Thе “Medicare q-Choice” program was enacted as part of the Balanced Budget Act of 1997 and is now codified at 42 U.S.C. §§ 1395w-21 to w-28. The program includes reimbursement provisions that encourage managed health care organizations to be cost-effective аnd to pass cost savings on to their members in the form of additional benefits or reduced charges. As under prior law, cost effec
In this case, the Minnesota Senior Federation and Mary Sarno, a Florida resident who would like to live with her daughter in Minnesota, seek a declaratory judgment that the Medicare+Choice formula violates their constitutional rights to travel and to equal protection of the law. The district court
1
granted defendants’ motion to dismiss for failure to state a claim uрon which relief may be granted.
Minnesota v. United States,
I. Background
Medicare was established in 1965 and presently serves some thirty-nine million elderly and disabled Americans. Uniform benefits were initially provided under Medicare Part A and Medicare Part B, and these programs continue today. See 42 U.S.C. §§ 1395c-1395i-5; 1395j-1395w-4. For beneficiaries who enroll in Parts A and B and elect to obtain benefits on a “fee-for-service” basis, Medicare payments are made for each service rendered. Amounts Medicare pays to providers vary in part because of geographic differences in the fees charged for providing those services.
In 1972, Congress enacted Medicare Part C, a program that permits managed health care organizations to enter into “risk contracts” under which the organization provides a full range of Medicare services and receives a single monthly capitation payment for each enrollee. See 42 U.S.C. § 1395mm; 42 C.F.R. § 417.594. Capitation payments are determined by a formula that is based upon the projected cost of treating beneficiaries under the traditional fee-for-service system. Thus, the fоrmula incorporates wide geographic variations in health care costs. But under Medicare Part C, the variations can result in different benefits to Medicare beneficiaries because, when a managed care organization receives more in capitation payments from Medicare than it costs to provide Medicare services to its enrollees (an “excess” that is determined by a complex formula), it may pass this cost saving on to enrollees in the form of reduced premiums, reduced co-payments, or additional health care benefits. See 42 U.S.C. § 1395mm(g)(2); 42 C.F.R. § 417.592.
Medicare + Choice, which is the new Medicare Part C, was enacted in 1997 to “allow beneficiaries to have access to a wide array of private health plan choices in addition to traditional fee-fоr-service Medicare.... [and] enable the Medicare program to utilize innovations that have helped the private market contain costs
II. Discussion
The Federation and Sarno attack the discriminatory impact of the Medicare + Choicе formula because it results, for example, in Medicare beneficiaries in southern Florida receiving more benefits at less cost than their similarly situated counterparts in Minnesota. Appellants mount two constitutional challenges to this federal statutory regime. First, they аrgue that because the formula implicates the constitutional right to travel, it is subject to strict scrutiny and fails that standard of review because it is not narrowly tailored to meet a compelling government interest. Second, they argue in the alternative that the formula does not withstand even deferential rational basis review and therefore violates their right to equal protection guaranteed by the Due Process Clause of the Fifth Amendment.
A. Equal Protection.
We agree with the district court that appellants’ alternative equal protection argument is without merit. When a federal economic or social welfare program is challenged on equal protection grounds, and no suspect class or fundamental constitutional right is implicated, the proper standard of judicial review is rational basis, the “paradigm of judicial restraint.”
FCC v. Beach Communications, Inc.,
Distributing Social Sеcurity and Medicare benefits is a massive undertaking which “requires Congress to make many distinctions among classes of beneficiaries while making allocations from a finite fund.”
Bowen v. Owens,
[T]his decision — to allow managed care organizations to share “savings” with Medicare beneficiaries instead of requiring them to return the difference to the Medicare program itself — hardly renders the Medicare + Choice program unconstitutional on equal protection grounds.... The Medicare + Choice program increases the health care options of a number of elderly Americans while reducing the strain on the public fisc. The fact that not all elderly Americans ... enjoy the same windfall as others is unfortunate, but not unconstitutional. Perhaps there are better solutions or solutions that are more fair, but the Medicare + Choice payment method is certainly “rational” in a constitutional sense.
B. The Right to Travel.
No doubt fearing that the Medicare + Choice formula would survive rational basis review, appellants primarily contend that it must be subjected to, and cannot survive, strict scrutiny because it impinges upon the constitutional right to trаvel. The district court concluded that the formula does not implicate the constitutional right to travel.
Although the word travel is not found in the Constitution, the Supreme Court has frequently recognized “the constitutional right to travel from one State to another.”
Saenz v. Roe,
embraces at least thrеe different components. It protects the right of a citizen of one State to enter and to leave another State, the right to be treated as a welcome visitor rather than an unfriendly alien when temporarily present in the second State, and, for thosе travelers who elect to become permanent residents, the right to be treated like other citizens of that State.
Appellants’ right-to-travel claims do not fall within the three components identified in
Saenz.
Rather, in arguing that the Medicare + Choice formula must be subjected to the strict scrutiny applied in right-to-travel cases, appellants rely primarily on dicta from the plurality opinion in an earlier case stating that “[a] state law implicates the right to travel when it actually deters such travel .... ”
Attorney General of New York v. Soto-Lopez,
First, and most importantly,
Soto-Lopez
— and the Court’s other modern cases — have applied the federal constitutional right to travel to
state
legislation that had a negative impact on travel between the various States.
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Here, on the other hand, appellants attack a
federal
statutory regime because it allegedly deters interstate travel. In effect, appellants argue that a federal program that fails to achieve nationwide uniformity in the distribution of government benefits is subject to strict scrutiny because it will deter travel to unfavored locales. Such a contention is clearly too broad.
4
Not surprisingly, it finds no support in the Supreme Court’s right-to-travel cases. Instead, the Court has emphasized time and again that rational basis review is appropriate in considering the constitutionality of federal social welfarе programs such as Medicare.
See Bowen v. Gilliard,
Second, appellants cite no later case applying the “deterrent” dicta of
Soto-Lopez.
Earlier cases such as
Shapiro
and
Memorial Hospital v. Maricopa County,
For these reasons, and those lucidly stated by the district court,
see
Notes
. The HONORABLE DONALD D. ALSOP, United States District Judge for the District of Minnesota.
. The district court also dismissed the State of Minnesota's claim that the Medicare + Choice formula violates its rights under the Tenth Amendment.
See
. Except for cases dealing with federal restrictions on international travel, such as
Aptheker v. Secretary of State,
. Appellants' theory would seemingly call into question an entire host of federal programs, including Medicaid, Temporary Assistance to Needy Families, and numerous agricultural subsidies, all of which provide different benefit levels based on regional price conditions.
