Lead Opinion
In 1993, the General Assembly amended Ohio’s workers’ compensation scheme to create the Health Partnership Program (“HPP”), a comprehensive managed care program administered by appellant, the Bureau of Workers’ Compensation (“BWC”), to provide medical services to employees for thencompensable injuries or occupational diseases. See 145 Ohio Laws, Part II, 2990, 3088-3093; R.C. 4121.44 and 4121.441. We have already determined that the managed care organizations (“MCOs”) certified to perform these services under the HPP do not unconstitutionally usurp the state’s power and authority to administer the State Insurance Fund (“SIF”) and determine the terms and conditions of payments to injured claimants. State ex rel. Haylett v. Ohio Bur. of Workers’ Comp. (1999),
Now we are asked to decide whether the BWC’s use of SIF proceeds to pay administrative and performance-incentive fees to certified MCOs under the HPP violates either the Revised Code or Section 35, Article II of the Ohio Constitution. The court of appeals determined that the BWC’s use of fund proceeds for
I. MCOs and the HPP
As we noted in Haylett, supra, MCOs are an integral part of the HPP established by the General Assembly. Id.,
Once certified by the BWC and selected by or assigned to an employer, MCOs manage the medical aspect of each workers’ compensation claim. Ohio Adm. Code 4123-6-043(B) and (F); Haylett,
The HPP also contains a mandatory dispute resolution program available to employees, employers, and providers. Id., citing Ohio Adm.Code 4123-6-16. “Any decision by an MCO regarding treatment or payment is nonbinding and subject to multiple levels of review. The final decision as to any aspect of the claim lies with the Industrial Commission.” Id. at 330,
II. Administrative and Performance Incentive Payments to MCOs
To compensate the MCOs for their medical-management and cost-containment services, the administrator promulgated a rule providing for certain payments to
Ohio Adm.Code 4123-6-13 provides:
“(B) The bureau shall pay an MCO an administrative fee for its medical management and administrative services in a manner determined by the administrator. The administrative fee may be subject to a disincentive penalty based upon the failure of the MCO to meet predetermined performance criteria set forth in the MCO contract. The bureau may pay an MCO a performance payment and may pay an incentive payment.
“(C) In establishing performance measures, the bureau shall evaluate an MCO’s performance based upon but not limited to:
“(1) Quality performance measures that may include return to work rates and reinjury rates.
“(2) Total cost measures that may include average total paid cost, average incurred cost, and lost-time claims to total claims ratio.
“(3) Change in cost measures that may include change in average total paid cost, change in average incurred cost, and change in lost-time to total claims ratio.
“(4) Customer satisfaction that may include in-network utilization rate and employee, employer, and provider satisfaction surveys.”
The parties here stipulate that both the administrative and performance-incentive payments authorized by Ohio Adm.Code 4123-6-13 are paid out of employer premium contributions, “with the total remuneration available to each [MCO] being a fixed percentage of the premiums paid by the employers which have selected or been assigned to it.” The parties further stipulate that “[t]he total percentage of premium allocated for payment of fees and performance incentive payments is not fixed by rule, but is established by the BWC or the Administrator and may be periodically adjusted.”
Douglas Maser, the BWC’s Chief Medical Management and Cost Containment Officer in 1997, testified at a deposition about how the administrative and performance-incentive fees provided under Ohio Adm.Code 4123-6-13 are calculated. Maser testified that at the time of his deposition, the “base administrative fee” was set at three percent. Accordingly, a hypothetical MCO with one hundred employers enrolled in it would receive a base administrative fee from the SIF equal to three percent of the premiums paid by those one hundred employers. As of January 1,1998, the phase-in of the HPP was complete and the base administrative fee for each participating MCO was increased to five percent of premium.
As a result, an MCO that participated in all phases of the HPP implementation program and successfully achieved all of the BWC’s quality-control objectives could earn administrative fees and performance-incentive payments totalling six percent of premium, to be paid from the SIF. The parties here do not dispute how the administrative fees and performance incentive payments are calculated in practice; rather, their appeal here centers on whether the use of SIF monies for these purposes is permissible at all.
III. This Declaratory Judgment Action
Appellees, Northwestern Ohio Building & Construction Trades Council and International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers, Local Union No. 8 (collectively, “Northwestern”), filed the instant action in June 1997, challenging several aspects of the HPP. In its complaint, Northwestern sought two declarations from the trial court. First, Northwestern sought a declaration that the HPP statutes and rules unconstitutionally delegate essential aspects of the administration of the SIF to private entities — including the determination of the terms and conditions upon which payments shall be made from the SIF. Second, Northwestern sought a declaration that Ohio Adm.Code 4123-6-13, to the extent that it authorizes the use of the SIF for administrative and performance-incentive payments, was promulgated without statutory authority and violates Section 35, Article II of the Ohio Constitution and R.C. 4123.30.
The parties eventually filed competing motions for summary judgment. In a Decision and Entry filed September 9, 1998, the Franklin County Common Pleas Court sustained the BWC’s motion for summary judgment. The trial court determined that “the HPP statutory provisions do not unconstitutionally delegate authority and responsibility over the SIF,” and that “the use of the SIF for HPP purposes is constitutional.”
In its second assignment of error, Northwestern contended that the use of SIF proceeds for the payment of administrative and performance-incentive fees under Ohio Adm.Code 4123-6-13 would contravene this court’s holdings in Corrugated Container Co. v. Dickerson (1960),
IV. Analysis
We shall address the BWC’s propositions of law in reverse order because we should determine the validity of the administrative rule, as well as the BWC’s interpretation of that rule, before we address any constitutional arguments related to the payments that the BWC has elected to make under the rule. If we were to agree with the court of appeals that the BWC lacked legislative authority to make these payments from the fund in the first instance, then we should decline to pass on any constitutional question implicated by those payments. See Norandex, Inc. v. Limbach (1994),
A. The Promulgation of Ohio Adm.Code 4123-6-13
The General Assembly has delegated broad rulemaking authority to the administrator of workers’ compensation. See, e.g., R.C. 4121.121 and 4121.441. R.C. 4121.121 expressly permits the administrator to “[establish the overall administrative policy of the bureau,” R.C. 4121.121(B)(1), to “[ejnsure, by rules, the impartial and prompt treatment of all claims,” R.C. 4121.121(B)(13), and to “[p]repare and submit * * * recommendations, in the form of administrative rules, * * * for the health partnership program,” R.C. 4121.121(B)(21).
To guide the administrator’s efforts in promulgating rules for administering the HPP, the General Assembly enumerated twelve nonexhaustive categories of rules that it deemed necessary for the effective implementation of the program. See R.C. 4121.441(A)(1) to (A)(12). One of these twelve subdivisions directs the administrator to adopt rules providing for “[appropriate financial incentives to reduce service cost and insure propep system utilization without sacrificing the quality of service.” (Emphasis added.) R.C. 4121.441(A)(4). Another directs the administrator to adopt rules ensuring “[a]dequate methods of peer review, utilization review, quality assurance, and dispute resolution.” (Emphasis added.) R.C. 4121.441(A)(5).
Ohio Adm.Code 4123-6-13(B) provides that MCOs shall be compensated for their “medical management and administrative services” based on “performance criteria” keyed to proper system utilization. Accordingly, it represents exactly the sort of administrative rule contemplated by the enabling language in R.C. 4121.441. In order to implement the HPP effectively, which it is statutorily required to do under R.C. 4121.441(B), the BWC must have the ability to promulgate, interpret, and enforce rules providing for performance-based compensation of those “integral” entities that perform the medical-management services called for under the program — the MCOs. See Haylett,
B. The BWC’s Reasonable Interpretation of Ohio Adm.Code 4123-6-13 and the Workers’ Compensation Statutory Scheme
As Northwestern correctly notes, neither R.C. 4121.441 nor Ohio Adm.Code 4123-6-13 specifies the source of the administrative and performance-incentive payments to be made under the rule. For the following reasons, however, we conclude that the BWC reasonably interpreted the statutory scheme when it decided to utilize SIF proceeds for these purposes.
It is axiomatic that if a statute provides the authority for an administrative agency to perform a specified act, but does not provide the details by which the act should be performed, the agency is to perform the act in a reasonable manner based upon a reasonable construction of the statutory scheme. See Swallow v. Indus. Comm. (1988),
In Swallow, a workers’ compensation claimant awarded permanent partial and permanent total disability benefits for the loss of use of both arms and legs requested that his permanent partial benefits be paid concurrently rather than consecutively. The statute at issue did not specify whether payments were to be made concurrently or consecutively. Even so, this court unanimously concluded that “the commission had a reasonable basis upon which to formulate a policy premised on the rationale that claimants are generally placed in a better position by receiving payments consecutively rather than concurrently. It was within the administrative purview of the commission to determine that appellant would be put in a better position by receiving eight hundred-fifty weeks of payments consecutively rather than two two-hundred weeks of payments for loss of each leg and two two-hundred twenty-five weeks of payments for loss of each arm concurrently.” Id. at 57,
We recognize that an agency can, at times, overstep the bounds of its statutorily delegated authority when interpreting and enforcing its administrative rules. In a recent case, the United States Supreme Court decided that the Army Corps of Engineers could not interpret and enforce its own “Migratory Bird Rule” so broadly as to provide the Corps with regulatory jurisdiction over ponds in abandoned gravel pits used as habitats by migratory birds, when the Clean Water Act authorized the Corps to regulate discharges only into “navigable waters.” Solid Waste Agency of N. Cook Cty. v. United States Army Corps of Engineers (2001),
In the present case, the General Assembly has not specified the source from which the BWC is to draw the funds necessary for the administrative and performance-incentive payments to be made to MCOs. The court of appeals found this legislative “gap” to be fatal, writing, “R.C. 4121.441(A)(4) is ambiguous in that it does not specifically authorize that these payments be made from SIF.
Unlike the court of appeals, we do not find the legislative gap equivalent to a lack of authority for the agency to act. As the United States Supreme Court has noted, “[t]he power of an administrative agency to administer a * * * program necessarily requires the formulation of policy and the making of rules to fill any gap left, implicitly or explicitly,” by the legislature. (Emphasis added.) Morton v. Ruiz (1974),
We find that the BWC acted reasonably when it authorized the use of fund proceeds for the payments to MCOs provided under Ohio Adm.Code 4123-6-13. No provision of the workers’ compensation scheme expressly prohibits this use, at least one provision of the scheme impliedly permits it, and both the General Assembly and this court have expressly permitted fund proceeds to be used for similar purposes in the past.
Northwestern contends that the BWC’s interpretation of its administrative rule cannot be a reasonable one because, in its view, R.C. 4123.30 “expressly prohibits the expenditure of premiums contributed to the state insurance fund for purposes other than the payment of compensation and benefits for loss sustained on account of injury, disease or death compensable under the workers’ compensation act.” The court of appeals likewise determined that though R.C. 4123.30 lists various permissible uses of SIF proceeds, no provision of that statute expressly authorizes the use of fund proceeds as the BWC seeks to apply them under Ohio Adm.Code 4123-6-13. The appellate panel concluded that R.C. 4123.30 ensures that fund proceeds are “limited to compensating injured workers and their dependents for injuries and illness arising out of their employment.” As we have done before, we decline to adopt these narrow interpretations of the fund’s permitted applications. See Thompson,
R.C. 4123.30 provides that money from the SIF may be applied to “the payment of compensation, medical services, examinations, recommendations and determinations, nursing and hospital services, medicine, rehabilitation, death benefits, funeral expenses, and like benefits for loss sustained on account of injury, disease, or death provided for by this chapter, and for no other purpose.” (Emphasis added.) In dicta, this court has previously stated that “[t]here is no provision for payment of administrative costs” from the fund under this statute. Corrugated Container,
Northwestern seizes on Corrugated Container’s dicta, the restrictive statutory language italicized above, and Ohio Adm.Code 4123-6-13’s characterization of some of the payments to be made thereunder as “administrative” to contend that R.C. 4123.30 prohibits the BWC from making the rule’s payments from the SIF. Superficially, Northwestern’s position has merit. As Northwestern correctly notes, “the workers’ compensation statutes have historically provided for a separate and distinct assessment for administrative costs.” See R.C. 4123.341. Moreover, R.C. 4123.30 expressly enumerates a list of permissible uses of the SIF, this court has previously stated (in Corrugated Container) that administrative costs are not among those enumerated uses, and R.C. 4123.30 expressly provides that the SIF is to be used for “no other purpose.” Despite these valid observations, several factors suggest that the BWC has reasonably interpreted Ohio Adm.Code 4123-6-13 to allow the rule’s payments to be made from the SIF.
First, though Ohio Adm.Code 4123-6-13(B) provides for payment of an “administrative fee,” this fee is expressly intended to compensate the MCOs for the “medical management * * * services” that they provide. (Emphasis added.) Id. The medical-management and cost-containment services performed by MCOs under the HPP differ from “the duties and * * * activities of * * * the bureau” for which an administrative cost and expense assessment is made under R.C. 4123.341. Compare R.C. 4121.44 and 4121.441 (outlining duties of MCOs under the HPP) with R.C. 4121.121 (outlining duties of the bureau and administrator).
Further, R.C. 4123.30 expressly permits the SIF to be applied to “medical services, examinations, recommendations and determinations.” As the BWC notes in its merit brief, “HPP administrative and performance and incentive payments are provided to MCOs for [their] medical recommendations. Each MCO has developed treatment guidelines. These guidelines guide MCOs and their providers in developing treatment plans for individual injured workers and * * * constitute medical recommendations.” See Ohio Adm.Code 4123-6-032(E)(5). Because the payments provided to the MCOs under Ohio Adm.Code 4123-6-13 compensate those entities for “recommendations and determinations,”
Moreover, as this court has previously noted, SIF proceeds have historically been used for purposes other than the payment of direct disability compensation to claimants. Thompson,
As the MCO League notes in its amicus curiae brief supporting the appellants, the “medical management” services performed by MCOs under the HPP are simply a “generalized development of earlier instances of utilization review provided by external entities for the BWC.” The BWC was entitled to rely on this historical practice when interpreting and applying the rules that it was delegated the authority to adopt under the HPP. It was reasonable for the BWC to conclude that the General Assembly provided it with the same authority to compensate MCOs for medical-utilization services under the HPP as the BWC had historically exercised to compensate outside vendors for similar services.
This is not a case, such as Cook Cty., supra, in which an agency ignored express terms contained in its enabling statute in order to expand broadly its own jurisdiction. See id.,
C. . Constitutionality of the BWC’s Interpretation
Having decided that the BWC reasonably interpreted Ohio Adm.Code 4123-6-13 and the workers’ compensation statutes to authorize the use of SIF proceeds for the administrative and performance-incentive payments provided under the rule, we now turn to the constitutional question. Despite this court’s broadly worded syllabus in Haylett,
Section 35, Article II of the Ohio Constitution provides:
“For the purpose of providing compensation to workmen and their dependents, for death, injuries or occupational disease, occasioned in the course of such workmen’s employment, laws may be passed establishing a state fund to be created by compulsory contribution thereto by employers, and administered by the state, determining the terms and conditions upon which payment shall be made therefrom.”
We have previously described this constitutional provision as “a broad grant of power to establish and to administer the fund without limitation.” (Emphasis added.) State ex rel. Michaels v. Morse (1956),
In Corrugated Container, the precise issue before the court was “whether the state can take money which has been set aside for the payment of awards to injured workmen and * * * transfer it to the money comprising the General
In Thompson, however, this court distinguished Corrugated Container, rejected the court of appeals’ “cramped” reading of Section 35, Article II, and held that the transfer of SIF investment income to the Disabled Workers’ Relief Fund (“DWRF”) did not violate the constitutional provision. Id.,
The same logic and the Thompson court’s careful distinction of Corrugated Container inform our decision here. In Thompson, this court noted that “the transfer of SIF investment funds to the DWRF is qualitatively different from the diversion of SIF funds proscribed in Corrugated Container. The DWRF is an integral component of Ohio’s comprehensive workers’ compensation program and, therefore, the use of SIF investment income to fund the DWRF does not contravene the principle enunciated in Corrugated Container.” (Emphasis added.) Id. at 247, 1 OBR at 267,
Judgment reversed.
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting. The majority finds the historical and dedicated purpose of the State Insurance Fund (“SIF”) too “narrow” and “cramped” for its liking. Consequently, the majority approves the diversion of $140 million per year for administrative fees and performance bonuses to organizational claims managers from a trust fund that was established for injured workers. The SIF is the tangible representation of the essential compensation bargain that forms the workers’ compensation system. It is constitutionally conceived, statutorily established, and judicially recognized as a trust fund for the benefit of injured Ohio workers and their dependents. Its quintessential purpose is to accumulate and reserve a sufficiently large sum of money to pay compensation and benefits to employees who suffer injury and disease, and to the dependents of employees who suffer death, in the course of their employment. After today, however, the premium contributions that compose the SIF can be used generally for all “purposes which relate to or are incidental to workers’ compensation,” or “to fund an integral component of the workers’ compensation scheme,” and specifically “for the payment of administrative and performance incentive fees * * * to managed care organizations.” Semantics aside, the majority has just changed the nature of the SIF in order to permit the Bureau of Workers’ Compensation (“bureau”) to tap its resources to pay administrative costs. I must dissent.
Section 35, Article II of the Ohio Constitution provides:
“For the purpose of providing compensation to workmen and their dependents, for death, injuries or occupational disease, occasioned in the course of such workmen’s employment, laws may be passed establishing a state fund to be
The SIF and the net premiums contributed thereto constitute a trust fund to be used solely for the payment of compensation and benefits to injured workers and their dependents. See State ex rel. Williams v. Indus. Comm. (1927),
In Corrugated Container Co. v. Dickerson (1960),
It cannot be any clearer that the SIF, in its essential form and character, is a trust fund created by premium contributions that are set aside for and disbursed to employees who suffer loss on account of injury, disease, or death occasioned in the course of employment, and that it is not to be used for administrative purposes.
Nevertheless, the majority views this basic principle as a “narrow” or “cramped” interpretation of the fund’s permissible uses, and argues:
“First, though Ohio Adm.Code 4123-6-13(B) provides for payment of an ‘administrative fee,’ this fee is expressly intended to compensate the MCOs for the ‘medical management * * * services’ that they provide. (Emphasis added.) Id. The medical-management and cost-containment services performed by MCOs under the HPP [health partnership program] differ from ‘the duties and * * * activities of * * * the bureau’ for which an administrative cost and expense
Nothing could be further from the truth. In the first place, Ohio Adm.Code 4123-6-13(B) actually provides that “[t]he bureau shall pay an MCO an administrative fee for its medical management and administrative services.” (Emphasis added.)
Second, the administrative duties and activities of the bureau most certainly include medical-management and cost-containment services as set forth in R.C. 4121.121(B)(16) and (17). Indeed, Ohio Adm.Code 4123-6-44 amplifies R.C. 4121.121, 4121.44, and 4121.441 by providing that fees and methods of payment for practitioner services will be established in conjunction with “the bureau’s medical management and cost containment division.” (Emphasis added.)
Third, the medical-management services provided by MCOs are just that, management services. They are not medical services. Medical services are provided by health care providers. A health care provider is “[a] physician or practitioner * * * or other legal entity licensed * * * and approved by the bureau, to provide particular medical services or supplies, including, but not limited to: a hospital, qualified rehabilitation provider, pharmacist, or durable medical equipment supplier.” Ohio Adm.Code 4123-6-01(G). “[A] managed care organization is not a health care provider.” (Emphasis added.) Ohio Adm.Code 4123-6-01(C).
Fourth, the HPP, by definition and design, is “[t]he bureau of workers’ compensation’s comprehensive managed care program.” (Emphasis added.) Ohio Adm.Code 4123-6-01(A). Moreover, R.C. 4121.44(B)(3) provides that the bureau “[m]ay integrate the certified vendors with bureau staff and existing bureau services for purposes of operation and training to allow the bureau to assume operation of the health partnership program at the conclusion of the certification periods.” (Emphasis added.) See, also, R.C. 4121.44(G).
It is eminently clear that the majority’s attempt to distinguish the services of MCOs from the duties and activities of the bureau creates a false dichotomy. Whether administered internally by the bureau or externally through contracts with private vendors, the HPP is essentially an administrative mechanism for medical management and cost containment. The services performed thereunder by MCOs are precisely the duties and activities of the bureau for which a separate administrative cost assessment is required under R.C. 4123.341.
The majority’s second argument is that R.C. 4123.30 expressly authorizes, or at least does not prohibit, the use of SIF contributions to pay the administrative fees of MCOs. According to the majority, the development of treatment guidelines and individual treatment plans by MCOs constitutes “medical * * * recom
To put it mildly, this argument stretches the meaning of “medical * * * recommendations and determinations” under R.C. 4123.30 considerably beyond its contextual parameters. The authorized SIF expenditures enumerated in R.C. 4123.30 are bounded by language establishing the SIF as a trust fund for the payment of compensation and benefits to employees and their dependents who suffer loss on account of a compensable injury, disease, or death. The payment of a basic administrative and performance incentive fee equal to five percent of all SIF premiums contributed by each covered employer is neither “compensation” nor “benefit,” and has nothing to do with a statute that provides for loss-replacement expenditures to injured workers. The development of treatment guidelines and plans by MCOs may be administratively necessary to facilitate the process of medical management and cost containment, but it is not medically necessary for the diagnosis or treatment of injury or disease, and certainly does not constitute a compensable loss to employees. Ohio Adm.Code 4123-6-043(B) provides that “[t]he MCO, in conjunction with the employer, employee, attending physician, and the bureau claims personnel assigned to the claim, shall seek a course of medical or rehabilitative treatment that promotes a safe return to work.” If we follow the majority’s reasoning, then the employer, employee, and the bureau’s claims personnel could all be paid an administrative fee from the SIF for their “recommendations and determinations” in developing treatment plans for injured workers. These guidelines and plans are administrative, not medical, recommendations and determinations. The administrative fee paid to MCOs under Ohio Adm.Code 4123-6-13(B) is still an administrative fee, and it can no more be wedged into the meaning of “medical * * * recommendations and determinations” under R.C. 4123.30 then it can be forced out of the definition of “administrative costs” under R.C. 4123.341.
In its third argument, the majority relies on Thompson v. Indus. Comm. (1982),
It is true, of course, that SIF disbursements do not always take the form of direct compensation payments to injured workers. But this does not mean that the SIF may be used to fund the administrative machinery of the workers’ compensation system. Constitutional limitations aside, the fact that certain provisions in R.C. Chapter 4123 expressly authorize SIF disbursements for specific items of cost associated with the bringing of a claim or the upkeep of the fund does not endow the bureau with such broad authority that it can use SIF assets to finance an entire administrative program created under R.C. Chapter 4121.
In creating the HPP, the General Assembly conferred no authority to compensate MCOs out of the SIF. Contrary to the majority’s assertions, this lack of authority does not translate into a “legislative gap” to be filled by the bureau. “Except for amounts earmarked for safety and hygiene, actuarial audits, specified costs and fees, and reinsurance premiums, the State Insurance Fund is a trust fund maintained for the benefit of employees and employers as a source of payment of compensation and benefits; it has no other purpose.” Fulton, Ohio Workers’ Compensation Law (2 Ed.1998) 378, Section 14.1. Moreover, when the General Assembly established the HPP as part of Am.Sub.H.B. No. 107, it also amended R.C. 4123.30 by removing an obsolete trust-fund exception for amounts set aside “for fees and costs authorized by section 4123.51 of the Revised Code,” which had been repealed effective October 5, 1955. 145 Ohio Laws, Part II, 3115; 126 Ohio Laws 1015. Yet the General Assembly did not, in amended R.C. 4123.30 or elsewhere, purport to provide any authority for using SIF assets to defray the operating costs of the HPP. Thus, the court of appeals correctly found that “[Backing any clear legislative authorization, [the bureau was] without the authority to authorize these payments from [the] SIF.”
In any event, the “utilization review” services performed by MCOs, like their other “medical management” services, are administrative in nature. R.C. 4121.441(A)(5) requires the administrator to adopt rules for the HPP that include “[a]dequate methods of * * * utilization review * * * to prevent, and provide sanctions for, inappropriate, excessive or not medically necessary treatment.” Ohio Adm.Code 4123-6-01(U) defines “utilization review” as “[t]he assessment of an employee’s medical care by the MCO. This assessment typically considers medical necessity, the appropriateness of the place of care, level of care, and the duration, frequency or quality of services provided in relation to the allowed condition being treated.” This is precisely the kind of review that the Workers’ Compensation Act historically required the commission and bureau to perform as
In particular, the utilization review services performed by MCOs are not comparable to the medical examinations and recommendations rendered by qualified medical specialists under R.C. 4123.68(V), (W), and (Y). MCOs conduct no x-ray, autopsy or other clinical examinations or tests, make no diagnostic or clinical findings, and perform no physical examinations of claimants. Instead, like the bureau, MCOs are authorized to obtain independent medical examinations to help resolve medical-management and treatment disputes. See Ohio Adm.Code 4123-6-043(G). Their utilization review has no actual medical component, and the fee paid by the bureau for these services constitutes an administrative cost for which a separate administrative assessment is required under R.C. 4123.341.
Moreover, there is no statutory exception that authorizes the use of SIF proceeds for purposes of “medical utilization services,” and the isolated provisions in R.C. Chapter 4123 upon which the majority relies do not cohere to allow for one to be judicially created. The costs of physician depositions (R.C. 4123.512[D]) and independent medical examinations (R.C. 4123.68[V], [W], and [Y]) are part of the expenses of a claim, while actuarial audits (R.C. 4123.30 and 4123.47[A]) and the creation of a Surplus Fund (R.C. 4123.34[B]), which is actually part of the SIF, State ex rel. First Natl. Supermarkets, Inc. v. Indus. Comm. (1994),
Finally, the majority finds that “the use of SIF proceeds for these purposes does not violate Section 35, Article II of the Ohio Constitution.” The majority’s supporting rationale for this finding has three components. First, the majority suggests that the constitutional question presented in this case can be disposed of under the authority of our syllabus in State ex rel. Haylett v. Ohio Bur. of Workers’ Comp. (1999),
In the second part of its constitutional analysis, the majority interprets Corrugated Container as holding only that SIF proceeds cannot be transferred to the general revenue fund because such a transfer “creates a risk that the proceeds will be applied to purposes wholly unrelated to the workers’ compensation system.” However, our decision in Corrugated Container leaves no room for such an interpretation.
Corrugated Container involved a challenge to certain provisions in the General Appropriation Act of 1959, which required that the SIF reimburse the General Fund for all amounts appropriated for administrative costs of the commission, and a commission resolution effectuating those provisions. Since former R.C. 4123.341 and 4123.342 had previously authorized the commission to collect only two-thirds of that amount from employers, the remaining one-third would have to come from money collected to pay awards of compensation. Our concern in Corrugated Container was that the SIF was being used to pay the administrative costs of the commission, and nothing in the opinion suggests that the court had any concern whatsoever with the funds being used for any purpose unrelated to the workers’ compensation system. Our holding is quite clear that “[n]o part of the State Insurance Fund, a trust fu/nd for the benefit of employers and employees, may be used for administrative purposes except as provided in Section 1123.312, Revised Code, and the Industrial Commission was without authority to adopt its resolution attempting to transfer money from the State Insurance Fund to the general fund in accordance with the appropriation act.” (Emphasis added.) Id.,
In its third constitutional argument, the majority reasons:
“In Thompson, this court expressly approved the use of SIF proceeds to fund an integral component of the workers’ compensation scheme. With its interpretation of Ohio Adm.Code 4123-6-13, the BWC simply seeks to apply SIF proceeds to fund what this court has already described as an ‘integral part’ of the HPP — the medical-management services performed by the MCOs. Haylett, 87
In Thompson, we held that “[t]he transfer of State Insurance Fund investment income to the Disabled Workers’ Relief Fund, pursuant to R.C. 4123.411, violates neither Section 35, Article II, nor Section 28, Article II of the Ohio Constitution.” Id.,
The Disabled Workers’ Relief Fund (“DWRF”) was created in 1953 as a subsidy to certain recipients of workers’ compensation. 125 Ohio Laws 506. “The creation of this subsidy was based upon the recognition that a large number of permanently and totally disabled claimants were receiving low levels of compensation, because benefits payable in a compensation claim are limited to those in effect at the time of injury, and inflation tended to victimize the recipients of such continuing benefits.” Fulton, Ohio Workers’ Compensation Law, supra, at 318, Section 10.6.
R.C. 4123.412 creates the DWRF “[f]or the relief of persons who are permanently and totally disabled as the result of injury or disease sustained in the course of their employment and who are receiving workers’ compensation which is payable to them by virtue of and under the laws of this state in amounts, the total of which, when combined with disability benefits received pursuant to the Social Security Act is less than three hundred forty-two dollars per month adjusted annually.” These are also the eligibility requirements for a participant in the DWRF. R.C. 4123.413.
The DWRF is obviously designed to pay supplemental benefits to a designated group of injured workers. “The recipients of the DWRF subsidy, namely those permanently and totally disabled employees who have previously been awarded workers’ compensation, are clearly members of this designated group.” Thompson, supra,
As we explained in Thompson:
“The General Assembly is afforded substantial discretion to implement a comprehensive workers’ compensation program and it is not the function of the judiciary to question the wisdom of the General Assembly’s exercise of its permissive powers under Section 35, Article II, so long as these powers are used in furtherance of the constitutionally enumerated purpose. The DWRF subsidy received by eligible permanently and totally disabled workers infuses Section 35, Article II with a meaningfulness that is fully consistent with the goals that prompted the people of Ohio to approve Section 35, Article II in the first place.
Accordingly, we agreed with the commission in Thompson that “the transfer of SIF investment funds to the DWRF is qualitatively different from the diversion of SIF funds proscribed in Corrugated Container. The DWRF is an integral component of Ohio’s comprehensive workers’ compensation program and, therefore, the use of SIF investment income to fund the DWRF does not contravene the principle enunciated in Corrugated Container.” Id. at 247, 1 OBR at 267,
The obvious distinction between Corrugated Container and Thompson lies in the qualitative difference between using SIF funds to pay for administrative costs and using SIF funds to provide compensation to workers who are injured in the course of their employment. It is in this sense that we considered the DWRF to be an integral component of the workers’ compensation program in Thompson. It can hardly be considered the intent of this single sentence in Thompson to change the nature of the SIF from a trust fund for the payment of compensation and benefits to injured workers to an all-purpose fund that can be used to pay the operating expenses of any constituent part of the entire workers’ compensation system.
The same qualitative difference between administrative costs and workers’ compensation that led us to distinguish Corrugated Container in Thompson should now compel us to distinguish Thompson. While the medical-management services of the MCOs may be an “ ‘integral part’ of the HPP,” the HPP is qualitatively different from the DWRF. The DWRF program is established to pay supplemental compensation to injured workers; the HPP has no compensation component. Thus, the use of SIF contributions to fund the HPP contravenes the principle enunciated in Corrugated Container.
For all of the foregoing reasons, the bureau acted without statutory or constitutional authority in diverting SIF contributions to pay administrative and performance incentive fees to MCOs under the HPP, and the judgment of the court of appeals should be affirmed.
