STATE of Alaska, DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND SOCIAL SERVICES, DIVISION OF PUBLIC ASSISTANCE, Petitioner, v. Lester GROSS, Respondent.
No. S-15339.
Supreme Court of Alaska.
April 24, 2015.
On this record, we conclude that, by declining to testify, Wagner failed to preserve his Miranda claim for appellate review.
V. CONCLUSION
We therefore AFFIRM the court of appeals’ decision affirming Wagner‘s conviction.
WINFREE, Justice, not participating.
Notes
While
We conclude that, while state law does not require the Department to track the federal analysis exactly when it assesses eligibility for state interim benefits, the Department‘s application of the law erroneously excludes a category of applicants who will be found to be disabled for purposes of federal benefits and who therefore should be entitled to interim assistance. We therefore affirm the superior court‘s decision in part, reverse it in part, and remand for further proceedings.
Kathryn R. Vogel, Assistant Attorney General, Anchorage, and Michael C. Geraghty, Attorney General, Juneau, for Petitioner.
Mark Regan, Disability Law Center of Alaska, Anchorage, for Respondent.
Before: FABE, Chief Justice, WINFREE, STOWERS, MAASSEN, and BOLGER, Justices.
OPINION
MAASSEN, Justice.
I. INTRODUCTION
An applicant for federal disability benefits applied for state benefits that are intended to provide basic assistance while the federal application is pending. The Division of Public Assistance—the division of the Alaska Department of Health and Social Services that administers the state program1—denied these interim benefits, relying on a subset of the criteria that the Social Security Administration uses to determine eligibility for federal benefits. The superior court reversed this decision, holding that Alaska law required the Department to apply the same federal substantive criteria and procedural requirements to its determination of eligibility for state interim benefits. The Department pe-
II. FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS
A. Facts
Certain persons who are disabled and unable to work are entitled to federal Supplemental Security Income (SSI) benefits administered by the United States Social Seсurity Administration.2 In determining whether an applicant is “disabled” and therefore entitled to SSI benefits, the Social Security Administration uses a five-step process outlined in federal regulations.3 Steps one and two are satisfied if the Administration finds first that the applicant is not currently engaged in “substantial gainful activity”4 and second that the applicant has a “determinable physical or mental impairment” lasting at least one year or likely to result in death, significantly limiting the applicant‘s “physical or mental ability to do basic work activities.”5 If these first two steps are satisfied, an individual may qualify for SSI benefits at step three, where the Administration considers whether the medical severity of the applicant‘s impairment “meets or equals” a disability listed in federal regulations.6
At step five the Social Security Administration considers the applicant‘s ability to do other work in the national economy;8 if the applicant can perform other work, he or she is not disabled and not entitled to SSI benefits. The burden shifts at this step of the federal analysis, and the Administration, rather than the applicant, is “responsible for providing evidence that demonstrates that other work exists in significant numbers in the national economy that [the applicant] can do, given [the applicant‘s] residual functional capacity and vocational factors.”9 Burden-shifting requires that the Administration present the testimony of a vocational expert when other methods of proof are insufficient.10 If the Administration fails to carry its burden, the applicant is considered disabled and entitled to SSI benefits.11
Determining eligibility for SSI can be a time-consuming process, lasting many months. To help alleviate hardship during the long application period, state interim assistance programs pay “assistance financed from State or local funds . . . furnished for meeting basic needs” of SSI applicants while their eligibility for federal benefits is being determined.12 The federal government reimburses Alaska for the interim assistance payments the State makes to individuals who are ultimately found to be entitled to SSI,13 but the State is responsible for determining the parameters of its interim assistance program, including thе requirements for eligibility.14
Alaska‘s interim assistance program is governed by
B. Proceedings
Lester Gross applied for federal SSI benefits and state interim assistance benefits in December 2011. He claimed eligibility for both based on a serious mental disorder. The Department denied Gross‘s application for interim assistance. Based on information that Gross provided and using the five-step SSI analysis, the Department‘s disability adjudicator determined at step five that Gross was not likely to be found eligible for SSI because thеre was “other work in the national economy” that he could perform, and that he was therefore not eligible for interim assistance.
Gross requested a hearing, which was held in March 2012. The Department presented testimony from its disability adjudicator but not from a vocational expert. The hearing officer, interpreting
After both Gross and the Department filed proposals for agency action,18 the Department‘s deputy commissioner issued a final decision.19 The deputy commissioner ruled that ”
7 AAC 40.180 does not require the Department to present evidence through a vocational expert, and does not place any burden on the Department to prove[ ] (as SSA is required to do at step 5 of its analysis)[ ] that there is particular work in the national economy that the applicant is able to perform.
Accordingly, because the hearing officer had determined that Gross was not likely to be found disabled at step three of the SSI analysis—finding him disabled only at step five—the deputy commissioner determined that Gross was not eligible for state interim assistance.
Gross appealed the deputy commissioner‘s decision to the superior court, which reversed it. Based on our decisions in Moore v. Beirne21 and State, Department of Health & Social Services v. Okuley,22 the superior court concluded that the Department, when determining eligibility for the state interim assistance program, must follow all five steps of the SSI analysis.
The Department petitioned for review. It argued that neither
We granted the petition.
III. STANDARDS OF REVIEW
“When a superior court acts as an intermediate appellate court in an administrative matter, we review the merits of the agency‘s decision.”23
The agency‘s decision in this case is based on its application of a regulation. When examining regulations that were properly promulgated, “[w]e limit our review to ‘whether the regulations are consistent with and reasonably necessary to carry out the purposes of the statutory provisions and whether the regulations are reasonable and not arbitrary.‘”24 “In making the consistency determination, we use our independent judgment unless the ‘issue involves agenсy expertise or the determination of fundamental policy questions on subjects committed to an agency.‘”25 “But the specific form our independent review takes is distinct from pure de novo review. We apply the substitution-of-judgment standard,” by which we “adopt the rule of law that is most persuasive in light of precedent, reason, and policy, but in doing so we give due deliberative weight ‘to what the agency has done, especially where the agency interpretation is longstanding.‘”26 In this case, the Department‘s interpretation is due little deference based on longevity;27 Gross‘s case appears to be the first in which the Department has adopted the interpretation at issue here, as the deputy commissioner noted in her decision.28
IV. DISCUSSION
The Department argues that
A. Why We Apply The Substitution Of Judgment Standard Of Review
The Department argues that determining eligibility for interim assistance is “a policy decision and a judgment squarely within the agency‘s area of expertise,” which we should review only to determine whether it has a reasonable basis. We use reasonable basis review “when the interpretation at issue implicates agency expertise or the determination of fundamental policies within the scope of the agency‘s statutory func-
In support of its argument for reasonable basis review, the Department cites Marathon Oil Co. v. State.30 In that case we examined whether the Department of Natural Resources had permissibly denied a lessee‘s request to apply retroactively a specific methodology for calculating royalties on gas leases.31 We found the governing statute ambiguous as to “whether retroactive contract pricing is permitted.”32 We applied the reasonable basis standard of review because of our recognition that “[a]llowing retroactivity could have important consequences for how royalties are assessed and paid,” consequences the agency was more qualified than the courts to weigh.33 We observed that “[t]he state royalty and audit system is complicated, and DNR has expertise in deciding when retroactive application makes sense within that system.”34 We also noted that we were “especially inclined to defer when the agency‘s statutory interpretation is long-standing,” as it was in Marathon Oil.35
The question in this case is whether the Department may, consistent with the interim assistance statute, definitionally exclude persons who are eligible for SSI from eligibility for state interim assistance. Unlike Marathon Oil, answering that question does not require the “resolution of policy questions which lie within the agency‘s expertise and are inseparable from the facts underlying the agency‘s decision.”36 Rather, the answer depends on the legislature‘s intent in creating the interim assistance program. “The question whether [the Department] properly interpreted the legislature‘s mandate . . . is answerable through ‘statutory interpretation or other analysis of legal relationships about which courts have specialized knowledge and experience.’ Because this preliminary legal question resides within the traditional province of judicial review and involves no technical expertise,”37 we employ the substitution of judgment standard.38
The Department also urges us to defer to its interрretation because the adult public assistance statutes—of which the interim assistance program is a part—generally grant it the authority to “adopt regulations, not inconsistent with law, defining need, [and] prescribing the conditions of eligibility for assistance.”39 But the grant of regulatory authority in this case is unlike the broad grants of authority at issue in cases in which we have deferred to an agency decision.40 Instead, because the issue is one of statutory interpretation, we apply the substitution of judgment standard, giving little deference to the agency‘s new interpretation of the law, as
Finally, in deciding this appeal we do not need to address whether the Department‘s decision of Gross‘s case has a reasonable basis in the regulation.42 For purposes of our decision we assume that the Department‘s application of
B. A Failure To Consider Steps Four And Five Of The SSI Analysis In Determining Eligibility For Interim Assistance Is Inconsistent With AS 47.25.455 .
The Department argues that nothing in
Alaska Statute
“[W]e interpret [a] statute according to reason, practicality, and common sense, considering the meaning of the statute‘s language, its legislative history, and its purpose.”44 The language and structure of the relevant statutes do not directly answer the question whether the test for state interim assistance must be the same as that for SSI, but they do suggest that the two should
We directly addressed the interim assistance statute once before.46 In Moore v. Beirne, we held that
The Department is partly correct. As we noted in Moore, the legislature in creating the interim assistance program intended to codify the Department‘s past practice of paying state benefits to SSI applicants while their entitlement to federal benefits was being determined.49 At that time, eligibility for interim assistance was assessed simply through the report of an accredited physician about the applicant‘s likely entitlement to federal benefits,50 a process far less rigorous than the current one. Nothing in Moore requires the Department to exactly replicate the SSI analysis when it assesses eligibility for interim assistance.
However, as we noted in Moore, “[t]he purpose of interim assistance is to alleviate hardship on applicants for SSI during the application period,”51 and the history of the program confirms that the legislature intended benefits to be broadly available to meet this purpose. It was recognized during development of the program that the waiting time for a determination of SSI eligibility was growing longer, and that assistance otherwise available to meet applicants’ basic
And as already noted, the method of assessing eligibility at the time of the statute‘s passage involved a much less rigorous process; rather than satisfying the federal eligibility criteria, an applicant for interim assistance had merely to “demonstrate[ ] some likelihood of meeting the statutory criteria for eligibility.”54 As the legislature intended to adopt the program currently in operation when it codified interim assistance,55 this again suggests a broadly available benefit. The interim assistance statute has been amended since its codification, but nothing in the later legislative history alters its broadly inclusive purpose.
Also aiding our analysis is the rule “that a remedial statute is to be liberally construed to effectuate its purposes.”56 Federal courts have recognized that thе Social Security Act is remedial and must therefore be liberally construed.57 We recognize the same remedial purposes in Alaska‘s interim assistance program, which—as part of Alaska‘s adult public assistance statutes—is intended “to furnish financial assistance as far as practicable to needy aged, blind, and disabled persons, and to help them attain self-support and or self-care.”58
The Department‘s interpretation of
V. CONCLUSION
We AFFIRM the superior court‘s decision in part, REVERSE it in part, and REMAND to the Department for proceedings consistent with this opinion.
Wilburn D. JACKSON, Appellant,
v.
STATE of Alaska, Appellee.
No. A-10835.
Court of Appeals of Alaska.
March 1, 2015.
Before: MANNHEIMER, Chief Judge, ALLARD, Judge, and HANLEY, District Court Judge.1
Heller v. State, Dep‘t of Revenue, 314 P.3d 69, 73 (Alaska 2013) (“Because the interpretation involves legislative intent rather than agency expertise, we aрply independent review here.“).ment‘s interpretation, therefore, consideration of vocational factors could only serve to exclude from state benefits those who would be entitled to federal benefits at step three.
