At the turn of the millennium, the Fund was created by
the state at the prodding of the federal government to deposit $500 million of federal
Medicaid money as part of an agreement closing out a loophole a number of states
had enjoyed that multiplied their receipts, but Louisiana more than any other
by routing so much Medicaid bucks through the charity hospital system. Although
backers claimed the principal should not be touched, the law clearly allows
that any of it can be used to support funding paid to nursing homes, while the
interest earnings from the principal essentially could be used for any purpose.
Last year, that latter possibility got removed through a constitution amendment,
making this an even sweeter deal for nursing homes, which long have been
favored by state policy despite their increasing inefficiency in care relative to
home- and community-based solutions. Until the time the fund was created,
policy deliberately favored them that created a situation where the typical
nursing home in the state received over 80 percent of its revenue for Medicaid
and among all of them the state had the nation’s highest
per capita state payments to nursing
homes with the lowest rate of bed occupancy.
But as a result of a court
decision not long after all of this, the state was forced to withdraw from
its warehousing strategy, especially concerning the developmentally disabled,
as it was judicially remanded to place all those it could practically into home
or community settings where aggregate expenditures would be lower. Nursing home
operators incorrectly had bet the gravy train would continue to roll for them and
built accordingly. Consequently, they went crying to policy-makers to have taxpayers
bail them out for their mistake and arrogance.
And they got it. In 2006,
Gov. Kathleen
Blanco and the Legislature put into law a case mix reimbursement
methodology highly favorable to propping up nursing homes, which would come to
include payments for empty beds that exceeded $20 million a year. At the time,
the Fund, which only gets small amounts of revenue from specialty license plate
sales and penalties paid by nursing homes for violations, buoyed by a good
investment climate and with a state budget swelled by massive federal spending
after the hurricane disasters of 2005, was rolling in dough over $800 million.
But as the artificial state economy wore off, the national recession
hit, and Pres. Barack Obama’s
economic policies continue to sabotage any meaningful recovery, the fund began
to dwindle as the interest earnings went out the door to replace reduced state operating
budget contributions to escalating Medicaid expenditures to nursing homes. This
allowed their rates hardly to decrease while many other part of state
government retracted more severely, if not entire programs lapsing. By 2011 the
balance barely was above the original principal. Then that also began going to
nursing homes, exacerbated by the 2012 decision of the federal government to
reduce significantly Medicaid reimbursements that the state had enjoyed under a
special post-disaster exception as well as by a one-off decision by the federal
government that the original amount had been too much and the return of that
chunk.
At the end of this just-started fiscal year, it now is budgeted to end
up at just half of its original level, which has led some
outside of government to complain. But this is a logical consequence of
policy that biased in favor of nursing homes to the point it unwisely
constrained other policy-making options.
All along, the state’s strategy has been to use taxpayer resources to
give nursing homes special privileges until they can tide over the demographic
changes that (both in fertility and in state out-migration only reversed in the
past five years), in collaboration with the poor decisions made by them, have
created the crisis. In essence, perhaps in a decade when baby boomers begin
needing such services and swell demand, the overbuilt space intended to follow
the developmentally disabled warehousing strategy will find use, then volumes
will be such that the empty bed subsidy will disappear and rates can be lowered
to a more market-realistic level, obviating need to dip into the Fund.
Until then, the money sits almost uselessly (and in a tough investment environment
for low-risk instruments where the Fund must disproportionately place its funds,
given the Obama strategy) unless it is used for a purpose clearly outlined in
the law, reimbursement of nursing homes. The amendment further made its higher balance
counterproductive by not permitting fund sweeps (even though they never had
been attempted before). Even if the state had been unwise to privilege nursing
homes so much that has led to reimbursement problems, it shouldn’t compound the
error by making Louisiana taxpayers cough up when draining a portion of the
fund will solve the problem.
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