Cоnnecticut enacted a statute, the Uncompensated Care Pool Act (“Act I”), which required those with insurance to subsidize medical care for the poor. Conn.Pub.Acts 91-2 & 92-16, as codified by Conn.Gen.Stat. § 19a-168 et seq., and as amended by Conn. PubAets 93^4 & 93-229. Under Act I, hospitals had to impose a surcharge on the bill of any patient with private health care insurance. The hospitals sent the surcharge to the state, which, after pooling it in an “uncompensated care pool,” returned it to the hospitals to cover the costs hospitals incurred for uncompensated and undercоm-pensated care. This pass-through also enabled Connecticut to qualify for federal Medicaid matching funds.
A patient, her union, and the union’s self-funded Taft-Hartley Fund, which was also a self-insured employee benefits plan, challenged the statute in the United States District Court for the District of Connecticut (José A. Cabranes, then-Chief Judge). The plaintiffs argued that the Employee Retirement Income Security Act of 1974, as amended, 29 U.S.C. § 1001 et seq. (“ERISA”) preempted the Connecticut statute. They moved for summary judgment, and the district court granted the motion, enjoined the
The district court offered three bases for its decision:
(1) Act I imposed a substantial, albeit indirect economic impact on ERISA plans; (2) Act I substantially depended on ERISA plans; and (3) Act I referred to ERISA plans.
Id. at 194-98. For support, it relied on our decision in Travelers Insurance Co. v. Cuomo,
On appeal, the Connecticut official charged with enforcing Act I argues that, in the wake of Travelers II, ERISA does not preempt it. Given our recent decisions construing Travelers II, we are compelled to agree. Accordingly, we reverse and remand with instructions to enter judgment for the defendants.
BACKGROUND
American hospitаls have a notable history of providing medical care for those who cannot afford it. See Erik J. Olson, note, No Room at the Inn: A Snapshot of an American Emergency Room, 46 Stan.L.Rev. 449, 468 & nn. 104-05 (1994). Because Medicaid and Medicare do not pay for all costs of healthcare provided to the poor, hospitals traditionally overcharged their paying patients — those with private insurance — to cover the cost of uncompensated and undercom-pensated care. See Travelers II, — U.S. at -,
In 1991, Connecticut passed Act I, sanctioning the cost-shifting Connecticut hospitals had been doing for decades. Conn.Pub. Acts 91-2, as codified by Conn.Gen.Stat. § 19a-168 et seq. Act I allowed hospitals to impose up to a 30.7% surcharge on the bill of paying patients. Under the original version of Act I, the hospitals remitted the entire surcharge to the state. The state pooled this revenue in an “uncompensated care pool” (the “UCP”), administered by the Connecticut Commission on Hospitals and Health Care (the “Commission”). The Commission then returned the revenues to the hospitals to subsidize the costs of uncompensated and undercompensated care. This pass-through qualified Connecticut for approximately $150 million in federal Medicaid matching funds annually, which the state used to balance its budget (rather than to provide additional Medicaid benefits).
In 1992, Nina Milner, a member of New England Hеalth Care Employees Union, District 1199, SEIU AFL-CIO (the “Union”), twice checked into Mount Sinai Hospital (the “Hospital”). The Union’s self-insured ERISA plan, the New England Health Care Employees Welfare Fund (the “Fund”), which also happened to be a self-funded Taft-Hartley fund, had to pay her hospital bills. Accordingly, Milner signed some forms authorizing the Hospital to bill the Fund directly. She remained liable, however, for whatever charges the Fund did not cover.
The Hospital sent a bill to the Fund, designating the surcharge as “uncompensated care assessments.” The Fund refused to pay the surcharge. Instead, it escrowed enough money for the surcharge, and paid the Hospital only for that portion of Milner’s bill representing the care she actually received. The Hospital, as required by Act I, applied the Fund’s payment to the surcharge first. It then tried to collect the balance of the bill from Milner herself.
In response, Milner (as the named plaintiff in a class action), the Union, and the Fund brought 42 U.S.C. § 1983 and ERISA claims in the United States District Court for the District of Connecticut against the Commission, the Chairman of the Commission, Ste
The district court dismissed the suit against the Commission on Eleventh Amendment grounds, and allowed the Connecticut Hospital Association (“CHA”), a non-profit association of health care facilities (including the Hospital), to intervene as a defendant. Meanwhile, Connecticut amended Act I. Conn.Pub.Act 92-16. Patients with private health insurance (including ERISA plans) still paid roughly 30.5% in surcharges. But, a hospital now had to remit to the state only an 8.4% surcharge (a “sales tax”); the hospital kept the additional 22.1% surcharge (by adding it into the rates it charged for each service — a classic cost-shift). (Thereafter, Act I was amended to break up the sales tax into two components, both of which were remitted to the state. Conn.Pub.Acts 93-44 & 93-229.)
The parties, together with Connecticut’s acute care hospitals, entered into a consent order, charting the course of the litigation. The order provided that the disputed surcharge was “deemed to be equal to 30.5% of all hospital charges.” Under the order, the Fund was to escrow 8.4% of each hospital’s bill. The hospitals continued to receive directly the remaining 22.1%, as authorized by the amended Act I. If the plaintiffs won, the Fund was to get the escrowed money back, and the Hospital had to reimburse the plaintiffs for the 22.1% cost-shift surcharge.
The parties then moved for summary judgment. The district court granted the plaintiffs’ motion, and denied the dеfendants’. Relying on and extending our opinion in Travelers I, the court held that ERISA preempted Act I. New England Health Care,
Accordingly, the district court enjoined the Chairman from enforcing Act I. It also enjoined the Hospital (and other hospitals that were parties to the consent order) from including the combined 30.5% surcharge when billing patients (i.e., the 8.4% sales tax and the 22.1% cost-shift). The court also ordered the escrow agent to return to the Fund the moneys escrowed for the 8.4% sales tax. Finally, the court ordered the Hospital (and the other hospitals that were parties to the consent order) to reimburse the Fund and the class plaintiffs any money collected through the 22.1% cost-shift.
In the wake of the district court’s ruling, Connecticut repealed Act I, replacing it with a new version (“Act II”) containing many of the same features. See Conn.Pub.Acts 94-9. CHA, a defendant in this action, has since successfully challenged Act II on ERISA preemption grounds. See Connecticut Hosp. Ass’n v. Pogue,
Despite Act I’s repeal, the defendants appealed the district court’s decision. The Hospital and CHA did not contest the preemption issue, but contеnded that the injunction was too drastic. The Chairman, on the other hand, argued that, as a matter of law, ERISA did not preempt Act I and, alternatively, that material disputes concerning Act I’s impact on ERISA plans precluded summary judgment. Not surprisingly, the plaintiffs moved to dismiss the Chairman’s appeal
After oral argument in this Court, the Supreme Court issued its decision in Travelers II. Because it reconfigured the landscape for ERISA preemption, we rеquested letter briefs from the parties on the impact of Travelers II.
DISCUSSION
In his letter brief, the Chairman argues that he still has an interest in this appeal, even though Act I has been repealed, and that Travelers II leaves us no choice but to reverse the judgment of the district court. On the other hand, Milner, the Fund, and the Union continue to argue that, notwithstanding Travelers II, ERISA totally preempts Act I, and, if not, it preempts at least with respect to self-insured plans like the Fund.
I. Mootness
We cannot hear an appeal in the absence of a live case or contrоversy. See U.S. Const, art. Ill; Burke v. Barnes,
Here, the Connecticut legislature repealed Act I, arguably mooting the Chairman’s appeal. The Chairman, however, contends that he still has a stake in the appeal. We agree. Because Connecticut hospitals were enjoined from collecting the surcharge, less money was fed into the uncompensated care pool, and Connecticut qualified for less Medicaid matching funds. Thus, Connecticut would be entitled to recoup over $1 million if we were to hold that Act I was not preempted and the surcharges had to be paid to the state. These collateral consequences give the Chairman “a concrete interest in the outcome of the litigation,” and ensure that his appeal is not moot. Firefighters,
The plaintiffs question whether the Chairman has in fact suffered any collateral consequences. Their argument is that Act I required hospitals to apply to the surcharge the first dollars it received from a patient and, accordingly, that the Chairman never suffered a loss. But, this ignores the terms of the district court’s injunction. The court enjoined the Chairman from “enforcing [Act I] against [the] fund and/or members of the cеrtified plaintiff class.”
Accordingly, we may still hear the Chairman’s appeal. The plaintiffs’ motion to dismiss it as moot is denied.
II. ERISA Preemption
Turning to the merits, we review a grant of summary judgment de novo. See Mays v. Mahoney,
ERISA generally preempts any state law that “relate[s] to” an ERISA plan. 29 U.S.C. § 1144(a). A law “relates to” an ERISA plan (and thus triggers ERISA preemption) “‘if it has a connection with or reference to sueh a plan.’ ” District of Columbia v. Greater Wash. Bd. of Trade, — U.S. -, -,
As we explained in Travelers III,
On the other hand, when a state law affected an ERISA plan only indirectly, our opinion in Travelers I,
The Supreme Court, however, has reversed our decision in Travelers I, see Travelers II, — U.S. at-,
A. Self-Insured Plans
Travelers II did not address the New York “surcharge statute insofar as it applie[d] to self-insured plans.” Travelers II, — U.S. at
We have already rejected the notion that self-insured plans deserve special treatment when determining if a state law “relates to,” and thus is preempted by, ERISA generally. See Travelers III,
B. Substantial Economic Impact
Even if ERISA did generally accord self-insured plans special protection under its preemption clause, we would reverse the decision below. We are well aware that self-insured plans feel the bite of a surcharge statute more directly and more deeply than do plans that purchase insurance. But, there was no proof that Act I actually increased self-insured plans’ costs at all.
The defendants offered uncontested allegations that hospitals’ fees remained largely the same after Act I’s enactment (and, despite the surcharge, even decreased at some hospitals). And, the plaintiffs conceded that “[h]ospital rates ... have always included ‘cost-shifting’ to reimburse hospitals for uncompensated care ... and undercompensat-ed care.” (J.A at 256.) Before Act I, hospitals used to pass through their losses from nоnpaying and underpaying patients to paying patients. Act I merely formalized this practice.
True, the district court noted that suburban hospitals treated fewer poor patients than did urban hospitals. It speculated that, without Act I, the Fund might “have reduced costs by negotiating group discounts for uncompensated care or by encouraging participants to choose hospitals with low uncompensated care costs [i.e., suburban hospitals].” New England Health Care,
In the first place, a Connecticut law unrelated to Act I forbade discounts. See Conn. Gen.Stat. § 19a-166. In addition, there was no evidence that patients like Milner would go to suburban hospitals. Furthermore, the district court cited no evidence that suburban hospital costs were in fact lower before Act I. And, even if suburban hospital costs were lower, there was no evidence that Act I substantially increased those costs by placing urban and suburban hospitals on the same footing.
As evidence of Act I’s economiс impact, the district court also noted that the Fund had “reduce[d] benefits in part as a result of’ Act I.
Finally, the plaintiffs argue that Act I’s purported economic impact, even if minimal, triggers ERISA preemption because it is direct. See NYSA-ILA
[t]he surcharge statute ... does not “directly” deplete assets, at least not as directly as did the statute in NYSA-ILA. That statute taxed payments made by patients to an ERISA plan’s hospital. NYSA-ILA27 F.3d at 825-26 . There wasno third party between the plan and the tax. Here, the statute raises costs to a third party — the patient — who is liable for the balance of any bill which an ERISA plan or insurance carrier refuses to pay. Granted, self-insured plans are one step closer to the surcharge than are insured plans — the latter will not see increased costs until their insurers raise premiums. But, self-insured plans are still not directly liable for the surcharge. In any case, in the wake of Travelers (and the Court’s decision to vacate NYSA-ILA), we question whether we should continue .to distinguish between laws that directly deplete ERISA plans’ assets and laws that only indirectly do so.
Travelers III,
C. “Reference to” Preemption
Act I contains a “self-destruct” clause that expressly mentions ERISA:
In the event that the final result of litigation brought pursuant to the federal Employee Retirement Income Security Act of 1974 (ERISA) ... is that any class of charges for patient care services ... is exempted from the assessment, the operation of the pool shall be terminated....
Conn.Gen.Stat. § 19a-168m, as amended by Conn.Pub.Aets 93-44, § 17. Seizing upon this, the plaintiffs contend that the self-destruct clause is a sufficient “reference” to ERISA to invoke preemption. Again, we disagree.
True, the Supreme Court has repeatedly said that state laws referring to ERISA plans “relate to” ERISA and are thus preempted. See, e.g., Travelers II, — U.S. at -,
The self-destruct clause here does not single out ERISA plans for special treatment. Quite the contrary, it guarantees that Act I will аpply to all private health insurance providers, or none at all. Contrast Ingersoll-Rand Co. v. McClendon,
The Fund argues that, because the surcharge ultimatеly subsidizes the medical costs of the poor, Act I imposes a substantive coverage requirement on the Fund and thus “affects” it. This argument has a certain surface appeal. See Greater Wash. Bd. of Trade, — U.S. at -,
The statute in Greater Washington, however, required employers “to evaluate employee benefits under their existing ERISA plan and then use those figures to calculate the benefits due to disabled employees.” NYS Health Maint. Org. Conf.
D. The Exclusive Benefit Rule
The Fund must comply with both ERISA and the Labor Management Relations Act, 29 U.S.C. § 141 et seq. (the “LMRA”). Each statute, in turn, mandates that the Fund be used exclusively for the benefit of participants and beneficiaries — the so-called “exclusive benefit rule.” See 29 U.S.C. § 1104(a) (ERISA); 29 U.S.C.
Like the Third Circuit, we believe an ERISA plan (and, by analogy, a Taft-Hartley fund) discharges its fiduciary duties “when it pays whatever portion of the price charged by the health care provider the plan has assumed.” United Wire, Metal & Mach. Health & Welfare Fund v. Morristown Mem. Hosp.,
To hold otherwise would ignore that “Congress envisioned state experiments with comprehensive hospital reimbursement regulation.” Travelers II, — U.S. at - n. 6,
E. “Substantial Dependence” Preemption
Finally, the district court held that Act I depended on ERISA plans because they provided some 70% of the revenue for the UCP; without ERISA plans’ participation, Act I simply would not succеed.
Until the district court’s decision, no court had ever held that ERISA preempts a statute simply because the law’s success “depended” on funds derived from ERISA plans. Indeed, we think this approach stands ERISA preemption principles on their head. Under ERISA preemption’s “connection with” prong, courts have always looked to the impact a law has on ERISA plans, not vice versa. See, e.g., Metropolitan Life Ins. Co. v. Massachusetts,
Moreover, we believe Travelers II implicitly rejected a market share/dependence approach to ERISA preemption. After all, we noted in Travelers I that over 80% of New Yorkers relied on ERISA plans for their health care coverage. Travelers I,
Finally, the market share/dependence rationale sounds uncomfortably like the dicta we proffered in NYSA-ILA: any regulation that targets the healthcare industry will necessarily affect healthcare plans. See NYSA-ILA,
To sum up: the plaintiffs failed to show that Act I, which sanctioned the cost-shifting that Connecticut hospitals practiced for decades, so increased costs to ERISA plans that thе plans had to restructure themselves, buy insurance rather than self-insure, or reduce benefits. In addition, Act I’s self-destruct clause does not trigger ERISA preemption. Finally, the plaintiffs’ “exclusive benefit rule” and market share/dependence arguments cannot be the basis for ERISA preemption.
CONCLUSION
The repeal of Act I has not mooted the Chairman’s appeal; we therefore deny the plaintiffs’ motion to dismiss.
Furthermore, we see no basis for holding that ERISA preempts Act I, even with respect to self-insured plans. Accordingly, we reverse the judgment of the district court and remand with instructions to enter judgment for the defendants, and to enter an appropriate order regarding any payments that should have been made under Act I.
Notes
. In 1994, Donald C. Pogue succeeded Bongard as Chairman; E. Cortright Phillips, in turn, succeeded Pogue as Chairman. In 1995, Connecticut replaced the Commission with the Office of Health Care Access, substituting Gwen B. Welt-man, the Acting Commissioner of the Office of Health Care Access, for Phillips. See Conn.Pub. Acts 95-257, § 35. For simplicity, we will refer to each state official as the "Chairman.”
