Determining Eligibility for Domiciliary Care, 60417-60424 [2023-18921]
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[FR Doc. 2023–18664 Filed 8–31–23; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 1410–30–P
DEPARTMENT OF VETERANS
AFFAIRS
38 CFR Parts 17 and 51
RIN 2900–AR61
Determining Eligibility for Domiciliary
Care
Department of Veterans Affairs.
Proposed rule.
AGENCY:
ACTION:
The Department of Veterans
Affairs (VA) proposes to amend its
medical regulations and State Veterans
Home (State home) regulations. VA
proposes to update the criteria used by
VA in determining whether a veteran
has no adequate means of support
relative to eligibility for domiciliary
care, and to shift the focus of the
regulatory language from the veterans’
ability to pursue substantially gainful
employment to a broader consideration
of available support systems and
medical conditions or disabilities that
might impact the veteran’s ability to live
independently. In addition, we propose
amending our State home regulations to
implement VA’s authority to waive
certain eligibility requirements for
receipt of State home domiciliary care
per diem.
DATES: Comments must be received by
VA on or before October 31, 2023.
ADDRESSES: Comments must be
submitted through www.regulations.gov.
Except as provided below, comments
received before the close of the
comment period will be available at
www.regulations.gov for public viewing,
inspection, or copying, including any
personally identifiable or confidential
business information that is included in
a comment. We post the comments
received before the close of the
comment period on the following
website as soon as possible after they
have been received: https://
www.regulations.gov. VA will not post
on Regulations.gov public comments
that make threats to individuals or
institutions or suggest that the
commenter will take actions to harm an
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SUMMARY:
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individual. VA encourages individuals
not to submit duplicative comments. We
will post acceptable comments from
multiple unique commenters even if the
content is identical or nearly identical
to other comments. Any public
comment received after the comment
period’s closing date is considered late
and will not be considered in the final
rulemaking.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Jennifer Burden, Ph.D., National Mental
Health Director, Mental Health
Residential Rehabilitation and
Treatment Programs (11MHSP),
Veterans Health Administration,
Department of Veterans Affairs, 810
Vermont Avenue NW, Washington, DC
20420; (540) 819–1190 (This is not a
toll-free number.)
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: Section
1710(b)(2) of title 38, United States Code
(U.S.C.) authorizes VA to provide
needed domiciliary care to veterans
whose annual income does not exceed
the applicable maximum annual rate of
VA pension and to veterans VA
determines have no adequate means of
support. Historically, domiciliary care
in VA has primarily been focused on
delivering care to older residents who
cannot live independently but who do
not require admission to a nursing
home, although the scope of domiciliary
care provided by VA has expanded over
the decades to meet the changing needs
of veterans.
The term domiciliary care is defined
in § 17.30(b) of title 38, Code of Federal
Regulations (CFR), which reflects the
two alternative models of domiciliary
care VA is authorized to provide to
eligible veterans. Domiciliary care is
defined at § 17.30(b)(1)(i) to mean the
furnishing of a temporary home to a
veteran, embracing the furnishing of
shelter, food, clothing, and other
comforts of home, including necessary
medical services. This model focuses on
the needs of veterans eligible for VA
domiciliary care who cannot live
independently but who do not require
admission to a nursing home. While VA
retains the authority to directly provide
domiciliary care under this model, it
currently pays a per diem to State
homes to provide this model of
domiciliary care to eligible veterans.
The statutory authority for the payment
program is set forth at 38 U.S.C. 1741–
43. VA has published regulations
governing this program at 38 CFR part
51. VA regulates eligibility for VA
payment of State home domiciliary care
per diem at § 51.51.
The second model for providing
domiciliary care is defined in
§ 17.30(b)(1)(ii). There, domiciliary care
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is defined to mean the furnishing of a
day hospital program consisting of
intensive supervised rehabilitation and
treatment provided in a therapeutic
residential setting for residents with
mental health or substance use
disorders and co-occurring medical or
psychosocial needs such as
homelessness and unemployment. This
model focuses on the needs of veterans
eligible for domiciliary care and who are
receiving care through VA’s Mental
Health Residential Rehabilitation
Treatment Program, including
Domiciliary Care for Homeless Veterans
Program; General Domiciliary;
Domiciliary Substance Use Programs;
and Domiciliary Post-Traumatic Stress
Disorder Programs. Today, a VA
domiciliary consists of intensive
supervised rehabilitation and treatment
provided in a therapeutic residential
setting that is aligned with VA medical
facilities.
Veterans must meet the eligibility
criteria found in 38 CFR 17.46(b) as well
as §§ 17.47(b)(2) and 17.47(c) to receive
domiciliary care in a VA domiciliary.
Per § 17.46(b) domiciliary care may be
furnished when needed to any veteran
whose annual income does not exceed
the maximum annual rate of pension
payable to a veteran in need of regular
aid and attendance, or any veteran who
VA determines had no adequate means
of support. There is an additional
requirement in that paragraph that the
veteran must be able to perform certain
listed activities related to self-care. In
turn, 38 CFR 17.47(b)(2) addresses how
VA determines whether a veteran has no
adequate means of support for purposes
of eligibility for domiciliary care.
Finally, 38 CFR 17.47(c) establishes that
to be provided domiciliary care, the
veteran must have a disability, disease,
or defect which is essentially chronic in
type and is producing disablement of
such degree and probable persistency as
will incapacitate from earning a living
for a prospective period. Eligibility
criteria found in §§ 17.46 and 17.47 are
applicable to domiciliary care provided
by VA in residential rehabilitation
treatment venues. The same eligibility
criteria generally are reflected in current
38 CFR 51.51 and are applicable to State
home domiciliary veterans for purposes
of per diem payment eligibility.
We propose multiple changes to our
regulations. Initially, we propose to
make a technical change in part 17 to
remove the word domiciliary from a
regulation that does not address
domiciliary care. VA also proposes
amending both Part 17 and 51
regulations that address how VA
determines whether a veteran has no
adequate means of support for purposes
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of eligibility for domiciliary care or
domiciliary care per diem. VA proposes
to amend its regulations to update the
criteria used by VA in determining
whether a veteran has no adequate
means of support relative to eligibility
for domiciliary care, and to shift the
focus in the regulatory language from
the veterans’ ability to pursue
substantially gainful employment to a
broader consideration of the availability
of a family and/or community support
system to assist the veteran in living
independently, consideration of the
veteran’s ability to access that support
system, and any medical conditions or
disabilities that might impact that
ability. In addition, we propose
amending our State home regulations to
implement VA’s authority to waive
certain eligibility requirements for
eligibility for State home domiciliary
care per diem and to permit waivers of
these eligibility requirements retroactive
to January 5, 2021.
Section 17.43 Persons Entitled to
Hospital or Domiciliary Care.
The title of this section references
domiciliary care as does the
introductory sentence. However, the
remaining content focuses on eligibility
for hospital care. Eligibility for
domiciliary care, as noted above, is
addressed in subsequent sections of Part
17. We propose deleting references to
domiciliary care in § 17.43.
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Section 17.46 Eligibility for Hospital,
Domiciliary or Nursing Home Care of
Persons Discharged or Released From
Active Military, Naval, or Air Service.
Current § 17.46(b)(2) states that
domiciliary care may be provided to any
veteran who the Secretary determines
had no adequate means of support. This
paragraph further states that a veteran
eligible for domiciliary care must be
able to make rational and competent
decisions as to their desire to remain or
leave the facility and perform tasks
related to self-care listed at
§ 17.46(b)(2)(i)–(viii). One task on the
list, at paragraph (b)(2)(vii), provides
that the veterans must be able to share
in some measure, however slight, in the
maintenance and operation of the
facility. We propose removing this
requirement, as the purpose of
providing domiciliary care is treatment
and rehabilitation, and requiring the
veteran to participate in the
maintenance and operation of the
facility is inconsistent with that
purpose. For this reason, we propose
removing this requirement and
redesignating current (b)(2)(viii) as
(b)(2)(vii).
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Section 17.47 Considerations
Applicable in Determining Eligibility
for Hospital Care, Medical Services,
Nursing Home Care, or Domiciliary
Care.
Current § 17.47(b)(2) specifies that
‘‘. . . the phrase no adequate means of
support refers to an applicant for
domiciliary care whose annual income
exceeds the annual rate of pension for
a veteran in receipt of regular aid and
attendance, as defined in 38 U.S.C.
1503, but who is able to demonstrate to
competent VA medical authority, on the
basis of objective evidence, that deficits
in health and/or functional status render
the applicant incapable of pursuing
substantially gainful employment, as
determined by the Chief of Staff of the
VA medical center, and who is
otherwise without the means to provide
adequately for self, or be provided for in
the community.’’
The foci of current 38 CFR 17.47(b)(2)
is on the ability to engage in
substantially gainful employment and
on self-reliance and achieving or
sustaining independence in the
community. VA believes that
predicating eligibility for domiciliary
care on the ability of the veteran to
engage in gainful employment, is
inconsistent with delivery of patient
centered care. In patient-centered care,
an individual’s specific health needs
and desired health outcomes are the
driving force behind all health care
decisions. Historically, domiciliary care
in VA was primarily focused on
delivering care to older residents who
could not live independently but who
did not require admission to a nursing
home. The scope of domiciliary care
provided by VA has expanded over the
decades to meet the changing needs of
veterans. Today, VA domiciliary care
consists of intensive supervised
rehabilitation and treatment provided in
a therapeutic residential setting that is
aligned with VA medical facilities. As
discussed in further detail below, VA
proposes taking a different approach to
determining whether a veteran has no
adequate means of support.
To determine that a veteran has no
adequate means of support, current
§ 17.47(b)(2) requires a determination by
VA on separate but interconnected
issues. VA must determine that the
veteran has an annual income that
exceeds the annual rate of pension for
a veteran in receipt of regular aid and
attendance, as defined in 38 U.S.C.
1503. In addition, VA must determine
that the veteran is able to demonstrate
to VA medical authority that deficits in
health and/or functional status render
them incapable of pursuing
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substantially gainful employment and
that the veteran is otherwise without the
means to provide adequately for self, or
be provided for in the community. VA
does not consider the inability to pursue
substantially gainful employment as a
prime determinant in assessing a
veteran’s need for domiciliary care. VA
believes that it also needs to consider
the veteran’s condition, medical and
financial, in its entirety in the context
of the veteran’s ability to sustain and
maintain independence in the
community given available support
systems and the veteran’s ability to
access those systems. For the purpose of
determining eligibility for domiciliary
care, VA believes that veterans with
annual income above the rate set in the
current regulation could still not have
adequate means of support because
having adequate means of support may
also require the availability of a family
and/or community support system to
assist the veteran in living
independently and the veteran’s ability
to access that support system, which
takes into account any medical
conditions or disabilities that might
impact that ability.
VA proposes to amend § 17.47(b)(2) to
state that for purposes of determining
eligibility for domiciliary care, the
phrase no adequate means of support
refers to an applicant for or recipient of
domiciliary care whose annual income
exceeds the maximum annual rate of
pension for a veteran in receipt of
regular aid and attendance, as defined
in 38 U.S.C. 1503, whose deficits in
health and/or functional status may
render the veteran incapable of
achieving or sustaining independence in
the community as determined by the
Chief of Staff of the VA medical center,
or designee. In assessing a veteran’s
ability to achieve or sustain
independence in the community, the
Chief of Staff or designee will make a
determination of eligibility for
domiciliary care based on objective
evidence, considering factors including,
but not limited to: (i) the impact of the
severity of the veteran’s medical
condition, disabilities, and symptoms
on the veteran’s safety in the
community; (ii) the impact of the
severity of the veteran’s medical
condition, disabilities, and symptoms
on the veteran’s ability to provide selfcare; (iii) the availability of community
or family support systems; (iv) the
impact of the severity of the veteran’s
medical condition, disabilities, and
symptoms on the veteran’s ability to
access and utilize community support
systems; (v) the risk of loss of housing
in the community; (vi) the risk of loss
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of the veteran’s income; (vii) access to
outpatient mental health and substance
use disorder care; and (viii) the current
effectiveness of any outpatient mental
health and substance use disorder care
provided to the veteran.
VA believes that this list of factors
that must be considered, which is not
intended to be all inclusive, would
provide guidance to the Chief of Staff of
a VA medical center, or designee, on the
criteria that must be considered in
determining eligibility for domiciliary
care in those cases where the veteran’s
annual income exceeds the annual rate
of pension for a veteran in receipt of
regular aid and attendance.
Additionally, VA proposes to clarify
existing language in 38 CFR 17.47(b)(2)
by referring to the ‘‘maximum annual
rate of pension’’ as opposed to ‘‘annual
rate of pension’’. Section 17.47(b)(2)
addresses how VA determines whether
a veteran has no adequate means of
support, while § 17.46(b) provides the
eligibility requirements for domiciliary
care. Specifically, § 17.46(b)(1) refers to
the maximum annual rate of pension.
VA believes that this is a nonsubstantive change that will maintain
consistency with §§ 17.46(b)(1) and
17.47(b)(2). Further, VA proposes to add
‘‘or designee’’ when referring to the
Chief of Staff. The authority to make
determinations on eligibility for
domiciliary care is exercised by the
Chief of Staff of the VA medical center;
however, the Chief of Staff may delegate
this responsibility to another clinical
reviewer in the VA medical center.
We propose deleting paragraph (c)
and marking that paragraph designation
as Reserved. Current § 17.47(c)
addresses three distinct issues. It
provides a definition for the term
disability, disease, or defect; it clarifies
that domiciliary care is intended to
provide a temporary home (not
permanent) with ambulant care as
needed; and it provides that to receive
domiciliary care from VA, an applicant
must consistently have a disability,
disease, or defect which is essentially
chronic in type and that disables the
veteran to such a degree and probable
persistency that the veteran will be
unable to earn a living for a prospective
period. The term disability, disease, or
defect was used in earlier versions of
our Part 17 regulations as an eligibility
criterion for one class of veterans
eligible for domiciliary care. The term
disability, disease, or defect is not used
anywhere else in Part 17 of 38 CFR
except in the last sentence of current
§ 17.47(c), which is discussed below.
We note that it is used in the definition
of domiciliary care found in § 59.2,
which defines terms relevant to grants
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to States for construction or acquisition
of State homes. However, there is no
reference to § 17.47(c) in § 59.2, and VA
believes that the § 17.47(c) definition of
disability, disease, or defect is not
necessary for understanding the use of
that term in Part 59. For those reasons,
we propose removing the definition of
disability, disease, or defect.
The second sentence in paragraph (c)
states that ‘‘domiciliary care, as the term
implies, is the provision of a temporary
home, with such ambulant medical care
as is needed.’’ This definition of
domiciliary care is not as complete as
the definition already in § 17.30(b)
which includes the following: The term
domiciliary care . . . [m]eans the
furnishing of . . . [a] temporary home to
a veteran, embracing the furnishing of
shelter, food, clothing and other
comforts of home, including necessary
medical services. Because the
regulations already have a more
complete definition of domiciliary care
in § 17.30(b), we propose deleting the
second sentence in § 17.47(c).
The final sentence in current
§ 17.47(c) states that to be provided with
domiciliary care, the applicant must
consistently have a disability, disease,
or defect which is essentially chronic in
type and is producing disablement of
such degree and probable persistency as
will incapacitate from earning a living
for a prospective period. We propose
removing this sentence because it ties
eligibility for domiciliary care solely to
incapacity to earn a living, which is
inconsistent with VA’s view that
eligibility for domiciliary care needs to
consider the veteran’s condition,
medical and financial, in its entirety as
noted above.
Section 51.42 Payment Procedures
Section 51.42 addresses per diem
payment procedures under part 51, and
we propose to add a new paragraph (c)
to implement per diem payments to a
State home domiciliary because of the
new authority granted by Public Law
(Pub. L.) 116–315, section 3007(a). As
explained later in this rulemaking, we
propose to revise eligibility for per diem
for domiciliary care in § 51.51(b) to
implement the new authority as of
January 5, 2021. In proposed § 51.42(c)
we would state that VA will make per
diem payments under this part
retroactive to the date specified by
§ 51.42(b)(3), or January 5, 2021,
whichever date is later, if all the
requirements in proposed § 51.42(c)(1)
through (4) are met. We would make per
diem payments retroactive pursuant to
§ 51.42(b)(3) (i.e., from the date of
receipt of the completed forms or from
the date care began if the State home
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submitted completed forms (no later
than 10 calendar days after care began)).
State homes have and continue to be
required to submit the following forms
no later than 10 calendar days after care
begins to receive payments retroactive
to the date of admission: (1) VA Form
10–10EZ, Application for Medical
Benefits (or VA Form 10–10EZR, Health
Benefits Renewal Form); and (2) VA
Form 10–10SH, State Home Program
Application of Care—Medical
Certification. Further, we believe State
homes that have admitted veterans in
reliance on this new discretionary
authority have continued to submit
completed forms for per diem payments
for these veterans under § 51.42.
Proposed § 51.42(c)(1) would set forth
one of the requirements that must be
met for VA to make per diem payments
under this part retroactive to the date
specified by paragraph (b)(3) of this
section: that within 30 calendar days of
the effective date of the rule, a State
home provides VA a written list of
veterans’ names for whom completed
forms were received by VA on or after
January 5, 2021, and the State home
requests that VA consider them for a
waiver under proposed § 51.51(b)(2). It
would be administratively burdensome
for VA to conduct a retrospective review
of every denied application since
January 5, 2021 and review current
applications in a timely manner. Not all
denied applications would be eligible
for a waiver under § 51.51(b). Therefore,
we would require State homes to submit
to VA a written list of veterans whose
completed forms have been denied
pursuant to current § 51.51(b) on or after
January 5, 2021, and whom the State
home wants to have considered for a
waiver under proposed § 51.51(b)(2). We
believe this would result in the most
efficient retrospective review of denied
applications and allow VA to process
applicable retroactive per diem
payments in a timely manner. We
would require that the list be provided
within 30 days of the effective date of
the rule because we believe State homes
have already been tracking which
veterans they believe might receive a
waiver under this new authority and
would be on notice upon publication of
this proposed rule of our intent to
require that a written list be provided
within that time period. Also, we would
limit retrospective reviews to completed
forms received by VA on or after
January 5, 2021. We would use January
5, 2021, as this is consistent with the
effective date of Public Law 116–315,
section 3007(a) granting the new
authority and the date we propose to
use in 38 CFR 51.51(b)(1). We would
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focus on completed forms received
because 38 U.S.C. 1743 only allows VA
to pay per diem from the date that VA
receives the request for VA to determine
the veteran’s eligibility or from the date
care began if the request is received
within 10 days after care begins. If the
required forms are received after 10
days from the date care begins, then
payments will be made from the date
VA receives the required forms. Id.
Therefore, we believe that VA lacks the
statutory authority to make per diem
retroactive to the date veterans began
receiving care in a State home
domiciliary in reliance on Pub. L. 116–
315, section 3007(a), unless the State
home submitted the required forms (i.e.,
VA Form 10–10EZ and VA Form 10–
10SH) within 10 days of that date. For
example, if a State home admitted a
veteran in reliance of Public Law 116–
315, section 3007(a) on January 5, 2021,
and to date has not submitted the
required forms, then the earliest VA
may make per diem payments is as of
the date VA receives the required forms.
In the same example, if a State home
submitted the required forms no later
than 10 days from January 5, 2021, then
the State home may receive per diem
retroactive to January 5, 2021, so long as
all of the requirements in proposed 38
CFR 51.42(c)(1) through (4) are met. In
the same example, if a State home
submitted the required forms on the day
on which care began, e.g., January 25,
2022, then the State home may receive
per diem retroactive to January 25, 2022,
so long as all the requirements in
proposed § 51.42(c)(1) through (4) are
met. Further, we note that in the
proposed regulatory text for this
paragraph, the effective date is
referenced as ‘‘[EFFECTIVE DATE OF
FINAL RULE]’’. It is VA’s intent to
replace this language with the actual
effective date of this rule which will be
determined upon publication of the
final rule.
Two other requirements would need
to be met for a State home to receive
retroactive per diem for care provided
prior to the effective date of this
regulation. Proposed § 51.42(c)(2) and
(c)(3) would provide that with respect to
the veterans on the written list under
proposed (c)(1), VA denied the State’s
request for per diem for the veterans
when their forms were originally
submitted and the denial was solely
because the veteran did not meet the
requirements under § 51.51(b) and that,
upon VA review, the veteran would
have received a waiver under proposed
§ 51.51(b)(2) if this regulation had been
in effect when the request for per diem
was originally submitted, respectively.
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Upon receipt of a list of veterans whom
the State home wants to have
considered for a waiver under proposed
§ 51.51(b)(2), VA would verify that the
claim was denied solely pursuant to
current § 51.51(b), which lists the eight
tasks and activities a veteran must be
able to perform to establish eligibility
for VA per diem for State home
domiciliary care, because, as discussed
below, Public Law 116–315, section
3007(a) requires VA to amend 38 CFR
51.51(b) to allow waivers of these
requirements under certain conditions.
Further, as discussed below we propose
to revise § 51.51(b) by creating a new
paragraph (b)(2) to implement the new
authority. Therefore, after verifying that
a claim was denied solely due to a
veteran’s inability to perform the eight
tasks and activities listed in current
§ 51.51(b), we would then determine
whether the claim is eligible for a
waiver under proposed § 51.51(b)(2). We
note we will not continue to conduct a
retrospective review if the claim was
denied for a reason other than the
eligibility requirement under current
§ 51.51(b). Therefore, if a claim was
denied because the veteran did not meet
the eligibility requirements in current
§ 51.51(a), VA would not grant a waiver
under proposed § 51.51(b)(2).
The final requirement that would
need to be met for a State home to
receive retroactive per diem for care
provided prior to the effective date of
this regulation is in proposed
§ 51.42(c)(4). That provision would
require the State home to submit to VA
a completed VA Form 10–5588, State
Home Report and Statement of Federal
Aid Claimed, for each month that the
State home provided domiciliary care to
a veteran for whom the home is
requesting a waiver. The form would
cover only the veterans not originally
included on the form when submitted
previously for that month. This
requirement would enable VA to make
applicable retroactive per diem
payments to State homes. VA Form 10–
5588 is an invoice in VA’s payment
system and is required for State homes
to receive payments. The submission of
VA Form 10–5588 will enable VA to
make a supplemental payment to State
homes for veterans who meet the
requirements for retroactive per diem.
We believe the changes discussed
above will allow VA to provide
retroactive per diem payments to a State
home domiciliary if the requirements
under proposed § 51.41(c)(1) through (4)
are met, irrespective of when this
rulemaking is effective.
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Section 51.51 Eligible Veterans—
Domiciliary Care
Section 51.51 specifies the Veterans
on whose behalf State homes may
receive per diem payments from VA for
domiciliary care in State home
domiciliaries. The criteria reflected in
this section derive primarily from
§§ 17.46(b) and 17.47(b)(2). VA
determinations regarding which
veterans on whose behalf VA may pay
per diem payments for domiciliary care
in State homes and which are eligible
for domiciliary care in a VA
domiciliary, and the factors considered
by VA in making those determinations,
are currently the same regardless of
whether the domiciliary care is
provided directly by VA or by a State
home. See 38 U.S.C. 1741. As discussed
below, under section 3007 of Public
Law 116–315, VA is required to modify
38 CFR 51.51(b) to provide VA the
authority to waive the requirements
under current § 51.51(b) for a veteran to
be eligible for per diem payments for
domiciliary care at a State home if—
(1) the veteran has met not fewer than
four of the requirements set forth in
such section; or
(2) such waiver would be in the best
interest of the veteran.
Current § 51.51(a)(2) substantively
mirrors current § 17.47(b)(2), and for
purposes of consistency, we propose
amending § 51.51(a)(2) consistent with
proposed § 17.47(b)(2). We note that the
addition of these factors that must be
considered when determining if a
veteran has no adequate means of
support would not affect the waiver
authority granted by Public Law 116–
315, section 3007(a). Some of the factors
in proposed §§ 51.51(a)(2) and (b)(1)
overlap. For example, a veteran’s ability
to provide self-care in proposed
paragraph (a)(2) and a veteran’s ability
to perform daily ablutions, dress or feed
oneself in proposed paragraph (b)(1).
However, the factors listed under
proposed § 51.51(a)(2) are focused, in
part, on any medical conditions or
disabilities that might impact a veteran’s
ability to live independently; whereas
the factors listed under proposed
§ 51.51(b) are tasks that a veteran must
be able to perform and would thus be
indicative of a veteran’s ability to live
independently. We believe that any
requirement waived under proposed
§ 51.51(b) would be indicative of a
veteran’s inability to live
independently. Therefore, a factor
waived under proposed § 51.51(b)(2)
could be considered under the proposed
factors in proposed § 51.51(a)(2) to
determine whether a veteran has no
means of adequate support.
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Current § 51.51(b) mirrors current
§ 17.46(b)(2), listing tasks and abilities
that a veteran must exhibit to be eligible
for domiciliary care. Public Law 116–
315, section 3007(a) states that
notwithstanding 38 U.S.C. 1741, the
Secretary of Veterans Affairs shall
modify 38 CFR 51.51(b) (or successor
regulations), to provide the Secretary
the authority to waive the requirements
under § 51.51(b) for a veteran to be
eligible for per diem payments for
domiciliary care at a State home if (1)
the veteran has met not fewer than four
of the requirements set forth in such
section; or (2) such waiver would be in
the best interest of the veteran.
The authority to make decisions on
eligibility for domiciliary level of care is
exercised by the Chief of Staff of the VA
medical center of jurisdiction, or
designee. VA believes that this local VA
official is in the best position to evaluate
whether there is sufficient evidence to
establish that an individual veteran is
eligible for the purposes of payment of
per diem for domiciliary care in a State
home, and to know the capabilities and
level of care provided by the State home
domiciliary.
We propose revising § 51.51(b) by
listing the tasks and activities a veteran
must be able to perform for VA to pay
the State home a per diem for
domiciliary care on behalf of the veteran
in a new paragraph (b)(1) and creating
a new paragraph (b)(2) to implement the
new authority in Public Law 116–315,
section 3007(a) to waive the
requirements in paragraph (b)(1).
Proposed § 51.51(b)(1) would list the
tasks and activities a veteran must be
able to perform for VA to pay per diem
on behalf of the veteran to the State
home for domiciliary care. This list is
similar to current 51.51(b), with
differences discussed below, and would
mirror that in proposed § 17.46(b)(2),
with one substantive difference
discussed below. Proposed
§ 17.46(b)(2)(vii) states that a veteran
eligible for domiciliary care must be
able to make rational and competent
decisions as to his or her desire to
remain or leave the facility. This is an
important requirement for domiciliary
care provided via a day hospital
residential rehabilitation treatment
model, as the primary goal is
rehabilitation. However, State homes are
residential sites operated for veterans by
the States. In those cases, authority to
make decisions as to whether to remain
or leave the facility is governed by State
law. In proposed 51.51(b)(1)(vii), we
would keep the same language in
current 51.51(b)(8); however, we would
add additional language to address that
in cases of veterans who lack the general
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capacity needed to decide to remain in
or to leave a State Home, which is a
community residential placement
decision, their legal representative as
designated under State law is
empowered to make this decision behalf
of the veteran.
In our discussion of the rationale for
removing the requirement in current
§ 17.46(b)(2)(vii) that a veteran eligible
for domiciliary care be able to share in
some measure, however slight, in the
maintenance and operation of the
facility, we stated that the purpose of
providing domiciliary care is treatment
and rehabilitation, and requiring the
veteran to share in the maintenance and
operation of the facility is inconsistent
with that purpose. As noted, we
likewise propose removing this similar
requirement found in current
§ 51.51(b)(7) for eligibility for per diem
for domiciliary care provided by a State
home. The requirement that the veteran
must ‘‘participate in some measure,
however slight, in work assignments
that support the maintenance operation
of the State home’’ is inconsistent with
the mission and goals of the State home
domiciliary program, to include
domiciliary care as a temporary home as
one of its primary goals. Further, some
States prohibit their State homes from
requiring any type of work from
domiciliary residents. By removing this
requirement, the list of tasks that a
veteran must be capable of performing,
except in those instances where the
Chief of Staff of the VA medical center
of jurisdiction, or designee, grants a
waiver under paragraph (b)(2), is
reduced from eight to seven tasks.
Therefore, we believe that the removal
of this requirement neither diminishes
the effect nor is contrary to the new
waiver authority granted by Public Law
116–315, section 3007(a).
In proposed 38 CFR 51.51(b)(2), we
would state that the Chief of Staff of the
VA medical center of jurisdiction, or
designee, may waive the requirements
in § 51.51(b)(1) for purposes of per diem
for domiciliary care in a State home on
or after January 5, 2021, if the veteran
is able to perform not fewer than four
of the requirements set forth in such
paragraph; or such waiver would be,
based on a clinical determination, in the
best interest of the veteran because
receipt of domiciliary care in the
particular State home would likely be
beneficial to the veteran. This clinical
determination must consider whether
receiving domiciliary care in the State
home would significantly enhance the
veteran’s ability to live safely, would
support the veteran’s potential progress
in rehabilitation, if such potential exists,
and would create an environment that
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60421
supports the health and well-being of
the veteran. In granting a waiver of
paragraph (b)(1) of this section, the
Chief of Staff of the VA medical center
of jurisdiction, or designee, must make
a finding that the State home has the
capability to provide the domiciliary
care that the veteran needs.
We would use January 5, 2021, as this
is consistent with the effective date of
Public Law 116–315, section 3007(a)
granting this authority. Also, we would
include language to define ‘‘in the best
interest’’ as used in this paragraph. VA
believes that determinations of ‘‘in the
best interest’’ must be a clinical
determination, guided by VA health
professionals’ judgment on what care
will best support the health and wellbeing of the veteran—including that
which offers the best opportunity for
recovery and rehabilitation, whenever
possible. In some cases, a clinician may
determine that other care and
maintenance options would better
promote the veteran’s functional
capabilities and potential for greater
independence, or that a higher level of
care may better ensure that the veteran
receives the level of care necessary.
Further, we would require the Chief of
Staff of the VA medical center of
jurisdiction, or designee, to make a
finding that the State home has the
capability to provide the domiciliary
care that the veteran needs to clearly
indicate that the decision to waive a
particular regulatory requirement for
domiciliary care cannot be made
independent of an understanding of the
State home’s capabilities and level of
care provided to domiciliary residents.
State home domiciliaries vary in the
type of resident that can be admitted,
based on factors such as building
structure, staffing expertise, staffing
levels, and availability of support
equipment. If the veteran’s medical
status is beyond the scope of care that
can be provided by the State home
domiciliary to which admission is
sought, we do not believe VA should
encourage the State home domiciliary to
accept the veteran as a resident by
paying the home a per diem for the
veteran. If waiver is requested of an
eligibility requirement in proposed 38
CFR 51.51(b)(1) VA must make a
determination that the State home
domiciliary is capable of providing the
level of care necessary if such waiver is
granted. Evaluating the capabilities
provided in the State home domiciliary
is an integral element that must be
considered when determining to grant a
waiver. Although this is not explicitly
stated in current § 51.51, such
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consideration has been longstanding VA
policy and practice.
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Section 51.300 Resident Rights and
Behavior; State Home Practices; Quality
of Life
Current 38 CFR 51.300(b) states that
the State home resident must
participate, based on his or her ability,
in some measure, however slight, in
work assignments that support the
maintenance and operation of the State
home. It requires the State home to
create a written policy to implement the
work requirement and integrate the
work requirement into a comprehensive
care plan. As we would remove the
requirement that a State home resident
participate to some degree in work in
support of maintenance and operation
of the State home, we likewise propose
removing this paragraph and marking it
as reserved.
Paperwork Reduction Act
This proposed rule includes
provisions constituting a revised
collection of information under the
Paperwork Reduction Act (PRA) of 1995
(44 U.S.C. 3501–3521) that requires
approval by the Office of Management
and Budget (OMB). Accordingly, under
44 U.S.C. 3507(d), VA has submitted a
copy of this rulemaking action to OMB
for review and approval.
OMB assigns control numbers to
collection of information it approves.
VA may not conduct or sponsor, and a
person is not required to respond to, a
collection of information unless it
displays a currently valid OMB control
number. If OMB does not approve the
collection of information as requested,
VA will immediately remove the
provisions containing the collection of
information or take such other action as
is directed by OMB.
Comments on the new collection of
information contained in this
rulemaking should be submitted
through www.regulations.gov.
Comments should indicate that they are
submitted in response to ‘‘RIN 2900–
AR61, Determining Eligibility for
Domiciliary Care’’ and should be sent
within 60 days of publication of this
rulemaking. The collection of
information associated with this
rulemaking can be viewed at:
www.reginfo.gov/public/do/PRAMain.
OMB is required to make a decision
concerning the collection of information
contained in this rulemaking between
30 and 60 days after publication of this
rulemaking in the Federal Register.
Therefore, a comment to OMB is best
assured of having its full effect if OMB
receives it within 30 days of
publication. This does not affect the
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Jkt 259001
deadline for the public to comment on
the provisions of this rulemaking.
The Department considers comments
by the public on a new collection of
information in—
• Evaluating whether the new
collection of information is necessary
for the proper performance of the
functions of the Department, including
whether the information will have
practical utility;
• Evaluating the accuracy of the
Department’s estimate of the burden of
the new collection of information,
including the validity of the
methodology and assumptions used;
• Enhancing the quality, usefulness,
and clarity of the information to be
collected; and
• Minimizing the burden of the
collection of information on those who
are to respond, including through the
use of appropriate automated,
electronic, mechanical, or other
technological collection techniques or
other forms of information technology,
e.g., permitting electronic submission of
responses.
The collection of information
associated with this rulemaking
contained in 38 CFR 51.42(c) is
described immediately following this
paragraph, under its respective title.
This new information collection will be
added to OMB control number 2900–
0160, containing State home program
forms 10–5588, 10–5588A, and 10–
10SH, which has a current PRA
clearance.
Title: List of Veteran Names for Claim
Reconsideration.
OMB Control No: 2900–0160.
CFR Provision: 38 CFR 51.42(c).
• Summary of collection of
information: The revised collection of
information in proposed 38 CFR
51.42(c) would allow State homes to
submit a list of veteran names whose
completed forms were received by VA
on or after January 5, 2021, but VA
subsequently denied the State home’s
request for payment for the care of these
veterans pursuant to current § 51.51(b),
to VA for consideration of a waiver
under proposed § 51.51(b)(2). This is a
time limited opportunity—the list of
names must be received within 30 days
of the effective date of the rule.
• Description of need for information
and proposed use of information: The
information will be used by VA to
conduct retrospective reviews of denied
applications and allow VA to process
applicable retroactive payments in a
timely manner.
• Description of likely respondents:
State home administrators and State
homes that have admitted veterans in
reliance on the authority granted by
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Fmt 4702
Sfmt 4702
Public Law 116–315, section 3007(a)
and that want these veterans considered
for a waiver under proposed
§ 51.51(b)(2).
• Estimated number of respondents:
Two.
• Estimated frequency of responses:
Once.
• Estimated average burden per
response: 90 minutes.
• Estimated total annual reporting
and recordkeeping burden: 3 hours.
• Estimated cost to respondents per
year: VA estimates the one-time annual
cost to respondents to be $177.21. Using
VA’s average annual number of
respondents, VA estimates the total
information collection burden cost to be
$177.21 per year * (3 burden hours for
× $59.07 per hour).
* To estimate the total information
collection burden cost, VA used the
Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) mean
hourly wage for ‘‘General and
Operations Managers’’ of $59.07 per
hour. This information is available at
https://www.bls.gov/oes/current/oes_
nat.htm#13-0000.
Regulatory Flexibility Act
The Secretary hereby certifies that
this proposed rule would not have a
significant economic impact on a
substantial number of small entities as
they are defined in the Regulatory
Flexibility Act, 5 U.S.C. 601–612. This
proposed rule would directly affect only
individuals who are veterans applying
for domiciliary care as well as States
operating State homes and would not
directly affect small entities. Therefore,
pursuant to 5 U.S.C. 605(b), the initial
and final regulatory flexibility analysis
requirements of 5 U.S.C. 603 and 604 do
not apply.
Executive Orders 12866, 13563, and
14094
Executive Order 12866 (Regulatory
Planning and Review) directs agencies
to assess the costs and benefits of
available regulatory alternatives and,
when regulation is necessary, to select
regulatory approaches that maximize
net benefits (including potential
economic, environmental, public health
and safety effects, and other advantages;
distributive impacts; and equity).
Executive Order 13563 (Improving
Regulation and Regulatory Review)
emphasizes the importance of
quantifying both costs and benefits,
reducing costs, harmonizing rules, and
promoting flexibility. Executive Order
14094 (Executive Order on Modernizing
Regulatory Review) supplements and
reaffirms the principles, structures, and
definitions governing contemporary
regulatory review established in
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Executive Order 12866 of September 30,
1993 (Regulatory Planning and Review),
and Executive Order 13563 of January
18, 2011 (Improving Regulation and
Regulatory Review). The Office of
Information and Regulatory Affairs has
determined that this rulemaking is not
a significant regulatory action under
Executive Order 12866, as amended by
Executive Order 14094. The Regulatory
Impact Analysis associated with this
rulemaking can be found as a
supporting document at
www.regulations.gov.
Unfunded Mandates
The Unfunded Mandates Reform Act
of 1995 requires, at 2 U.S.C. 1532, that
agencies prepare an assessment of
anticipated costs and benefits before
issuing any rule that may result in the
expenditure by State, local, and tribal
governments, in the aggregate, or by the
private sector, of $100 million or more
(adjusted annually for inflation) in any
one year. This proposed rule would
have no such effect on State, local, and
tribal governments, or on the private
sector.
Assistance Listing
38 CFR Part 17
Administrative practice and
procedure, Claims, Domiciliary care,
Government contracts, Health care,
Health facilities, Mental health
programs, Reporting and recordkeeping
requirements, Veterans.
38 CFR Part 51
Administrative practice and
procedure, Claims, Domiciliary care,
Government contracts, Health care,
Health facilities, Mental health
programs, Reporting and recordkeeping
requirements, Veterans.
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Signing Authority
Denis McDonough, Secretary of
Veterans Affairs, approved this
document on August 24, 2023, and
authorized the undersigned to sign and
submit the document to the Office of the
Federal Register for publication
Jkt 259001
For the reasons set forth in the
preamble, the Department of Veterans
Affairs proposes to amend 38 CFR parts
17 and 51 as follows:
PART 17—MEDICAL
1. The authority citation for part 17 is
amended by adding an entry in
numerical order for § 17.47 to read as
follows:
■
Authority: 38 U.S.C. 501, and as noted in
specific sections.
*
*
*
*
*
Section 17.47 is also issued under 38
U.S.C. 1701, 1710, 1721, 1722, 1729,
3104(a)(9), 7333, Public Law 99–272; 42
U.S.C. 1396 et seq.
*
*
§ 17.43
*
*
*
[Amended]
2. Amend § 17.43 by removing the
words ‘‘or domiciliary’’ in the section
heading and introductory text.
■
[Amended]
3. Amend § 17.46 by removing
paragraph (b)(2)(vii), and redesignating
paragraph (b)(2)(viii) as paragraph
(b)(2)(vii).
■ 4. Amend § 17.47 by:
■ a. Removing the authority citations
immediately following paragraphs
(b)(1), (b)(2), (c), (d)(1)(i), (d)(1)(iii),
(d)(2), (d)(3), (d)(4), (d)(5), (e)(1), (e)(2),
(f), (g)(1)(ii), (g)(2)(iv), (i)(2)(vii), (j), and
(k).
■ b. Revise paragraph (b)(2).
■ c. Remove and reserve paragraph (c).
Revisions read as follows:
■
List of Subjects
16:27 Aug 31, 2023
Consuela Benjamin,
Regulation Development Coordinator Office
of Regulation Policy & Management, Office
of General Counsel, Department of Veterans
Affairs.
§ 17.46
The Assistance Listing number and
title for the program affected by this
document is 64.014—Veterans State
Domiciliary Care.
VerDate Sep<11>2014
electronically as an official document of
the Department of Veterans Affairs.
§ 17.47 Considerations applicable in
determining eligibility for hospital care,
medical services, nursing home care, or
domiciliary care.
*
*
*
*
*
(b) * * *
(2) For purposes of determining
eligibility for domiciliary care under
§ 17.46(b)(2) of this part, the phrase no
adequate means of support refers to an
applicant for or recipient of domiciliary
care whose annual income exceeds the
maximum annual rate of pension for a
veteran in receipt of regular aid and
attendance, as defined in 38 U.S.C.
1503, whose deficits in health and/or
functional status may render the veteran
incapable of achieving or sustaining
independence in the community as
determined by the Chief of Staff of the
VA medical center, or designee. In
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60423
assessing a veteran’s ability to achieve
or sustain independence in the
community, the Chief of Staff or
designee will make a determination of
eligibility for domiciliary care based on
objective evidence, considering factors
including, but not limited to:
(i) the impact of the severity of the
veteran’s medical condition, disabilities,
and symptoms on the veteran’s safety in
the community;
(ii) the impact of the severity of the
veteran’s medical condition, disabilities,
and symptoms on the veteran’s ability to
provide self-care;
(iii) the availability of community or
family support systems;
(iv) the impact of the severity of the
veteran’s medical condition, disabilities,
and symptoms on the veteran’s ability to
access and utilize community support
systems;
(v) the risk of loss of housing in the
community;
(vi) the risk of loss of the veteran’s
income;
(vii) access to outpatient mental
health and substance use disorder care;
and
(viii) the current effectiveness of any
outpatient mental health and substance
use disorder care provided to the
veteran.
(c) [Reserved]
*
*
*
*
*
PART 51—PER DIEM FOR NURSING
HOME, DOMICILIARY, OR ADULT DAY
HEALTH CARE OF VETERANS IN
STATE HOMES
5. The authority citation for part 51 is
amended by revising § 51.42, and
adding an entry in numerical order for
§ 51.51 to read as follows:
*
*
*
*
*
■
Section 51.42 also issued under 38 U.S.C.
510, 1744, and Public Law 116–315 section
3007.
*
*
*
*
*
Section 51.51 also issued under Public Law
116–315 section 3007.
*
*
*
*
*
6. Amend § 51.42 by adding paragraph
(c) to read as follows:
■
§ 51.42
Payment procedures.
*
*
*
*
*
(c) Retroactive payments. VA will
make per diem payments under this part
retroactive to the date specified by
paragraph (b)(3) of this section, or
January 5, 2021, whichever date is later,
if all the following are met:
(1) Within 30 calendar days of
[EFFECTIVE DATE OF FINAL RULE]]
the State home provides VA a written
list of veterans’ names for whom
completed forms were received by VA
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on or after January 5, 2021, and the State
home requests that VA consider them
for a waiver under § 51.51(b)(2);
(2) With respect to the veterans on the
written list under paragraph (c)(1), VA
denied the State’s request for per diem
for the veterans when their forms were
originally submitted and the denial was
solely because the veteran did not meet
the requirements under 38 CFR 51.51(b)
(2021);
(3) Upon VA review, the veteran
would have received a waiver under
§ 51.51(b)(2) if that paragraph had been
in effect when the request for per diem
was originally submitted; and
(4) The State home submits to VA a
completed VA Form 10–5588, State
Home Report and Statement of Federal
Aid Claimed, for each month that the
State home provided domiciliary care to
a veteran for whom the home is
requesting a waiver. The form would
only cover the veterans not originally
included on the form when submitted
previously for that month.
■ 7. Amend § 51.51 by revising
paragraphs (a)(2) and (b) to read as
follows:
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§ 51.51
care.
Eligible veterans—domiciliary
(a) * * *
(1) * * *
(2) A veteran who VA determines has
no adequate means of support. When an
applicant’s annual income exceeds the
rate of pension described in paragraph
(a)(1) of this section, VA will determine
if the applicant has no adequate means
of support. This determination will be
made through an assessment of the
veteran’s deficits in health or functional
status that may render the veteran
incapable of achieving or sustaining
independence in the community as
determined by the Chief of Staff of the
VA medical center of jurisdiction, or
designee. Assessment of whether the
veteran has no adequate means of
support will be based on objective
evidence that considers factors that are
inclusive of but not limited to:
(i) the impact of the severity of the
veteran’s medical condition, disabilities,
and symptoms on the veteran’s safety in
the community;
(ii) the impact of the severity of the
veteran’s medical condition, disabilities,
and symptoms on the veteran’s ability to
provide self-care;
(iii) the availability of community or
family support systems;
(iv) the impact of the severity of the
veteran’s medical condition, disabilities,
and symptoms on the veteran’s ability to
access and utilize community support
systems;
(v) the risk of loss of housing in the
community;
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16:27 Aug 31, 2023
Jkt 259001
(vi) the risk of loss of the veteran’s
income;
(vii) access to outpatient mental
health and substance use disorder care;
and
(viii) the current effectiveness of any
outpatient mental health and substance
use disorder care provided to the
veteran.
(b) (1) For purposes of this section,
the eligible veteran must be able to
perform the following:
(i) Daily ablutions, such as brushing
teeth, bathing, combing hair, and body
eliminations, without assistance.
(ii) Dress himself or herself with a
minimum of assistance.
(iii) Proceed to and return from the
dining hall without aid.
(iv) Feed himself or herself.
(v) Secure medical attention on an
ambulatory basis or by use of a
personally propelled wheelchair.
(vi) Have voluntary control over body
eliminations or have control by use of
an appropriate prosthesis.
(vii) Make rational and competent
decisions as to the veteran’s desire to
remain in or leave the State home; or,
if the veteran lacks the general capacity
to make this residential care placement
decision, as defined by State law, then
the veteran’s legal representative
designated in accordance with State
law, is authorized to make this decision
on behalf of the veteran.
(2) The Chief of Staff of the VA
medical center of jurisdiction, or
designee, may waive the requirements
in paragraph (b)(1) of this section for
purposes of payment of per diem for
domiciliary care in a State home on or
after January 5, 2021, if the veteran is
able to perform not fewer than four of
the requirements set forth in such
paragraph; or such waiver would be,
based on a clinical determination, in the
best interest of the veteran because
receipt of domiciliary care in the
particular State home would likely be
beneficial to the veteran. This clinical
determination must consider whether
receiving domiciliary care in the State
home would significantly enhance the
veteran’s ability to live safely, would
support the veteran’s potential progress
in rehabilitation, if such potential exists,
and would create an environment that
supports the health and well-being of
the veteran. In granting a waiver of
paragraph (b)(1) of this section, the
Chief of Staff of the VA medical center
of jurisdiction, or designee, must make
a finding that the State home has the
capability to provide the domiciliary
care that the veteran needs.
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§ 51.300
[Amended]
8. Amend § 51.300 by removing and
reserving paragraph (b).
■
[FR Doc. 2023–18921 Filed 8–31–23; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 8320–01–P
ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION
AGENCY
40 CFR Part 52
[EPA–R04–OAR–2022–0391; FRL–11368–
01–R4]
Air Plan Approval; North Carolina;
Revisions to Miscellaneous Particulate
Matter Rules
Environmental Protection
Agency (EPA).
ACTION: Proposed rule.
AGENCY:
The Environmental Protection
Agency (EPA) is proposing to approve a
State Implementation Plan (SIP)
revision submitted by the State of North
Carolina through the North Carolina
Division of Air Quality (NCDAQ) via a
letter dated April 13, 2021. The SIP
revision seeks to modify the State’s
emission control standards by amending
several air quality rules and removing a
redundant rule for electric utility
boilers. EPA is proposing to approve
these changes pursuant to the Clean Air
Act (CAA or Act).
DATES: Comments must be received on
or before October 2, 2023.
ADDRESSES: Submit your comments,
identified by Docket ID No. EPA–R04–
OAR–2022–0391, at
www.regulations.gov. Follow the online
instructions for submitting comments.
Once submitted, comments cannot be
edited or removed from Regulations.gov.
EPA may publish any comment received
to its public docket. Do not submit
electronically any information you
consider to be Confidential Business
Information (CBI) or other information
whose disclosure is restricted by statute.
Multimedia submissions (audio, video,
etc.) must be accompanied by a written
comment. The written comment is
considered the official comment and
should include discussion of all points
you wish to make. EPA will generally
not consider comments or comment
contents located outside of the primary
submission (i.e., on the web, cloud, or
other file sharing system). For
additional submission methods, the full
EPA public comment policy,
information about CBI or multimedia
submissions, and general guidance on
making effective comments, please visit
www.epa.gov/dockets/commenting-epadockets.
SUMMARY:
E:\FR\FM\01SEP1.SGM
01SEP1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 88, Number 169 (Friday, September 1, 2023)]
[Proposed Rules]
[Pages 60417-60424]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2023-18921]
=======================================================================
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF VETERANS AFFAIRS
38 CFR Parts 17 and 51
RIN 2900-AR61
Determining Eligibility for Domiciliary Care
AGENCY: Department of Veterans Affairs.
ACTION: Proposed rule.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: The Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) proposes to amend its
medical regulations and State Veterans Home (State home) regulations.
VA proposes to update the criteria used by VA in determining whether a
veteran has no adequate means of support relative to eligibility for
domiciliary care, and to shift the focus of the regulatory language
from the veterans' ability to pursue substantially gainful employment
to a broader consideration of available support systems and medical
conditions or disabilities that might impact the veteran's ability to
live independently. In addition, we propose amending our State home
regulations to implement VA's authority to waive certain eligibility
requirements for receipt of State home domiciliary care per diem.
DATES: Comments must be received by VA on or before October 31, 2023.
ADDRESSES: Comments must be submitted through www.regulations.gov.
Except as provided below, comments received before the close of the
comment period will be available at www.regulations.gov for public
viewing, inspection, or copying, including any personally identifiable
or confidential business information that is included in a comment. We
post the comments received before the close of the comment period on
the following website as soon as possible after they have been
received: https://www.regulations.gov. VA will not post on
Regulations.gov public comments that make threats to individuals or
institutions or suggest that the commenter will take actions to harm an
individual. VA encourages individuals not to submit duplicative
comments. We will post acceptable comments from multiple unique
commenters even if the content is identical or nearly identical to
other comments. Any public comment received after the comment period's
closing date is considered late and will not be considered in the final
rulemaking.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Jennifer Burden, Ph.D., National
Mental Health Director, Mental Health Residential Rehabilitation and
Treatment Programs (11MHSP), Veterans Health Administration, Department
of Veterans Affairs, 810 Vermont Avenue NW, Washington, DC 20420; (540)
819-1190 (This is not a toll-free number.)
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: Section 1710(b)(2) of title 38, United
States Code (U.S.C.) authorizes VA to provide needed domiciliary care
to veterans whose annual income does not exceed the applicable maximum
annual rate of VA pension and to veterans VA determines have no
adequate means of support. Historically, domiciliary care in VA has
primarily been focused on delivering care to older residents who cannot
live independently but who do not require admission to a nursing home,
although the scope of domiciliary care provided by VA has expanded over
the decades to meet the changing needs of veterans.
The term domiciliary care is defined in Sec. 17.30(b) of title 38,
Code of Federal Regulations (CFR), which reflects the two alternative
models of domiciliary care VA is authorized to provide to eligible
veterans. Domiciliary care is defined at Sec. 17.30(b)(1)(i) to mean
the furnishing of a temporary home to a veteran, embracing the
furnishing of shelter, food, clothing, and other comforts of home,
including necessary medical services. This model focuses on the needs
of veterans eligible for VA domiciliary care who cannot live
independently but who do not require admission to a nursing home. While
VA retains the authority to directly provide domiciliary care under
this model, it currently pays a per diem to State homes to provide this
model of domiciliary care to eligible veterans. The statutory authority
for the payment program is set forth at 38 U.S.C. 1741-43. VA has
published regulations governing this program at 38 CFR part 51. VA
regulates eligibility for VA payment of State home domiciliary care per
diem at Sec. 51.51.
The second model for providing domiciliary care is defined in Sec.
17.30(b)(1)(ii). There, domiciliary care is defined to mean the
furnishing of a day hospital program consisting of intensive supervised
rehabilitation and treatment provided in a therapeutic residential
setting for residents with mental health or substance use disorders and
co-occurring medical or psychosocial needs such as homelessness and
unemployment. This model focuses on the needs of veterans eligible for
domiciliary care and who are receiving care through VA's Mental Health
Residential Rehabilitation Treatment Program, including Domiciliary
Care for Homeless Veterans Program; General Domiciliary; Domiciliary
Substance Use Programs; and Domiciliary Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder
Programs. Today, a VA domiciliary consists of intensive supervised
rehabilitation and treatment provided in a therapeutic residential
setting that is aligned with VA medical facilities.
Veterans must meet the eligibility criteria found in 38 CFR
17.46(b) as well as Sec. Sec. 17.47(b)(2) and 17.47(c) to receive
domiciliary care in a VA domiciliary. Per Sec. 17.46(b) domiciliary
care may be furnished when needed to any veteran whose annual income
does not exceed the maximum annual rate of pension payable to a veteran
in need of regular aid and attendance, or any veteran who VA determines
had no adequate means of support. There is an additional requirement in
that paragraph that the veteran must be able to perform certain listed
activities related to self-care. In turn, 38 CFR 17.47(b)(2) addresses
how VA determines whether a veteran has no adequate means of support
for purposes of eligibility for domiciliary care. Finally, 38 CFR
17.47(c) establishes that to be provided domiciliary care, the veteran
must have a disability, disease, or defect which is essentially chronic
in type and is producing disablement of such degree and probable
persistency as will incapacitate from earning a living for a
prospective period. Eligibility criteria found in Sec. Sec. 17.46 and
17.47 are applicable to domiciliary care provided by VA in residential
rehabilitation treatment venues. The same eligibility criteria
generally are reflected in current 38 CFR 51.51 and are applicable to
State home domiciliary veterans for purposes of per diem payment
eligibility.
We propose multiple changes to our regulations. Initially, we
propose to make a technical change in part 17 to remove the word
domiciliary from a regulation that does not address domiciliary care.
VA also proposes amending both Part 17 and 51 regulations that address
how VA determines whether a veteran has no adequate means of support
for purposes
[[Page 60418]]
of eligibility for domiciliary care or domiciliary care per diem. VA
proposes to amend its regulations to update the criteria used by VA in
determining whether a veteran has no adequate means of support relative
to eligibility for domiciliary care, and to shift the focus in the
regulatory language from the veterans' ability to pursue substantially
gainful employment to a broader consideration of the availability of a
family and/or community support system to assist the veteran in living
independently, consideration of the veteran's ability to access that
support system, and any medical conditions or disabilities that might
impact that ability. In addition, we propose amending our State home
regulations to implement VA's authority to waive certain eligibility
requirements for eligibility for State home domiciliary care per diem
and to permit waivers of these eligibility requirements retroactive to
January 5, 2021.
Section 17.43 Persons Entitled to Hospital or Domiciliary Care.
The title of this section references domiciliary care as does the
introductory sentence. However, the remaining content focuses on
eligibility for hospital care. Eligibility for domiciliary care, as
noted above, is addressed in subsequent sections of Part 17. We propose
deleting references to domiciliary care in Sec. 17.43.
Section 17.46 Eligibility for Hospital, Domiciliary or Nursing Home
Care of Persons Discharged or Released From Active Military, Naval, or
Air Service.
Current Sec. 17.46(b)(2) states that domiciliary care may be
provided to any veteran who the Secretary determines had no adequate
means of support. This paragraph further states that a veteran eligible
for domiciliary care must be able to make rational and competent
decisions as to their desire to remain or leave the facility and
perform tasks related to self-care listed at Sec. 17.46(b)(2)(i)-
(viii). One task on the list, at paragraph (b)(2)(vii), provides that
the veterans must be able to share in some measure, however slight, in
the maintenance and operation of the facility. We propose removing this
requirement, as the purpose of providing domiciliary care is treatment
and rehabilitation, and requiring the veteran to participate in the
maintenance and operation of the facility is inconsistent with that
purpose. For this reason, we propose removing this requirement and
redesignating current (b)(2)(viii) as (b)(2)(vii).
Section 17.47 Considerations Applicable in Determining Eligibility for
Hospital Care, Medical Services, Nursing Home Care, or Domiciliary
Care.
Current Sec. 17.47(b)(2) specifies that ``. . . the phrase no
adequate means of support refers to an applicant for domiciliary care
whose annual income exceeds the annual rate of pension for a veteran in
receipt of regular aid and attendance, as defined in 38 U.S.C. 1503,
but who is able to demonstrate to competent VA medical authority, on
the basis of objective evidence, that deficits in health and/or
functional status render the applicant incapable of pursuing
substantially gainful employment, as determined by the Chief of Staff
of the VA medical center, and who is otherwise without the means to
provide adequately for self, or be provided for in the community.''
The foci of current 38 CFR 17.47(b)(2) is on the ability to engage
in substantially gainful employment and on self-reliance and achieving
or sustaining independence in the community. VA believes that
predicating eligibility for domiciliary care on the ability of the
veteran to engage in gainful employment, is inconsistent with delivery
of patient centered care. In patient-centered care, an individual's
specific health needs and desired health outcomes are the driving force
behind all health care decisions. Historically, domiciliary care in VA
was primarily focused on delivering care to older residents who could
not live independently but who did not require admission to a nursing
home. The scope of domiciliary care provided by VA has expanded over
the decades to meet the changing needs of veterans. Today, VA
domiciliary care consists of intensive supervised rehabilitation and
treatment provided in a therapeutic residential setting that is aligned
with VA medical facilities. As discussed in further detail below, VA
proposes taking a different approach to determining whether a veteran
has no adequate means of support.
To determine that a veteran has no adequate means of support,
current Sec. 17.47(b)(2) requires a determination by VA on separate
but interconnected issues. VA must determine that the veteran has an
annual income that exceeds the annual rate of pension for a veteran in
receipt of regular aid and attendance, as defined in 38 U.S.C. 1503. In
addition, VA must determine that the veteran is able to demonstrate to
VA medical authority that deficits in health and/or functional status
render them incapable of pursuing substantially gainful employment and
that the veteran is otherwise without the means to provide adequately
for self, or be provided for in the community. VA does not consider the
inability to pursue substantially gainful employment as a prime
determinant in assessing a veteran's need for domiciliary care. VA
believes that it also needs to consider the veteran's condition,
medical and financial, in its entirety in the context of the veteran's
ability to sustain and maintain independence in the community given
available support systems and the veteran's ability to access those
systems. For the purpose of determining eligibility for domiciliary
care, VA believes that veterans with annual income above the rate set
in the current regulation could still not have adequate means of
support because having adequate means of support may also require the
availability of a family and/or community support system to assist the
veteran in living independently and the veteran's ability to access
that support system, which takes into account any medical conditions or
disabilities that might impact that ability.
VA proposes to amend Sec. 17.47(b)(2) to state that for purposes
of determining eligibility for domiciliary care, the phrase no adequate
means of support refers to an applicant for or recipient of domiciliary
care whose annual income exceeds the maximum annual rate of pension for
a veteran in receipt of regular aid and attendance, as defined in 38
U.S.C. 1503, whose deficits in health and/or functional status may
render the veteran incapable of achieving or sustaining independence in
the community as determined by the Chief of Staff of the VA medical
center, or designee. In assessing a veteran's ability to achieve or
sustain independence in the community, the Chief of Staff or designee
will make a determination of eligibility for domiciliary care based on
objective evidence, considering factors including, but not limited to:
(i) the impact of the severity of the veteran's medical condition,
disabilities, and symptoms on the veteran's safety in the community;
(ii) the impact of the severity of the veteran's medical condition,
disabilities, and symptoms on the veteran's ability to provide self-
care; (iii) the availability of community or family support systems;
(iv) the impact of the severity of the veteran's medical condition,
disabilities, and symptoms on the veteran's ability to access and
utilize community support systems; (v) the risk of loss of housing in
the community; (vi) the risk of loss
[[Page 60419]]
of the veteran's income; (vii) access to outpatient mental health and
substance use disorder care; and (viii) the current effectiveness of
any outpatient mental health and substance use disorder care provided
to the veteran.
VA believes that this list of factors that must be considered,
which is not intended to be all inclusive, would provide guidance to
the Chief of Staff of a VA medical center, or designee, on the criteria
that must be considered in determining eligibility for domiciliary care
in those cases where the veteran's annual income exceeds the annual
rate of pension for a veteran in receipt of regular aid and attendance.
Additionally, VA proposes to clarify existing language in 38 CFR
17.47(b)(2) by referring to the ``maximum annual rate of pension'' as
opposed to ``annual rate of pension''. Section 17.47(b)(2) addresses
how VA determines whether a veteran has no adequate means of support,
while Sec. 17.46(b) provides the eligibility requirements for
domiciliary care. Specifically, Sec. 17.46(b)(1) refers to the maximum
annual rate of pension. VA believes that this is a non-substantive
change that will maintain consistency with Sec. Sec. 17.46(b)(1) and
17.47(b)(2). Further, VA proposes to add ``or designee'' when referring
to the Chief of Staff. The authority to make determinations on
eligibility for domiciliary care is exercised by the Chief of Staff of
the VA medical center; however, the Chief of Staff may delegate this
responsibility to another clinical reviewer in the VA medical center.
We propose deleting paragraph (c) and marking that paragraph
designation as Reserved. Current Sec. 17.47(c) addresses three
distinct issues. It provides a definition for the term disability,
disease, or defect; it clarifies that domiciliary care is intended to
provide a temporary home (not permanent) with ambulant care as needed;
and it provides that to receive domiciliary care from VA, an applicant
must consistently have a disability, disease, or defect which is
essentially chronic in type and that disables the veteran to such a
degree and probable persistency that the veteran will be unable to earn
a living for a prospective period. The term disability, disease, or
defect was used in earlier versions of our Part 17 regulations as an
eligibility criterion for one class of veterans eligible for
domiciliary care. The term disability, disease, or defect is not used
anywhere else in Part 17 of 38 CFR except in the last sentence of
current Sec. 17.47(c), which is discussed below. We note that it is
used in the definition of domiciliary care found in Sec. 59.2, which
defines terms relevant to grants to States for construction or
acquisition of State homes. However, there is no reference to Sec.
17.47(c) in Sec. 59.2, and VA believes that the Sec. 17.47(c)
definition of disability, disease, or defect is not necessary for
understanding the use of that term in Part 59. For those reasons, we
propose removing the definition of disability, disease, or defect.
The second sentence in paragraph (c) states that ``domiciliary
care, as the term implies, is the provision of a temporary home, with
such ambulant medical care as is needed.'' This definition of
domiciliary care is not as complete as the definition already in Sec.
17.30(b) which includes the following: The term domiciliary care . . .
[m]eans the furnishing of . . . [a] temporary home to a veteran,
embracing the furnishing of shelter, food, clothing and other comforts
of home, including necessary medical services. Because the regulations
already have a more complete definition of domiciliary care in Sec.
17.30(b), we propose deleting the second sentence in Sec. 17.47(c).
The final sentence in current Sec. 17.47(c) states that to be
provided with domiciliary care, the applicant must consistently have a
disability, disease, or defect which is essentially chronic in type and
is producing disablement of such degree and probable persistency as
will incapacitate from earning a living for a prospective period. We
propose removing this sentence because it ties eligibility for
domiciliary care solely to incapacity to earn a living, which is
inconsistent with VA's view that eligibility for domiciliary care needs
to consider the veteran's condition, medical and financial, in its
entirety as noted above.
Section 51.42 Payment Procedures
Section 51.42 addresses per diem payment procedures under part 51,
and we propose to add a new paragraph (c) to implement per diem
payments to a State home domiciliary because of the new authority
granted by Public Law (Pub. L.) 116-315, section 3007(a). As explained
later in this rulemaking, we propose to revise eligibility for per diem
for domiciliary care in Sec. 51.51(b) to implement the new authority
as of January 5, 2021. In proposed Sec. 51.42(c) we would state that
VA will make per diem payments under this part retroactive to the date
specified by Sec. 51.42(b)(3), or January 5, 2021, whichever date is
later, if all the requirements in proposed Sec. 51.42(c)(1) through
(4) are met. We would make per diem payments retroactive pursuant to
Sec. 51.42(b)(3) (i.e., from the date of receipt of the completed
forms or from the date care began if the State home submitted completed
forms (no later than 10 calendar days after care began)). State homes
have and continue to be required to submit the following forms no later
than 10 calendar days after care begins to receive payments retroactive
to the date of admission: (1) VA Form 10-10EZ, Application for Medical
Benefits (or VA Form 10-10EZR, Health Benefits Renewal Form); and (2)
VA Form 10-10SH, State Home Program Application of Care--Medical
Certification. Further, we believe State homes that have admitted
veterans in reliance on this new discretionary authority have continued
to submit completed forms for per diem payments for these veterans
under Sec. 51.42.
Proposed Sec. 51.42(c)(1) would set forth one of the requirements
that must be met for VA to make per diem payments under this part
retroactive to the date specified by paragraph (b)(3) of this section:
that within 30 calendar days of the effective date of the rule, a State
home provides VA a written list of veterans' names for whom completed
forms were received by VA on or after January 5, 2021, and the State
home requests that VA consider them for a waiver under proposed Sec.
51.51(b)(2). It would be administratively burdensome for VA to conduct
a retrospective review of every denied application since January 5,
2021 and review current applications in a timely manner. Not all denied
applications would be eligible for a waiver under Sec. 51.51(b).
Therefore, we would require State homes to submit to VA a written list
of veterans whose completed forms have been denied pursuant to current
Sec. 51.51(b) on or after January 5, 2021, and whom the State home
wants to have considered for a waiver under proposed Sec. 51.51(b)(2).
We believe this would result in the most efficient retrospective review
of denied applications and allow VA to process applicable retroactive
per diem payments in a timely manner. We would require that the list be
provided within 30 days of the effective date of the rule because we
believe State homes have already been tracking which veterans they
believe might receive a waiver under this new authority and would be on
notice upon publication of this proposed rule of our intent to require
that a written list be provided within that time period. Also, we would
limit retrospective reviews to completed forms received by VA on or
after January 5, 2021. We would use January 5, 2021, as this is
consistent with the effective date of Public Law 116-315, section
3007(a) granting the new authority and the date we propose to use in 38
CFR 51.51(b)(1). We would
[[Page 60420]]
focus on completed forms received because 38 U.S.C. 1743 only allows VA
to pay per diem from the date that VA receives the request for VA to
determine the veteran's eligibility or from the date care began if the
request is received within 10 days after care begins. If the required
forms are received after 10 days from the date care begins, then
payments will be made from the date VA receives the required forms. Id.
Therefore, we believe that VA lacks the statutory authority to make per
diem retroactive to the date veterans began receiving care in a State
home domiciliary in reliance on Pub. L. 116-315, section 3007(a),
unless the State home submitted the required forms (i.e., VA Form 10-
10EZ and VA Form 10-10SH) within 10 days of that date. For example, if
a State home admitted a veteran in reliance of Public Law 116-315,
section 3007(a) on January 5, 2021, and to date has not submitted the
required forms, then the earliest VA may make per diem payments is as
of the date VA receives the required forms. In the same example, if a
State home submitted the required forms no later than 10 days from
January 5, 2021, then the State home may receive per diem retroactive
to January 5, 2021, so long as all of the requirements in proposed 38
CFR 51.42(c)(1) through (4) are met. In the same example, if a State
home submitted the required forms on the day on which care began, e.g.,
January 25, 2022, then the State home may receive per diem retroactive
to January 25, 2022, so long as all the requirements in proposed Sec.
51.42(c)(1) through (4) are met. Further, we note that in the proposed
regulatory text for this paragraph, the effective date is referenced as
``[EFFECTIVE DATE OF FINAL RULE]''. It is VA's intent to replace this
language with the actual effective date of this rule which will be
determined upon publication of the final rule.
Two other requirements would need to be met for a State home to
receive retroactive per diem for care provided prior to the effective
date of this regulation. Proposed Sec. 51.42(c)(2) and (c)(3) would
provide that with respect to the veterans on the written list under
proposed (c)(1), VA denied the State's request for per diem for the
veterans when their forms were originally submitted and the denial was
solely because the veteran did not meet the requirements under Sec.
51.51(b) and that, upon VA review, the veteran would have received a
waiver under proposed Sec. 51.51(b)(2) if this regulation had been in
effect when the request for per diem was originally submitted,
respectively. Upon receipt of a list of veterans whom the State home
wants to have considered for a waiver under proposed Sec. 51.51(b)(2),
VA would verify that the claim was denied solely pursuant to current
Sec. 51.51(b), which lists the eight tasks and activities a veteran
must be able to perform to establish eligibility for VA per diem for
State home domiciliary care, because, as discussed below, Public Law
116-315, section 3007(a) requires VA to amend 38 CFR 51.51(b) to allow
waivers of these requirements under certain conditions. Further, as
discussed below we propose to revise Sec. 51.51(b) by creating a new
paragraph (b)(2) to implement the new authority. Therefore, after
verifying that a claim was denied solely due to a veteran's inability
to perform the eight tasks and activities listed in current Sec.
51.51(b), we would then determine whether the claim is eligible for a
waiver under proposed Sec. 51.51(b)(2). We note we will not continue
to conduct a retrospective review if the claim was denied for a reason
other than the eligibility requirement under current Sec. 51.51(b).
Therefore, if a claim was denied because the veteran did not meet the
eligibility requirements in current Sec. 51.51(a), VA would not grant
a waiver under proposed Sec. 51.51(b)(2).
The final requirement that would need to be met for a State home to
receive retroactive per diem for care provided prior to the effective
date of this regulation is in proposed Sec. 51.42(c)(4). That
provision would require the State home to submit to VA a completed VA
Form 10-5588, State Home Report and Statement of Federal Aid Claimed,
for each month that the State home provided domiciliary care to a
veteran for whom the home is requesting a waiver. The form would cover
only the veterans not originally included on the form when submitted
previously for that month. This requirement would enable VA to make
applicable retroactive per diem payments to State homes. VA Form 10-
5588 is an invoice in VA's payment system and is required for State
homes to receive payments. The submission of VA Form 10-5588 will
enable VA to make a supplemental payment to State homes for veterans
who meet the requirements for retroactive per diem.
We believe the changes discussed above will allow VA to provide
retroactive per diem payments to a State home domiciliary if the
requirements under proposed Sec. 51.41(c)(1) through (4) are met,
irrespective of when this rulemaking is effective.
Section 51.51 Eligible Veterans--Domiciliary Care
Section 51.51 specifies the Veterans on whose behalf State homes
may receive per diem payments from VA for domiciliary care in State
home domiciliaries. The criteria reflected in this section derive
primarily from Sec. Sec. 17.46(b) and 17.47(b)(2). VA determinations
regarding which veterans on whose behalf VA may pay per diem payments
for domiciliary care in State homes and which are eligible for
domiciliary care in a VA domiciliary, and the factors considered by VA
in making those determinations, are currently the same regardless of
whether the domiciliary care is provided directly by VA or by a State
home. See 38 U.S.C. 1741. As discussed below, under section 3007 of
Public Law 116-315, VA is required to modify 38 CFR 51.51(b) to provide
VA the authority to waive the requirements under current Sec. 51.51(b)
for a veteran to be eligible for per diem payments for domiciliary care
at a State home if--
(1) the veteran has met not fewer than four of the requirements set
forth in such section; or
(2) such waiver would be in the best interest of the veteran.
Current Sec. 51.51(a)(2) substantively mirrors current Sec.
17.47(b)(2), and for purposes of consistency, we propose amending Sec.
51.51(a)(2) consistent with proposed Sec. 17.47(b)(2). We note that
the addition of these factors that must be considered when determining
if a veteran has no adequate means of support would not affect the
waiver authority granted by Public Law 116-315, section 3007(a). Some
of the factors in proposed Sec. Sec. 51.51(a)(2) and (b)(1) overlap.
For example, a veteran's ability to provide self-care in proposed
paragraph (a)(2) and a veteran's ability to perform daily ablutions,
dress or feed oneself in proposed paragraph (b)(1). However, the
factors listed under proposed Sec. 51.51(a)(2) are focused, in part,
on any medical conditions or disabilities that might impact a veteran's
ability to live independently; whereas the factors listed under
proposed Sec. 51.51(b) are tasks that a veteran must be able to
perform and would thus be indicative of a veteran's ability to live
independently. We believe that any requirement waived under proposed
Sec. 51.51(b) would be indicative of a veteran's inability to live
independently. Therefore, a factor waived under proposed Sec.
51.51(b)(2) could be considered under the proposed factors in proposed
Sec. 51.51(a)(2) to determine whether a veteran has no means of
adequate support.
[[Page 60421]]
Current Sec. 51.51(b) mirrors current Sec. 17.46(b)(2), listing
tasks and abilities that a veteran must exhibit to be eligible for
domiciliary care. Public Law 116-315, section 3007(a) states that
notwithstanding 38 U.S.C. 1741, the Secretary of Veterans Affairs shall
modify 38 CFR 51.51(b) (or successor regulations), to provide the
Secretary the authority to waive the requirements under Sec. 51.51(b)
for a veteran to be eligible for per diem payments for domiciliary care
at a State home if (1) the veteran has met not fewer than four of the
requirements set forth in such section; or (2) such waiver would be in
the best interest of the veteran.
The authority to make decisions on eligibility for domiciliary
level of care is exercised by the Chief of Staff of the VA medical
center of jurisdiction, or designee. VA believes that this local VA
official is in the best position to evaluate whether there is
sufficient evidence to establish that an individual veteran is eligible
for the purposes of payment of per diem for domiciliary care in a State
home, and to know the capabilities and level of care provided by the
State home domiciliary.
We propose revising Sec. 51.51(b) by listing the tasks and
activities a veteran must be able to perform for VA to pay the State
home a per diem for domiciliary care on behalf of the veteran in a new
paragraph (b)(1) and creating a new paragraph (b)(2) to implement the
new authority in Public Law 116-315, section 3007(a) to waive the
requirements in paragraph (b)(1).
Proposed Sec. 51.51(b)(1) would list the tasks and activities a
veteran must be able to perform for VA to pay per diem on behalf of the
veteran to the State home for domiciliary care. This list is similar to
current 51.51(b), with differences discussed below, and would mirror
that in proposed Sec. 17.46(b)(2), with one substantive difference
discussed below. Proposed Sec. 17.46(b)(2)(vii) states that a veteran
eligible for domiciliary care must be able to make rational and
competent decisions as to his or her desire to remain or leave the
facility. This is an important requirement for domiciliary care
provided via a day hospital residential rehabilitation treatment model,
as the primary goal is rehabilitation. However, State homes are
residential sites operated for veterans by the States. In those cases,
authority to make decisions as to whether to remain or leave the
facility is governed by State law. In proposed 51.51(b)(1)(vii), we
would keep the same language in current 51.51(b)(8); however, we would
add additional language to address that in cases of veterans who lack
the general capacity needed to decide to remain in or to leave a State
Home, which is a community residential placement decision, their legal
representative as designated under State law is empowered to make this
decision behalf of the veteran.
In our discussion of the rationale for removing the requirement in
current Sec. 17.46(b)(2)(vii) that a veteran eligible for domiciliary
care be able to share in some measure, however slight, in the
maintenance and operation of the facility, we stated that the purpose
of providing domiciliary care is treatment and rehabilitation, and
requiring the veteran to share in the maintenance and operation of the
facility is inconsistent with that purpose. As noted, we likewise
propose removing this similar requirement found in current Sec.
51.51(b)(7) for eligibility for per diem for domiciliary care provided
by a State home. The requirement that the veteran must ``participate in
some measure, however slight, in work assignments that support the
maintenance operation of the State home'' is inconsistent with the
mission and goals of the State home domiciliary program, to include
domiciliary care as a temporary home as one of its primary goals.
Further, some States prohibit their State homes from requiring any type
of work from domiciliary residents. By removing this requirement, the
list of tasks that a veteran must be capable of performing, except in
those instances where the Chief of Staff of the VA medical center of
jurisdiction, or designee, grants a waiver under paragraph (b)(2), is
reduced from eight to seven tasks. Therefore, we believe that the
removal of this requirement neither diminishes the effect nor is
contrary to the new waiver authority granted by Public Law 116-315,
section 3007(a).
In proposed 38 CFR 51.51(b)(2), we would state that the Chief of
Staff of the VA medical center of jurisdiction, or designee, may waive
the requirements in Sec. 51.51(b)(1) for purposes of per diem for
domiciliary care in a State home on or after January 5, 2021, if the
veteran is able to perform not fewer than four of the requirements set
forth in such paragraph; or such waiver would be, based on a clinical
determination, in the best interest of the veteran because receipt of
domiciliary care in the particular State home would likely be
beneficial to the veteran. This clinical determination must consider
whether receiving domiciliary care in the State home would
significantly enhance the veteran's ability to live safely, would
support the veteran's potential progress in rehabilitation, if such
potential exists, and would create an environment that supports the
health and well-being of the veteran. In granting a waiver of paragraph
(b)(1) of this section, the Chief of Staff of the VA medical center of
jurisdiction, or designee, must make a finding that the State home has
the capability to provide the domiciliary care that the veteran needs.
We would use January 5, 2021, as this is consistent with the
effective date of Public Law 116-315, section 3007(a) granting this
authority. Also, we would include language to define ``in the best
interest'' as used in this paragraph. VA believes that determinations
of ``in the best interest'' must be a clinical determination, guided by
VA health professionals' judgment on what care will best support the
health and well-being of the veteran--including that which offers the
best opportunity for recovery and rehabilitation, whenever possible. In
some cases, a clinician may determine that other care and maintenance
options would better promote the veteran's functional capabilities and
potential for greater independence, or that a higher level of care may
better ensure that the veteran receives the level of care necessary.
Further, we would require the Chief of Staff of the VA medical center
of jurisdiction, or designee, to make a finding that the State home has
the capability to provide the domiciliary care that the veteran needs
to clearly indicate that the decision to waive a particular regulatory
requirement for domiciliary care cannot be made independent of an
understanding of the State home's capabilities and level of care
provided to domiciliary residents. State home domiciliaries vary in the
type of resident that can be admitted, based on factors such as
building structure, staffing expertise, staffing levels, and
availability of support equipment. If the veteran's medical status is
beyond the scope of care that can be provided by the State home
domiciliary to which admission is sought, we do not believe VA should
encourage the State home domiciliary to accept the veteran as a
resident by paying the home a per diem for the veteran. If waiver is
requested of an eligibility requirement in proposed 38 CFR 51.51(b)(1)
VA must make a determination that the State home domiciliary is capable
of providing the level of care necessary if such waiver is granted.
Evaluating the capabilities provided in the State home domiciliary is
an integral element that must be considered when determining to grant a
waiver. Although this is not explicitly stated in current Sec. 51.51,
such
[[Page 60422]]
consideration has been longstanding VA policy and practice.
Section 51.300 Resident Rights and Behavior; State Home Practices;
Quality of Life
Current 38 CFR 51.300(b) states that the State home resident must
participate, based on his or her ability, in some measure, however
slight, in work assignments that support the maintenance and operation
of the State home. It requires the State home to create a written
policy to implement the work requirement and integrate the work
requirement into a comprehensive care plan. As we would remove the
requirement that a State home resident participate to some degree in
work in support of maintenance and operation of the State home, we
likewise propose removing this paragraph and marking it as reserved.
Paperwork Reduction Act
This proposed rule includes provisions constituting a revised
collection of information under the Paperwork Reduction Act (PRA) of
1995 (44 U.S.C. 3501-3521) that requires approval by the Office of
Management and Budget (OMB). Accordingly, under 44 U.S.C. 3507(d), VA
has submitted a copy of this rulemaking action to OMB for review and
approval.
OMB assigns control numbers to collection of information it
approves. VA may not conduct or sponsor, and a person is not required
to respond to, a collection of information unless it displays a
currently valid OMB control number. If OMB does not approve the
collection of information as requested, VA will immediately remove the
provisions containing the collection of information or take such other
action as is directed by OMB.
Comments on the new collection of information contained in this
rulemaking should be submitted through www.regulations.gov. Comments
should indicate that they are submitted in response to ``RIN 2900-AR61,
Determining Eligibility for Domiciliary Care'' and should be sent
within 60 days of publication of this rulemaking. The collection of
information associated with this rulemaking can be viewed at:
www.reginfo.gov/public/do/PRAMain.
OMB is required to make a decision concerning the collection of
information contained in this rulemaking between 30 and 60 days after
publication of this rulemaking in the Federal Register. Therefore, a
comment to OMB is best assured of having its full effect if OMB
receives it within 30 days of publication. This does not affect the
deadline for the public to comment on the provisions of this
rulemaking.
The Department considers comments by the public on a new collection
of information in--
Evaluating whether the new collection of information is
necessary for the proper performance of the functions of the
Department, including whether the information will have practical
utility;
Evaluating the accuracy of the Department's estimate of
the burden of the new collection of information, including the validity
of the methodology and assumptions used;
Enhancing the quality, usefulness, and clarity of the
information to be collected; and
Minimizing the burden of the collection of information on
those who are to respond, including through the use of appropriate
automated, electronic, mechanical, or other technological collection
techniques or other forms of information technology, e.g., permitting
electronic submission of responses.
The collection of information associated with this rulemaking
contained in 38 CFR 51.42(c) is described immediately following this
paragraph, under its respective title. This new information collection
will be added to OMB control number 2900-0160, containing State home
program forms 10-5588, 10-5588A, and 10-10SH, which has a current PRA
clearance.
Title: List of Veteran Names for Claim Reconsideration.
OMB Control No: 2900-0160.
CFR Provision: 38 CFR 51.42(c).
Summary of collection of information: The revised
collection of information in proposed 38 CFR 51.42(c) would allow State
homes to submit a list of veteran names whose completed forms were
received by VA on or after January 5, 2021, but VA subsequently denied
the State home's request for payment for the care of these veterans
pursuant to current Sec. 51.51(b), to VA for consideration of a waiver
under proposed Sec. 51.51(b)(2). This is a time limited opportunity--
the list of names must be received within 30 days of the effective date
of the rule.
Description of need for information and proposed use of
information: The information will be used by VA to conduct
retrospective reviews of denied applications and allow VA to process
applicable retroactive payments in a timely manner.
Description of likely respondents: State home
administrators and State homes that have admitted veterans in reliance
on the authority granted by Public Law 116-315, section 3007(a) and
that want these veterans considered for a waiver under proposed Sec.
51.51(b)(2).
Estimated number of respondents: Two.
Estimated frequency of responses: Once.
Estimated average burden per response: 90 minutes.
Estimated total annual reporting and recordkeeping burden:
3 hours.
Estimated cost to respondents per year: VA estimates the
one-time annual cost to respondents to be $177.21. Using VA's average
annual number of respondents, VA estimates the total information
collection burden cost to be $177.21 per year * (3 burden hours for x
$59.07 per hour).
* To estimate the total information collection burden cost, VA used
the Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) mean hourly wage for ``General and
Operations Managers'' of $59.07 per hour. This information is available
at https://www.bls.gov/oes/current/oes_nat.htm#13-0000.
Regulatory Flexibility Act
The Secretary hereby certifies that this proposed rule would not
have a significant economic impact on a substantial number of small
entities as they are defined in the Regulatory Flexibility Act, 5
U.S.C. 601-612. This proposed rule would directly affect only
individuals who are veterans applying for domiciliary care as well as
States operating State homes and would not directly affect small
entities. Therefore, pursuant to 5 U.S.C. 605(b), the initial and final
regulatory flexibility analysis requirements of 5 U.S.C. 603 and 604 do
not apply.
Executive Orders 12866, 13563, and 14094
Executive Order 12866 (Regulatory Planning and Review) directs
agencies to assess the costs and benefits of available regulatory
alternatives and, when regulation is necessary, to select regulatory
approaches that maximize net benefits (including potential economic,
environmental, public health and safety effects, and other advantages;
distributive impacts; and equity). Executive Order 13563 (Improving
Regulation and Regulatory Review) emphasizes the importance of
quantifying both costs and benefits, reducing costs, harmonizing rules,
and promoting flexibility. Executive Order 14094 (Executive Order on
Modernizing Regulatory Review) supplements and reaffirms the
principles, structures, and definitions governing contemporary
regulatory review established in
[[Page 60423]]
Executive Order 12866 of September 30, 1993 (Regulatory Planning and
Review), and Executive Order 13563 of January 18, 2011 (Improving
Regulation and Regulatory Review). The Office of Information and
Regulatory Affairs has determined that this rulemaking is not a
significant regulatory action under Executive Order 12866, as amended
by Executive Order 14094. The Regulatory Impact Analysis associated
with this rulemaking can be found as a supporting document at
www.regulations.gov.
Unfunded Mandates
The Unfunded Mandates Reform Act of 1995 requires, at 2 U.S.C.
1532, that agencies prepare an assessment of anticipated costs and
benefits before issuing any rule that may result in the expenditure by
State, local, and tribal governments, in the aggregate, or by the
private sector, of $100 million or more (adjusted annually for
inflation) in any one year. This proposed rule would have no such
effect on State, local, and tribal governments, or on the private
sector.
Assistance Listing
The Assistance Listing number and title for the program affected by
this document is 64.014--Veterans State Domiciliary Care.
List of Subjects
38 CFR Part 17
Administrative practice and procedure, Claims, Domiciliary care,
Government contracts, Health care, Health facilities, Mental health
programs, Reporting and recordkeeping requirements, Veterans.
38 CFR Part 51
Administrative practice and procedure, Claims, Domiciliary care,
Government contracts, Health care, Health facilities, Mental health
programs, Reporting and recordkeeping requirements, Veterans.
Signing Authority
Denis McDonough, Secretary of Veterans Affairs, approved this
document on August 24, 2023, and authorized the undersigned to sign and
submit the document to the Office of the Federal Register for
publication electronically as an official document of the Department of
Veterans Affairs.
Consuela Benjamin,
Regulation Development Coordinator Office of Regulation Policy &
Management, Office of General Counsel, Department of Veterans Affairs.
For the reasons set forth in the preamble, the Department of
Veterans Affairs proposes to amend 38 CFR parts 17 and 51 as follows:
PART 17--MEDICAL
0
1. The authority citation for part 17 is amended by adding an entry in
numerical order for Sec. 17.47 to read as follows:
Authority: 38 U.S.C. 501, and as noted in specific sections.
* * * * *
Section 17.47 is also issued under 38 U.S.C. 1701, 1710, 1721,
1722, 1729, 3104(a)(9), 7333, Public Law 99-272; 42 U.S.C. 1396 et
seq.
* * * * *
Sec. 17.43 [Amended]
0
2. Amend Sec. 17.43 by removing the words ``or domiciliary'' in the
section heading and introductory text.
Sec. 17.46 [Amended]
0
3. Amend Sec. 17.46 by removing paragraph (b)(2)(vii), and
redesignating paragraph (b)(2)(viii) as paragraph (b)(2)(vii).
0
4. Amend Sec. 17.47 by:
0
a. Removing the authority citations immediately following paragraphs
(b)(1), (b)(2), (c), (d)(1)(i), (d)(1)(iii), (d)(2), (d)(3), (d)(4),
(d)(5), (e)(1), (e)(2), (f), (g)(1)(ii), (g)(2)(iv), (i)(2)(vii), (j),
and (k).
0
b. Revise paragraph (b)(2).
0
c. Remove and reserve paragraph (c).
Revisions read as follows:
Sec. 17.47 Considerations applicable in determining eligibility for
hospital care, medical services, nursing home care, or domiciliary
care.
* * * * *
(b) * * *
(2) For purposes of determining eligibility for domiciliary care
under Sec. 17.46(b)(2) of this part, the phrase no adequate means of
support refers to an applicant for or recipient of domiciliary care
whose annual income exceeds the maximum annual rate of pension for a
veteran in receipt of regular aid and attendance, as defined in 38
U.S.C. 1503, whose deficits in health and/or functional status may
render the veteran incapable of achieving or sustaining independence in
the community as determined by the Chief of Staff of the VA medical
center, or designee. In assessing a veteran's ability to achieve or
sustain independence in the community, the Chief of Staff or designee
will make a determination of eligibility for domiciliary care based on
objective evidence, considering factors including, but not limited to:
(i) the impact of the severity of the veteran's medical condition,
disabilities, and symptoms on the veteran's safety in the community;
(ii) the impact of the severity of the veteran's medical condition,
disabilities, and symptoms on the veteran's ability to provide self-
care;
(iii) the availability of community or family support systems;
(iv) the impact of the severity of the veteran's medical condition,
disabilities, and symptoms on the veteran's ability to access and
utilize community support systems;
(v) the risk of loss of housing in the community;
(vi) the risk of loss of the veteran's income;
(vii) access to outpatient mental health and substance use disorder
care; and
(viii) the current effectiveness of any outpatient mental health
and substance use disorder care provided to the veteran.
(c) [Reserved]
* * * * *
PART 51--PER DIEM FOR NURSING HOME, DOMICILIARY, OR ADULT DAY
HEALTH CARE OF VETERANS IN STATE HOMES
0
5. The authority citation for part 51 is amended by revising Sec.
51.42, and adding an entry in numerical order for Sec. 51.51 to read
as follows:
* * * * *
Section 51.42 also issued under 38 U.S.C. 510, 1744, and Public
Law 116-315 section 3007.
* * * * *
Section 51.51 also issued under Public Law 116-315 section 3007.
* * * * *
0
6. Amend Sec. 51.42 by adding paragraph (c) to read as follows:
Sec. 51.42 Payment procedures.
* * * * *
(c) Retroactive payments. VA will make per diem payments under this
part retroactive to the date specified by paragraph (b)(3) of this
section, or January 5, 2021, whichever date is later, if all the
following are met:
(1) Within 30 calendar days of [EFFECTIVE DATE OF FINAL RULE]] the
State home provides VA a written list of veterans' names for whom
completed forms were received by VA
[[Page 60424]]
on or after January 5, 2021, and the State home requests that VA
consider them for a waiver under Sec. 51.51(b)(2);
(2) With respect to the veterans on the written list under
paragraph (c)(1), VA denied the State's request for per diem for the
veterans when their forms were originally submitted and the denial was
solely because the veteran did not meet the requirements under 38 CFR
51.51(b) (2021);
(3) Upon VA review, the veteran would have received a waiver under
Sec. 51.51(b)(2) if that paragraph had been in effect when the request
for per diem was originally submitted; and
(4) The State home submits to VA a completed VA Form 10-5588, State
Home Report and Statement of Federal Aid Claimed, for each month that
the State home provided domiciliary care to a veteran for whom the home
is requesting a waiver. The form would only cover the veterans not
originally included on the form when submitted previously for that
month.
0
7. Amend Sec. 51.51 by revising paragraphs (a)(2) and (b) to read as
follows:
Sec. 51.51 Eligible veterans--domiciliary care.
(a) * * *
(1) * * *
(2) A veteran who VA determines has no adequate means of support.
When an applicant's annual income exceeds the rate of pension described
in paragraph (a)(1) of this section, VA will determine if the applicant
has no adequate means of support. This determination will be made
through an assessment of the veteran's deficits in health or functional
status that may render the veteran incapable of achieving or sustaining
independence in the community as determined by the Chief of Staff of
the VA medical center of jurisdiction, or designee. Assessment of
whether the veteran has no adequate means of support will be based on
objective evidence that considers factors that are inclusive of but not
limited to:
(i) the impact of the severity of the veteran's medical condition,
disabilities, and symptoms on the veteran's safety in the community;
(ii) the impact of the severity of the veteran's medical condition,
disabilities, and symptoms on the veteran's ability to provide self-
care;
(iii) the availability of community or family support systems;
(iv) the impact of the severity of the veteran's medical condition,
disabilities, and symptoms on the veteran's ability to access and
utilize community support systems;
(v) the risk of loss of housing in the community;
(vi) the risk of loss of the veteran's income;
(vii) access to outpatient mental health and substance use disorder
care; and
(viii) the current effectiveness of any outpatient mental health
and substance use disorder care provided to the veteran.
(b) (1) For purposes of this section, the eligible veteran must be
able to perform the following:
(i) Daily ablutions, such as brushing teeth, bathing, combing hair,
and body eliminations, without assistance.
(ii) Dress himself or herself with a minimum of assistance.
(iii) Proceed to and return from the dining hall without aid.
(iv) Feed himself or herself.
(v) Secure medical attention on an ambulatory basis or by use of a
personally propelled wheelchair.
(vi) Have voluntary control over body eliminations or have control
by use of an appropriate prosthesis.
(vii) Make rational and competent decisions as to the veteran's
desire to remain in or leave the State home; or, if the veteran lacks
the general capacity to make this residential care placement decision,
as defined by State law, then the veteran's legal representative
designated in accordance with State law, is authorized to make this
decision on behalf of the veteran.
(2) The Chief of Staff of the VA medical center of jurisdiction, or
designee, may waive the requirements in paragraph (b)(1) of this
section for purposes of payment of per diem for domiciliary care in a
State home on or after January 5, 2021, if the veteran is able to
perform not fewer than four of the requirements set forth in such
paragraph; or such waiver would be, based on a clinical determination,
in the best interest of the veteran because receipt of domiciliary care
in the particular State home would likely be beneficial to the veteran.
This clinical determination must consider whether receiving domiciliary
care in the State home would significantly enhance the veteran's
ability to live safely, would support the veteran's potential progress
in rehabilitation, if such potential exists, and would create an
environment that supports the health and well-being of the veteran. In
granting a waiver of paragraph (b)(1) of this section, the Chief of
Staff of the VA medical center of jurisdiction, or designee, must make
a finding that the State home has the capability to provide the
domiciliary care that the veteran needs.
Sec. 51.300 [Amended]
0
8. Amend Sec. 51.300 by removing and reserving paragraph (b).
[FR Doc. 2023-18921 Filed 8-31-23; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 8320-01-P