The United States appeals from a final judgment of the United States Court of Federal Claims invalidating an Office of Personnel Management (“OPM”) regulation.
GHS Health Maint. Org., Inc. v. United States,
I. BACKGROUND
Appellees all formerly contracted with OPM to provide health benefits to Federal employees and retirees under the Federal Employees Health Benefits Program (“FEHBP”), 5 U.S.C. § 8903(4). Congress conferred contracting authority on OPM via 5 U.S.C. § 8902. With respect to how OPM should calculate its rates, Congress directed that such rates should “reasonably and equitably reflect the cost of the benefits provided.” 5 U.S.C. § 8902(i).
OPM devised a process whereby it negotiates annually with each contractor to determine the benefits and premiums for the subsequent contract year. In an ordinary year (that is, a year other than the final year of a contractor’s relationship with OPM), the rate-setting procedure involves two steps. First, in May of the year preceding the contract year, contractors propose premium rates for the upcoming contract year. The proposal is supposed to represent the contractor’s estimate of what it will charge similarly sized subscriber groups (“SSSGs”), i.e., the contractor’s comparable non-Federal customers, during the following year.
The second step involves reconciliation. In April of the contract year, OPM and the carriers reconcile the current year’s rates *1296 (which were established in step one by estimating what the contractor would charge SSSGs) with the actual rates the contractor is charging SSSGs. If, in the course of this reconciliation process, it is determined that the current year’s rates are higher than the rates the contractor is actually charging SSSGs, then the contractor remits the difference to OPM. If, on the other hand, it is determined that the current year’s rates are lower than the rates SSSGs are paying, then the Government pays the contractor the difference.
This two-step process takes place in years other than the final year of a contractor’s relationship with OPM. In a year when the contract is not renewed (“Final Year”), things change. Neither party is paid the difference between the established rates and the rates SSSGs are actually paying. 1 One might ask, why is the Final Year different from all other years? The reason is OPM promulgated a rule (“Nonreconciliation Regulation”) stating: “In the event this contract is not renewed, neither the Government nor the Carrier shall be entitled to any adjustment or claim for the difference between the subscription rates prior to rate reconciliation and the actual subscription rates.” 48 C.F.R. § 1652.216-70(b)(6). It is the validity of this regulation that Appellees challenge here.
GHS Health Maintenance Organization, Inc., Texas Health Choice, L.C., and Scott & White Health Plan each separately sued the government claiming entitlement to reconciliation revenues for the Final Years of their respective contracts with OPM. Each argued that 48 C.F.R. § 1652.216-70(b)(6) conflicts with 5 U.S.C § 8902®. After some procedural twists and turns, the three cases were consolidated in the
United States Court of Federal Claims. The Court of Federal Claims granted the carriers’ motion for summary judgment and denied the Government’s cross-motion for summary judgment.
GHS,
This appeal followed. We have jurisdiction pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1295(a)(3).
II. DISCUSSION
“We review the Court of Federal Claims’ grant of summary judgment without deference.”
Doe v. United States,
A. The Regulation Is Invalid
The central question is whether or not the Nonreconciliation Regulation is valid. The Supreme Court instructs that “a reviewing court has no business rejecting an agency’s exercise of its generally conferred authority to resolve a particular statutory ambiguity simply because the agency’s chosen resolution seems unwise.... ”
United States v. Mead Corp.,
The
Chevron
Court established a two-step framework for determining the validity of an agency regulation.
See Chevron,
We conclude that Congress has not directly spoken to the precise question at issue here. Identifying “the precise question at issue” is a necessary prerequisite to determining whether or not Congress has directly spoken on it. In this case, the precise question is: is OPM required to engage in reconciliation as part of its current rate-setting process, even in the Final Year of its relationship with a given carrier? The statute—5 U.S.C. § 8902—is silent on this question. The law does not mention reconciliation at all, much less reconciliation in the Final Year. The only relevant direction Congress gave on this point was that “[r]ates charged under health benefits plans ... shall reasonably and equitably reflect the cost of the benefits provided.” 5 U.S.C. § 8902(i). Section 8902(i) is not ambiguous. Congress was clear when it said that rates should reasonably and equitably reflect the cost of the benefits provided. Yet the statute does not clearly and unequivocally answer the question at hand, i.e., whether OPM is required to perform reconciliation in the Final Year. Because that question cannot be resolved by referring to the statute alone, we must proceed to step two.
Is the Nonreconciliation Regulation “based on a permissible construction of the statute?”
Chevron,
The regulation at issue here is invalid both because it is contrary to the statute and because it is arbitrary and capricious.
1. The Regulation Conflicts With The Statute
The Nonreconciliation Regulation conflicts with 5 U.S.C. § 8902(i). When a regulation directly contradicts a statute, the regulation must yield.
Ragsdale v. Wolverine World Wide, Inc.,
We first briefly reiterate the broader rate-setting framework that OPM has constructed. Congress’ charge vis-á-vis rate-setting was to command that rates “shall reasonably and equitably reflect the cost of the benefits provided.” 5 U.S.C. § 8902(i). We infer that OPM designed its rate-setting mechanism with Congress’ command in mind. The process OPM devised includes the pre-contract year estimate of SSSG rates, and then (in all but the Final Year) the mid-contract year reconciliation.
The carriers are not challenging this overarching rate-setting structure. See Appellees Texas Health Choice, L.C. and *1298 Scott & White Health Plan’s Br. at 18. We need not evaluate the propriety of that larger system here. The sole question before us is whether the Nonreconciliation Regulation is valid. That question cannot be answered without viewing the regulation—an exception to the established rule—in the context of OPM’s overall judgment about how best to set rates consistent with § 8902(i).
During oral argument, Counsel for the Government conceded—with commendable candor—that reconciled rates are a proxy for costs. 2 Oral Arg., available at http:// oralarguments.cafe.uscourts.gov/mp3/20075143.mp3. In truth, this is an unremarkable admission. If the Government were to contend otherwise, it would admit that the heart of its rate-setting methodology patently ignores the one and only rate-setting directive that Congress handed down: that rates should reasonably and equitably reflect costs.
OPM’s established rate-setting process for ordinary years was designed to produce rates that reasonably and equitably reflect carriers’ costs. OPM endeavors to arrive at such rates by ensuring that the rates carriers charge the government are on par with the rates they charge their non-Federal subscribers. OPM concedes this point. Nancy H. Kichak, the Director of the Actuaries, Retirement and Insurance Service for OPM, submitted a declaration (“Kichak Declaration”) in the proceedings below. In it, she acknowledged that “[w]hen OPM negotiates rates with a community rated carrier, its objective is to receive a rate that is derived in a manner consistent with the rate the carrier charges its other, non-Federal groups of a similar size.” Joint Appendix, at 78, ¶ 8.
This is one rational way to go about implementing Congress’ command. The system presupposes that a competitive marketplace for health care services exists. It farther assumes that the competitiveness of the market yields rates that are high enough to permit carriers to recoup their costs plus earn a reasonable profit, 3 but not so high as to be unfair. 4 OPM itself confirms this point. In her declaration, Ms. Kichak stated:
*1299 Community rated health maintenance organizations are at risk when they determine their rates. If they charge too much, they are at risk of losing enrollees in the competitive open season process. If they charge too little, they may not earn enough premiums to meet the covered heath services of the group.
Joint Appendix, at 78, ¶ 5.
In short, OPM has concluded that if it pays rates that are commensurate with what a non-Federal group would pay, then those rates will reasonably and equitably reflect the carriers’ costs. Again, this presumes that the rates reflect costs plus some reasonable profit, but Congress’ command does not, in our view, foreclose the factoring-in of reasonable profit as well (if it did, it would be unreasonable to expect that any carriers would be willing to enter into contracts with OPM).
Having seen that OPM devised its two-step rate-setting process (estimation followed by reconciliation) in order to carry out the command of Congress, we now evaluate the Nonreconciliation Regulation. That regulation excises the reconciliation step in the Final Year. Viewed in the context of this regulatory structure, we conclude that the Nonreconciliation Regulation does contradict the statute. Regulations that contradict and undermine Congress’ statutory schemes must be invalidated.
See FDA v. Brown & Williamson Tobacco Corp.,
This follows from the notion that OPM’s rate-setting process—estimation followed by reconciliation—is designed to yield rates that reasonably and equitably reflect costs. The key to achieving such rates is to ensure that the rates OPM pays. are commensurate with the rates that non-Federal groups pay. Rates determined without the reconciliation process are less likely to be on par with the rates SSSGs are paying. The further OPM’s rates get from SSSGs’ rates, the less reflective they are of costs.
We reject OPM’s argument that the regulation is valid because the Final Year rate-setting process (estimation without reconciliation) would adequately implement the statute if it were the system in place for all years. The Government suggests that it would not be “unreasonable or inequitable” if the rate-setting procedure, in all years, consisted solely of the precontract year estimate and never contained the mid-year reconciliation. Appellant’s Br. at 42. We disagree. A rate-setting system that relied only on the pre-year estimates (without a mid-year reconciliation) would conflict with the statute because in such a system, rates would be insufficiently reflective of costs. OPM made precisely that judgment when it formulated a system where rates were reconciled in all contract years, a system under which it presumably intended to set rates in a manner consistent with Congress’ directive. Then, OPM promulgated the Nonreconciliation Regulation, which makes rates insufficiently reflective of costs in the *1300 Final Year. Because Congress’ explicit command to OPM with respect to rate-setting was that rates should reflect costs—with no relaxation of that requirement in the Final Year—the Nonreconciliation Regulation conflicts with the statute and is thus invalid.
The Government seeks to avoid the result we reach here by offering an “alternative” rationale for the reconciliation process. During oral argument, counsel for the Government explained the reconciliation process this way: “The purpose of reconciliation is to make sure that when the carrier negotiates and sets a rate for January 1, that later in the year they don’t give a better rate advantage or discount to [non-Federal groups] which would then end up subsidizing the whole thing.” Oral Arg., available at http://oralarguments. eafc.uscourts.gov/mp3/2007-5143.mp3. At first blush, this may appear to undermine the idea that OPM seeks to comply with the statute by using rates charged to SSSGs as a proxy for costs. Concededly, if OPM’s regulatory structure does not seek to ensure that rates reflect costs by using SSSG rates as a proxy for costs, then our analysis above would have to be reconsidered. Upon closer inspection, however, this “alternative” rationale does not undermine our analysis at all.
First, it is possible that the Government conjured this explanation for the reconciliation procedure as a post hoc rationalization to defend the regulation in this litigation. This explanation does not appear in the Federal Register where OPM justified the adoption of this regulation. The conclusion that this might not be a genuine explanation follows from the fact that sometimes the reconciliation process reveals that OPM was paying rates that were lower than the rates SSSGs were charged. When this happens, OPM pays the contractor the difference. In fact, the incidents that precipitated these lawsuits all involved carriers charging OPM rates that turned out to be lower than the rates they charged SSSGs.
GHS,
Even assuming, arguendo, that the Government’s “alternative” explanation is true—and there are reasons to accept that rationale as genuine 5 —this does not undercut our analysis here. The Govern *1301 ment’s explanation of the reconciliation process—that it prevents carriers from seeking to take advantage of OPM by boosting its pre-contract year estimate—is just another way of saying that the overall rate-setting process is designed to ensure comparability between the rates OPM pays and the rates non-Federal SSSGs pay. The Government insists that the purpose of the reconciliation process is to ensure that the actual rates OPM pays are on par with the rates SSSGs pay. This is patently true. In fact, our conclusion that the regulation contradicts the statute is premised on the notion that OPM’s two-step process (estimation followed by reconciliation) was put in place to achieve this parity. It is further premised upon the notion that this parity is not simply a goal in and of itself, but a way of complying with the requirement that rates fairly and equitably reflect costs. The Government’s explanation for the reconciliation process supports our ultimate conclusion. If reconciliation yields comparability, then abandoning reconciliation means that the rates OPM pays in the Final Year will be less comparable to the rates SSSGs pay than in other years. If they are less comparable to the rates SSSGs pay—and the rates SSSGs pay are a proxy for reasonable and equitable costs—then Final Year (unreconciled) rates are less reflective of costs than rates in other years. Congress says that rates should reasonably and equitably reflect costs. Accordingly, the regulation— which abridges the process OPM devised to arrive at rates that reasonably and equitably reflect costs—must be struck down.
2. The Regulation Is Arbitrary And Capricious
Were we to conclude that the regulation did not directly conflict with the statute, we would nevertheless strike it down because it is arbitrary and capricious. As noted above, the Supreme Court in
Mead
delineated three grounds upon which a regulation in circumstances like these might be invalidated.
Mead,
The Government faced a predicament in seeking to defend this regulation. The difficulty centers on the way in which the Government answers the following question: Was OPM endeavoring to implement Congress’ rate-setting direction—embodied in § 8902(i)—when it promulgated the Nonreconciliation Regulation? This is a perilous exercise because, ultimately, neither a “yes” nor a “no” provides much of a defense for the regulation. If the Government were to try to answer yes, it would then have to explain how abandoning reconciliation in the Final Year helps to achieve rates that reasonably and equitably reflect costs. For the reasons set forth above, we do not believe that Government can do so.
If the Government were to answer “no,” and concede, in effect, that it ignored Congress’ clear command when promulgating this regulation, then the regulation must likewise be invalidated. Judicial deference is premised upon the proposition that the agency will be construing and interpreting the statute when it promulgates regulations.
See Mead,
None of the Government’s explanations in support of the Nonreconciliation Regulation adequately justifies it. An agency action is arbitrary and capricious if a court determines that the agency:
relied on factors which Congress has not intended it to consider, entirely failed to consider an important aspect of the problem, offered an explanation for its decision that runs counter to the evidence before the agency, or is so implausible that it could not be ascribed to a difference in view or the product of agency expertise.
Motor Vehicle Mfrs. Ass’n v. State Farm Mut. Automobile Ins. Co.,
The Nonreconciliation Regulation is arbitrary and capricious for two reasons. First, OPM has been unable to establish that the problem the Nonreconciliation Regulation was supposedly designed to address actually exists. And second, even if the problem did exist, the connection between that problem and the “solution” OPM devised is too attenuated to sustain the regulation.
a. OPM’s Supposed Inability to Acquire Data Has Not Been Established
The Government asserts that OPM promulgated the Nonreconciliation Regulation because it was finding it difficult to acquire data in the Final Year of a carrier’s contract. When the final version of the regulation was published, OPM justified it this way: “OPM’s experience has been that it is difficult to get adequate data from plans when they have terminated. Further, in the event a plan goes out of business, there are no rates to reconcile.” 55 Fed. Reg. 27406, 27410 (July 2, 1990). There is a dearth of documentary support for the Government’s assertion that OPM has had difficulty getting the data it needs in the Final Year. The Government points to two instances in the late 1980s when it sent letters to carriers regarding the carriers’ insufficient documentation. It also points to the Kichak Declaration.
Quite simply, this does not constitute a sufficient basis to justify OPM’s conclusion that it had a problem acquiring data in the Final Year. The agency points to few instances where it had a problem, and it makes no attempt to put these instances into perspective by, for instance, enumerating how many carriers had left the program in total. 6 Despite our repeated at *1303 tempts during oral argument, Counsel for the Government was unable to further elucidate the alleged existence of the problem. Particularly when an agency seeks to defend a regulation that contravenes a Congressional directive, it must go far further than the Government has gone here in establishing that the supposed problem the regulation was meant to address actually exists.
In addition, the Government’s reliance on the Kichak Declaration fails to help its cause. As the Court of Federal Claims aptly put it: “Ms. Kichak, in her declaration, was unable offer more than the two carriers named to try to demonstrate an allegedly pervasive problem of inadequate data for reconciliation in a carrier’s Final Year of FEHBA participation.”
GHS,
Absent sufficient support in the record to justify OPM’s contentions, we must set aside this supposed rationale. This is the only problem OPM pointed to when explaining the impetus for promulgating the Nonreconciliation Regulation. Vitiating it, therefore, leads us to conclude that the Nonreconciliation Regulation is arbitrary and capricious.
b. The Proposed Solution Makes No Sense
Even if OPM had established that it experienced difficulty acquiring the requisite data in Final Years, we would nevertheless conclude that the Nonreconciliation Regulation is arbitrary and capricious. The Government has failed to explain the rational connection between the perceived data collection problem and the Nonreconciliation Regulation. The Government fails to persuade us that reconciliation should never take place in the Final Year, even where adequate records exist, simply because some firms, at some time, have had bad records.
The closest the Government comes to offering a justification for this solution is to say that it is necessary either to conserve its resources or to properly allocate risks. The resource utilization argument is wholly unpersuasive. As best we can decipher it, the Government seems to be arguing that the reconciliation process imposes a burden on OPM, and therefore, OPM may rationally choose to forego reconciliation in the Final Year in order to preserve its limited resources. The Government • fails to explain, however, what differentiates the Final Year from all other years in this respect. That is, the Government does not tell us why it is that there are ample resources to conduct reconciliation in every other year of a carrier’s contract, but not in the Final Year. It is also a mystery how the Government connects this resource utilization argument with the alleged problem of inadequate data in the Final Year. There is a stark asymmetry between the problem that OPM said prompted the regulation in the first place—the difficulty in acquiring documents in the Final Year of a carrier’s contract—and the justification it now proffers of needing to allocate resources effectively.
The second way in which the Government tries to connect the alleged problem with the Nonreconciliation Regulation is allocation of risk. When the agency published the final rule, it stated “the most reasonable solution [to OPM’s difficulty in getting adequate data in the Final Year] is for both the Government and the carrier to bear the risk of a carrier’s termination.” 55 Fed.Reg. 27406, 27410 (July 2, 1990). The principal flaw in this argument is that Congress did not direct OPM to make sure *1304 that risk was allocated fairly. Rather, it directed OPM to ensure that rates fairly and equitably reflected costs. To take an extreme example, OPM could have promulgated a regulation requiring that in the Final Year, a blind-folded representative from the carrier will throw a dart against a dartboard adorned with various possible rates, and whatever rate it hits, that is the rate the carrier will receive. This rate-setting plan would allocate the risk between OPM and the carrier. Nevertheless, it totally ignores what Congress said about how to set rates. This is a farfetched analogy, but it illustrates the potential mutual exclusivity between a rate-setting procedure that fairly allocates risks, and one that reasonably and equitably reflects the cost of benefits provided. Thus, even if the Government is correct that the rate-setting procedure in the Final Year fairly allocates risk between OPM and the carrier, this does not save the regulation.
In making the risk allocation argument, the Government again falls back on its refrain that “there would be nothing unreasonable or inequitable in a system in which OPM and the carrier in all contract years equally shared in the risk that the negotiated community rate either over-estimated or under-estimated the actual rates charged to SSSGs by the carriers.” Appellant’s Br. at 42 (emphasis in original). As we noted, this argument misses the point. OPM made a determination about how to carry out Congress’ command and ensure that rates fairly and equitably reflect costs. The decision to deviate from the established rate-setting method in the Final Year must be assessed in the context of the overall system. Viewed in that framework, it is clear that OPM’s method for calculating rates is far less responsive to Congress’ instructions than the method used in all other years. This both conflicts with the statute and— because there is no valid basis for the deviation—is arbitrary and capricious.
OPM’s arguments notwithstanding, the Nonreconciliation Regulation is an irrational response to the perceived problem of difficulty acquiring records in the Final Year. The reconciliation process occurs in April of the contract year. Thus, the carrier and OPM’s relationship is ongoing at the time the reconciliation process takes place, even in a year when the contract will not be renewed. In fact, in the cases of each of the three Appellees here, the reconciliation process occurred in their respective Final Years. Appellants Br. at 42. Moreover, one of the Appellees, Texas Health Choice, L.P., actually received $622,246.00 from OPM before the agency determined that the carrier was not renewing its contract.
Abandoning reconciliation in Final Years actually undermines OPM’s rate-setting framework. One of the effects of reconciliation is that it negates one of the incentives an unscrupulous carrier has to overestimate their rates. See supra, note 5. The process serves as a “check” to ensure that the rates OPM is paying actually correspond to the rates SSSGs are paying. The fact that reconciliation does not occur in the Final Year could create an opportunity for a carrier to, in bad faith, overcharge the Government. To be sure, the carriers here all underestimated the rates in their respective Final Years, despite the fact that they all knew that reconciliation would not take place. Nevertheless, removing this disincentive is arbitrary and capricious, particularly because it provides no corresponding benefit and because the Government has failed to adequately explain why it chose to deviate from its established procedure.
The arbitrary nature of the Nonreconciliation Regulation is also evidenced by the fact that OPM has another regulation in place that deals with the perceived problem of inadequate record-keeping. That regulation states:
the Carrier shall retain and make available all records applicable to a contract term that support the annual statement of operations and ... the rate submission for the contract term for a period of 5 years after the end of the contract term to which records relate....
48 C.F.R. § 1652.204-70. Unlike the Non-reconciliation Regulation, this provision is a reasonable reaction to the perceived problem of inadequate access to documents. In fact, this is a reasonable regulation for myriad purposes. 8 Particularly in light of this other regulation, OPM’s choice—to abandon the reconciliation process in all Final Years, irrespective of whether the carrier at issue was able to produce the required documents—is arbitrary and capricious.
B. Reformation Was Proper
The Government also argues that even if the Nonreconciliation Regulation is invalid, reformation is an improper remedy here. We reject that argument.
Where a contract provision is based upon a regulation, and the regulation is deemed to be invalid, reformation is appropriate.
See LaBarge Products, Inc. v. West,
*1306 We regard as frivolous the Government’s attempt to sustain the regulation on the grounds that it was consented to by a contract that was signed by the carriers. The Nonreeonciliation Regulation was nonnegotiable. If anything is to be derived from the contract provision, it is an inference that OPM itself had profound doubts about the validity of the regulation.
III. CONCLUSION
For the aforementioned reasons, we affirm the decision of the Court of Federal Claims.
AFFIRMED
Notes
. Appellees note that the reconciliation process occurs even in the Final Year. Appellees Texas Health Choice, L.C. and Scott & White Health Plan's Br. at 25. It is merely the post-reconciliation, exchange of money (one way or the other) that does not occur in the Final Year.
. Counsel, at a later point in the argument, did try to walk-back this concession, but the toothpaste was already out of the tube. In addition, in its brief, the Government states: "The reconciliation process does not provide a better reflection of the actual costs, but, rather, ensures that the Government pays rates that are developed using a methodology that is commensurate with the private sector.” Appellant's Br. at 37. The Government’s attempt to cloud this issue notwithstanding, it is clear that the strategy OPM devised to comply with Congress’ directive was to use SSSG rates as a proxy for reasonable and equitable costs.
. But for the ability to earn a reasonable profit, one wonders why these private, for-profit enterprises would be willing to contract with OPM.
. Community rated plans have obvious incentives to set rates which, at worst, cover the costs of the benefits provided. There is, too, the incentive to charge rates which yield profit but are not so high that they discourage non-Federal employees from engaging their services: competitors may offer lower rates. Federal employees and officers (including judges) are offered individual choices from a long menu of carriers. See http://www.opm. gov/insure/health/index.asp (last visited July 1, 2008). Thus, community rated plans have a similar incentive to offer plans which attract enrollees. The record contains no data showing whether carriers, as a matter of practice, tend to offer federal employees a better deal than non-Federal subscribers. They would have reason to do so, since the reconciliation process allows them to recoup the money they lose by so doing. Reconciliation operates to ensure that federal employees pay approximately the same price paid by non-Federal employees. In addition, it operates to ensure that a carrier receives approximately the same income from its federal programs as it does from its non-Federal programs.
. The fact that the reconciliation process does not always reveal that OPM was paying rates in excess of what SSSGs are actually charged does not necessarily discredit the Government’s explanation for the purpose of reconciliation. When the carriers make their precontract year estimates, they are aware that the reconciliation process will ultimately take place. Therefore, they have an incentive to make a good-faith estimate of the rates they will later charge SSSGs. Absent the reconciliation process, it is possible that some bad actors would artificially inflate the estimates in order to squeeze as much money as possible out of OPM.
. This would have provided the denominator for a fraction representing the percentage of instances when OPM had difficulty acquiring *1303 the requisite data. The numerator of that fraction would, of course, have been 2.
. The Government attempts to make much of the fact that OPM does not necessarily remit cash payments to carriers that underestimate their rates. See Appellant’s Br. at 19-20. The Government argues that the Court of Federal Claims’ ruling will upset the regulatory framework that is in place. Id. at 42-45. There are problems with this line of reasoning. First, as Texas Health Choice, L.P.’s experience reveals, OPM does—at least in some instances—remit a cash payment to a carrier as a result of the reconciliation process. Moreover, even if the Government never remitted funds in this way, OPM’s argument ignores the fungible nature of money. It makes little or no difference whether reconciliation results in cash payments or in adjustments to future rates. Either way, as a practical matter, an adjustment has been made (either upward or downward) to the revenue *1305 a carrier receives for providing services in a given year.
. The Government argues that this regulation does not apply in Final Years. Appellant’s Br. at 37 (“Record retention regulations relating to annual operations do not apply to the reconciliation process in the Final Year of FEHBP participation.”). The Government states it does not apply “because a carrier’s operations in the final year do not include a reconciliation, by virtue of the challenged regulation.” Appellant’s Br. at 40. It is clear, though, that OPM does, in fact, reconcile in the Final Year, even if it does not make or receive the payments that would normally result from the process.
