North Memorial Medical Center, University of Minnesota Hospital and Clinic, Cannon Falls Community Hospital, and Canby Community Health Services, appeal from the district court’s
The Hospitals are participants in Minnesota’s Medicaid program. Medicaid is a joint federal-state program providing medical services, including in-patient hospital care, to needy persons. The Hospitals are paid according to a payment rate which the Department sets. There are several types of rate determination appeals which are described in detail in the district court’s opinion. North Memorial Medical Ctr. v. Steffen, Civ. No. 4-92-706, slip op. at 2-3 (D.Minn. Apr. 4, 1994). We need concern ourselves only with the “case-mix” appeal which is at issue in the present case. The purpose of a “case-mix” appeal, which may be filed at the end of a rate-year, is to review the adequacy of the current year’s payment rate. This is accomplished by calculating the difference in the mix of Medicaid patients served during the current rate year as compared with the mix of Medicaid patients served during the 1981 base year.
Before August 1, 1989, there were no deadlines for the filing of “case-mix” appeals, and generally the Hospitals waited for the Department to issue settle-up notices for a given rate year before submitting a case-mix appeal. The settle-up notices contained the information the Hospitals needed to file their case-mix appeals. Although the Hospitals admit that they could have compiled the information contained in the settle-up notices themselves, because the process was time consuming and there were no deadlines, the Hospitals typically waited until they received the settle-up notices before filing their appeals.
On June 1, 1989, the Minnesota Legislature amended the Medicaid program and enacted Minn.Stat. § 256.9695(l)(b) (Supp. 1989), which required that all case-mix appeals be filed with the commissioner within 60 days of the end of the rate year.
The district court entered summary judgment in favor of the Department, rejecting each of the four arguments asserted by the
Second, the district court rejected the Hospitals’ argument that the Department’s application of the statute violated the Boren Amendment, 42 U.S.C. § 1396a(a)(13)(A), which requires that state Medicaid plans provide reasonable and adequate payment for hospital services. Id. at 8-10. The district court reasoned that the Hospitals had several years in which to file their appeals, but did not do so, and that after the passage of the statute in 1989, there was an additional 60-day window period before the statute became effective in which the Hospitals could have filed their appeals. Id. at 10.
Third, the district court rejected the Hospitals’ argument that the Department’s application of the deadline violated 42 C.F.R. § 447.253(a) and (e), a regulation promulgated under the Boren Amendment. The regulation requires that Medicaid agencies provide Medicaid providers with an appeals procedure. The district court concluded that the Hospitals had not been deprived of an opportunity to appeal, but had failed to exercise their right to appeal within the prescribed time limits. Slip op. at 11. The district court reasoned that the Hospitals “are sophisticated players in the healthcare industry,” who “should have been aware of the passage of the appeals statute, and taken steps to protect their interests.” Id. at 12.
Finally, the district court rejected the Hospitals’ argument that the Department’s interpretation of the statute eliminated their vested property right to file “case-mix” appeals for the years ending in or before 1989 without notice and, therefore, violated their right to due process. Slip op. at 12-16. The district court concluded that the Hospitals had an obligation to “stay abreast of changes in the law that affected them, and to request written clarification of policy interpretation” and, therefore, received sufficient notice of the change in the appeals deadline. Id. at 15-16.
On appeal, the Hospitals do not challenge the district court’s dismissal of their Minn. Stat. § 645.21 claim, but otherwise reassert the arguments which the district judge dealt with so capably.
We review a district court’s grant of summary judgment de novo, and apply the same standards used by the district court. Langley v. Allstate Ins. Co.,
I.
The Hospitals contend that the Department’s refusal to allow appeals for rate years ending prior to 1989 violates the Boren Amendment, which provides:
A state plan for medical assistance must (13) provide—
(A) For payment of the hospitals services ... which the State finds, and makes assurances satisfactory to the Secretary, are reasonable and adequate to meet the costs which must be incurred by efficiently and economically operated facilities in order to provide care and services in conformity with applicable State and Federal laws, regulations, and quality and safety standards and to assure that individuals eligible for medical assistance have reasonable access ... to inpatient hospital services of adequate quality ...
42 U.S.C. § 1396a(a)(13)(A). The Hospitals argue that by refusing “case-mix” appeals for rate years before the deadline became effective, the Department is failing to comply with the Boren Amendment’s requirement that it provide Medicaid providers with reasonable and adequate payment for their services.
The Hospitals’ reliance on the Boren Amendment is misplaced. The Boren
II.
Next, the Hospitals argue that the Department’s interpretation of Minn.Stat. § 256.9695(1)(b) violated 42 C.F.R. § 447.253(a) and (e), which was promulgated under the Boren Amendment and provides that:
(a) State Assurances. In order to receive [Health Care Financing Administration] approval of a State plan change in payment methods and standards, the Medicaid agency must make assurances satisfactory to HCFA that the requirements set forth in paragraphs (b) through (i) of this section are being met, must submit the related information required by § 447.255 of this subpart, and must comply with all other requirements of this subpart.
(e) Provider Appeals. The Medicaid agency must provide an appeals or exception procedure that allows individual providers an opportunity to submit additional evidence and receive prompt administrative review, with respect to such issues as the agency determines appropriate, of payment rates.
42 C.F.R. § 447.253(a), (e). The Hospitals assert that the Department’s interpretation of § 256.9695(l)(b) cut off any meaningful and reasonable appeals procedure for Medicaid providers to contest the Department “case-mix” rate decisions for rate years ending in or before 1989.
Nothing in the record supports the Hospitals’ contention that the Department’s interpretation of § 256.9695(1)(b) resulted in the implementation of an unreasonable appeals procedure. As we set out above, each of the Hospitals, at the very least, had a 60-day period in which to file their pre-1989 “case-mix” appeals. The Hospitals argue that the imposition of a 60-day appeals period without notice is unreasonable. However, as participants in the Medicaid program, the Hospitals had a duty to familiarize themselves with the legal requirements of the appeals process and obtain a written agency interpretation of the statute. See Heckler v. Community Health Servs.,
III.
Finally, the Hospitals argue that the Department’s interpretation of Minn. Stat. § 256.9695(1)(b) violates the due process clause of the Fourteenth Amendment, because it deprived them of their property interest in pre-1989 appeals process without notice.
“The Fourteenth Amendment’s procedural protection of property is a safeguard of the security of interests that a person has already acquired in specific benefits.” Board of Regents v. Roth,
The Hospitals rely upon Littlefield v. City of Afton,
For the foregoing reasons, we affirm the judgment of the district court.
Notes
. The Honorable Diana E. Murphy, then Chief Judge of the United States District Court for the District of Minnesota, now United States Circuit Judge for the Eighth Circuit.
. North Memorial filed a successful case-mix appeal for the rate year 1984. The Department did not complete processing the 1984 appeal until the spring of 1990. North Memorial contends that even if it wanted to file a case-mix appeal for 1985 or later years, it could not because it did not know what its adjusted base year rate would be until the Department finished processing the 1984 appeal. North Memorial argues that the regulations then in effect required that a permanent adjustment be made to the base year costs in the years following a successful appeal. The Department contends that the regulation then in effect did not require that successful case-mix appeals be included in the adjusted base year costs for following years, and that North Memorial misconstrued the regulation.
.The length of time to file a "case-mix” appeal was amended from 60 days to 120 days effective August 1, 1990. Act of May 3, 1990, ch. 568, Art. 3, § 18, 1990 Minn.Laws 1859.
. The Department points out that the shortest appeal period at issue in this case is 244 days.
. Although it is not clear from the briefs, it appears that the Hospitals are asserting only a procedural due process claim. In order "to make out a substantive due process claim, [the Hospitals] must show that the law violated one of [their] fundamental rights." Walker v. City of Kansas City,
. The portion of Littlefield which addresses substantive due process has been abrogated. See Lemke,
