatically equate to Medicaid coverage.”45
The Hearing Officer next considered whether electric shock treatment was a covered
service under Medicaid and concluded that it was not. The Hearing Officer summarized
the arguments on both sides that had been presented at the January 13, 2016 Fair Hearing.
DHSS contended that GED was prohibited by both state and federal law. As for
state law, DHSS pointed to the HCBS Waiver which was duly enacted and approved by
CMS on July 1, 2014 and it had the force of law.
As for the federal level, DHSS pointed out that the 2015 CMS Letter had been
signed by the head of the CMS Division of Long Term Care Services—the CMS branch
that oversees the implementation of the HCBS Rule in all Medicaid funded community
services nationwide. Thus, DHSS contended that it applied not solely to Regions I or III,
but rather, it applied nationwide. According to DHSS, this letter meant that federal law
prohibited the use of electric shock in all community settings nationwide.46 Thus, DHSS
43
Id. at A955.
44
Id.
45
Id. In support of this proposition, she cited Beal v. Doe, 432 U.S. 438, 444 (1977) (“But nothing
in [Title XIX] suggests that participating States are required to fund every medical procedure that
falls within the delineated categories of medical care.”).
46
App. to Opening Br. at A957 (No. 93).
20
argued that the prohibition on GED aversive treatment represented a considered judgment
by state officials, through the HCBS Waiver, and by federal officials, through the CMS
letters, that the GED treatment services, though formerly covered, would no longer be a
covered Medicaid service.
Appellants, on the other hand, contended that the CMS letters are neither policy nor
regulations, but rather, are guidance only. They argued that the controlling regulation is
the HCBS Setting Rule (which became effective March 17, 2014) which refers to the use
of “coercion or restraint,” but which does not specifically refer to aversives, let alone GED
in particular. In addition, Appellants argued that in the renewed HCBS Waiver, DDDS, by
eliminating GED as a treatment modality, has undermined the goals of the waiver program
by eliminating Appellants’ ability to remain in a community-based setting.
After considering the arguments, along with 209 exhibits submitted by the parties,
the Hearing Officer ruled that “the evidence supports that the DDDS instruction in October
2013 to JRC to cease using GED treatment services was correct and well within its
authority under the Delaware HCBS Waiver.”47 Further, she held that “[t]he fact that the
duly promulgated Delaware HCBS Waiver carries the force and effect of law cannot be
seriously disputed.”48
47
Id. at A966.
48
Id.
21
The Hearing Officer then rejected Appellants’ argument that the CMS letters do not
constitute regulatory authority. Rather, she concluded that “an agency interpretation of its
own regulation is authoritative.”49 She explained her reasoning as follows:
[T]he CMS letter to Delaware dated March 10, 2015 was authored by the
Director of the CMS Division of Long Term Care Services, which is the CMS
branch responsible for overseeing the implementation of the HBCS Rule in
all Medicaid funded community services nationwide. Certainly, a response
from the national Director of the CMS branch responsible for the HCBS
waivers that is directly on point should be given substantial deference.
Moreover, review of the CMS letter to Delaware finds that the text
specifically references GED as a prohibited aversive not covered under the
HCBS Waiver. Further, the CMS letter to Delaware clearly mandates the
state should “cease all billing for FFP [federal financial participation] for
individuals receiving Medicaid services through providers practicing any”
aversive interventions. Appellants’ argument that GED treatment services
remain covered under Medicaid as a behavioral intervention is simply not
supported.50
Finally, the Hearing Officer rejected Appellants’ contention that they were
somehow limited on the coverage issue because they could not present evidence as to
medical necessity to support their coverage position and that the Hearing Officer had
restricted the Fair Hearing to argument only. She emphasized that, “[t]o be clear, this Fair
Hearing Officer’s [Bifurcation Order] in no way limited either the Appellants’ or DHSS’s
ability to present evidence and/or testimony to prove Medicaid coverage in the first part of
this Fair Hearing.”51 She explained:
[M]edical necessity does not automatically guarantee Medicaid coverage. At
the onset of this Fair Hearing, this Fair Hearing Officer asked both sides if
there would be any witnesses presented. Apparently, as stated on the record,
49
Id.
50
Id.
51
Id.
22
Appellants asked DHSS, without clarification from this Fair Hearing Officer,
if witnesses were permitted during the first part of this Fair Hearing. DHSS
advised that it understood the first part of the Fair Hearing was limited to
argument only. Again, this Fair Hearing Officer did not limit either sides’
ability to present witnesses and/or testimony to provide Medical coverage in
the first part of this Fair Hearing. Although Appellants argued that they had
to present witnesses and testimony on medical necessity to prove Medicaid
coverage, this argument is also unsupported. Consequently, denying
Appellants’ Motion in Limine did not limit Appellants’ ability to provide
testimony to support the Medicaid coverage.52
The Guardians filed an administrative appeal of the Hearing Officer’s Final
Decision in the Delaware Superior Court pursuant to 31 Del. C. § 520. The Guardians
argued that they had received inadequate notice of DHSS’s treatment mandates, that DHSS
provided an inadequate Fair Hearing summary with shifting legal justifications for its
actions, and that DHSS engaged in coercive and prejudicial conduct resulting in a denial
of due process. They argued further that the Hearing Officer’s decision was not supported
by substantial evidence and that it was incorrect because electronic shock treatment was
and remains a covered service.
Following briefing and oral argument, the Superior Court rejected each of these
contentions in an opinion dated January 30, 2018. First, it concluded that bifurcating the
Fair Hearing did not result in a denial of due process. Further, “the parties were not limited
in their ability to allow evidence regarding Medicaid coverage, including by witness
testimony.”53 Thus, it ruled that “[h]ad the Hearing Officer determined that GED was a
52
Id. at A967.
53
Oldham v. Dep’t of Health and Soc. Servs., 2018 WL 776580, at *5 (Del. Super. Jan. 30, 2018).
23
covered service, no doubt the Guardians would have had a full opportunity to present their
case in support of medical necessity.”54
Next, the Superior Court concluded that both state and federal law support the
Hearing Officer’s conclusion that aversives are not a Medicaid covered service. On the
state level, it held that the HCBS Waiver, in providing that “[t]he use of averse
conditioning, defined as the contingent application of startling, painful, or noxious stimuli
is prohibited,” “undoubtedly prohibits the use of GED and terminates its coverage as a
Medicaid service.”55 Moreover, the HCBS Waiver has “the force and effect of law” as it
was validly promulgated pursuant to legislative authority. The Superior Court explained:
Here, DHSS amended its waiver through the formal rulemaking process by
gathering input from providers and advocates, convening public hearings and
comment, and publishing notice of the waiver as a proposed final regulation.
Delaware’s HCBS waiver therefore carries the force and effect of law and
substantiates the Hearing Officer’s conclusion—aversives are not Medicaid
covered services.56
The Superior Court also rejected Appellants’ argument that GED was a necessary behavior
support service and thus was covered under Delaware’s HCBS Waiver. It reasoned that
“[a]versives cannot be prohibited outright by the waiver, but also—as the Guardians
propose—covered by the waiver.”57
54
Id.
55
Id.
56
Id.
57
Id. at *6.
24
As to the prohibition on GED at the federal level, the Superior Court concluded that
the 2012 Region I Letter and the 2015 CMS Letter are agency interpretations of CMS’s
own regulation “and are therefore entitled to mandatory judicial deference.”58 Further, the
HCBS Setting Rule, which assures an individual’s right to freedom from coercion and
restraint, was interpreted by CMS as prohibiting the use of aversives such as GED.
According to the Superior Court, “[s]uch an interpretation is entitled to mandatory judicial
deference.”59 Thus, “according to federal law, state law, and the federal agency tasked
with interpreting the HCBS Rule, the Hearing Officer’s conclusion that GED is not a
Medicaid covered service is correct.”60
As to the various procedural due process challenges, the Superior Court rejected
them and observed that the “Guardians offer no evidence that they were unprepared, no
evidence that notice was not received, or that the hearing was held without them, and
nothing to the effect that they did not understand the issues or the bases for the decision in
question.”61 In fact, “the Guardians received exactly what they sought”—namely, “[t]hey
engaged in a full evidentiary Fair Hearing in which they were prepared to argue the issues
raised, permitted to produce any evidence on the issue of Medicaid coverage, and to raise
58
Id. at *5.
59
Id. at *6.
60
Id.
61
Id.
25
arguments as to why aversives were still Medicaid Covered Services.”62 Accordingly, the
Superior Court concluded that granting reversal would be elevating form over substance.
Finally, the Superior Court rejected Appellants’ claim based on Title II of the
Americans with Disabilities Act (“ADA”) as it had not been fairly raised in the proceedings
below.
III. Issues on Appeal
Appellants raised three issues on appeal. First, they argue that the administrative
process preceding the Hearing Officer’s decision violated their due process rights. Second,
they contend that aversive treatments (and specifically GED) are covered under Delaware’s
Medicaid waiver program and that their rights were violated by DHSS through post hoc
rule-making and interpretations. They contend that because an individual’s specific
medical needs are integral to the issue of whether or not a particular service might be
“covered” under the HCBS Waiver, the Hearing Officer erred in precluding evidence
regarding Appellants’ medical needs. Finally, they contend that the Final Decision
constitutes prohibited discrimination by DHSS against Appellants in violation of Title II
of the Americans with Disabilities Act (“ADA”).
IV. Standard of Review
The Final Decision of the Hearing Officer was subject to review by the Superior
Court pursuant to 31 Del. C. § 520.63 The Superior Court was required to determine
62
Id.
63
Section 520 provides in relevant part:
26
whether the Hearing Officer’s Final Decision was supported by substantial evidence and
free from legal error.64 Our standard of review “mirrors that of the Superior Court.”65
“Where there is a review of an administrative decision by both an intermediate and a higher
appellate court and the intermediate court received no evidence other than that presented
to the administrative agency, the higher court does not review the decision of the
intermediate court, but, instead, directly examines the decision of the agency.”66 Further,
“[o]n appeal from an administrative agency the reviewing court must determine whether
the agency ruling is supported by substantial evidence and free from legal error.”67
Substantial evidence is that which a reasonable mind might accept as adequate to support
a conclusion.68 Questions of law are reviewed de novo.69
Any . . . recipient of public assistance benefits . . . against whom an administrative
hearing decision has been decided may appeal such decision to the Superior
Court . . . . The appeal shall be on the record without a trial de novo. The Court
shall decide all relevant questions and all other matters involved, and shall sustain
any factual findings of the administrative hearing decision that are supported by
substantial evidence on the record as a whole.
31 Del. C. § 520.
64
See Lawson ex rel. Lawson v. Dep’t of Health and Human Servs., 2004 WL 440405, at *2 (Del.
Super. Feb. 25, 2004).
65
Stoltz Mgmt. Co. v. Consumer Affairs Bd., 616 A.2d 1205, 1208 (Del. 1992).
66
Id. (internal citations omitted).
67
Id. (internal citations omitted).
68
See Lehto v. Bd. of Educ., 962 A.2d 222, 225–26 (Del. 2008).
69
See Delaware Dep’t of Nat. Res. & Envtl. Control v. Sussex Cnty., 34 A.3d 1087, 1090 (Del.
2011).
27
V. Analysis
A. The Procedural Due Process Challenges
Although framed primarily as a series of due process challenges, Appellants’ main
challenge raises a question of Medicaid coverage, namely, whether aversive treatment,
including the use of a GED, is covered. They challenge the Hearing Officer’s decision to
consider that threshold question first, and argue that the procedure employed by the
Hearing Officer deprived them of their right to a meaningful, pre-deprivation process and
hearing. The foundation for this right, according to them, is constitutional, statutory, and
regulatory in nature.
DHSS contends that CMS’s and DHSS’s determination to no longer fund what they
deem an intolerable practice is a regulatory determination, which Appellants have no legal
right to challenge. Rather than being targeted discrimination, DHSS contends that CMS’s
and DHSS’s prohibitions against coercion and the use of aversives are not adjudications,
but rather, are duly promulgated regulatory and policy decisions that apply to all Medicaid-
qualified providers and recipients. Thus, DHSS contends that no hearing was required
because the decision to ban GED was not based on individualized findings. Rather, CMS
directed, and DHSS determined, as a matter of public policy, that using such intolerable
and coercive methods to enforce behavioral compliance was unacceptable for all Medicaid
recipients receiving home and community-based services.
28
DHSS relies on the United States Supreme Court’s 1915 decision in Bi-Metallic
Investment Co. v. State Board of Equalization70 for the proposition that regulatory acts that
apply broadly, unlike adjudications, do not trigger individual rights to challenge such
policy decisions. In Bi-Metallic, the Supreme Court held that procedural due process rights
did not apply to the enactment of legislation when the Colorado Tax Commission and the
State Board of Equalization had ordered a 40% increase in the valuation of all taxable
property in Denver. The plaintiff sought to enjoin enforcement of the order arguing that it
had been denied a right to a hearing. The Supreme Court held that a hearing was not
required for each affected property owner prior to the enactment of the generally applicable
tax increase, reasoning that:
Where a rule of conduct applies to more than a few people, it is impractical
that everyone should have a direct voice in its adoption. The Constitution
does not require all public acts to be done in a town meeting or an assembly
of the whole. General statutes within the state power are passed that affect
the person or property of individuals, sometimes to the point of ruin, without
giving them a chance to be heard. Their rights are protected in the only way
that they can be in a complex society, by their power, immediate or remote,
over those who make the rule.71
A number of cases since Bi-Metallic have held that in altering substantive rights of
people through the enactment of rules of general applicability, a legislature generally
provides all of the constitutionally required process that is due simply by enacting the
70
239 U.S. 441 (1915).
71
Id. at 445.
29
statute, publishing it, and to the extent it regulates private conduct, affording those affected
a reasonable opportunity to familiarize themselves with the requirements and to comply.72
Applying this principle in the Medicaid context, a number of cases have held that a
hearing need not be granted when either state or federal law requires automatic grant
adjustments for classes of Medicaid recipients unless the reason for an individual appeal is
an incorrect grant computation.73 Relying on these authorities, DHSS maintains that both
the federal and State’s ban on coercion in home and community-based settings reflected
broad policy determinations at the federal and state levels, did not involve individual
findings regarding the Recipients, is governed by the Bi-Metallic line of cases, and thus,
no hearing was required at all. They also cite to Medicaid regulations which state that no
72
See, e.g., United States v. Locke, 471 U.S. 84, 108 (1985) (holding that no individualized notice
was required where the statute was generally applicable, published, and afforded the affected
landowners a reasonable opportunity to understand and comply with the requirements); Logan v.
Zimmerman Brush Co., 455 U.S. 422, 433 (1982) (“[T]he legislative determination [terminating a
welfare program or granting defenses and immunities to state officials] provides all the process
that is due.”).
73
Rosen v. Goetz, 410 F.3d 919, 926 (6th Cir. 2005) (“The regulations grant a broad right to an
evidentiary hearing (when a recipient believes that the agency has ‘taken an action erroneously’ in
terminating benefits, § 431.220(a)(2)) and impose a broad limitation on that right (when the sole
issue is a law ‘requiring an automatic change’ in benefits, § 431.220(b)). An interpretation of the
regulations that invariably respects a recipient’s claim that ‘erroneous[]’ action has been taken,
even when the termination of benefits arises solely from a change in state or federal law,
necessarily slights the provision stating that a hearing need not be given in the face of ‘an automatic
change’ in benefits. By contrast, a reading of the regulation that draws a dichotomy between
impermissible challenges to a State’s legal or policy judgment on the one hand and permissible
challenges to the relevant facts or application of law to a given beneficiary respects both
regulations.”); see also, e.g., Benton v. Rhodes, 586 F.2d 1, 3 (6th Cir. 1978) (“[W]hen a state
decides to terminate optional benefits on the basis of lack of appropriated funds, or for any other
state reason, this is a matter of state law or policy which it was permitted to adopt.”).
30
hearing is required “if the sole issue is a federal or state law requiring an automatic change
adversely affecting some or all beneficiaries.”74
Appellants, on the other hand, rely on the Supreme Court’s seminal decision in
Goldberg v. Kelly,75 which involved the question of what process was due to recipients
who faced termination of welfare benefits. Appellants argue that they were entitled to
procedural due process before the proposed termination of GED treatment in October 2013,
including timely and adequate notice detailing the reasons for termination and a
meaningful, pre-deprivation evidentiary hearing. They claim that these rights, though
derived from Goldberg, are also embedded in federal and state laws and regulations.
In particular, Appellants cite to a number of federal regulations within the Medicaid
regulatory scheme that they contend apply in the context of a threatened termination of
Medicaid benefits.76 They contend that Delaware regulations either mirror or expand the
procedural due process rights of Medicaid beneficiaries beyond the federal requirements.77
Further, they argue that the Delaware Social Security Manual requires “adequate notice”
even when changes in federal or state law require automatic adjustments for benefits
rendered to certain classes of individuals, and even if no hearing is required.78
74
42 C.F.R. § 431.220(b) (2017).
75
397 U.S. 254 (1970).
76
See, e.g., 42 C.F.R. §§ 431.200(a)–(b), 431.220(a)(1)–(2), 431.242(c)–(d), 431.241(a)–(b),
431.221(b) (2017).
77
They cite to 16 Del. Admin. C. §§ 5000 et seq.
78
See DSSM § 5302(K) (requiring such mass change notices [to] “be adequate and timely” and
include statements regarding the state’s intended action, the reasons for the intended action, the
31
Here, Appellants face the termination of GED treatment (including the termination
of federal funding) that had, for many years, been a covered Medicaid service. But,
Appellants have continued to have these services available through the present, and the
State has committed to pay for all of their services at JRC until Ashlee’s and Robert’s
transition out of JRC is complete.79
Under federal law, states choosing to participate in Medicaid must provide a core
set of mandatory services to qualified beneficiaries.80 States may also cover other optional
categories of services. These optional services are then part of the state’s Medicaid plan.
As such, they are subject to the requirements of federal law.81 Factored into this mix is our
recognition that both the federal and state governments are entitled to make policy
decisions as to which services are no longer consistent with community-based settings.82
Given this unique factual scenario, the question here is: what process was due?
specific change in law, and “circumstances under which a hearing may be obtained and assistance
continued[.]”).
79
The Agreements to Participate in Transition, signed by Ashlee’s and Robert’s parents in April
2015, provide that “[w]e affirm that DDDS has committed to pay for [Ashlee’s and Robert’s]
supports [sic] during the transition, and that [JRC] will receive payment for the services it provides
to [Ashlee and Robert] during the transition at the conclusion of the transition, as stated in the
Division’s October 3, 3014 letter to JRC and the Division’s October 10, 2014 letter to us.” App.
to Opening Br. at A782–83 (No. 93).
80
See 42 U.S.C. §§ 1396a (a)(10)(A), 1396d (a) (2018); see also Lawson, 2004 WL 440405, at *3
(“The State of Delaware recognizes that Medicaid benefits are property rights and as such, the
recipient may not be deprived of these benefits without due process of law.”).
81
Doe 1-13 ex rel Doe, Sr. 1-13 v. Chiles, 136 F.3d 709, 721 (11th Cir. 1998) (“‘[W]hen a state
elects to provide an optional service, that service becomes part of the state Medicaid plan and is
subject to the requirements of federal law.’” (quoting Tallahassee Mem’l Reg’l Med. Ctr. v. Cook,
109 F.3d 693, 698 (11th Cir. 1997))).
82
See, e.g., Atkins v. Parker, 472 U.S. 115, 129 (1985) (“The procedural component of the Due
Process Clause does not ‘impose a constitutional limitation on the power of Congress to make
substantive changes in the law of entitlement to public benefits.’” (quoting Richardson v. Belcher,
32
We first consider the issue of constitutional due process and address Appellants’
contention that they were entitled to an evidentiary hearing prior to the State’s “action” in
sending letters to JRC in 2013 demanding termination of GED. They rely heavily on
Goldberg, where the United States Supreme Court held that before a state can terminate a
recipient’s welfare benefits, due process requires that the recipient be afforded an adequate
hearing.83 The Supreme Court said, in that context, that due process requires: (i) timely
and adequate notice detailing the reasons for a proposed termination; (ii) an effective
opportunity for the recipient to defend by confronting any adverse witnesses and by
presenting arguments and evidence orally; (iii) retained counsel, if desired; (iv) an impartial
decision-maker; (v) a decision resting solely on the legal rules and evidence addressed at
the hearing; and (vi) a statement of the reasons for the decision and the evidence relied
upon.84
Federal regulations require that a state agency must provide a “fair hearing” which
satisfies the Goldberg requirements.85 These requirements are imputed to the states via the
404 U.S. 78, 81 (1971))); Benton, 586 F.2d at 3–4 (distinguishing Goldberg on the grounds that
“[t]he present case involves only the termination of optional benefits which the state was never
required to provide in the first place,” stating that “[w]e find nothing in the Federal or State
Constitutions giving prospective recipients of optional benefits a constitutional right to their
perpetual existence,” and holding that “matters of law and policy are not subject to any hearing
requirements under the applicable regulations, whether the hearing be pre- or post-reduction”).
83
Goldberg, 397 U.S. at 261.
84
Id. at 267–68, 270–71.
85
See, e.g., 42 C.F.R. § 431.202 (“A State plan must provide that the requirements of §§ 431.205
through 431.246 of this subpart are met.”). Section 431.205(d) provides that “[t]he hearing system
must meet the due process standards set forth in Goldberg v. Kelly, 397 U.S. 254 (1970), and any
additional standards specified in this subpart.”
33
Fourteenth Amendment and “are only triggered when adverse actions, such as the denial
of benefits, are implemented by state action.”86
Notably, the Supreme Court in Goldberg focused on welfare benefits needed for
basic subsistence. In addition, the Supreme Court declined to reach the issue of “whether
due process requires only an opportunity for written submission, or an opportunity both for
written submission and oral argument, where there are no factual issues in dispute or where
the application of the rule of law is not intertwined with factual issues.”87
Several years after Goldberg, in Mathews v Eldridge,88 the Supreme Court rejected
the contention that a pre-termination evidentiary hearing (as opposed to a post-termination
hearing) was required before termination of social security disability benefits. It observed
that “[o]nly in Goldberg has the Court held that due process requires an evidentiary hearing
prior to a temporary deprivation.”89 In Goldberg, “it was emphasized there that welfare
assistance is given to persons on the very margin of subsistence.”90 The Court observed in
Mathews that eligibility for disability benefits, by contrast, is not based upon financial
need.91
86
Lawson, 2004 WL 440405, at *4 (citing Perry v. Chen, 985 F. Supp. 1197, 1201 (D. Ariz.
1996)).
87
Goldberg, 397 U.S. at 268 n.15.
88
424 U.S. 319 (1976).
89
Id. at 340.
90
Id.
91
Id. at 340–41.
34
In Mathews, the Supreme Court observed further that “‘[d]ue process is flexible and
calls for such procedural protections as the particular situation demands.’”92 Reflecting the
flexibility inherent in the due process analysis, the Supreme Court stated that “[t]he
fundamental requirement of due process is the opportunity to be heard ‘at a meaningful
time and in a meaningful manner.’”93 Further, it held that “resolution of the issue whether
the administrative procedures provided here are constitutionally sufficient requires analysis
of the governmental and private interests that are affected.”94
Many cases suggest that Mathews’ pragmatic approach takes into account the
fact/law dichotomy.95 For example in the context of a reduction of termination in AFDC
92
Id. at 334 (quoting Morrissey v. Brewer, 408 U.S. 471, 481 (1972)); see also Mullane v. Cent.
Hanover Bank & Trust Co., 339 U.S. 306, 314–15 (1950) (“An elementary and fundamental
requirement of due process in any proceeding which is to be accorded finality is notice reasonably
calculated, under all the circumstances, to apprise interested parties of the pendency of the action
and afford them an opportunity to present their objections. The notice must be of such nature as
reasonably to convey the required information and it must afford a reasonable time for those
interested to make their appearance. But if with due regard for the practicalities and peculiarities
of the case these conditions are reasonably met the constitutional requirements are satisfied.”
(internal citations omitted)).
93
Mathews, 424 U.S. at 333 (quoting Armstrong v. Manzo, 380 U.S. 545, 552 (1965)).
94
Id. at 334–35 (noting that due process requires consideration of three distinct factors, namely,
“[f]irst, the private interest that will be affected by the official action; second, the risk of an
erroneous deprivation of such interest through the procedures used, and the probable value, if any,
of additional or substitute procedural safeguards; and finally, the Government’s interest, including
the function involved and the fiscal and administration burdens that the additional or substitute
procedural requirement would entail” (internal citations omitted)).
95
See, e.g., Codd v. Velger, 429 U.S. 624, 627 (1977) (“[I]f the hearing mandated by the Due
Process Clause is to serve any useful purpose, there must be some factual dispute between an
employer and a discharged employee which has some significant bearing on the employee's
reputation.”); Rosen, 410 F.3d at 928 (“And since Goldberg, the [United States Supreme] Court
has explained that the due process requirement that the government provide a hearing before the
termination of benefits turns on the sensible fact/law dichotomy that CMS, the State and Benton
have drawn.”); Ortiz v. Eichler, 794 F.2d 889, 893–94 (3d Cir. 1986) (distinguishing cases where
less detailed pre-hearing notice was required in denying or terminating Aid to Families with
35
benefits, the Court of Appeals for the First Circuit distinguished between across-the-board
reductions in welfare benefits mandated by a statutory change, and reductions based upon
individualized determinations. It stated that for across-the-board reductions, “this court
has recognized that due process may set a lower standard for determining a notice to be
adequate than where the reduction or termination of aid is on an individual basis.”96
Four years after Mathews, the United States Supreme Court, in O’Bannon v. Town
Court Nursing Center,97 held that nursing home residents had no constitutional right to a
hearing before a state or federal agency revoked the home’s authority to provide them with
nursing care at the government’s expense. The Court acknowledged that when
government’s enforcement of standards requires decertification of a facility, “there may be
an immediate, adverse impact on some residents.”98 Nevertheless, it held that “surely that
Dependent Children, Food Stamps, and Medicaid benefits where those cases did not concern
“individual eligibility determinations,” but rather, involved “a legislatively mandated substantive
change in the scope of the entire program” (quoting Atkins, 472 U.S. at 129)); Washington v.
DeBeaugrine, 658 F. Supp. 2d 1332, 1335 (N.D. Fla. 2009) (“Both sides have agreed further that
there is no right to a hearing when there is no factual issue attending a denial or reduction of
benefits—that is, when there is no factual issue to be heard. The governing regulation confirms
this, saying that the agency ‘need not grant a hearing if the sole issue is a Federal or State law
requiring an automatic change adversely affecting some or all recipients.’ Thus, for example,
when a state validly changes its law in a way that, without factual dispute, ends a person’s benefits,
no hearing is required. The right to a hearing when the recipient believes the agency has acted
‘erroneously’ thus means ‘factually erroneously.’ (internal citations omitted)).
96
LeBeau v. Spirito, 703 F.2d 639, 644–45 (1st Cir. 1983) (citing Velazco v. Minter, 481 F.2d 573,
577 (1st Cir. 1973)).
97
447 U.S. 773 (1980).
98
Id. at 787.
36
impact, which is an indirect and incidental result of the Government’s enforcement action,
does not amount to a deprivation of any interest in life, liberty or property.”99
In view of the unique facts presented here, we believe that as a matter of federal due
process, no pre-termination hearing was required. In other words, even assuming,
arguendo, the October 2013 letters constituted formal “action” within the meaning of the
federal regulations discussed below, Appellants had no constitutional right to a hearing
prior to these letters being sent. Further, even though only two Delaware citizens are
impacted by the ban on aversives, those regulatory pronouncements are more credibly
viewed as broad-based policy decisions and not discriminatory decisions based on facts
unique to these individuals. The agency decisions to terminate GED here are broad-based
prohibitions against the use of coercion and restraint, including GED. The record before
us supports the State’s characterization of them as a product of formal rule-making (the
Setting Rule and HCBS Waiver) designed to safeguard all potentially impacted Medicaid
recipients. We do not think the record supports Appellants’ contention that these changes
were a manufactured litigation tactic directed to them.100 Having determined that no pre-
99
Id. The Supreme Court further explained that “[t]he simple distinction between government
action that directly affects a citizen’s legal rights, or imposes a direct restraint on his liberty, and
action that is directed against a third party and affects the citizen only indirectly or incidentally,
provides a sufficient answer to all of the cases on which the patients rely in this Court.” Id. at 788.
Just as decertification resulted from the home’s noncompliance with HEW’s standards, here, the
decision to cut funding to JRC resulted from its noncompliance with the Setting Rule and HCBS
Waiver rules.
100
Persons with disabilities have faced societal, attitudinal, and institutional barriers over time.
Consider Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes’ decision in Buck v. Bell, 274 U.S. 200 (1927). In Buck,
Justice Holmes upheld a statute requiring the sterilization of Carrie Buck, a “feeble-minded”
woman committed to an institution, holding that “[i]t is better for all the world, if instead of waiting
to execute degenerate offspring for crime, or to let them starve for their imbecility, society can
37
termination hearing was required as a matter of constitutional due process, there remains
the question of whether DHSS complied with applicable federal and state statutory and
regulatory requirements. Here, Appellants did receive a hearing eventually, but they raise
challenges as to its adequacy and to the notice they received. We address these points
below.
1. The Adequacy of the Fair Hearing
Although a pre-termination hearing was not required as a matter of constitutional
due process, the Hearing Officer, relying on 42 C.F.R.§ 431.200(b), 42 C.F.R. 431.201 and
16 Del. Admin. C. § 5100(1), ruled that a Fair Hearing was required under the applicable
regulations.
Section 431.200(b) “[p]rescribes procedures for an opportunity for a hearing if the
State agency or non-emergency transportation [Prepaid Ambulatory Health Plan] . . . takes
action, as stated in this subpart, to suspend, terminate, or reduce services, or of an adverse
benefit determination by [a Managed Care Organization], [Prepaid Inpatient Health Plan]
or PAHP under subpart F of part 438 of this chapter . . . .”101 Section 431.201 defines
“action” as a “termination, suspension, or reduction of Medicaid eligibility.”102 Further
prevent those who are manifestly unfit from continuing their kind.” Id. at 205, 207. He noted
further that “[t]here generations of imbeciles are enough.” Id. at 207. Fortunately, states have
continued to repeal and revise laws over time with a view towards protection of society’s most
fragile populations.
101
42 C.F.R.§ 431.200(b) (2017).
102
Appellants also rely on 42 C.F.R. § 431.241 (2017) (“Matters to be considered at the hearing”).
Section 431.241(a) states that the hearing must cover “[a]ny matter described in §
431.220(a)(a) for which an individual requests a fair hearing,” which includes “[a] change in the
amount or type of benefits or services . . . .” 42 C.F.R. § 431.220(a)(1)(iv) (2017). Federal
regulations require that when a state agency takes any “action” affecting an individual’s Medicaid
38
“According to Delaware’s Division of Social Services Manual (“DSSM”), Section
5001(1), entitled, Providing the Opportunity for a Fair Hearing, states:
This policy applies to all applicants and recipients of DSS and DMMA for
services provided directly by the Agencies or through agreements with other
State or contracted entities where the applicant or recipient claims that he/she
has been adversely impacted by a specific action taken by DSS or DMMA.
An opportunity for a fair hearing will be provided, subject to the provisions
of this section, to any individual requesting a hearing who is dissatisfied with
a decision of the [DSS] or the [DMMA].
There is some tension in the rules as 42 C.F. R. § 431.220(b) states that “[t]he agency
need not grant a hearing if the sole issue is a Federal or State law requiring an automatic
change adversely affecting some or all beneficiaries.” Also, Section 5307(B) of the DSSM
provides that “[t]he hearing officer of the Divisions will dismiss or deny a request for a fair
hearing where the sole issue is one of state or federal law requiring automatic benefit
adjustments. . . .” The parties continue to argue before this Court as to whether any “action”
was taken and whether a hearing was required.103 We think there are strong arguments that
what Appellants are really challenging here is the broad-based policy decision to ban GED,
and that the public notice and comment process by which those regulations were enacted
claim, it must provide notice to the individual of the action in accord with 42 C.F.R. § 431.210
(2017). An “action” is the “termination, suspension, or reduction in Medicaid eligibility . . . .” 42
C.F.R. § 431.201 (2017). Ten days’ advance notice of the action is required, “except as permitted
under §§ 431.213 and 431.214.” 42 C.F.R. § 431.211 (2013).
103
DHSS asserted before the Hearing Officer that “if there had been a reduction or if the state was
proposing a reduction in services the state certainly agrees that would give rise that is an action
that would give rise to the right to a fair hearing.” App. to Opening Br. at A290 (No. 93). Instead,
the State’s position was that “there has been no reduction in services.” Id. (“These residents both
remain fully funded under the Medicaid Program for the services they’re getting up to
JRC. . . . The only difference is the state is prohibiting this provider from using an aversive that
violates federal law.”).
39
provided sufficient notice and opportunity to be heard. But under the circumstances
presented here, we find no error with the Hearing Officer’s determination to conduct a
hearing, especially given that GED had been a covered service for years, given that the
Setting and HCBS Waiver regulations were in the process of being revised during the
period of time leading up to the Fair Hearing, and given that the parties disputed the legal
effect of the CMS letters.
Recognizing that a Fair Hearing was held, the real focus here is on Appellant’s
challenges to its adequacy. We first consider their challenge to the Bifurcation ruling.
Appellants contend that bifurcation of their hearing deprived them of their due process
rights. They assert that bifurcation of the issues prevented evidence of medical necessity,
which they insist is critical in determining whether GED is considered a covered service
under Medicaid.
The Hearing Officer determined if Appellants could demonstrate that GED is a
covered service, then the Hearing Officer would provide a second evidentiary hearing on
the medical necessity issue. Specifically, she held that “before considering whether the
GED treatment services are medically necessary, the first issue that must be decided is
whether these services are indeed covered services under Medicaid and/or whether the state
erred when instructing JRC to permanently cease using the GED treatment services.”104
She ruled that “[t]he Fair Hearing shall proceed as a bifurcated process considering the
104
See id. at A853.
40
issue of Medicaid coverage first, followed by the medical necessity of GED treatment
services, if Medicaid coverage is sustained.”105
A hearing officer has the authority to bifurcate evidentiary hearings and restrict the
issues raised at the hearings pursuant to 16 Del. Admin. C. § 5304.3.106 This is not disputed.
The Hearing Officer ultimately determined that a claim that GED treatment is medically
necessary does not mean that it is covered under the HCBS Waiver program.107 In her
Final Decision she reiterated that “[t]aken as a whole, consideration of whether the GED
treatment services at issue are medically reasonable and necessary is a moot issue if
Delaware’s Medicaid program prohibits these treatment services.”108 We find no error in
the Hearing Officer’s handling of the Fair Hearing. Appellants were afforded the full
opportunity to present evidence as to Medicaid coverage of GED.109 Appellants would
have been able to present evidence on medical necessity had they prevailed on the threshold
105
Id.
106
It provides in relevant part:
The Hearing Officer has the authority to restrict the issues raised at the hearing.
The following issues may be raised at the hearing.
A. Issues described in the notice of action sent to the appellant
B. Issues fairly presented in the appellant’s request for a hearing
C. Issues fairly presented in the Division’s response in its hearing summary.
16 Del. Admin. C. § 5304.3.
107
See App. to Opening Br. at A955, A966–67 (No. 93).
108
Id. at A955.
109
The Hearing Officer expressly ruled that she “did not limit either side’s ability to present
witnesses and/or testimony to provide Medical coverage in the first part of this fair Hearing.” Id.
at A967.
41
coverage issue. Accordingly, we reject Appellants’ challenges to the adequacy of the Fair
Hearing.
2. Adequacy of Notice
Appellants contend that their due process rights were violated because DHSS failed
to provide adequate notice of the legal and factual basis for the prohibition of GED
treatment. Citing to State regulations, they argue that adequate notice is required even
when the change of federal or state law terminates Medicaid services for a class of persons.
Appellants cite to the Hearing Officer’s statement of the “procedural anomaly” due to
DHSS’s failure to provide “the standard DDDS letter decision” regarding the forthcoming
termination of GED services.110 They assert that DHSS failed to provide (1) any factual
basis for DHSS’s October 2013 instruction to JRC to terminate Recipients’ GED
treatments; (2) any clinical reason for the termination; and (3) any factual basis for the
alleged risk of harm to Recipients. Additionally, Appellants contend that DHSS provided
no legal or expert support for its actions.
In support of their notice arguments, Appellants rely upon state regulations and
Goldberg. As to their state law contentions, both parties cite to 16 Del. Admin. C.
§ 5302(K) but interpret it differently. Section 5302 provides, in relevant part, that “[DHSS]
may dispense with timely notice but will send adequate notice not later than the date of
action when:”
(K) When changes in either state or federal laws (e.g., Social Security
increases) require automatic adjustments for classes of recipients.
110
Id. at A290.
42
These mass change notices will be timely and adequate. An adequate notice
must include a statement of the:
1. Intended action
2. Reasons for such intended action
3. Specific change in law
4. Circumstances under which a hearing may be obtained and
assistance continued
The notices will also include:
1. The specific change in the individual’s benefits
2. A name and telephone number of a person to call for additional
information. . ..111
Section 5302(K) applies to every recipient under any public assistance program
administered under DHSS.112
DHSS asserts that by letters to JRC and its attorneys, meetings with Appellants, and
the Fair Hearing Summary, Appellants received more than adequate notice. DHSS further
asserts that Section 5302(K) does not require DHSS to provide detailed reasoning and
evidentiary proof to support its policy decisions (i.e., that GED treatment undermines the
well-being of Recipients in home and community-based settings).
We first address the factual record relating to notice. DHSS sent notice to JRC on
October 8 and 11, 2013.113 These letters were not addressed to Appellants. But, Appellants
have acknowledged that DHSS did provide them with these letters and did meet with
Appellants around that same time.114 Two months later, DHSS filed the Fair Hearing
111
16 Del. Admin. C. § 5302(K) (emphasis added).
112
Id.
113
App. to Opening Br. at A14–17 (No. 93).
114
DHSS contends that DDDS met with the Appellants prior to sending the letters “and explained
GED would no longer be covered as part of Medicaid services.” Answering Br. at 31. Appellants
contend that it was “only after sending its October 2013 letters to JRC did HDSS meet with the
43
Summary while, at the same time, contesting that a Fair Hearing was required (which it
was entitled to do pursuant to DSSM § 5307). The HCBS Waiver was amended through
formal rulemaking and a public comment process that included public meetings in all three
Delaware counties with stakeholders. Further, Appellants did not disagree with the State’s
statement at argument that there had been significant interaction between the State and
Appellants throughout this process as to the CMS polices and HCBS Waiver and their
potential impact on Ashlee and Robert. Although Appellants did not have notice in
advance of the October 2013 letters to JRC, by the time of the Fair Hearing, Appellants
had, in substance, all of the information DHSS was required to provide.
By citing to Goldberg, Appellants appear to assert that the notice they received was
constitutionally deficient. As stated in Mathews, procedural due process requires a
balancing of interests.115 And in Mullane v. Central Hanover Bank & Trust Co., the
Supreme Court said that “[t]he notice must be of such nature as reasonably to convey the
required information . . . and it must afford a reasonable time for those interested to make
their appearance . . . .”116 It stated further that “if with due regard for the practicalities and
guardians and provide them with copies of the October 2013 letters to JRC.” Reply Br. at 14.
During the July 8, 2014 Clarification Conference, DHSS represented that it met with the parents
in Delaware “just about at the same time” the October 2013 letters were sent. App. to Opening
Br. at A291 (No. 93).
115
Mathews, 424 U.S. at 334–35 (weighing three factors, including the private and government
interests affected).
116
Mullane, 339 U.S. at 314 (internal citations omitted).
44
peculiarities of the case these conditions are reasonably met the constitutional requirements
are satisfied.”117
Here, the interests of the parents of Ashlee and Robert is to have electric shock
treatment available to be used as a method to control the behavior of their sons. Balanced
against their interests is the State’s interest in duly enacting regulations prohibiting the use
of electric shock in order to safeguard its citizens from what it has deemed to be
unacceptable coercive behavior modification practice. If we are also to consider, as
Mathews suggests, the probable value of additional procedural safeguards to correct what
is arguably a defect in the initial notice, we do not think there is any value to reversing and
starting over. Appellants, earlier in the proceedings, were asked by the Hearing Officer if
they wished to withdraw their hearing request and pursue an appeal of the notice issue and
they declined, saying that it would be “prejudicial” to them “to hit the reset button.”118
They did not raise it in their Motion in Limine prior to the Fair Hearing or during the Fair
117
Id. at 314–15.
118
Appellants’ Opening Br. at 16 (citing App. to Opening Br. at A290 (No. 93)). During this same
hearing, namely, the July 8, 2014 Clarification Conference, the Hearing Officer asked Appellants’
counsel whether if DDDS withdrew its fair hearing request to pursue an internal appeal on the
notice issue. Counsel declined and responded:
I think at this stage of the game as far down the path as we’ve gone to a fair hearing,
I think it would be prejudicial to hit the reset button and go through a different
process since we’ve already had an exchange of information, a fair hearing
summary from the State, engaged in some preparation work and started getting
witnesses lined up for a fair hearing, I think that would be prejudicial to my clients
to do that.
...
I mean and, again, I think it ends up putting us right back where we were or where
we are now anyway just further down the line.
App. to Opening Br. at A289 (No. 93).
45
Hearing.119 Any prejudice to Appellants has been further mitigated by the fact that there
still has been no termination of services, although federal funding has been impacted and
the State and Appellants have entered into transition agreements whereby the State has
agreed to fund Appellants’ services until their transition out of JRC is complete. Although
the State’s handling of the notice was not perfect, we agree with the Superior Court that in
these highly unique circumstances, it would exalt form over substance to say that
Appellants’ due process rights were violated.
B. GED Is Not a Covered Service
In addition to Appellants’ procedural and due process challenges, Appellants
contend that the Hearing Officer erred in her determination that GED is not a covered
service. They contend that GED aversive interventions are part of a category of covered
services and that the State’s elimination of them is unreasonable and inconsistent with the
stated goals of Medicaid. The Superior Court concluded that the Hearing Officer’s
determination that GED was not a covered service was supported by substantial evidence
and free from legal error. We agree.
1. GED Is Not Covered Under Federal Law
The Hearing Officer determined “that GED treatment services were no longer
covered services by Medicaid under the Delaware HCBS Waiver” based upon “the CMS
letters directed to Massachusetts and Delaware” in 2012 and 2015. 120 The Hearing Officer
119
Consequently, the Hearing Officer did not address the issue of notice in her Final Decision.
120
Id. at A965.
46
determined that the CMS Letters and the Regional I Letter should be afforded “substantial
deference.”121 She concluded that “[this] agency interpretation of its own regulation is
authoritative” and of “nationwide significance” as the federal law “prohibits the use of
electric shock in all community settings.”122 The Superior Court concluded that the CMS
Letters and Regional I Letter were “agency interpretation[s] of its own regulation” and thus
“entitled to mandatory judicial deference.”123
Appellants argue that the CMS letters and Regional I letter should not be afforded
any deference.124 They argue that the CMS Letters and Regional I Letter are merely
121
Id. at A966.
122
Id.
123
Oldham, 2018 WL 776580, at *5 (internal citations omitted).
124
Appellants contend that the CMS Letters should not be afforded deference because
“‘[d]eference is not given . . . to a ‘post hoc rationalization advanced by an agency seeking to
defend past agency action against attack’ or when there is reason to ‘suspect that the interpretation
does not reflect the agency’s fair and considered judgment on the matter in question.’” Opening
Br. at 40 n.57 (quoting Massachusetts v. Sebelius, 638 F.3d 24, 30 (1st Cir. 2011)). Additionally,
Appellants argue that the CMS Letters and Regional I Letter should be given only “a modicum of
respectful consideration,” but no deference because there was no “reference to the specific
language of the regulations” at issue and it “offer[ed] little clarity.” Aplin v. McGrossen, 2014 WL
4245985, at *13, *15 (W.D.N.Y. Aug. 26, 2014). Appellants also assert that the Regional I Letter
“‘deserve[s] no legal weight’” or “deference because it, and the opinion it expresses, are simply
not ‘persuasive’ even if considered in these proceedings.” Opening Br. at 38 (quoting Kai v. Ross,
336 F.3d 650, 655 (8th Cir. 2003)). They argue that the Regional I Letter is not an official
interpretation and construction of the federal Medicaid statute so it is only entitled to Skidmore
deference, which means that any deference afforded to the Regional I Letter “depend[s] upon the
thoroughness evident in its consideration, the validity of its reasoning, its consistency with earlier
and later pronouncements, and all those factors which give it power to persuade, if lacking power
to control.” Skidmore v. Swift & Co., 323 U.S. 134, 140 (1944). The Hearing Officer disagreed
with this argument finding that “an agency interpretation of its own regulation is authoritative.”
App. to Opening Br. at A966 (No. 93). Therefore, the Hearing Officer concluded that the Skidmore
factors were inapplicable as the CMS Letters and Regional Letter I were not “lacking [the] power
to control” as CMS, the agency authorized to promulgate these regulations, “specifically
reference[d] GED as a prohibited aversive not covered under the HCBS Waiver” and “clearly
mandate[d] [Delaware]” to stop funding “providers” of these [GED] treatments. Id. at A966. The
47
guidance letters, not official statements of CMS or the Secretary of HHS, that do not have
the force and effect of law.125
Federal Medicaid regulations explicitly require assurances from participating states
that home and community-based settings protect an individual’s rights of privacy, dignity
and respect, and freedom from coercion and restraint.126 CMS construed an individual’s
freedom from coercion and restraint as prohibiting GED treatment in community settings.
Although this Court has stated that “substantial weight and deference is accorded to the
construction of a regulation enacted by an agency which is also charged with its
enforcement,”127 we need not today define with precision the level of deference (on the
continuum of “no deference” to “mandatory deference”) to be given to the CMS Letters.128
Instead, it suffices that we find no error in the Hearing Officer’s decision to give the 2015
Hearing Officer concluded that by and through the CMS Letters and Regional I Letter, CMS
interpreted “coercion and restraint” to include GED treatment.
125
Id. at A700 (citing Skidmore, 323 U.S. at 140); see Opening Br. at 37 (citing Aplin, 2014 WL
4245985, at *13–14). Notably, the First Circuit held in Sebelius that “CMS’s interpretation of its
regulations resolves this question and is entitled to deference.” Sebelius, 638 F.3d at 33. It ruled
on a CMS guidance letter to Medicaid directors. Id. at 33–34.
126
42 C.F.R. § 441.530(a)(1)(iii).
127
State Farm Mut. Auto. Ins. Co. v. Mundorf, 659 A.2d 215, 220 (Del. 1995) (internal citations
omitted).
128
See, e.g., Decker v. Northwest Envtl. Def. Ctr., 568 U.S. 597, 613 (2013) (“When an agency
interprets its own regulation, the Court, as a general rule, defers to it ‘unless that interpretation is
“plainly erroneous or inconsistent with the regulation.”’” (quoting Chase Bank USA, N.A. v.
McCoy, 562 U.S. 195, 208 (2011) (further quoting Auer v. Robbins, 519 U.S. 452, 461 (1997)))).
In his partial dissent, Justice Scalia urged reconsideration of the practice of deferring to agencies’
interpretations of their own regulations. As he urged, “[m]aking regulatory programs effective is
the purpose of rulemaking, in which the agency uses its ‘special expertise’ to formulate the best
rule,” but “the purpose of interpretation is to determine the fair meaning of the rule—to ‘say what
the law is.’” Id. at 618 (Scalia, J., dissenting in part) (quoting Marbury v. Madison, 1 Cranch 137,
177 (1803)).
48
CMS Letter and Regional I Letter substantial deference.129 The Hearing Officer’s
determination that GED is not a covered service under federal law is supported by
substantial evidence and is free from legal error.
In arguing that the medical necessity of their receipt of GED triggers a mandatory
duty of DHSS to cover that service—notwithstanding the HCB Settings Rule and CMS’s
explicit disapproval of GED—Appellants overlook the critical role of CMS in approving
the services provided under HCBS waivers. The statutory basis for Appellants’ medical-
necessity theory is the so-called “reasonable standards” requirement in the federal
Medicaid statute, which provides that “[a] State plan for medical assistance
must . . . include reasonable standards . . . for determining . . . the extent of medical
assistance under the plan which . . . are consistent with the objectives of” that statute.130
That language applies only to the State’s determination of “the extent of medical
assistance,” and “medical assistance” is defined under section 1905 of the Social Security
Act to include twenty-nine different categories of care.131 HCBS, however, are not listed
129
See Davis v. Shah, 821 F.3d 231, 247 (2d Cir. 2016) (stating that courts “owe a ‘significant
measure of deference to CMS’s interpretation’ of the Medicaid Act,” including its “‘relatively
informal’ communications, such as letters from local administers” (quoting Community Health
Ctr. v. Wilson-Coker, 311 F.3d 132, 138 (2d Cir. 2002))); Iowa Dep’t of Human Servs. v. Centers
for Medicare and Medicaid Servs., 576 F.3d 885, 888 (8th Cir. 2009) (holding that unless it is
plainly erroneous or inconsistent with the regulation, CMS’s interpretation of its regulations would
be entitled to deference, particularly in a complex and highly technical regulatory program);
Skandalis v. Rowe, 14 F.3d 173, 178 (2d Cir. 1994) (“An agency’s interpretation of a statute that
the agency administers is entitled to considerable deference. . . . When an agency construes its
own regulations, such deference is particularly appropriate.” (emphasis added) (internal citations
omitted)).
130
42 U.S.C. § 1396a(a)(17).
131
See 42 U.S.C. § 1396d(a).
49
among those twenty-nine different categories, but instead come into play under an entirely
different section of the Act: section 1915(c).
Under section 1915(c), the State can provide HCBS as “medical assistance” only to
the extent that the services are approved by CMS.132 Section 1915(c) allows CMS to “by
waiver provide that a State plan . . . may include as ‘medical assistance’ under such plan
payment for part or all of the cost of home and community-based services . . . approved by
[CMS].”133 The statute further provides that “[a] waiver shall not be granted . . . unless the
State provides assurances satisfactory to [CMS] that . . . necessary safeguards . . . have
been taken to protect the health and welfare of individuals provided services under the
waiver.”134 In other words, CMS approval—which CMS cannot grant unless the State
provides adequate assurances that it has put in place the necessary safeguards to protect
recipients’ health and welfare—is needed before the State can provide coverage under an
HCBS waiver.
Here, starting in 2014, CMS did not approve Delaware’s coverage of GED, and
indeed it specifically requested that both Massachusetts and Delaware stop covering GED.
That decision had a reasonable basis in the HCB Settings Rule, which requires that each
setting “ensure[] an individual’s . . . freedom from coercion and restraint.”135 Given that
the purpose of GED is to coerce the recipient into ceasing undesirable behavior by applying
Technically, section 1915(c) refers to the “Secretary,” but that authority has been delegated to
132
CMS.
133
Id. § 1396n(c)(1) (emphasis added).
134
Id. § 1396n(c)(2) (emphasis added).
135
42 C.F.R. § 441.301(c)(4)(iii).
50
electric shock whenever they act up, a setting that uses GED can hardly be said to “ensure[]
an individual’s . . . freedom from coercion and restraint.”
At bottom, Appellants’ medical-necessity argument is premised on the notion that
the State’s plan lacks reasonable standards. But we cannot fault the State’s decision to stop
covering GED as unreasonable when that is what the federal authorities were telling them
to do. If anything, disobeying CMS—which had issued not only letters, but also a binding,
notice-and-comment regulation—would be the unreasonable thing to do. This is not a case
where the State made its decision based on arbitrary criteria such as the cause of the
beneficiary’s affliction.136 Instead, the State based its decision on the uncontroversial
principle that it must follow federal law. Indeed, it is clear that Delaware has sought to
provide coverage to help the Appellants, and only stopped covering the GED treatments
when the federal government said that was impermissible. This is a far cry from the federal
136
We acknowledge that there is federal case law faulting states for denying medically necessary
treatment to Medicaid patients based on the reasonable standards requirement. But the animating
concern of those cases is to ensure that states do not deny needed treatments to some patients based
on arbitrary criteria like the cause of the person’s disease, the characteristics of the patient, or
empty distinctions between different types of equipment. See, e.g., White v. Beal, 555 F.2d 1146,
1151–52 (3d Cir. 1977) (holding that Pennsylvania’s limitation of coverage for eyeglasses based
on etiology rather than medical necessity violated the reasonable standards requirement, even
though eyeglasses are an “optional” benefit); Lankford v. Sherman, 451 F.3d 496, 506 (8th Cir.
2006) (“Because Missouri has elected to cover [durable medical equipment] as an optional
Medicaid service, it cannot arbitrarily choose which [durable medical equipment] items to
reimburse under its Medicaid policy.”); Weaver v. Reagan, 886 F.2d 194, 197-200 (8th Cir. 1989)
(holding that Missouri could not limit coverage of AZT to patients who had specific diagnostic
criteria, at a time when AZT was the only AIDS medication available and was medically necessary
for some patients who did not meet those diagnostic criteria).
51
cases cited by Appellants, which have generally involved the denial of services for
seemingly arbitrary reasons.137
In sum, the State did not violate the reasonable standards requirement in deciding
to follow CMS’s directives to stop covering GED.
2. GED Is Not Covered Under State Law
Appellants contend that the HCBS Waiver is not dispositive of Appellants’ Fair
Hearing request because the language in the 2014 amendment is (1) a manufactured
litigation position taken by DHSS after Appellants filed the Fair Hearing request; and (2)
constitutes as an adjudication by DHSS of Recipients’ individual rights and not the general
rulemaking that DHSS has attempted to make it in form. We reject these contentions.
The Hearing Officer’s decision that GED is not a covered service under state law is
supported by substantial evidence and free from legal error. In its HCBS Waiver, Delaware
expressly incorporated language consistent with CMS’s regulation that “[t]he use of averse
conditioning, defined as the contingent application of startling, painful or noxious stimuli
is prohibited.”138 With the approval of CMS, DHSS enacted this provision into the HCBS
Waiver program.
Moreover, at the DHSS level, the incorporation of the HCBS Waiver language
satisfied its procedural requirements by process of notice, comment, and public hearing.
The HCBS Waiver was duly enacted. The Hearing Officer properly concluded that
137
See, e.g., Lankford, 451 F.3d at 506.
138
App. to Opening Br. at A503 (No. 93).
52
because the HCBS Waiver was duly enacted and approved by CMS on July 1, 2014, it
carries the force and effect of law. Appellants did not challenge the lawfulness of that
waiver.139 The waiver unquestionably bans GED and has the force of law. In sum, the
Hearing Officer’s determination that GED is not a covered service under federal and state
law was supported by substantial evidence and free from legal error.
C. Americans with Disabilities Act Claim Was Not Properly Raised
Finally, we agree with DHSS that Appellants’ ADA claim was not fairly presented
below.140
VI. Conclusion
For the reasons set forth above, we AFFIRM.
Appellants could have challenged the amendments to Delaware’s HCBS Waiver pursuant to 29
139
Del. C. § 14141 but did not.
140
Supr. Ct. R. 8.
53