MANDY R., by and through her parents and guardians, MR. AND MRS. R.; Lisa W., by and through her parents and next friends, Mr. and Mrs. W.; Stephanie F., by and through her parents and next friends, Mr. and Mrs. F., Plaintiffs, Marian L., by and through her parent and guardian, Ms. L.; Jodi F., by and through her parents and next friends, Mr. and Mrs. F.; and Cathy G., by and through her parent and guardian, Russell G., Plaintiffs-Intervenors, and Colorado Association of Community Centered Boards, Plaintiff-Intervenor-Appellant, v. Bill OWENS, Governor of the State of Colorado; Marva Hammons, Executive Director of the Colorado Department of Human Services; Karen Reinertson, Executive Director of the Colorado Department of Health Care Policy and Financing; Colorado Department of Human Services; Colorado Department of Health Care Policy and Financing, Defendants-Appellees. Mandy R., by and through her parents and guardians, Mr. and Mrs. R.; Stephanie F., by and through her parents and next friends, Mr. and Mrs. F., Plaintiffs-Appellants, Jodi F., by and through her parents and next friends, Mr. and Mrs. F.; Marian L., by and through her parent and guardian, Ms. L.; Cathy G., by and through her parent and guardian, Russell G., Plaintiffs-Intervenors-Appellants, and Lisa W., by and through her parents and next friends, Mr. and Mrs. W., Plaintiff
Nos. 05-1148, 05-1150
United States Court of Appeals, Tenth Circuit
Sept. 21, 2006
464 F.3d 1139
Based on the forgoing analysis, we AFFIRM Herula‘s sentence and DENY his Motion for a Limited Remand.
2006); United States v. Alston-Graves, 435 F.3d 331, 343 (D.C.Cir.2006); United States v. Perez-Ruiz, 421 F.3d 11, 15 (1st Cir.2005), cert. denied, --- U.S. ---, 126 S.Ct. 1092, 163 L.Ed.2d 907 (2006).
Richard Westfall, of Hale Friesen, LLP, Denver, CO, for Appellant Colorado Association of Community Centered Boards.
Wade S. Livingston, First Assistant Attorney General, Human Services Unit of the State Services Section, Denver, CO (Attorney General John W. Suthers with him on the brief), for Appellees.
Before MURPHY, McCONNELL, and BALDOCK, Circuit Judges.
McCONNELL, Circuit Judge.
Colorado has a waiting list of hundreds of developmentally disabled persons who need but do not receive Medicaid-funded services. Six such persons and an association of providers brought this suit under
I. Factual and Procedural Background
This suit was brought in August 2000 by six persons, through their parents and guardians, against the governor of Colorado and two other state officials. The six individual plaintiffs are developmentally disabled persons who are on waiting lists for comprehensive residential services. These services are provided by public and private entities, which are paid by the State, which is in turn reimbursed for about half of the costs by the federal government through Medicaid. See
In October 2000, the Colorado Association of Community Centered Boards (CACCB) moved to intervene on the side of the plaintiffs. Community-centered boards are HCBS providers offering housing and medical care to the developmentally disabled and receiving, in return, Medicaid payments from the state.
Suing under
The district court denied class certification and, after a four-day trial, entered judgment for the Defendants. The plaintiffs now appeal.1
II. Reasonable Promptness and Comparability
We begin with the claim that the State has failed to comply with the requirements of reasonable promptness and comparability. If a state chooses to participate in Medicaid, it must submit a state plan for providing “medical assistance.”
In addressing these claims, we assume that the individual plaintiffs may sue to enforce their rights under subsections (8) and (10). Since the Supreme Court clarified when a statute creates an enforceable
On the merits, the plaintiffs’ reasonable promptness and comparability claims are two ways of characterizing one problem: that the individual plaintiffs are not receiving the comprehensive residential services they need. They are thus (1) not receiving them promptly and (2) not receiving them to the extent that others receive them. The outcome of both claims turns on the same question: What is the “medical assistance” that the State must provide promptly and equally?
The Medicaid Act defines “medical assistance” as “payment of part or all of the cost of the [described] care and services.”
First, the plaintiffs point to another provision in the Medicaid Act,
Second, the plaintiffs suggest that the comparability provision requires the State to provide actual services because the “medical assistance” must be the same “in amount, duration, or scope.”
Third, the plaintiffs suggest that the State must provide services whenever necessary to assure that “care and services will be provided[] in a manner consistent with simplicity of administration and the best interests of the recipients.”
Fourth, the plaintiffs point to the plan the State filed with the federal government, which promised to provide ICFs/MR with “No Limitations.” Colorado State Medicaid Plan, R. Vol. IV, at 755. This phrase appears in the state plan on a page titled “Amount, Duration and Scope of Medical and Remedial Care and Services Provided to the Categorically Needy.” Id. A series of services are mentioned, from ICFs/MR to nurse-midwife services, and for each the government checked boxes indicating that the services are provided with “No Limitations,” are provided “With Limitations,” or are “Not Provided.” Id. As the director of the State‘s Medical As-
Fifth, the plaintiffs assert that Colorado‘s waiver application indicates a commitment to ensuring that every eligible patient receives services, either from ICFs/MR or HCBS. The waiver application provides that a developmentally disabled adult deemed to require the level of care offered by an ICF/MR will be “informed of any feasible alternatives” to ICFs/MR and “[g]iven the choice of either institutional or home and community-based services.” R. Vol. IV, at 863. Although the waiver application suggests that a developmentally disabled person will have a choice between an ICF/MR and HCBS, it does not assign to the State, or any other party, the responsibility to ensure that such facilities are in fact available. Indeed, the waiver application appears to mean only that the choice among “feasible alternatives” is to be made by the recipient—not that the State must make alternatives available. Because it is at best ambiguous on the point, it provides no reason to reject the natural reading of the statutory definition. None of these five contextual clues, therefore, undermines the statutory definition of “medical assistance” as payment for services.
The plaintiffs’ second reason to reject the payment-only reading of “medical assistance” is policy based. The plaintiffs accuse the State of promising to pay for services for the developmentally disabled and then suppressing the supply of these services. They are effectively asking us, in the alternative, (1) to conclude that in the context of the Medicaid Act, the state plan, and the State‘s waiver application, “medical assistance” includes a requirement that the State be a service-provider of the last resort; or (2) to graft onto “medical assistance” a good-faith requirement that would oblige the state not to discourage proposals from outside care providers. Such a good-faith requirement has intuitive appeal, for the State has obvious conflicts of interest. At oral argument the State even conceded that it may not escape paying for ICF/MR services by setting rates so low that no one can provide them. Cf. Westside Mothers, 454 F.3d at 541 (allowing plaintiffs, after amending their complaint, “to allege that inadequate payments effectively deny the right to ‘medical assistance’ “).
Nevertheless, we need not decide whether a state has (or may assume) a good-faith obligation not to prevent new entrants into this market. The precise claim brought by the plaintiffs is narrow. The plaintiffs do not suggest that ICF/MR rates have been set so low as to prohibit new entrants to the market. Nor do the plaintiffs claim that the State has discouraged efforts to build HCBS facilities, which is where the greatest shortfall in facilities exists. And the plaintiffs do not claim that the state has denied or effectively denied (through delay or similar means) a formal application to build new ICF/MR facilities. Indeed, the plaintiffs could not claim this, because no such applications have been filed. Instead, the individual plaintiffs claim that the State has
We therefore agree with the Sixth and Seventh Circuits that the Medicaid statute does not require states to be service-providers of last resort. See Westside Mothers, 454 F.3d at 540; Bruggeman, 324 F.3d at 910. Although Bruggeman concerned a claim about the location of ICFs/MR within a state, and not about the lack of them, the Seventh Circuit‘s conclusion is directly on point and persuasive:
Medicaid is a payment scheme, not a scheme for state-provided medical assistance, as through state-owned hospitals. The regulations that implement the provision indicate that what is required is a prompt determination of eligibility and prompt provision of funds to eligible individuals to enable them to obtain the covered medical services that they need ... ; a requirement of prompt treatment would amount to a direct regulation of medical services.
Bruggeman, 324 F.3d at 910. The State must pay for medical services, but it need not provide them.
III. Rates
A second claim is brought only by the CACCB: that the State payments for waiver services (HCBS) are insufficient to comply with the Medicaid Act. Specifically, the CACCB claims that the rates at which the State pays for waiver services violate
provide such methods and procedures relating to the utilization of, and the payment for, care and services available under the plan ... as may be necessary to safeguard against unnecessary utilization of such care and services and to assure that payments are consistent with efficiency, economy, and quality of care and are sufficient to enlist enough providers so that care and services are available under the plan at least to the extent that such care and services are available to the general population in the geographic area.
Id. at 340-41 (citations omitted). Once a plaintiff demonstrates that a statute creates a federal right, the right is presumptively enforceable under § 1983 unless Congress specifically foreclosed such a remedy. Gonzaga, 536 U.S. at 284.
In Wilder v. Va. Hosp. Ass‘n, 496 U.S. 498, 110 S.Ct. 2510, 110 L.Ed.2d 455 (1990) the Supreme Court considered a Medicaid provision with wording very similar to subsection (30)(A), and the Court did find an enforceable private right.3 In Gonzaga, however, the Supreme Court tightened the first requirement. After Gonzaga, an enforceable private right exists only if the statute contains nothing “short of an unambiguously conferred right” and not merely a vague benefit or interest. Id. at 283. No enforceable right exists “where a statute by its terms grants no private rights to any identifiable class.” Id. at 283-84. Although professing not to overrule Wilder, Gonzaga recharacterized the earlier decision as a case finding an enforceable private right in a “provision [that] required States to pay an ‘objective’ monetary entitlement to individual health care providers.” See Gonzaga, 536 U.S. at 280; see also id. at 300 n. 8 (Stevens, J., dissenting).
Since Gonzaga, four circuit courts have considered whether subsection (30)(A) creates an enforceable private right. Three have concluded that the provision does not create an enforceable right. Westside Mothers v. Olszewski, 454 F.3d 532, 542-43 (6th Cir.2006) (concluding that subsection (30)(A) “has an aggregate focus rather than an individual focus” and its “broad and nonspecific” language is “ill-suited to judicial remedy“); Sanchez v. Johnson, 416 F.3d 1051, 1059 (9th Cir.2005) (finding no enforceable private right for recipients or providers because “nothing in the text of § 30(A) ... unmistakably focuses on recipients or providers as individuals” and because “the flexible, administrative standards embodied in the statute do not reflect a Congressional intent to provide a private remedy for their violation“); Long Term Pharmacy Alliance v. Ferguson, 362 F.3d 50, 57 (1st Cir.2004) (finding no enforceable private right for providers because subsection (30)(A) “has no ‘rights creating language’ and identifies no discrete class of beneficiaries“). Only one
We join the First, Sixth, and Ninth Circuits in concluding that subsection (30)(A) does not create a federal right enforceable under § 1983. Even though Wilder addressed a similar statute, our approach is controlled by Gonzaga, the Supreme Court‘s most recent assessment of private rights of action. Applying that analysis, we conclude that subsection (30)(A) “identifies no discrete class of beneficiaries.” Long Term Pharmacy Alliance, 362 F.3d at 57. This provision refers to recipients only “in the aggregate, as members of ‘the general population in the geographic area’ “; and providers are mentioned only “as indirect beneficiaries ‘enlisted’ as subordinate partners in the administration of Medicaid services.” Westside Mothers, 454 F.3d at 542-43 (quoting
Because subsection (30)(A) fails to satisfy the first of the criteria set forth in Blessing for establishing a federal right enforceable under § 1983, there is no need for us to consider the other criteria. See Gonzaga, 536 U.S. at 287-89 (holding that certain provisions of federal law are not privately enforceable under § 1983 because there was no congressional intent to confer rights on individual beneficiaries, without consideration of other Blessing factors); cf. id. at 292 (Breyer, J., concurring) (agreeing with the majority but also concluding that “[m]uch of the statute‘s key language is broad and nonspecific“).
One circuit has found that subsection (30)(A) creates an enforceable private right. Relying on its own precedent, Wilder, and Gonzaga, the Eighth Circuit found that both recipients and providers could sue to enforce this subsection. Pediatric Specialty Care, 443 F.3d at 1015-16. In analyzing Gonzaga, the court concluded that “[t]he beneficiaries [of subsection (30)(A)] are both the recipients of the services and the recipients of the state‘s payment,” i.e., the providers. Id. at 1015. We respectfully disagree. Despite the fact that recipients and providers ultimately benefit from competent administration, they are nowhere identified in the statutory provision as a class of beneficiaries. And Gonzaga requires not a vague benefit or interest but rather an “unambiguously conferred right.” 536 U.S. at 283. In sum, because the provision does not confer enforceable federal rights on identified beneficiaries, Gonzaga precludes interpreting subsection (30)(A) to create a federal right enforceable under § 1983.
IV. Class Certification
Finally, the plaintiffs also challenge the district court‘s denial of class certification. Because this opinion disposes of all issues in the potential class action, plaintiffs’ motion for class certification is now moot. See Gullickson v. Sw. Airlines Pilots’ Ass‘n, 87 F.3d 1176, 1187 (10th Cir.1996); Rucker v. St. Louis Sw. Ry. Co., 917 F.2d 1233, 1237 n. 1 (10th Cir.1990).
V. Conclusion
For the foregoing reasons, we AFFIRM the district court‘s entry of judgment in favor of the defendants.
