OPINION
I. INTRODUCTION
Thе Office of Rate Review, a division of the State Department of Health and Social Services (DHSS), set a Medicaid payment rate for North Star Hospital based on a 2005 home office cost report that did not reflect a substantial increase in costs incurred by North Star in 2006. While making its determination, the Office of Rate Review had access to an unaudited version of a 2006 home office cost report that reflected these increased costs. The audited version of the 2006 home offiсe cost report was delayed through no fault of either party.
The Office of Rate Review refused to grant North Star's request for an interim rate pending the audit of the 2006 report or to reconsider the rate once it received the audited 2006 report. In response, North Star administratively challenged the Office of Rate Review's rate determination. The DHSS Commissioner concluded that the Office of Rate Review's refusal to consider data from the unaudited 2006 report was proper and thаt the Office of Rate Review was not required to grant North Star a temporary rate preceding completion of the audit of the 2006 report. The Commissioner also concluded that DHSS did not have jurisdiction to determine whether 7 Alaska Administrative Code (AAC) 150.170(b)(12), which establishes which home office costs are to be considered, was in conflict with AS 47.07.070, which requires that the rate be based upon reasonable costs. North Star appealed the decision to the superior court and the superi- or court reversed, concluding that because the audited 2006 home office cost statement was overdue at no fault of North Star, it was error for the Office of Rate Review to refuse to grant North Star's request for a temporary rate in order to consider the audited version of the 2006 report. We affirm the superior court's decision.
II. FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS
A. Facts
At least once every four years, the Office of Rate Review must determine prospective Medicaid base payment rates in compliance with the mеthodology and criteria established in 7 AAC 150.160.
One component of the prospective base rate calculation is the home office cost
[Alllowable home office costs may not exceed the most recent Medicare-audited Medicare home office cost statement available in the department's files 60 days before the beginning of a re-based prospective rate year; if the Medicare-audited Medicare home office cost statement is not from the same year as the facility's base year, the costs will be inflated to the facility's base year using the mеthodology de-seribed in 7 AAC 150.150.
At the time of the hearing, the fiscal year 2005 audited home office cost report for North Star Hospital was on file 60 days before the beginning of the re-basing year. But before the hearing, North Star submitted to the Office of Rate Review an unaudited fiscal year 2006 home office cost report that reflected a substantial-almost 100%-increase in its home office costs. The audited version of the 2006 report was unavailable because, despite North Star's timely submission of the 2006 reрort to the federal auditor, the federal auditor was late in completing the audited version of that home office cost report.
In a letter to the Office of Rate Review on December 17, 2007, North Star objected to the payment rate based on the 2005 home office cost report. North Star argued that the base rate did not comply with AS 47.07.070(b)(1), which requires that when "determining the rates of payment for health facilities for a fiscal year, the department shall ... set rates for facilities thаt are based on ... reasonable costs related to patient care."
Under 7 AAC 150.080(b), the Office of Rate Review may establish temporary prospective rates at its discretion.
On December 28, 2007, North Star was informed that the Office of Rate Review had set its base year rate, effective January 2008, at $562.12 "per patient day" using the audited 2005 home office cost report already on file. On January 22, 2008, North Star again requested that the Office of Rate Review use the unaudited 2006 home office cost report instead of the 2005 home office cost report or that it delаy its decision until the audited 2006 home office cost report was returned by the fiscal intermediary.
On February 18, 2008, the Office of Rate Review refused both of North Star's requests. On March 13, 2008, North Star received the federal audit of the 2006 home office cost report. North Star sent the audited report to the Office of Rate Review that same day, and the audited numbers were virtually identical to the home office costs found in the unaudited 2006 home office cost report. Reliance on the audited 2006 home offiсe cost report, rather than the 2005 home office cost report, would have resulted in an increased payment to North Star of $30.19 per patient day.
B. Proceedings
North Star appealed the Office of Rate Review's decision to the Commissioner of the Department of Health and Social Services pursuant to AS 44.62.540.
North Star appealed this decision to the superior court under AS 44.62.560.
The superior court further reasoned that DHSS "committed error by refusing to set the Medicaid payment rates based on reasonable costs related to patient care, thereby setting North Star's Medicaid payment rate too low." The superior court noted that state and federal regulations also require the agency to follow Alaska's State Medicaid Plan,
The superior court further noted that "although [DHSS] argues that they followed their regulation to the 'letter,' they did not do so in regard to [the Providence Medical Centers]" when they allowed the centers to submit additional information long after DHSS's internal deadlines had passed. The superior court concluded that since "being overdue [was] no fault of North Star," the audited 2006 report should have been considered and that "[bly allowing such supplemental information to be submitted, the department would have been able to determine the most up-to-date assessment of the reasonable costs related to patient care." The superior court remanded to the Office of Rate Review with instructions to use North Star's audited 2006 home office cost report to set North Star's base rate.
DHSS appeals.
III. STANDARD OF REVIEW
When the superior court acts as an intermediate court of appeal, "we independently review the merits of the underlying administrative decision."
IV. DISCUSSION
In State of Alaska, Department of Health & Social Services v. Valley Hospital Association, Inc., we addressed a similar question: whether DHSS's rate-setting for Medicaid reimbursement was arbitrary and capricious because it did not reflect the most recent cost data.
We held that DHSS acted arbitrarily and capriciously in setting the Medicaid reimbursement ratе for Valley Hospital because "most importantly, at the time it calculated Valley's reimbursement rate, DHSS's Medic aid staff appeared to have known that there was a significant discrepancy between Valley's [submitted] log data and the [more accurate billings] report, and that using the log data would result in a lower reimbursement rate."
DHSS argues that in the present case there are "good reasons to prefer audited data" and to "use a statement available before the new rate year begins." DHSS explains that an audited report is superior to an unaudited report, that DHSS cannot be responsible for auditing reports, and that DHSS staff needs at least 60 days to caleu-late rates. All of these assertions may be true. But regulations expressly permit the Office of Rate Review to grant a temporary rate, and DHSS concedes that any subsequent discrepancy between the temporary rate and the final rate will be adjusted, allowing for reimbursement of the overpayment or underpayment.
DHSS further notes that compliance with 7 AAC 150.170(b)(12)'s requirement that it use the data available 60 days before the rate year begins provides DHSS staff thе time needed to calculate the rates for facilities. This, DHSS contends, allows the "prospective rate system" to work. In City of Cordova v. Medicaid Rate Commission, Department of Health & Social Services, we recognized that a prospective rate setting system was designed to save costs.
We understand that 7 AAC 150.170(b)(12)'s 60-day requirement is part of this prospective rate regime. But allowing the four-year prospective rate to be set based on the hospital's more recent 2006 cost data does not, as DHSS claims, undermine the purpose of the prospective rate system. DHSS has the discretion to grant temporary rates under 7 AAC 150.0830(b), and in fact it granted temporary rates to both of the Providence Medical Centers, adjusting their final rates based on updated data in March 2008, the same month that the federal auditor completed North Star's audited 2006 home office cost report. And facilities still have an incentive to operate efficiently while under a temporary rate structure because it is uncontested that any discrepancy between the temporary rate and the permanent rate will be reimbursed to the damaged party.
Additionally, there is no reason to believe that applying the temporary rate in this case would create an exception that would devour the 60-day rule. Here, North Star had done everything necessary to provide the Office of Rate Review with the most up-to-date report, with the expectation that the federal auditor would complete the report in a timely fashion. North Star's conduct cannot be faulted because the failure to produce the audited 2006 home cost report on time was not something that North Star could control.
Finally, North Star is correct in its argument that AS 47.07.070 requires that the rate be based upon "reasonable costs related to patient care" and that the Alaska State Medicaid Plan allows for an adjustment of rates when "significant changes ... would impact the rates." The 2005 home office cost statement states North Star's costs were $613,056. The more recent 2006 home office cost statement states North Star's home office costs were a significantly higher $1,214,888. DHSS acknowledges that reliance on the 2006 audited report is "advantageous" to North Star because it would result in a higher reimbursement to North Star, which North Star estimates totals "hundreds
In summary, the present case and Valley Hospital are similar in a most important respect: At the time DHSS calculated both hospitals' reimbursement rates, DHSS's Medicaid staff appeared to have known that there was a significant discrepancy between the most current data available and the outdated data it relied on, and that using outdated data "would result in a lower reimbursement rate."
v. CONCLUSION
For these reasons, we AFFIRM the superior court's decision reversing DHSS's decision.
Notes
. 7 AAC 150.160(a) (2012) provides:
The department will use the following methodology and criteria in reviewing and establishing prospective payment rates for the Medicaid program:
(1) the department will consider the following with the relаtive importance of each criterion being a matter of department discretion:
(A) whether the costs are related to patient care and are attributable to the Medicaid program;
*577 (B) whether the payment rate is reasonably related to costs;
(2) the department will set annual rates established for the facility's fiscal year;
(3) base years may be changed to more current years and may be subject to audit; the department may determine the timing for a re-basing under this parаgraph and whether and when to conduct an audit;
(4) for all facilities, except facilities with rate agreements established under 7 AAC 150.190, the department
(A) will perform a re-basing for the first fiscal year beginning after notification to the facilities that a re-basing will be done;
(B) will perform a re-basing no less than every four years; and
(C) may perform a re-basing sooner than every four years.
. Home office costs are the costs attributable to the central headquarters of Medicaid providers with multiple facilities.
. AS 47.07.070(b) states:
In determining the rates of payment for health faсilities for a fiscal year, the department shall, within the limit of appropriations made by the legislature for the department's programs under this chapter and under AS 47.25.120-47.25.300 for that fiscal year, including anticipated available federal revenue for that fiscal year, set rates for facilities that are based on (1) reasonable costs related to patient care; and (2) audit and inspection results and reports, when the audit or inspection is conducted under AS 47.07.074.
. 7 AAC 150.030(b) provides: "The department mаy establish temporary prospective payment rates. The final rate approved by the department supersedes the temporary rate, and payments will be adjusted in accordance with the final rate."
. 7 AAC 150.200()(2) defines desk review as: "[Tlhe department's review that is conducted without the auditor visiting the facility being desk-reviewed for the purpose of conducting tests or the initial phase of a field audit."
. 7 AAC 150.200(b)(3) provides:
[A] facility may file with the department a response to the department's field audit or desk rеview report no more than 40 days after the date the department issues the report; the department may make additional related adjustments if the facility makes objections to the department's adjustments; the department will provide to the facility a description of any additional adjustments(.]
. AS 44.62.540(a) provides in relevant part: ''The agency may order a reconsideration of all or part of the case on its own motion or on petition of a party. To be considered by the agency, a petition for reconsideration must be filed with the agency within 15 days after delivery or mailing of the decision. The power to order a reconsideration expires 30 days after the delivery or mailing of a decision to the respondent."
. AS 44.62.560(a) provides in relevant part: "Judicial review by the superior court of a final administrative order may be had by filing a notice of appeal in accordance with the applicable rules of court governing appeals in civil matters."
. See AS 47.07.040, which provides:
The department shall prepare a state plan in accordance with the provisions of 42 U.S.C. 1396-1396p (Title XIX, Social Security Act, Medical Assistance) and submit it for approval to the United States Department of Health and Human Services. The plan shall designate that the Department of Health and Social Services is the single state agency to administer this plan. The department shall act for the state in any negotiations relative to the submission and approval of the plan. The depаrtment may make those arrangements or regulatory changes, not inconsistent with law, as may be required under federal law to obtain and retain approval of the United States Department of Health and Human Services to secure for the state the optimum federal payment under the provisions of 42 U.S.C. 1396-1396p (Title XIX, Social Security Act, Medical Assistance).
See also 42 C.F.R. § 447.253(i) (2012); "The Medicaid agency must pay for inpatient hospital and long term care services using rates determined in accordаnce with methods and standards specified in an approved State plan."
. Usibelli Coal Mine, Inc. v. State, Dep't of Natural Res.,
. Handley v. State, Dep't of Revenue,
. Id.
. Id.
. Id.
. Id.
.
. Id. at 581.
. Id. at 582.
. Id.
. Id. at 582.
. Id. at 583.
. Id. at 587.
. Id. at 586.
. Id. (citing Beverly Enters. v. Miss. Div. of Medicaid, 808 $o.2d 939, 942-43 (Miss.2002)).
. Id. at 587.
. DHSS qualifies its concession by asserting that rerunning billings under a newly established permanent rate is "a resource-intensive process that creates administrative and fiscal burdens." It also argues that "[if the provider has not properly budgeted [for the possibility of underpayment], it may cause serious problems to the provider" and "where the state underpays under a temporary rate, the department may have to seek additional funding from the legislature to make up a shortfall." But these reasons are insufficient to justify setting a rate, based on outdated data, which does not accurately reflect the reasonable costs related to patient care. Moreover, at the same time the Office of Rate Review denied North Star's request for a temporary rate, it granted temporary rates to Providence Alaska Medical Center and Providence Kodiak Island Medical Center, indicating that the administrative burdens are not insurmountable.
.
. Id.
. Valley Hosp.,
