Medicaid; CMS Enforcement of State Compliance With Reporting and Federal Medicaid Renewal Requirements Under Section 1902(tt) of the Social Security Act, 84713-84737 [2023-26640]
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Federal Register / Vol. 88, No. 233 / Wednesday, December 6, 2023 / Rules and Regulations
pharmaceuticals is not required to list
all applicable EPA hazardous waste
numbers (i.e., hazardous waste codes) in
Item 13 of EPA Form 8700–22.
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shall not be deemed to ‘‘control’’ such
generators.
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■ 34. Section 262.232 is amended by
revising the paragraphs (a)(5), (b)(4)
introductory text, and (b)(4)(ii)(C) to
read as follows:
[FR Doc. 2023–26750 Filed 12–5–23; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6560–50–P
§ 262.232 Conditions for a generator
managing hazardous waste from an
episodic event.
(a) * * *
(5) The very small quantity generator
must comply with the hazardous waste
manifest provisions of subpart B of this
part and the recordkeeping provisions
for small quantity generators in § 262.44
when it sends its episodic event
hazardous waste off site to a designated
facility, as defined in § 260.10 of this
subchapter.
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(b) * * *
(4) Accumulation by small quantity
generators. A small quantity generator is
prohibited from accumulating
hazardous wastes generated from an
episodic event on drip pads and in
containment buildings. When
accumulating hazardous waste
generated from an episodic event in
containers and tanks, the following
conditions apply:
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(ii) * * *
(C) Use inventory logs, monitoring
equipment or other records to identify
the date upon which each episodic
event begins; and
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■ 55. Section 266.508 is amended by
revising paragraphs (a)(1)(iii)(C) and
(a)(2)(i) to read as follows:
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§ 266.508 Shipping non-creditable
hazardous waste pharmaceuticals from a
healthcare facility of evaluated hazardous
waste pharmaceuticals from a reverse
distributor.
(a) * * *
(1) * * *
(iii) * * *
(C) Lab packs that will be incinerated
in compliance with § 268.42(c) of this
subchapter are not required to be
marked with EPA hazardous waste
numbers (i.e., hazardous waste codes),
except D004, D005, D006, D007, D008,
D010, and D011, where applicable. A
nationally recognized electronic system,
such as bar coding or radio frequency
identification tag, may be used to
identify the applicable EPA hazardous
waste numbers (i.e., hazardous waste
codes).
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(2) * * *
(i) A healthcare facility shipping
noncreditable hazardous waste
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DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND
HUMAN SERVICES
Centers for Medicare & Medicaid
Services
42 CFR Parts 430 and 435
Office of the Secretary
45 CFR Part 16
[CMS–2447–IFC]
RIN 0938–AV26
Medicaid; CMS Enforcement of State
Compliance With Reporting and
Federal Medicaid Renewal
Requirements Under Section 1902(tt)
of the Social Security Act
Centers for Medicare &
Medicaid Services (CMS), HHS.
ACTION: Interim final rule with comment
period.
AGENCY:
This interim final rule with
request for comments (IFC) implements
reporting requirements and enforcement
authorities in the Social Security Act
(the Act) that were added by the
Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2023
(CAA, 2023). CMS will use these new
enforcement authorities as described in
this rule if States fail to comply with the
new reporting requirements added by
the CAA, 2023 or with Federal Medicaid
eligibility redetermination requirements
during a timeframe that is generally
aligned with the period when States are
restoring eligibility and enrollment
operations following the end of the
Medicaid continuous enrollment
condition under the Families First
Coronavirus Response Act (FFCRA).
The new enforcement authorities
include requiring States to submit a
corrective action plan, suspending
disenrollments from Medicaid for
procedural reasons, and imposing civil
money penalties (CMPs). They also
include applying a reduction to the
State-specific Federal Medical
Assistance Percentage (FMAP) for
failure to meet reporting requirements.
DATES: These regulations are effective
on December 6, 2023.
Comment date: To be assured
consideration, comments must be
SUMMARY:
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84713
received at one of the addresses
provided below, by February 2, 2024.
In commenting, please refer
to file code CMS–2447–IFC.
Comments, including mass comment
submissions, must be submitted in one
of the following three ways (please
choose only one of the ways listed):
1. Electronically. You may submit
electronic comments on this regulation
to https://www.regulations.gov. Follow
the ‘‘Submit a comment’’ instructions.
2. By regular mail. You may mail
written comments to the following
address ONLY: Centers for Medicare &
Medicaid Services, Department of
Health and Human Services, Attention:
CMS–2447–IFC, P.O. Box 8016,
Baltimore, MD 21244–8016.
Please allow sufficient time for mailed
comments to be received before the
close of the comment period.
3. By express or overnight mail. You
may send written comments to the
following address ONLY: Centers for
Medicare & Medicaid Services,
Department of Health and Human
Services, Attention: CMS–2447–IFC,
Mail Stop C4–26–05, 7500 Security
Boulevard, Baltimore, MD 21244–1850.
For information on viewing public
comments, see the beginning of the
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION section.
ADDRESSES:
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Abby Kahn, (410) 786–4321,
Abigail.Kahn@cms.hhs.gov, or Anna
Bonelli, (443) 615–1268, Anna.Bonelli@
cms.hhs.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Inspection of Public Comments: All
comments received before the close of
the comment period are available for
viewing by the public, including any
personally identifiable or confidential
business information that is included in
a comment. We post all 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. Follow the search
instructions on that website to view
public comments. CMS 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. CMS continues to encourage
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.
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Federal Register / Vol. 88, No. 233 / Wednesday, December 6, 2023 / Rules and Regulations
I. Background
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A. Enforcement Authorities Under
Section 1902(tt) of the Social Security
Act
Section 1902(tt)(2) of the Social
Security Act (the Act) (added by section
5131(b) of Subtitle D of Title V of
Division FF of the Consolidated
Appropriations Act, 2023 (CAA, 2023),
Public Law 117–328, enacted December
29, 2022) includes new enforcement
authority for CMS to use if it determines
that a State is not in compliance with
the reporting requirements under
section 1902(tt)(1) of the Act, Federal
eligibility redetermination
requirements,1 or both.
First, if CMS determines that a State
is not in compliance with the reporting
requirements under section 1902(tt)(1)
of the Act for any fiscal quarter that
occurs during the period that begins on
July 1, 2023, and ends on June 30, 2024,
section 1902(tt)(2)(A) of the Act requires
CMS to reduce the Federal Medical
Assistance Percentage (FMAP) as
determined for the State for the quarter
under section 1905(b) of the Act by the
number of percentage points (not to
exceed 1 percentage point) equal to the
product of 0.25 percentage points and
the number of fiscal quarters during
such period for which the State has
failed to satisfy such requirements. Per
section 1902(tt)(2)(A) of the Act, the
FMAP reduction is for fiscal quarters
occurring in the period beginning on
July 1, 2023, and ending on June 30,
2024. Therefore, CMS will not apply the
FMAP reduction under section
1902(tt)(2)(A) of the Act to the quarter
from April 1, 2023, to June 30, 2023,
and CMS will not evaluate Statereported data reflecting activities during
these months for purposes of the FMAP
reduction.
Second, if CMS determines that a
State is not in compliance with Federal
eligibility redetermination
requirements, the reporting
requirements under section 1902(tt)(1)
of the Act, or both, section 1902(tt)(2)(B)
of the Act authorizes CMS to require a
State to submit a corrective action plan
(CAP) to address the noncompliance. If
the State fails to submit or implement
an approved CAP in accordance with
section 1902(tt)(2)(B)(ii) of the Act, then,
under section 1902(tt)(2)(B)(iii) of the
Act, CMS may require the State to
1 Medicaid regulations use both terms
‘‘redetermination’’ and ‘‘renewal.’’ For purposes of
this rule, we interpret the reference to all Federal
requirements applicable to eligibility
redeterminations in section 1902(tt)(2)(B)(i) of the
Act to include Federal renewal requirements
outlined in 42 CFR 435.916, as newly defined at
§ 430.5 in this rule.
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suspend some or all terminations of
Medicaid eligibility that are for
procedural reasons (hereinafter referred
to as ‘‘procedural disenrollments’’) and
may also impose civil money penalties
(CMPs) of up to $100,000 for each day
a State is not in compliance. In this rule,
CMS defines procedural disenrollments
in § 430.5 to mean, for the purposes of
§ 430.49 and 45 CFR part 16, a
termination of a beneficiary’s Medicaid
eligibility after providing advance
notice required under 42 CFR part 431,
subpart E for reasons that are unrelated
to a State’s determination of whether the
individual meets eligibility criteria to
qualify for coverage, including for
failure to return a renewal form or
documentation needed by the State to
make a determination of eligibility. This
new authority under section
1902(tt)(2)(B) of the Act is in addition to
any FMAP reduction that may also be
applicable under section 1902(tt)(2)(A)
of the Act or any other enforcement
authority available to the Secretary. This
new enforcement authority under
section 1902(tt)(2)(B) of the Act relates
to State conduct occurring during the
period that began on April 1, 2023, and
ends on June 30, 2024.
Both the new enforcement authorities
in section 1902(tt)(2)(A) of the Act and
in section 1902(tt)(2)(B) of the Act took
effect on April 1, 2023. As noted above,
the enforcement authority in section
1902(tt)(2)(A) of the Act does not apply
to State conduct during the period from
April 1, 2023, to June 30, 2023.
B. New Enforcement Needs and
Considerations Given the Ending of the
Medicaid Continuous Enrollment
Condition
Section 1902(tt) of the Act applies
during a period when States are
conducting an unprecedented volume of
Medicaid eligibility redeterminations.
Under section 6008(b)(3) of the FFCRA
(Pub. L. 116–127, originally enacted
March 18, 2020), States were able to
claim a temporary 6.2 percentage point
increase in their FMAP provided that
they met several conditions, including
that they not disenroll most persons
enrolled in Medicaid as of or after
March 18, 2020, until the last day of the
month in which the COVID–19 Public
Health Emergency (PHE) ended. This
provision is known as the Medicaid
continuous enrollment condition. As of
April 1, 2023, 50 States, the District of
Columbia, and the five U.S. Territories
(referred to as ‘‘States’’ throughout,
consistent with section 1101(a) of the
Act), were claiming the FFCRA FMAP
increase, so this condition applied to all
States.
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Section 5131(a) of Subtitle D of Title
V of Division FF of the CAA, 2023 made
several changes to section 6008 of the
FFCRA. As relevant here, section
5131(a)(2)(C) of Subtitle D of Title V of
Division FF of the CAA, 2023 separated
the end of the continuous enrollment
condition from the end of the COVID–
19 PHE by amending section 6008(b)(3)
of the FFCRA to end continuous
Medicaid enrollment as a condition for
claiming the FFCRA temporary FMAP
increase on March 31, 2023.2 This
means that, beginning April 1, 2023, all
56 States claiming the temporary FMAP
increase were no longer required to
comply with the continuous enrollment
condition. Accordingly, States must
conduct a full renewal of eligibility for
each beneficiary (as part of a process
referred to as ‘‘unwinding’’), in
accordance with 42 CFR 435.916 and as
described in State Health Official (SHO)
letter #22–001, ‘‘RE: Promoting
Continuity of Coverage and Distributing
Eligibility and Enrollment Workload in
Medicaid, the Children’s Health
Insurance Program (CHIP), and Basic
Health Program (BHP) Upon Conclusion
of the COVID–19 Public Health
Emergency’’ (March 2022 SHO letter).3
CMS previously released guidance
describing specific requirements and
recommendations for States related to
unwinding from the continuous
enrollment condition. As a result of the
policies described in these guidance
documents, State unwinding periods
vary and do not necessarily overlap
with the compliance period for the new
enforcement tools created under section
1902(tt) of the Act. As discussed in SHO
letter # 23–002, ‘‘RE: Medicaid
Continuous Enrollment Condition
Changes, Conditions for Receiving the
FFCRA Temporary FMAP Increase,
Reporting Requirements, and
Enforcement Provisions in the
Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2023’’
(January 2023 SHO letter),4 beginning as
early as February 1, 2023, States have
up to 12 months to initiate, and 14
months to complete, a renewal for all
individuals enrolled in Medicaid, a
period commonly referred to as a State’s
2 Section 5131(a) of Subtitle D of Title V of
Division FF of the CAA, 2023 also amended section
6008 of the FFCRA to revise the conditions States
must meet to claim the temporary FMAP increase
for each quarter beginning April 1, 2023, to extend
the availability of the temporary FMAP increase
until December 31, 2023, and to gradually phase
down the amount of the increase for each quarter
from April 1, 2023, to December 31, 2023.
3 https://www.medicaid.gov/Federal-policyguidance/downloads/sho22001.pdf.
4 https://www.medicaid.gov/federal-policyguidance/downloads/sho23002.pdf.
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Federal Register / Vol. 88, No. 233 / Wednesday, December 6, 2023 / Rules and Regulations
‘‘unwinding period.’’ 5 Starting on or
after April 1, 2023, States claiming the
temporary FFCRA FMAP increase may
disenroll persons determined to be
ineligible by a renewal initiated during
the State’s unwinding period. Likewise,
the March 2022 SHO letter outlines
CMS’ expectations for renewals during
unwinding. As also discussed in the
January 2023 SHO letter, States had the
option to initiate the first cohort of
renewals to begin their unwinding
period in February, March, or April
2023.6
Section 1902(tt) of the Act took effect
on April 1, 2023, the day after the
continuous enrollment condition
expired. It imposes new reporting
requirements on States during a period
that generally overlaps with States’
unwinding periods. It also provides
CMS with new authority to take
enforcement action if States fail to
comply with Federal requirements
related to eligibility redetermination or
the new reporting requirements.
Notably, these new reporting
requirements and CMS’ authority to
enforce redetermination and data
reporting requirements apply to all 56
States, regardless of whether a State is
continuing to claim the FFCRA FMAP
increase. This rule implements the new
reporting requirements in section
1902(tt)(1) of the Act and the
enforcement authorities in section
1902(tt)(2) of the Act (which are further
discussed in the section II).
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C. Monitoring Eligibility
Redetermination Activities
Section 1902(tt) of the Act authorizes
CMS to closely monitor and enforce
Federal redetermination requirements
during a period that generally aligns
with States’ unwinding periods, and
thus, these authorities better position
CMS to take actions to prevent
unauthorized disenrollments during this
critical period. Section 1902(tt)(1) of the
Act requires that, for each month
occurring during the period beginning
on April 1, 2023, and ending on June 30,
2024, States must submit on a timely
basis to CMS, and CMS must make
public, certain monthly data about
5 While the requirements of section 6008 of the
FFCRA do not apply to separate CHIPs or the Basic
Health Program (BHP), CMS recognizes some States
elected to apply certain provisions of section 6008
to their separate CHIP program or BHP. In those
circumstances, subject to exceptions noted and
other Federal requirements, much of CMS’ guidance
related to unwinding from the FFCRA continuous
enrollment condition also applies to CHIP and BHP.
However, neither section 1902(tt) of the Act, nor
this rule, applies to separate CHIPs or BHPs.
6 For additional guidance about State renewals of
eligibility following the end of the continuous
enrollment condition see www.medicaid.gov/
unwinding.
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activities related to eligibility
redeterminations conducted during that
same period. The January 2023 SHO
letter discussed these reporting
requirements under section 1902(tt)(1)
of the Act in further detail and
explained that all the data States must
report under these new reporting
requirements are included in existing
data sources, including the Unwinding
Data Report and State-based Exchanges
(SBE) priority metrics.7
Based on the timeframe when the
reporting requirements under section
1902(tt)(1) of the Act apply, and the title
of section 1902(tt)(1) of the Act, which
refers to the ‘‘transition from [the
FFCRA] FMAP increase,’’ CMS
interprets the statutory data collection
and reporting requirements to be a
means to help CMS monitor States’
work unwinding from the Medicaid
continuous enrollment condition and
returning to regular eligibility and
enrollment operations. Under our
interpretation, the reporting
requirements under section 1902(tt)(1)
of the Act will help us monitor whether
States are compliant—during a
timeframe that generally aligns with
their return to regular eligibility and
enrollment operations—with Federal
eligibility redetermination requirements
(including renewal requirements at 42
CFR 435.916, strategies authorized
under section 1902(e)(14) of the Act, or
alternative strategies authorized by
CMS, including alternative or mitigation
strategies CMS has authorized States to
implement under section 6008(f)(2)(A)
of the FFCRA, which was added by
section 5131 of Subtitle D of Title V of
Division FF of the CAA, 2023).
Additionally, because section 1902(tt) of
the Act also includes the new
enforcement authorities in section
1902(tt)(2)(B) of the Act, CMS interprets
the data collection and reporting
requirements under section 1902(tt)(1)
to be a tool CMS can use to monitor
State compliance with Federal
eligibility redetermination requirements
during a period that generally aligns
with States’ unwinding periods.
CMS has also been monitoring States’
implementation of other amendments
made by section 5131 of Subtitle D of
Title V of Division FF of the CAA, 2023,
which create new conditions for States
seeking to receive the FFCRA temporary
7 See the January 2023 SHO Letter. See also CMS,
‘‘Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2023: FMAP
Reduction for Failure to Meet Reporting
Requirements under Section 1902(tt)(1) of the
Social Security Act, Frequently Asked Questions for
State Medicaid and CHIP Agencies,’’ (June 30, 2023)
(‘‘June 2023 FAQs’’) (Available at: https://
www.medicaid.gov/federal-policy-guidance/
downloads/fmap-rdctn-repot-medcid-chip-agncs06302023.pdf).
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84715
FMAP increase through December 31,
2023. These new conditions for
receiving the FFCRA temporary FMAP
increase also give CMS ways to
incentivize States to minimize the
disruption in coverage resulting from
procedural disenrollments during
States’ unwinding periods. Specifically,
the CAA, 2023 added to the FFCRA new
section 6008(f)(2)(A), which conditions
receipt of the FFCRA FMAP increase
after April 1, 2023, on State compliance
with Federal redetermination
requirements, including renewal
strategies authorized under section
1902(e)(14)(A) or other alternative
processes and procedures approved by
the Secretary. New FFCRA section
6008(f)(2)(B) conditions receipt of the
FFCRA FMAP increase after April 1,
2023, on States’ maintaining up-to-date
contact information for a beneficiary
before redetermining eligibility for such
beneficiary, and new section
6008(f)(2)(C) conditions receipt of the
FFCRA FMAP increase after April 1,
2023, on States’ undertaking a good
faith effort to contact an individual
using more than one modality prior to
terminating their enrollment on the
basis of returned mail. The January 2023
SHO letter outlines these new
conditions for receiving the FFCRA
FMAP increase in greater detail.
Because the same section of the CAA,
2023 that added new section 1902(tt) to
the Act also included both these
conditions for receiving the FFCRA
FMAP increase, CMS interprets the
entirety of the changes made in section
5131 of subtitle D of division FF of the
CAA, 2023 to give CMS a range of
enforcement mechanisms and
incentives that, taken together, can be
used to help minimize the
disenrollment of people who otherwise
continue to meet the substantive
eligibility criteria and whose enrollment
would be retained but for their failure
to meet a procedural requirement during
States’ unwinding periods. One key
purpose of section 1902(tt) is thus to
enhance CMS’ ability to take
enforcement action against
noncompliant States during this critical
timeframe.
CMS takes seriously its responsibility
to hold States accountable for resuming
routine eligibility and enrollment
operations and plans to fully exercise
the new authorities at section 1902(tt) of
the Act when appropriate to do so.
Since the FFCRA was enacted, CMS has
been preparing for the eventual
unwinding of the FFCRA continuous
enrollment condition. CMS has
explained to States the conditions of the
FFCRA FMAP increase, gauged States’
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ability to resume redeterminations on an
unprecedented scale, and provided
States with technical assistance to
address challenges that might lead to
preventable loss of coverage for
procedural reasons among beneficiaries.
If CMS identifies a violation of Federal
redetermination requirements, then,
consistent with section 6008(f)(2)(A) of
the FFCRA, CMS will communicate to
the State that its FFCRA FMAP increase
will be withheld if the State does not
ensure the issue is fully resolved or does
not implement appropriate mitigations
until full compliance can be achieved.
The new enforcement tools outlined
at section 1902(tt) of the Act, which
allow CMS to enforce existing Federal
redetermination requirements as well as
the reporting requirements at section
1902(tt)(1) of the Act, are a key part of
the suite of CMS enforcement
mechanisms and incentives added
through the CAA, 2023 to minimize the
disenrollment of eligible individuals
during States’ unwinding periods. These
new enforcement tools are critical to
enabling CMS to effectively monitor for,
and take action to protect against, States
conducting renewals that do not adhere
to Federal redetermination requirements
and to support continued enrollment for
those individuals who remain eligible.
Nothing in this rule affects other
authorities that exist outside of this new
enforcement framework or precludes
CMS from pursuing additional
enforcement action under section 1904
of the Act, including withholding
Federal financial participation (FFP), or
limiting payments, for States that fail to
comply with requirements of the
Medicaid statute.
D. Pre-Compliance Engagement With
States
When CMS becomes aware of a
potential violation of Federal
requirements, we first attempt to work
collaboratively with the State to
understand the nature and scope of the
problem and to identify appropriate
alternative processes and procedures
that the State can adopt to avoid or
minimize beneficiary harm until the
State can fix the problem and come into
full compliance with Federal
requirements, consistent with our
authority to enforce compliance with
section 1902 under section 1904 of the
Act and 42 CFR 430.35. Consistent with
this practice, as discussed in section
II.A of this rule, CMS will provide
technical assistance to States facing
unusual circumstances that interfere
with their ability to comply fully with
section 1902(tt)(1) of the Act reporting
requirements and will consider
approving alternative timelines and
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processes for meeting those
requirements. The statute does not give
CMS the discretion to avoid taking an
FMAP reduction under section
1902(tt)(2)(A) of the Act for a quarter in
the period beginning July 1, 2023, and
ending June 30, 2024, if a State
ultimately fails to report each of the
metrics required under section
1902(tt)(1) of the Act for that quarter.
However, CMS will consider mitigating
circumstances before taking additional
enforcement action under section
1902(tt)(2)(B) of the Act if a State fails
to meet the reporting requirements
under section 1902(tt)(1) of the Act
during the period from April 1, 2023, to
June 30, 2024.
If CMS’ efforts to work collaboratively
with States are successful, and the State
takes necessary steps to address
beneficiary harm and prevent future
harm (such as reinstating eligibility for
affected beneficiaries and suspending
procedural disenrollments, where
appropriate), CMS might not initiate
compliance action under section
1902(tt)(2)(B) of the Act. However, if
CMS determines that a State violated
the section 1902(tt)(1) of the Act
reporting requirements or Federal
redetermination requirements, CMS will
consider exercising the enforcement
authorities in section 1902(tt)(2)(B) of
the Act, as implemented in this rule.
II. Provisions of the Interim Final Rule
With Comment
This rule adds new 42 CFR 430.49
and 435.927 and 435.928 to the CFR and
amends §§ 430.3, 430.5, and 45 CFR part
16. New § 430.49 of this rule interprets
and implements section 1902(tt)(2)(B) of
the Act, which authorizes CMS to do the
following: (1) require States to submit
and implement a CAP for
noncompliance with Federal
requirements applicable to eligibility
redeterminations and the reporting
requirements described in section
1902(tt)(1) of the Act; and (2) if the State
fails to submit or implement an
approvable CAP in accordance with
section 1902(tt)(2)(B)(ii), require the
State to suspend some or all
disenrollments from Medicaid for
procedural reasons until the State takes
appropriate corrective action, impose
CMPs of not more than $100,000 for
each day the State is not in compliance,
or both. New § 435.927 interprets and
implements section 1902(tt)(1) of the
Act, which requires that, for each month
occurring during the period beginning
on April 1, 2023, and ending on June 30,
2024, States must submit on a timely
basis to CMS, and CMS must make
public, certain monthly data about
activities related to eligibility
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redeterminations conducted during that
same period.
New § 435.928 specifies how CMS
will implement the FMAP reduction
required under section 1902(tt)(2)(A) of
the Act. If a State does not satisfy the
reporting requirements described in
section 1902(tt)(1) of the Act for any
fiscal quarter in the period that begins
on July 1, 2023 and ends on June 30,
2024, section 1902(tt)(2)(A) of the Act
requires CMS to reduce the FMAP
determined for the State for the quarter
under section 1905(b) of the Act by the
number of percentage points (not to
exceed 1 percentage point) equal to the
product of 0.25 percentage points and
the number of fiscal quarters during
such period for which the State has
failed to satisfy such requirements.
The provisions of this rule apply to
the States, District of Columbia, and all
5 territories—Guam, Puerto Rico, the
Virgin Islands, the Northern Mariana
Islands, and American Samoa. While
the regulations in part 435 apply only to
the States, the District of Columbia, the
Northern Mariana Islands and American
Samoa, § 436.901 provides that with one
exception (not relevant here), the
requirements of part 435, subchapter J,
which includes §§ 435.927 and 435.928
through this rulemaking, apply to
Guam, Puerto Rico, and the Virgin
Islands.
The new enforcement authority
granted to CMS under section
1902(tt)(2)(A) and (B) of the Act will
improve State accountability for
complying with Federal renewal
requirements while also minimizing
disruptions to coverage for eligible
people during a period that generally
aligns with States’ unwinding activities.
The additional enforcement activities
authorized in section 1902(tt)(2) of the
Act will reinforce and augment the
routine monitoring and compliance
action that CMS is already undertaking
to promote State compliance with
Federal enrollment and eligibility
requirements, described in section I.C
and D of this rule. These authorities will
also help ensure that States remain
accountable to CMS by requiring them
to submit certain data to CMS and will
increase public transparency about
eligibility redeterminations between
April 1, 2023, and June 30, 2024, by
requiring CMS to publicly report the
data.
Finally, the rule amends § 430.5 to
add new definitions of the terms Federal
redetermination requirements and
procedural disenrollment for purposes
of § 430.49, and (with respect to the
definition of procedural disenrollment
only) for purposes of 45 CFR part 16.
And this rule creates reconsideration
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and appeal rights for States under new
§ 430.49(f) and corresponding
amendments to § 430.3 and 45 CFR part
16, to ensure States have clear avenues
for appealing CMS decisions to require
suspension of procedural
disenrollments and/or impose CMPs
under the new authorities in section
1902(tt)(2)(B)(iii) of the Act.
We have also included severability
clauses at new §§ 430.49(g), 435.927(e),
and 435.928(c) to emphasize our intent
that, to the extent a reviewing court
holds that any provision of these rules
is unlawful, the remaining provisions
should take effect and be given the
maximum effect permitted by law. The
severability clauses provide that any
provision of these sections that is held
to be invalid or unenforceable by its
terms, or as applied to any person or
circumstance, or stayed pending further
agency action, shall be severable from
the relevant section and shall not affect
the remainder thereof or the application
of the provision to persons not similarly
situated or to dissimilar circumstances.
A. Reporting Requirements (§ 435.927)
Section 1902(tt)(1) of the Act requires
that, for each month occurring during
the period that begins on April 1, 2023,
and ends on June 30, 2024, each State
submits to CMS, and that CMS make
public, a report on the activities of the
State relating to eligibility
redeterminations conducted during
such period.
New § 435.927 implements and
interprets the reporting requirements in
section 1902(tt)(1) of the Act. The
required reporting will help CMS and
others to monitor State actions during
the unwinding period and beyond
because it includes reporting on metrics
such as the number of individuals
disenrolled from Medicaid or CHIP and
certain information about transitions
from Medicaid or CHIP coverage to
coverage through an Exchange.
Reviewing and publishing these
monthly data will give CMS and the
public information to help hold States
accountable for following
redetermination requirements and will
promote transparency.
CMS interprets section 1902(tt)(1) of
the Act to require that States report data
representing the activities conducted
during each month of the designated
time period.8 However, CMS does not
believe the provision requires that
States must submit all the required
monthly reports by June 30, 2024,
because it will take States time to
assemble, review, and submit data from
8 See the January 2023 SHO, and the June 2023
FAQs.
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the months for which they are reporting.
For example, States must report on
activities occurring in June 2024, but the
submission of that monthly report could
occur after June 30, 2024, to allow the
State time to collect, review, and submit
the data.9 This is reflected in new
§ 435.927(c), which requires States to
report certain data representing
activities conducted by a State during
the time period beginning April 1, 2023,
and ending June 30, 2024.
To help ensure that CMS and the
public can use and understand the data,
avoid redundancy, and for purposes of
practicality, CMS is interpreting the
data elements required under section
1902(tt)(1) of the Act differently in
§ 435.927(d) depending on the element.
Section 1902(tt)(1) of the Act directs the
Secretary to make public reports with
data ‘‘relating to eligibility
redeterminations,’’ but CMS is not
interpreting all the reporting elements
listed in the subsequent subparagraphs
to be limited to data related to such
redeterminations. Specifically, CMS is
interpreting the reporting elements
listed in section 1902(tt)(1)(A), (B) and
(D) of the Act to represent only those
individuals who are subject to Medicaid
or CHIP redeterminations but is not
interpreting the elements listed in
section 1902(tt)(1)(C) or (E) of the Act to
be limited to reporting on such
individuals.
Paragraphs (A) and (B) of section
1902(tt)(1) of the Act require States to
report on certain data elements for
persons with coverage for medical
assistance, child health assistance, or
pregnancy-related assistance, which
CMS interprets to refer to people with
Medicaid or CHIP coverage, including
pregnancy-related coverage in both
programs. The data elements required
under paragraphs (A) and (B) are as
follows: the number of eligibility
renewals initiated, beneficiaries
renewed on a total and ex parte basis
(that is, based on available reliable
information without contacting the
individual consistent with
§ 435.916(a)(2)), individuals who were
disenrolled for any reason, and the
number of individuals disenrolled for
procedural reasons. These data points
are all the direct result of Medicaid or
CHIP eligibility redetermination actions
and thus new § 435.927(d)(1) through
(5) require States to report this
information only for people undergoing
Medicaid or CHIP redeterminations.
Similarly, paragraph (D) of section
1902(tt)(1) of the Act requires States to
report the number of individuals whom
a Federal or State-based Exchange
9 See
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84717
determined eligible for a qualified
health plan or a Basic Health Program
(BHP),10 as well as the number of
individuals who selected a qualified
health plan or enrolled in a BHP
(section 1902(tt)(1)(D)(i) and (ii) of the
Act specifically require data related to
BHPs). Paragraph (D) of section
1902(tt)(1) of the Act does not specify
that these data be limited only to
numbers of individuals whose eligibility
had been redetermined by the Medicaid
program. However, these data elements
are only useful to CMS in understanding
‘‘the activities of the State relating to
eligibility redeterminations,’’ as directed
by section 1902(tt)(1) of the Act if the
data are limited to Medicaid and CHIP
beneficiaries who have undergone an
eligibility redetermination. These data
will help demonstrate if beneficiaries
found ineligible for Medicaid and CHIP
during the redetermination process are
able to find other coverage on
Exchanges or BHPs and will also help
CMS and other interested parties
identify States in which transitions to
Exchange coverage are relatively
successful and States in which such
transitions may not be as successful.
These data will be most useful for
oversight of States’ redetermination
processes if they are limited to the
numbers of individuals’ accounts that
were transferred to an Exchange or BHP
because of a redetermination under
Medicaid or CHIP. To include other
transfers (those of consumers who were
not enrolled in Medicaid or CHIP at the
time and who newly apply directly with
their State agency and are determined
ineligible) would not help to illuminate
‘‘eligibility redeterminations,’’ because
new applicants are not in a position to
lose Medicaid or CHIP coverage.
Therefore, in new § 435.927(d)(10) and
(11), we require the reported data
described in section 1902(tt)(1)(D) of the
Act to reflect Medicaid/CHIP
redeterminations.
In previous guidance,11 we listed the
reporting elements under section
1902(tt)(1) of the Act related to
Exchanges and the anticipated data
sources for obtaining the data for these
elements. Specifically, in the January
2023 SHO letter, in the first column of
‘‘Table 2: Reporting Elements Under
Section 1902(tt)(1) for the Period from
April 1, 2023, through June 30, 2024,
and Corresponding Data Sources,’’ we
stated that for States with Exchanges
10 The Basic Health Program (BHP) is a program
for specified individuals who do not qualify for
Medicaid but whose household income does not
exceed 200 percent of the Federal poverty level
(FPL).
11 See the January 2023 SHO Letter, and the June
2023 FAQs.
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that use the Federal Exchange eligibility
and enrollment platform (including
Federally-facilitated Exchanges (FFEs)
and SBEs on the Federal platform (SBE–
FPs)) we anticipated that CMS would
report these data on behalf of States and
that we intended to limit the data to
information that is the result of a
Medicaid or CHIP redetermination
(which would exclude data resulting
from a new Medicaid or CHIP
application). In contrast, for SBEs with
their own platforms that use either a
non-integrated or integrated eligibility
system, we inadvertently did not make
such a distinction.12 Rather, column one
in Table 2 of the January 2023 SHO
letter suggests that the reporting
elements would apply to Exchange
activity resulting from all Medicaid or
CHIP applications. However, in the
‘‘SBE Priority Metrics: Medicaid/
Children’s Health Insurance Program
(CHIP) Continuous Enrollment
Condition Unwinding Overview and
Template 1.0 User Guide (version 1.0, 5/
19/2023),’’ which is cited in guidance
that we released on June 30, 2023,13 we
specified that SBEs will report only
those required data elements that result
from Medicaid or CHIP
redeterminations. As a result, although
the labeling in the first column of the
table in the January 2023 SHO letter is
inconsistent, the definitions of the
required State data are consistent across
types of Exchanges, and therefore the
data collected and reported will be
consistent across types of Exchanges,
and in all cases, including for SBEs not
using the Federal platform, will be
limited to information related to
Medicaid or CHIP redeterminations.
12 States with SBEs that operate an integrated
eligibility platform have a shared operating system
between the SBE and the Medicaid/CHIP agency
that conducts eligibility determinations related to
new and renewal applications for certain Medicaid
and CHIP programs and qualified health plans. In
contrast, States with SBEs that operate a nonintegrated eligibility platform have separate
operating systems for the SBE and the Medicaid/
CHIP agency. Accounts are transferred between the
separate operating systems depending on the initial
eligibility determination or assessment for the
programs made by either the SBE or the Medicaid/
CHIP agency.
13 The June 2023 FAQs, in Table 1, cites to CMS,
‘‘State-Based Exchanges (SBE) Priority Metrics:
Medicaid/Children’s Health Insurance Program
(CHIP) Continuous Enrollment Condition
Unwinding; Overview and Template 1.0 User
Guide,’’ released May 5, 2023, https://
www.medicaid.gov/resources-for-states/downloads/
sbe-medicaid-chip-con-unwind-metrics-reprtguide.pdf. ‘‘The priority metrics include indicators
that are specific to Medicaid/CHIP continuous
enrollment unwinding activities. For those metrics,
SBEs should count activities that were initiated
through the Medicaid/CHIP agency’s renewal
process, in which a consumer was determined
ineligible for limited or full benefit Medicaid or
CHIP.’’
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Section 435.927(d)(10) and (11) reflect
this.
As noted, in the January 2023 SHO
letter, CMS identified the reporting
requirements under section 1902(tt)(1)
of the Act that relate to Exchanges.
Consistent with CMS’ stated
expectations in that SHO letter, CMS
will report data on behalf of States with
Exchanges that use the Federal
eligibility and enrollment platform
(including FFEs and SBE–FPs) since
CMS operates the Federal eligibility and
enrollment platform. Therefore, States
do not have to report the data, and we
are not including in this rule any
provisions implementing the
requirements under section 1902(tt)(1)
of the Act that apply to States with
Exchanges that use the Federal
eligibility and enrollment platform.
Section 435.927(d)(10) and (11) describe
the reporting requirements that apply to
States with SBEs that do not use the
Federal platform.
Section 435.927(d)(10) and (11) also
reflect certain practical and operational
differences between SBEs based on
whether the Exchange eligibility system
is integrated with the State’s Medicaid
and/or CHIP eligibility systems.
Specifically, some SBEs have integrated
eligibility systems but others do not. As
Congress recognized in section
1902(tt)(1)(D)(i) and (ii) of the Act, there
is no need for an Exchange with an
integrated eligibility system to report
account transfers from the Medicaid
and/or CHIP agency to the Exchange,
whereas that data point is relevant for
Exchanges without integrated eligibility
systems.
In contrast to how we are interpreting
section 1902(tt)(1)(A), (B), and (D) of the
Act, we are not interpreting section
1902(tt)(1)(E) of the Act to be limited to
describing only information about a
Medicaid or CHIP redetermination.
States are required under section
1902(tt)(1)(E) of the Act to report data
on total call center volume, average wait
times, and average abandonment rate.
For these reporting elements, it is
impractical to limit the measures only to
data related to eligibility
redeterminations. States do not always
identify the purpose of individual calls
to call centers, calls can address
multiple purposes and beneficiaries,
and reprogramming call trees and
retraining staff could take months for
States to operationalize, if required. As
the period for which States are required
to report these data under section
1902(tt)(1)(E) of the Act has already
begun and is time-limited, it is
impractical to limit the collection of the
call center data required under
1902(tt)(1)(E) of the Act to only those
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calls related to individuals’ eligibility
redeterminations. Furthermore, these
call center metrics are useful because
they illustrate the extent to which all
beneficiaries, including those whose
eligibility is being redetermined, can
access assistance. Accordingly, new
§ 435.927(d)(7) through (9) are not
limited to just call center information
related to redeterminations.
CMS is also not interpreting section
1902(tt)(1)(C) of the Act to be limited to
describing only information about a
Medicaid or CHIP redetermination.
Section 1902(tt)(1)(C) of the Act requires
States to report on the number of
individuals enrolled in a separate CHIP
program under section 2101(a)(1) of the
Act. Broadening the data collected
under paragraph (C) to include the total
number of enrollees in a separate CHIP,
not just those enrolling subject to a
Medicaid or CHIP eligibility
redetermination, provides useful
information. In addition to being new
data that is not publicly reported
elsewhere, the data helps CMS and
others identify whether separate CHIP
programs’ total enrollment levels are
changing during the applicable period,
which might indicate whether
individuals are transitioning to CHIP
from the Medicaid program. New
§ 435.927(d)(6) therefore refers to
reporting on total enrollment in separate
CHIPs.
Despite not being limited to
information on redeterminations, data
elements reported under section
1902(tt)(1)(C) and (E) of the Act are still
useful for purposes of providing
transparency on States’ activities to
conduct redeterminations. State
Medicaid agency operational data on
call center activity—call volume,
average wait times, and average
abandonment rates—help illuminate
beneficiaries’ access to information and
ability to receive assistance from the
State, as well as the eligibility process
generally. Information on the
enrollment levels for separate CHIP
programs helps identify trends in
enrollment that could signal whether a
State is not performing redeterminations
or transitioning eligible individuals
from Medicaid to CHIP.
All the data States must report under
the requirements of section 1902(tt)(1)
of the Act are already being reported
through existing data reports collected
by CMS. For efficiency and to improve
standardization (and hence,
comparability) of the data, and because
the applicable statutes, regulations, and
other guidance governing CMS’ use of
the data collected through those existing
data sources permit this, CMS is not
requiring States to submit separate or
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additional reports to CMS to comply
with section 1902(tt)(1) of the Act.14
Rather, CMS believes the requirements
of section 1902(tt)(1) of the Act can be
met through compliance with the
following existing, CMS-approved data
reporting processes: the Unwinding
Eligibility and Enrollment Data
Reporting (also referred to as the
Unwinding Data Report), Medicaid and
CHIP Eligibility and Enrollment
Performance Indicator Data (PI data), the
Transformed Medicaid Statistical
Information System (T–MSIS), and SBE
Priority Metrics.15 Additionally, as
described previously, the required data
under section 1902(tt)(1) of the Act that
apply to States with Exchanges that use
the Federal eligibility and enrollment
platform will be reported by CMS.
Under section 1902(tt)(1) of the Act,
CMS will publish all required data after
a period of time to allow for data quality
and validation reviews.
Section 1902(tt)(1) of the Act requires
States to submit the required monthly
data on a timely basis but does not
include a definition of timely or
standards for completeness and
accuracy. CMS already collects the
required data via existing processes, and
the timeliness, completeness, and
quality specifications for data submitted
via those existing processes have
generally been defined previously.16
Under this regulation, States will
generally submit data in accordance
with these existing timelines and
specifications unless CMS has approved
an alternative process or timeline for
reporting, in which case the State must
submit the data according to any
alternative specifications CMS approved
as part of the alternative process or
timeline.
As specified in § 435.927(b)(1), CMS
will consider data to be timely when it
is submitted by the deadline outlined in
the applicable existing reporting process
specifications, with some variations for
T–MSIS data and to permit States to
submit data according to alternative
processes and timelines approved by
CMS. CMS will approve these
alternative processes and timelines
when, as discussed below, a State is
making a good faith effort to meet the
14 See sections 1902(a)(4), 1902(a)(6), 1902(a)(75),
1903(r)(1)(F), and 2107(b)(1) of the Act; see also 42
CFR 431.16, 42 CFR 433.112(b)(15), 45 CFR
155.260(a)(1)(ii). See also https://www.federal
register.gov/documents/2019/02/06/2019-01157/
privacy-act-of-1974-system-of-records and https://
www.federalregister.gov/documents/2013/10/23/
2013-24861/privacy-act-of-1974-report-of-analtered-cms-system-of-records-notice.
15 See the January 2023 SHO Letter, and the June
2023 FAQs.
16 See the January 2023 SHO Letter, and the June
2023 FAQs.
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requirements despite facing significant
challenges that interfere with its ability
to do so. As an example of how a
deadline outlined under other existing
reporting process specifications might
apply here, the specifications for PI data
generally require States to submit data
by the 8th of each month; 17 thus under
§ 435.927(b)(1), States would report
these PI data on a timely basis under
section 1902(tt)(1) of the Act if they
reported them by the 8th of each month.
The rule also, however, includes a
variation on how the existing T–MSIS
reporting timeline would apply for
purposes of section 1902(tt)(1) of the
Act data because, in order for T–MSIS
data to be useful for section 1902(tt)(1)
of the Act purposes, these data must be
reported under a different timeline.
Specifically, to publicly report data
under section 1902(tt)(1)(D)(i) of the
Act, CMS will use T–MSIS data to
match the records of Medicaid and CHIP
beneficiaries to data from the FFEs and
SBEs-FPs and identify the number of
accounts that are received at these
Exchanges due to a Medicaid/CHIP
redetermination. Using these data, CMS
can determine the other metrics listed
under section 1902(tt)(1)(D)(i) of the
Act, such as the total numbers of these
individuals who apply for and are
determined eligible for a qualified
health plan. CMS will also use T–MSIS
data to publicly report data on the
number of separate CHIP enrollees for
each State, as required under section
1902(tt)(1)(C) of the Act. CMS already
requires that States maintain current
data submissions by submitting T–MSIS
data monthly before the last day of the
subsequent month, although States are
not considered to be out of compliance
for T–MSIS reporting until data
submissions are behind by 2 or more
months. As reflected in
§ 435.927(b)(1)(ii), due to the timesensitive nature of these calculations
and the need for up-to-date data, States
that do not submit T–MSIS data
monthly by the last day of the
subsequent month may be subject to the
FMAP reduction under section
1902(tt)(2)(A) of the Act or other
corrective action under section
1902(tt)(2)(B) of the Act. For example,
T–MSIS data reflecting March 2024
activities will be due by the end of April
2024, under § 435.927(b)(1)(ii).
CMS recognizes that some States
might encounter unusual circumstances
that interfere with reporting using
17 CMS, ‘‘Medicaid and Children’s Health
Insurance Program Eligibility and Enrollment Data
Specifications for Reporting During Unwinding,’’
updated December 2022. Available at https://
www.medicaid.gov/sites/default/files/2022-12/
unwinding-data-specifications-dec-2022.pdf.
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84719
existing CMS-approved processes or
that impede a State’s ability to meet the
deadlines in § 435.927(b)(1)(i) and (ii).
For example, States may experience
unforeseeable or unavoidable challenges
such as a natural disaster or unplanned
systems outages, or may be working to
resolve significant foreseeable
challenges, such as a known and
reported major operational or systems
issue that impacts the State’s ability to
submit timely and accurate data and
that the State is working to remediate
but needs additional time to fix. As
reflected in § 435.927(b)(1)(iii), (b)(3)(ii),
(b)(4), and (c)(2), CMS would consider
approving alternative timelines and
processes for reporting required data if
a State is making a good faith effort to
submit the required data. For example,
CMS would consider allowing such a
State to submit certain summary data
via email. As specified in
§ 435.927(b)(4), a good-faith effort
means that (1) the State is experiencing
significant, unforeseeable, or
unavoidable challenges in complying
with the reporting requirements of
§ 435.927(c), or is experiencing
significant foreseeable challenges in
complying and is working to remediate
these challenges but needs additional
time to address them; (2) the State
requested and obtained approval from
CMS to submit the data via an
alternative process or timeline, and (3)
the approved alternative process for
submitting the data or timeline is
sufficient to ensure CMS can obtain and
use the data to meet CMS’ obligations to
report the data publicly per section
1902(tt)(1) of the Act. CMS will work
with such a State to ensure that CMS
has all the data it needs in order to meet
its requirement to publicly report data
under section 1902(tt)(1) of the Act and
will only approve alternative timelines
or reporting processes that permit CMS
to meet this requirement.
States that are ultimately unable to
submit required data or that submit data
via an unapproved process or according
to an unapproved timeline will be
subject to the enforcement actions in
section 1902(tt)(2) of the Act. Because
section 1902(tt)(2)(A) requires CMS to
take an FMAP reduction if States fail to
meet the section 1902(tt)(1) of the Act
reporting requirements for a quarter in
the period beginning July 1, 2023, and
ending June 30, 2024, CMS does not
have the authority to exempt States from
FMAP reductions for failure to meet the
section 1902(tt)(1) of the Act reporting
requirements during that timeframe.
However, as indicated in § 430.49, CMS
will consider certain mitigating
circumstances before taking the various
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additional enforcement actions
described in section 1902(tt)(2)(B) of the
Act.
The regulation also provides in
§ 435.927(b)(2) that in order to be
considered ‘‘complete’’ for purposes of
public reporting under section
1902(tt)(1) of the Act, States must
submit every data element (although in
some cases, as noted above, certain
elements may be submitted on a
different or later timeframe than others,
subject to CMS approval). A State that
ultimately fails to report one or more
required data elements would be subject
to the FMAP reduction under section
1902(tt)(2)(A) of the Act if the State’s
noncompliance was for a quarter during
the period from July 1, 2023, through
June 30, 2024. Such a State might also
be subject to other enforcement actions
under section 1902(tt)(2)(B) of the Act;
these are discussed in section II. of this
rule.
Furthermore, in § 435.927(b)(3), the
regulation provides that to be
considered of ‘‘sufficient quality,’’ the
State must report data that adheres to
specifications outlined in previously
existing regulation or guidance for each
of the CMS-approved processes, or data
that adheres to the specifications
outlined in an alternative process
approved by CMS. Existing reporting
processes are governed by detailed
instructions that outline how and what
States should report and help ensure
that States are reporting consistent data
that CMS can publicly report, consistent
with requirements under section
1902(tt)(1) of the Act.
New section § 435.927(c) implements
the reporting requirements in section
1902(tt)(1) of the Act in light of the
interpretations that are discussed above
and reflected in the other paragraphs of
§ 435.927. Section 435.927(c) specifies
that States must submit to CMS the data
described in § 435.927(d), and those
data must be timely, complete, and of
sufficient quality (as those terms are
defined in § 435.927(b)). It further
provides that States must submit the
required data via existing CMSapproved processes or through
alternative processes approved by CMS
when a State is making a good faith
effort as defined in § 435.927(b)(4).
B. Application of the FMAP Reduction
(§ 435.928)
If a State does not satisfy the reporting
requirements in section 1902(tt)(1) of
the Act for any fiscal quarter that occurs
during the period that begins on July 1,
2023, and ends on June 30, 2024,
section 1902(tt)(2)(A) of the Act requires
CMS to reduce the FMAP determined
for the State for the quarter under
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section 1905(b) of the Act by the
number of percentage points (not to
exceed 1 percentage point) equal to the
product of 0.25 percentage points and
the number of fiscal quarters during
such period for which the State has
failed to satisfy such requirements. We
are implementing this FMAP reduction
along with our interpretation of how it
is to be applied in new § 435.928.18 In
§ 435.928(b)(1), CMS interprets the
statutory reference to the FMAP
determined for the State under section
1905(b) of the Act to mean the Statespecific FMAP defined in the first
sentence of section 1905(b) of the Act.19
In § 435.928(b)(4), CMS interprets the
statutory language regarding the amount
of the reduction to mean that when
States are noncompliant in multiple
quarters, the FMAP reduction will
increase by 0.25 percentage points for
each successive quarter of
noncompliance, regardless of whether
the noncompliant quarters are
consecutive. For example, if a State
were out of compliance for three
quarters, the reduction would be: a 0.25
percentage point FMAP reduction in the
first quarter of noncompliance; a 0.50
percentage point FMAP reduction in the
second quarter of noncompliance; and a
0.75 percentage point FMAP reduction
in the third quarter of noncompliance.
In no case, however, would the FMAP
reduction for any single quarter exceed
1 percentage point.
We acknowledge that the language of
the statute would allow for an
alternative interpretation that would
require CMS to apply the same
percentage point reduction to all of the
quarters in which a State failed to
comply with the reporting requirements.
For example, if a State were out of
compliance for three quarters, CMS
could apply a 0.75 percentage point
reduction to the State’s FMAP in all
three of the applicable quarters. To
come to that conclusion, CMS would
have to interpret the statute as requiring
CMS either to apply the reduction to the
relevant quarters multiple times, or to
wait until the end of the period to apply
the reduction. Neither of these
alternative approaches supports
transparency, as the total amount of the
reduction would not be known until up
to three quarters after the State is found
to be noncompliant, making it difficult
for States to budget for the amount of
18 For additional discussion about the application
of the FMAP reduction, see the January 2023 SHO
Letter, and the June 2023 FAQs.
19 In the June 2023 FAQs, CMS explained how
such a decrease would be applied to expenditures
that are matched at FMAPs articulated elsewhere in
statute, because they use the 1905(b) State-specific
FMAP as a base.
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State share they would need for the
four-quarter period.
As specified in § 435.928(b)(3), States
that fail to report data according to the
requirements in § 435.927 for a single
month within a quarter will be subject
to the FMAP reduction for the entire
quarter. Section 1902(tt)(1) of the Act
specifies that the FMAP reduction
should be applied for each fiscal
quarter. As such, the statute does not
give CMS the authority to reduce a
State’s FMAP for a single month.20
C. Corrective Action Plans (§ 430.49(b))
As noted in section I.A. of this rule,
section 1902(tt)(2) of the Act includes
new enforcement authority for CMS to
use if it determines that a State is not
in compliance with the reporting
requirements in section 1902(tt)(1) of
the Act, Federal eligibility
redetermination requirements, or both.
New § 430.49(b) provides guidelines for
how CMS will exercise the CAP
authority created by section
1902(tt)(2)(B) of the Act. Specifically,
§ 430.49(b)(1) provides that if CMS
determines that, during the period
between April 1, 2023, and June 30,
2024, a State has been out of compliance
with the reporting requirements in
section 1902(tt)(1) of the Act (as
implemented in § 435.927 of this rule)
or Federal eligibility redetermination
requirements (as defined at § 430.5, as
amended by this rule), then, after
considering whether mitigating
circumstances (discussed in section II.E.
and § 430.49(d) of this rule) apply, CMS
will determine whether to require the
State to submit and implement a CAP.
New § 430.49(b)(2) specifies that CMS
will issue a written notice to the State
informing the State of CMS’ finding of
noncompliance and the requirement to
submit and implement a CAP, or to
revise and resubmit an existing
approved CAP to address newly
identified violations of the Federal
reporting and/or redetermination
requirements, unless consideration of
certain mitigating circumstances has led
CMS to delay or forgo requiring a CAP.
The notice will: (1) explain the violation
of Federal redetermination or reporting
requirements that CMS has identified
and the basis for CMS’ finding; (2)
inform the State of the requirement to
submit and implement a new CAP or to
revise and resubmit an existing CAP,
with instructions on the method and
deadline by which the State must
submit a CAP to CMS; and (3) explain
the additional enforcement actions that
CMS may pursue if the State fails to
20 See, the January 2023 SHO Letter, and the June
2023 FAQs.
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submit or implement the CAP,
including if CMS disapproves the
State’s submitted CAP or if the State
fails to meet the requirements set forth
in the approved CAP, in accordance
with the requirements at section
1902(tt)(2)(B)(ii) of the Act, as
interpreted in this rule and discussed in
section II.D. and at § 430.49(b) of this
rule.
As set forth in new § 430.49(b)(3), a
CAP must include specific content to be
approved by CMS. First, the CAP must
identify actions the State will take
immediately, which means as soon as
feasible, if needed to prevent further
harm or risk of harm to beneficiaries
while it implements the CAP. Harm to
beneficiaries in this context includes
increased burden for beneficiaries in
completing the renewal process, loss of
coverage at renewal for individuals who
continue to meet the substantive
eligibility criteria and whose eligibility
should otherwise be retained but for
failure to meet a procedural
requirement, and delays in access to
coverage or care. Actions to prevent
harm, or risk of harm, to beneficiaries
could include, if needed and
appropriate, reinstatement of coverage
for impacted individuals, suspension of
procedural disenrollments, and
adoption of alternative processes or
procedures under section 1902(e)(14)(A)
of the Act or other alternative strategies
approved by CMS.
Next, the CAP must detail steps the
State will take to ensure compliance
with Federal redetermination and/or
reporting requirements, such as new
policies, procedures, operational
processes, or systems changes it will
implement. The CAP must also include
key milestones and a detailed timeline
for achieving compliance, as well as a
plan for communicating the steps in the
CAP to: (1) State staff, including State
Medicaid agency staff and staff of any
agency or other entity that is
determining eligibility under a
delegation of authority under
§ 431.10(c)(1)(i), (2) CMS, and (3)
beneficiaries, as applicable. CMS
believes that an approvable CAP must
include these elements because they
will allow CMS to assess at the outset
whether the State’s CAP appears
sufficient to resolve the noncompliance
and to monitor whether the State is
making sufficient progress in its
implementation. Additionally, these
elements are consistent with those that
CMS has historically required when
requesting CAPs under section 1904 of
the Act and § 430.35 for failure to
administer the State Plan in compliance
with the provisions in section 1902 of
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the Act, violations of which may result
in withholding of FFP.
New § 430.49(b)(4) of this rule
implements section 1902(tt)(2)(B)(ii) of
the Act by requiring the following
timeline for submission, approval, and
implementation of a CAP after the State
receives notice that CMS is requiring it
to implement a CAP:
(1) The State must submit a CAP that
includes the minimum elements
described in § 430.49(b)(3) to CMS not
later than 14 calendar days after
receiving CMS’ written notice.
(2) CMS must approve or disapprove
the proposed CAP within 21 calendar
days of the date the CAP is submitted
by the State. If CMS does not approve
or disapprove the CAP within 21
calendar days of submission, the CAP
will be deemed approved.
(3) The State must begin
implementation of the CAP not later
than 14 calendar days after receiving
CMS approval or after the CAP is
deemed approved.
We interpret the statute to refer to
calendar days and to authorize CMS to
provide that CAPs not expressly
approved or disapproved within 21
calendar days will be deemed approved.
(Henceforth in this rule, ‘‘days’’ refers to
calendar days unless otherwise noted.)
CMS is providing for deemed approval
so that CMS and States can take quick
action to implement any strategies or
system changes needed to correct
identified violations of the reporting or
redetermination requirements to
promote sustained compliant operations
and beneficiary coverage.
Section 430.49(b)(5) provides that
CMS will consider the following in
determining whether to approve a CAP
submitted by a State: (1) whether the
CAP will promptly eliminate or
minimize any harm or risk of harm to
beneficiaries, including increased
burden for beneficiaries in completing
the renewal process, loss of coverage at
renewal for individuals who continue to
meet the substantive eligibility criteria
and whose eligibility should otherwise
be retained but for failure to meet a
procedural requirement, and delays in
access to coverage or care, due to the
noncompliance to be addressed by the
plan; and (2) whether the CAP will
result in the State achieving compliance
in a reasonable time, taking into account
systems challenges and circumstances
faced by the agencies involved. Systems
challenges that could impact the
timeframe in which a State can achieve
compliance could include, for example,
the timeframe needed to update coding
for a State’s eligibility system, the need
to create policy manuals to guide
workers on use of new system
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84721
functionality, training workers on new
system changes, and/or the creation and
implementation of new forms or
functions to receive or track information
in the renewal process.
As discussed further in section II.E.
and § 430.49(d)(1) and (2), CMS will
consider certain mitigating
circumstances before issuing a notice
directing a State to submit a CAP in
accordance with the requirements at
§ 430.49(b).
D. Suspension of Procedural
Disenrollments and Civil Money
Penalties (§ 430.49(c))
Under section 1902(tt)(2)(B)(iii) of the
Act, as implemented at § 430.49(c) of
this rule, if a State fails to submit or
implement an approved CAP, including
if CMS disapproves the State’s
submitted CAP or if the State fails to
meet the requirements set forth in the
approved CAP, in accordance with
section 1902(tt)(2)(B)(ii) of the Act, the
Secretary may, after consideration of
any mitigating circumstances described
in section II.E. of this rule and at new
§ 430.49(d)(3), and in addition to any
reduction applied to the FMAP under
section 1902(tt)(2)(A) of the Act, take
either or both of the following actions:
(1) require the State to suspend making
some or all disenrollments from
Medicaid that are for procedural reasons
until the State takes appropriate
corrective action; (2) impose CMPs of
not more than $100,000 for each day a
State is not in compliance.
Under new § 430.49(c)(2), prior to
taking either or both of these
enforcement actions, CMS will issue a
notice to the State. Such notice will
include: (1) a description of the
enforcement actions CMS is taking and
the basis for such action(s); (2) whether
CMS is requiring suspension of some or
all procedural disenrollments, and in
the case of a partial suspension, the
affected populations; (3) the date on
which the State must begin suspending
procedural disenrollments, if
applicable; (4) the daily amount of any
CMPs imposed, the date that assessment
of the CMPs will begin, the timeline for
payment (including information on how
the timeline for payment would be
affected by an appeal), and instructions
on how to submit payment; (5) the steps
the State must take to cure its
noncompliance and for CMS to lift the
enforcement action(s); (6) information
on the State’s appeal rights as described
in section II.G and at new § 430.49(f) of
this rule, including the deadline to
submit an appeal request and the effect
of requesting an appeal on the
applicability of any enforcement actions
pending the decision in such appeal.
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The notice must also provide that the
decision outlined in the notice is final
unless it is timely appealed as described
in § 430.49(f). Section 430.49(c)(2)(ii)
also provides that CMS may issue
additional notices to take additional
actions (for example, increasing CMPs
or adding or increasing the scope of a
suspension of procedural
disenrollments) if CMS identifies
additional violations of a CAP’s
provisions. Such notices will meet the
requirements outlined in
§ 430.49(c)(2)(i).
Suspension of Procedural
Disenrollments. As noted in this rule, if
CMS finds that a State has failed to
submit or implement an approved CAP
in accordance with the requirements in
section 1902(tt)(2)(B) of the Act, section
1902(tt)(2)(B)(iii) of the Act provides
that CMS may require the State to
suspend either some or all procedural
disenrollments of Medicaid eligibility.
We believe it is appropriate to target any
procedural disenrollment suspension to
protect those beneficiaries impacted by
the State’s noncompliance. If CMS
requires the State to suspend procedural
disenrollments, the scope of that
requirement will be based upon the
impact of the noncompliance that led to
the requirement for the CAP.
Accordingly, under § 430.49(c)(3)(i), if
the impact of the noncompliance
requiring a CAP affects a substantial
number of (meaning all or nearly all)
individuals in the State who are or
should have been found eligible for
Medicaid, CMS may require the State to
suspend all procedural disenrollments.
If the impact of the noncompliance is
limited, for example to a specific
population or geographic area, CMS
may limit the suspension only to the
affected population(s). In cases where
CMS initially limits the requirement to
suspend procedural disenrollments to
an affected population or area, CMS
may later opt to require the State to
suspend all procedural disenrollments if
CMS subsequently determines that the
impact of the noncompliance is greater
than was initially determined or if the
State fails to comply with the initial
requirement to suspend procedural
disenrollments for a targeted population
or area in accordance with the notice
issued under § 430.49(c)(2). In these
circumstances, CMS will issue a
subsequent notice under § 430.49(c)(2).
CMS believes that suspension of
procedural disenrollments is an
effective and necessary enforcement tool
to protect beneficiaries from harm due
to a State’s noncompliance and, except
in one limited circumstance discussed
in section II.E of this rule, will always
require States that have failed to submit
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an approvable CAP or to implement an
approved CAP to suspend some or all
procedural disenrollments.
After CMS requires a State to suspend
procedural disenrollments, the State
must continue suspending procedural
disenrollments until CMS determines
that the State has taken appropriate
corrective action. Once CMS is satisfied
that the State has taken appropriate
corrective action, CMS will inform the
State of the date on which it may
resume procedural disenrollments. See
section II.F of this rule for a discussion
of the circumstances under which CMS
will lift enforcement actions taken
pursuant to an enforcement notice
issued in accordance with § 430.49(c).
Civil Money Penalties. If CMS finds
that a State has failed to submit or
implement an approved CAP, including
if CMS disapproves the State’s
submitted CAP or if the State fails to
meet the requirements set forth in the
approved CAP, in accordance with the
requirements in 1902(tt)(2)(B)(ii) of the
Act and as interpreted at § 430.49(b) of
this rule, CMS may also issue notice to
the State in accordance with
§ 430.49(c)(2) indicating that CMS will
impose CMPs.
The CMPs authorized under section
1902(tt)(2)(B)(ii) are a tool to compel
State compliance with corrective action
as quickly as possible, given the urgency
of preventing unauthorized loss of
coverage for beneficiaries during a
period that generally aligns with States’
unwinding periods. For this reason,
CMS is adopting a penalty formula that
will impose a lower penalty for States
with a shorter timeframe of
noncompliance and increase the penalty
over time for States that do not return
to compliance. CMPs will start accruing
5 days after the date of the notice and
become payable 60 days after the date
of the notice, if not timely appealed, or
60 days after issuance of a final
determination at the conclusion of any
appeals pursuant to § 430.49(f). Under
§ 430.49(c)(3)(ii)(B) of this rule, CMS
will impose CMPs for failure to submit
or implement an approved CAP
according to the following formula:
Days 1–30 (after 5-day delay as specified
in the enforcement notice): $25,000/day;
Days 31–60: $50,000/day; and Days 61–
until State comes into compliance with
CAP requirements: $100,000/day. All
CMP amounts provided in this rule will
be adjusted annually in accordance with
45 CFR part 102.
New § 430.49(c)(2)(ii) provides that
CMS may issue additional notices to
take additional actions (including
increasing CMPs or imposing or
broadening the scope of a suspension of
procedural disenrollments) if CMS
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identifies additional violations of CAP
provisions. Such notices will meet the
requirements in 430.49(c)(2)(i).
Noncompliant States will be charged
CMPs daily until the State takes
appropriate action to cure the
noncompliance with the CAP
requirements as outlined in § 430.49(e)
and discussed in section II.F. of this
rule. Under § 430.49(e)(2), once CMS is
satisfied that the State has taken
appropriate action to cure the
noncompliance with the CAP
requirements, CMS will inform the State
of the total amount of CMPs that have
accrued, the balance owed if the State
has already begun payment, and the last
day CMPs under the enforcement notice
were imposed.
As provided in § 430.49(c)(4), if the
State fails to suspend procedural
disenrollments as required pursuant to
a notice described in § 430.49(c)(2) or to
pay CMPs as specified in that notice, or
both, CMS may issue a subsequent
notice under § 430.49(c)(2) to increase
the CMPs to the maximum allowable
daily amount, if not already reached, or
may pursue additional enforcement
action under section 1904 of the Act,
including withholding some or all FFP
for the period of noncompliance.
CMS intends to issue additional
guidance following the issuance of this
rule providing additional information
regarding the process CMS will use to
collect CMPs and any operational
requirements for States to remit
payment of CMPs.
E. Mitigating Circumstances
(§ 430.49(d))
As described previously, section
1902(tt)(2)(B) of the Act, as
implemented in new § 430.49, gives
CMS the authority to require States to
submit a CAP for failure to meet
reporting or Federal redetermination
requirements and, if the State fails to
submit or implement such CAP,
including if CMS disapproves the
State’s submitted CAP or if the State
fails to meet the requirements set forth
in the approved CAP, in accordance
with section 1902(tt)(2)(B)(ii) of the Act,
to suspend procedural disenrollments,
impose CMPs of up to $100,000 per day,
or take both actions. While section
1902(tt)(2)(B) of the Act empowers CMS
to require CAPs, suspend procedural
disenrollments, and impose CMPs, the
statute also gives the Secretary
discretion to use this authority or not
and to determine the amount of CMPs
up to the statutory maximum.21
21 Section 1902(tt)(2)(B)(iii) of the Act provides
(emphasis added): If a State fails to submit or
implement an approved corrective action plan in
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CMS interprets the enforcement
authorities in section 1902(tt)(2) of the
Act as tools to promote State
accountability for compliance with the
reporting requirements in section
1902(tt)(1) of the Act and Federal
redetermination requirements, as
defined in § 430.5 of this rule, and to
maximize accurate eligibility
redeterminations to promote retention
of coverage for eligible people to the
greatest extent feasible. CMS recognizes
that the scope or impact of different
violations of the reporting or
redetermination requirements may vary,
and there also may be an emergency or
other extraordinary circumstances
preventing a State from complying with
a given requirement or submitting or
implementing a CAP. Thus, consistent
with the discretion allowed under
section 1902(tt)(2)(B) of the Act, CMS
will take into consideration certain
mitigating circumstances related to the
State’s noncompliance when
determining whether to require the State
to submit a CAP or require suspension
of procedural disenrollments or impose
CMPs. These circumstances are set forth
at § 430.49(d) of this rule.22
Mitigating Circumstances Impacting
Decision to Require a CAP. In the case
of State noncompliance with Federal
redetermination requirements,
§ 430.49(d)(1) provides that CMS may
elect to not require or to delay requiring
submission of a CAP if either or both of
the following circumstances exist:
1. No Harm or Substantial Risk of
Harm Occurred: The noncompliance
caused neither actual harm nor a
substantial risk of harm to beneficiaries,
including increased burden for
beneficiaries in completing the renewal
process, loss of coverage at renewal for
individuals who continue to meet the
substantive eligibility criteria and
whose eligibility should otherwise be
retained but for failure to meet a
procedural requirement, or delays in
access to coverage or care.
2. Extraordinary Circumstances Exist:
There is an emergency or there are other
extraordinary circumstances preventing
the State’s compliance—for example, a
accordance with clause (ii), the Secretary may . . .
require the State to suspend making all or some
terminations of eligibility for medical assistance
from the State plan under this title (including any
waiver of such plan) that are for procedural reasons
until the State takes appropriate corrective action,
as determined by the Secretary, and may impose a
civil money penalty of not more than $100,000 for
each day a State is not in compliance.
22 CMS has also used its discretion in setting the
amount of the CMPs that will apply in certain
circumstances, based on the duration of the CAP
violation involved, as discussed above in section
II.D.
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natural disaster or catastrophic systems
outage.
In addition, in the case of
noncompliance with the reporting
requirements in § 435.927,
§ 430.49(d)(2) provides that CMS may
delay requiring or elect not to require a
State to submit a CAP if CMS has
determined that the State implementing
a CAP is not necessary to ensure that the
noncompliance is remedied. For
example, CMS might not require a CAP
if a State’s noncompliance is due to an
error that the State commits to
correcting and does immediately
correct. As with violations relating to
Federal redetermination requirements,
CMS may also delay requiring or elect
not to require a State to submit a CAP
relating to a violation of reporting
requirements if CMS determines that
there is an emergency or other
extraordinary circumstances preventing
the State’s compliance.
Mitigating Circumstances Impacting
Decision to Suspend Procedural
Disenrollments or Impose CMPs. If a
State fails to submit an approvable CAP
or to implement an approved CAP,
including if CMS disapproves the
State’s submitted CAP or if the State
fails to meet the requirements set forth
in the approved CAP, new § 430.49(d)(3)
provides that CMS will consider
whether any of the following mitigating
circumstances exist when deciding
whether to require a suspension of
procedural disenrollments, impose
CMPs, or take both actions:
1. Extraordinary Circumstances Exist:
Regardless of the type of violation that
gave rise to the requirement of a CAP,
CMS will consider whether there is an
emergency or other extraordinary
circumstance that occurred after the
violation resulting in the requirement of
a CAP that significantly impeded the
State’s ability to submit or implement
the CAP. If such circumstances exist,
CMS may delay or forgo imposition of
CMPs but will not delay requiring a
suspension of procedural
disenrollments (beyond the one-month
delay described below in the case of
reporting violations that do not impede
CMS’ oversight of procedural
disenrollments).
2. Reporting Violation Does Not
Impede CMS’ Oversight of Procedural
Disenrollments: When a State fails to
submit or implement an approved CAP
that was required based on the State’s
violation of reporting requirements
under section 1902(tt)(1) of the Act,
CMS will consider whether the
underlying reporting violation impedes
CMS’ oversight of procedural
disenrollments. If so, CMS will suspend
procedural disenrollments and impose
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84723
CMPs. If not, CMS will delay requiring
a suspension of procedural
disenrollments for 1 month to allow the
State an opportunity to comply with the
data reporting requirements but will
immediately impose CMPs (unless
extraordinary circumstances exist, as
discussed above).
Although all data reporting under
section 1902(tt)(1) of the Act is
important to support CMS oversight of
State redetermination processes during
a period that generally aligns with
States’ unwinding periods, we believe
that in most cases it would be too
punitive to suspend procedural
disenrollments immediately if the State
fails to submit or implement a CAP
related to an underlying reporting
requirement violation that does not
impede CMS’ understanding of the
State’s procedural disenrollment rate. In
contrast, where a State fails to submit or
implement a CAP related to an
underlying reporting violation that
impedes CMS’ oversight of procedural
disenrollments in that State, CMS will
take immediate action to require
suspension of procedural
disenrollments, in addition to imposing
CMPs (if not delayed or forgone by CMS
due to the existence of extraordinary
circumstances), to mitigate possible
harm to beneficiaries at risk of
disenrollment.
For example, if a State fails to submit
or implement an approved CAP that
CMS required based upon the State’s
failure to report data on the volume of
calls it is receiving at a call center, CMS
will examine the circumstances of the
underlying reporting violation and may
find that the lack of these data does not
impede its oversight of procedural
disenrollments and, if so, will delay
requiring the State to suspend
procedural disenrollments for 1 month,
pending the submission or
implementation of a CAP or the
correction of the underlying reporting
violation, but will impose CMPs
according to § 430.49(c)(3)(ii) without
delay (unless there has been an
extraordinary circumstance after the
violation occurred that prevented the
State from submitting or implementing
the CAP).
F. Lifting of CAP Enforcement Actions
(§ 430.49(e))
Under § 430.49(e)(1) of this rule, CMS
will lift any requirement to suspend
procedural disenrollments and/or stop
charging any CMPs imposed pursuant to
§ 430.49(c) when the State cures its
noncompliance by submitting an
approvable CAP (where the violation
was a failure to submit a CAP) or
initiating or resuming implementation
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of an approved CAP (where the
violation was a failure to implement
according to the terms of the CAP). In
cases where the State had received a
notice imposing CMPs due to failure to
submit an approved CAP, CMS will
continue the accrual of CMPs from the
date that a State submits a CAP for CMS
review in accordance with
§ 430.49(e)(1)(i)(A), until CMS
determines whether the CAP is
approvable. If CMS determines the CAP
is approvable, CMS will retroactively
end the accrual of CMPs on the day the
CAP was submitted and cease charging
CMPs prospectively. If CMS determines
that the CAP is not approvable, CMS
will continue charging CMPs imposed
under the terms of the enforcement
notice without interruption from the
date specified in the original notice
provided to the State under
§ 430.49(c)(2) and will continue
charging such CMPs until an approvable
CAP is submitted. Under § 430.49(e)(2),
once CMS is satisfied that the State has
taken appropriate action to cure the
noncompliance with the CAP
requirements, CMS will inform the State
of the total amount of CMPs that have
accrued, the balance owed, and the last
day CMPs were imposed as well as the
date on which the State may resume
procedural disenrollments.
CMS may again require suspension of
procedural disenrollments and impose
CMPs that have been lifted in
accordance with § 430.49(e)(1) if CMS
subsequently determines that the State
is not complying with the terms of the
approved CAP. In such a situation, CMS
will issue a new notice pursuant to
§ 430.49(c)(2).
G. State Reconsideration and Appeal
Rights (42 CFR 430.3, 430.49(f), and 45
CFR Part 16)
Under new § 430.49(f) and
amendments to § 430.3 and 45 CFR part
16, States will be able to appeal CMS’
decision to require a State to suspend
procedural disenrollments and/or pay
CMPs under section 1902(tt)(2)(B)(iii) of
the Act and new § 430.49(c). The rule
amends § 430.3 and 45 CFR part 16,
Appendix A, to provide that States can
appeal these CMS decisions to the
Departmental Appeals Board (Board) in
accordance with procedures set forth in
45 CFR part 16.
The rule creates a new 42 CFR
430.49(f)(1), providing that a State
dissatisfied with CMS’ determination
under § 430.49(c) that the State must
suspend procedural disenrollments or
pay CMPs will have 30 days (as counted
consistent with the protocol for
counting days outlined under 45 CFR
16.19) from receipt of the notice
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16:08 Dec 05, 2023
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described in § 430.49(c)(2) to appeal
CMS’s decision to the Board. The appeal
request must comply with 45 CFR 16.7,
and the appeals process will be
governed by 45 CFR part 16. That means
that the expedited appeal procedures
outlined in 45 CFR 16.12 might be
available, if the conditions in 45 CFR
16.12 are met. If the State does not
submit an appeal request within that 30day timeframe, then the decision
described in the notice received by the
State under § 430.49(c)(2) is the final
decision of the Secretary and is final
agency action within the meaning of 5
U.S.C. 704.
At new 42 CFR 430.49(f)(2), we give
any party to the appeal that is
dissatisfied with the Board’s decision
under 430.49(f)(1) an opportunity to
request that the CMS Administrator
reconsider it, and we outline the process
that will govern the Administrator’s
reconsideration. In particular, new
§ 430.49(f)(2)(i) specifies that any party
to the appeal that is dissatisfied with the
Board’s decision on an appeal brought
by a State under § 430.49(f)(1) may
request reconsideration of that decision
within 15 days of receiving notice of the
decision under 45 CFR 16.21. The
process for such reconsiderations is
provided under new § 430.49(f)(2)(i)(A)
through (D). Under new
§ 430.49(f)(2)(i)(A), we are providing
that reconsideration requests must be
filed with the Administrator, and must
include a copy of the Board’s decision,
a brief statement of why the party
believes it was wrong, and a statement
of the amount of any CMPs in dispute.
New § 430.49(f)(2)(i)(B) requires that the
party requesting reconsideration send a
copy of the request for reconsideration
to all other parties to the appeal and
other participants in the appeal (as
described in 45 CFR 16.16) at the same
time the request is filed. New
§ 430.49(f)(2)(i)(C) provides that any
other party to the appeal, or other
participant in the appeal, may respond
to the request for reconsideration in
writing and file such response with the
Administrator within 15 days of the
date the request for reconsideration is
filed with the Administrator. Under new
§ 430.49(f)(2)(i)(D), the Administrator
will review the Board’s decision and
any additional information submitted by
the parties and other participants, and
either affirm the Board’s decision or
issue a new decision within 60 days
after the Board issues notice of its
decision under 45 CFR 16.21. Under
new § 430.49(f)(2)(ii), the Administrator
may, within 60 days after the Board
issues notice of its decision under 45
CFR 16.21, also modify or reverse the
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Sfmt 4700
Board’s decision without receiving a
request for reconsideration under
§ 430.49(f)(2). In cases where the
Administrator opts to review the
Board’s decision without a request for
reconsideration, such decision must be
provided within 60 days of the Board’s
issuance of its notice of decision under
45 CFR 16.21.
New § 430.49(f)(2)(iii) states that if
there is no request for reconsideration
filed under § 430.49(f)(2)(i) and the
Administrator does not modify or
reverse the decision within the 60-day
period described in § 430.49(f)(2)(ii),
then the Board’s decision will be the
final determination of the Secretary and
final agency action, and the
Administrator will provide notice to all
parties and other participants of such
decision as described in
§ 430.49(f)(2)(iv). New § 430.49(f)(2)(iv)
provides that the Administrator will
provide a notice to all parties and other
participants of the final decision that
communicates that it is the final
determination of the Secretary and final
agency action and § 430.49(f)(2)(v)
provides that the determination of the
Administrator pursuant to
§§ 430.49(f)(2)(i)(D) or 430.49(f)(2)(ii)
constitutes final agency action within
the meaning of 5 U.S.C. 704.
Under amendments in the rule to 45
CFR 16.22, any suspensions of
procedural disenrollments under 42
CFR 430.49(c) will continue in effect
and CMPs imposed on a State under
430.49(c) will continue to accrue
pending an appeal to the Board under
§ 430.49(f).
Appeals of CMS decisions to take the
FMAP reduction under section
1902(tt)(2)(A) of the Act will follow a
different process that is governed by
already existing regulations. If CMS
finds that a State is noncompliant with
reporting requirements under § 435.927,
CMS will calculate the amount of the
FMAP reduction under § 435.928 and
request that the State make a voluntary
adjustment to the Form CMS–64 to
return the funds to CMS. If the State
does not do so, CMS will initiate
disallowance proceedings, which will
be governed by existing regulations at
§ 430.42. States may request
reconsideration or appeal disallowance
decisions per these existing CMS
regulations at § 430.42. Under § 430.42,
States wishing to request a
reconsideration of the Administrator’s
decision to impose a disallowance must
request such reconsideration within 60
days of receiving the notice of
disallowance described in § 430.42(a).
We are adding new § 430.49(f) and
amending § 430.3 and 45 CFR part 16 as
outlined in this section to provide States
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with a fair and reasonable
administrative process for appealing
CMS’ decisions to suspend procedural
disenrollments or impose CMPs and to
ensure that accountability for those
decisions is vested in a principal officer.
These changes also will provide States
with accurate information about the
availability of administrative review if
they are dissatisfied with a CMS
decision under 42 CFR 430.49(c). These
provisions also clarify when agency
decisions are final agency action for
purposes of 5 U.S.C. 704.
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H. Definitions (§ 430.5)
This rule adds two new definitions to
§ 430.5 that apply to the provisions at
§ 430.49. One of the two new definitions
will also apply to related amendments
to 45 CFR part 16. First, the rule defines
a ‘‘procedural disenrollment’’ for
purposes of 42 CFR 430.49 and 45 CFR
part 16 as a termination of eligibility
and disenrollment from Medicaid for
reasons that are unrelated to a State’s
determination of whether the individual
meets eligibility criteria to qualify for
coverage, including for failure to return
a renewal form or documentation
needed by the State to make a
determination of eligibility. And
second, the rule defines ‘‘Federal
redetermination requirements’’ for
purposes of 42 CFR 430.49 as Federal
requirements applicable to eligibility
redeterminations outlined in § 435.916,
including renewal strategies authorized
under section 1902(e)(14)(A) or other
alternative processes and procedures
approved by CMS under section
1902(e)(14)(A) of the Act or section
6008(f)(2)(A) of the FFCRA.
III. Good Cause
The Administrative Procedure Act
(APA), at 5 U.S.C. 553(b), requires the
agency to publish a notice of the
proposed rule in the Federal Register
that includes a reference to the legal
authority under which the rule is
proposed and the terms and substance
of the proposed rule or a description of
the subjects and issues involved.
Section 553(c) further requires the
agency to give interested parties the
opportunity to participate in the
rulemaking through public comment
before the provisions of the rule take
effect. Section 553(b)(B) provides an
exception to notice-and-comment
requirements, however, if the agency for
good cause finds that notice-andcomment is impracticable, unnecessary,
or contrary to the public interest and
incorporates a statement of the finding
and its reasons in the rule issued.
Section 553(d) ordinarily requires a
30-day delay in the effective date of a
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16:08 Dec 05, 2023
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final rule from the date of its
publication in the Federal Register.
However, similar to the good cause
exception for notice-and-comment
requirements, section 553(d)(3) excepts
a rule from the 30-day delay
requirement if the agency for good cause
finds that the delay is impracticable,
unnecessary, or contrary to the public
interest. Similarly, the Congressional
Review Act (CRA) also allows an agency
to issue a rule that would otherwise be
subject to a 60-day delayed effective
date requirement with an immediate
effective date in circumstances where a
delay is impractical, unnecessary, or
contrary to the public interest (5 U.S.C.
808(2)). CMS is forgoing the usual
notice-and-comment procedures and
delay in the effective date for this rule
because, for the reasons discussed in
this section, following such
requirements would be impracticable
and contrary to the public interest.
Recent data on unwinding-related
renewals indicates that of the 7.1
million Medicaid and CHIP
beneficiaries whose eligibility was due
for renewal in July 2023, more than 1.6
million had been disenrolled.23 The vast
majority of these disenrolled
individuals (71 percent) were
disenrolled due to a procedural reason
such as failure to return paperwork, not
because of a determination that the
person no longer satisfied Medicaid’s
substantive eligibility criteria. While we
are unable to determine the proportion
of individuals who were procedurally
disenrolled but continued to meet
substantive eligibility criteria, the high
rate of procedural disenrollments
suggests that the options and strategies
that CMS has been working with States
to implement through their mitigation
plans may not be sufficient to protect
the continued enrollment of individuals
who continue to meet substantive
eligibility criteria. For this reason, the
enforcement authorities established
under this rule are needed to protect
access to Medicaid coverage. Any delay
in implementing the enforcement tools
in this rule would thwart CMS’s ability
to take an array of possible enforcement
actions against noncompliant States
under section 1902(tt) of the Act and
could result in serious harm to
beneficiaries.
In anticipating the likely impact of
unwinding, the Assistant Secretary for
Planning and Evaluation (ASPE) in HHS
estimated that in the period between
April 1, 2023, and June 1, 2024, 6.8
23 Medicaid and CHIP National Summary of
Renewal Outcomes—March Through July 2023
Data; published October 2023; available at https://
www.medicaid.gov/sites/default/files/2023-10/july2023-national-summary-renewal-outcomes.pdf.
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84725
million people will lose Medicaid
coverage despite still meeting
substantive eligibility criteria.24 ASPE
estimated that 82.7 percent of enrollees
would be determined eligible, and their
eligibility would be renewed, while 17.5
percent would be disenrolled. Of those
disenrolled, ASPE estimated 54 percent
would be disenrolled because they were
determined ineligible, and 45 percent
(6.8 million) would be disenrolled for
procedural reasons despite still meeting
substantive eligibility criteria. Early
unwinding data from May and June
2023 renewals show a higher percentage
of renewals resulting in disenrollment
(nearly 38 percent in May and just over
25 percent in June) and a significantly
higher percentage of disenrollments
occurring for procedural reasons (77
percent in May and 73 percent in June)
compared to ASPE’s estimates. While
these early data are limited, if
disenrollments continue at the June
2023 rates, the number of individuals
who lose Medicaid coverage for
procedural reasons will be much higher
than ASPE’s estimates, and many of
those individuals may still meet
substantive Medicaid eligibility criteria.
If CMS is unable to take all actions
within its authority to enforce Federal
redetermination requirements, the
number of individuals negatively
impacted may increase.
Analyses indicate that Medicaid
coverage loss could have significant
detrimental consequences, resulting in
forgone medical care, including
preventive care, that could result in
refilling prescriptions less often, more
emergency department visits, and
increased morbidity and mortality.25 26
Preventable coverage loss could result
from States’ failure to follow Federal
requirements, which CMS cannot fully
enforce without this rulemaking. Loss of
coverage by individuals who still meet
substantive eligibility criteria, which is
likely followed by re-enrollment at a
later point in time, is often referred to
as ‘‘churning.’’ Because churning can
lead to deferred or delayed care, it can
result in greater health care costs; such
disruptions in care and medication
24 ASPE (August 19, 2022). Unwinding the
Medicaid Continuous Enrollment Provision:
Projected Enrollment Effects and Policy
Approaches. (Available at https://aspe.hhs.gov/
sites/default/files/documents/404a7572048090
ec1259d216f3fd617e/aspe-end-mcaid-continuouscoverage_IB.pdf).
25 ASPE (April 11, 2021). Medicaid Churning and
Continuity of Care. (Available at https://
aspe.hhs.gov/reports/medicaid-churningcontinuity-care).
26 Abdus, S. (August 2014). Part-year Coverage
and Access to Care for Nonelderly Adults.
(Available at https://journals.lww.com/lwwmedicalcare/Fulltext/2014/08000/Part_year_
Coverage_and_Access_to_Care_for.6.aspx).
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adherence create negative health
outcomes that make care more costly
down the road.27
By contrast, continuous enrollment
permits individuals to maintain a
regular source of care, including
preventive care and ongoing treatment
of chronic conditions. A review of the
research available on continuous
enrollment of children found it is
related to reductions in unmet health
care needs, increases in coordination of
care, including monitoring and regular
treatment adjustments as conditions
change, and greater patient/provider
engagement in treatment planning,
which can lead to better health
outcomes.28 In fact, a study of health
care outcomes in States that provided
continuous eligibility to children prior
to the FFCRA’s continuous enrollment
condition found reductions in insurance
gaps, lower probability of children being
in fair or poor health, and, for children
with serious health care needs,
increased access to preventive and
specialty care.29 This evidence suggests
that protecting access to coverage leads
to better outcomes for enrollees. The
availability of these enforcement tools is
critically important to ensure that CMS
can act quickly, if needed, to address
State noncompliance. Delaying CMS’
access to the full range of the
enforcement tools it could employ to
require States to follow Federal
eligibility redetermination requirements
and the new reporting requirements in
section 1902(tt)(1) of the Act, could thus
cause actual harm to beneficiaries.
As discussed, State submission of
renewal data is critically important to
our ability to monitor State renewal
processes and take action when needed
to prevent unauthorized disenrollments.
CMS must be able to use the compliance
tools under section 1902(tt) of the Act
to obtain data from States that will help
us to continue to quickly identify
problems with the redetermination
process during the period from April 1,
2023, through June 30, 2024, and, if
needed, to take timely action to require
States to fix problems including, if
appropriate, requiring States to halt
27 Sommers, B.D., Gourevitch, R., Maylone, B.,
Blendon, R.J., Epstein, A.M. (2016). Insurance
churning rates for low-income adults under health
reform: Lower than expected but still harmful for
many. Health Affairs, 35(10), 1816–1824.
28 Guevara, J.P., Moon, J., Hines, E.M., Fremont,
E., Wong, A., Forrest, C.B., Silber, H.H., & Pati, S.
(2014). Continuity of public insurance coverage: A
systematic review of the literature. Medical Care
Research and Review, 71(2), 115–137.
29 Brantley, E., Ku, L. (2022). Continuous
eligibility for Medicaid associated with improved
child health outcomes. Medical Care Research and
Review, 79(3), 404–413.
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procedural disenrollments from
Medicaid.
This rule provides critical guidance to
help States ensure that they are
complying with the data reporting
requirements under section 1902(tt)(1)
of the Act and that they understand how
CAPs and CMPs will be administered in
the event that a State does not take all
actions necessary for compliance. For
example, the rule provides States with
certainty regarding how CMS will
interpret the requirement to report
certain data under section 1902(tt)(1) of
the Act on a timely basis. A delay in the
issuance of guidance resulting from the
notice-and-comment process would
forestall States’ ability to be compliant
with Federal requirements that protect
beneficiaries.
CMS sees the enforcement
authorities—CAPs, suspensions of
procedural disenrollments, and CMPs—
as tools to promote State accountability
for compliance with the reporting and
redetermination requirements, and we
recognize that the scope or impact of
different violations of these
requirements may vary. Thus, we
believe it is important to consider
certain mitigating circumstances when
determining whether to require a State
to submit a CAP or to require a
suspension of procedural
disenrollments or impose CMPs. This
rule gives States additional information
about the factors that CMS will weigh in
deciding whether to require CAPs, to
require States to suspend procedural
disenrollments, or to impose CMPs.
CMS needs to be able to focus its
limited enforcement resources on the
most serious noncompliance. Without
this flexibility, CMS would be required
to tie up our limited resources on
enforcement actions in situations where
mitigating circumstances would weigh
against such action. This could
seriously inhibit or even prevent CMS
from taking truly needed enforcement
action if a situation were to arise
involving serious noncompliance
causing harm or a substantial risk of
harm.
Recognizing the importance of the
guidance in this rule, CMS has moved
as quickly as possible within existing
constraints to complete rulemaking.
Section 1902(tt) of the Act was enacted
via the CAA, 2023, on December 29,
2022, took effect 3 months later, on
April 1, 2023, and applies to a timelimited period, from April 1, 2023, to
June 30, 2024, that began on the day that
the statutory language took effect. In
other words, the effective date of section
1902(tt) of the Act is the same date as
the start of the compliance period, and
there was only a 3-month timeframe
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between the passage of the CAA, 2023
and the effective date. Given the short
timeframe and the evolving landscape of
State needs relating to implementation,
it was not feasible for CMS to have
issued a final rule (with or without
notice-and-comment) in that 3-month
timeframe, because, as is discussed in
more detail below, CMS’ notice-andcomment rulemaking process ordinarily
takes at least 18 months.
Moreover, given the evolving
landscape of Federal guidance and State
needs before and after the end of the
Medicaid continuous enrollment
condition, it would not have been
feasible for CMS to begin the
rulemaking process earlier. When the
CAA, 2023 was enacted on December
29, 2022, CMS was immersed in efforts
to support States as they prepared
operations for the end of the Medicaid
continuous enrollment condition. This
included working with all 56 States
individually on assessing the need for
and implementing temporary strategies
or plans to ensure State compliance
with Federal Medicaid redetermination
requirements (often referred to as
mitigation plans) and issuing new
guidance and flexibilities to enable
States to maximize their capacity to
maintain the enrollment of eligible
beneficiaries at renewal during the
unwinding of the Medicaid continuous
enrollment condition.
Accelerating the rulemaking process
was also not a viable option for CMS
given resource constraints, even if doing
so would have been feasible. Since
enactment of the CAA, 2023, CMS has
devoted an extraordinary amount of
internal resources to the development of
materials, review of readiness, and
availability of technical assistance for
States as they prepared for and began to
return to normal eligibility operations
following the end of the FFCRA
continuous enrollment condition. We
created a series of new resources
designed to assist States in protecting
the enrollment of eligible individuals as
they restarted routine Medicaid
renewals, met with every State to assess
its planning for unwinding and
compliance with Medicaid renewal
requirements, and developed new
options and strategies through which
States could address areas of
noncompliance and mitigate negative
impacts on eligible individuals. These
efforts did not stop when the unwinding
process began, and they continue to
strain Federal agency resources. During
roughly the same timeframe, CMS was
also engaged in an unprecedented
amount of work to support States,
health care providers, and Medicare,
Medicaid, and CHIP beneficiaries in the
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transition back to regular operations
when numerous access-related policies
and flexibilities ended on May 11, 2023,
when the COVID–19 PHE (as declared
by the Secretary under section 319 of
the Public Health Service Act) ended.
This included waivers under section
1135 of the Act that were in place for
the more than 3 years of that COVID–
19 PHE.30 Notwithstanding this
unusual, extraordinary workload
throughout most of 2023, CMS has
developed and issued this rule as soon
as was practicable under the
circumstances.
Had CMS proceeded through noticeand-comment rulemaking, the resulting
delay would have been significant,
thereby increasing the risk that
beneficiaries would be harmed by losing
coverage due to States’ violation of
Federal redetermination requirements.
CMS’ rulemaking cycle from proposed
rulemaking to final rule typically takes
at least 18 months. This includes
drafting the proposed rule and engaging
in a rigorous clearance process that
concludes with CMS, HHS, and the
Office of Information and Regulatory
Affairs leadership approval. A proposed
rule is typically published in the
Federal Register with a 60-day public
comment period, and then CMS must
review, categorize, and consider the
public comments received, which may
number in the thousands. Then the final
rule can be drafted and enter the same
rigorous clearance process. If this
process began immediately upon
enactment of the CAA, 2023 (December
29, 2022) and extended 18 months,
when combined with the usual 30- or
60-day delay in effective date following
publication in the Federal Register, the
rule would not have taken effect until
the beginning of August 2024 at the
earliest, 1 month after the compliance
period ended. In the meantime, CMS
would have been significantly
hampered in its efforts to enforce
Federal redetermination requirements
and to enforce the reporting
requirements that help CMS quickly
become aware of possible State
violations of those redetermination
requirements.
Based on CMS’ early and still ongoing
work with States and the information
States have already reported, CMS has
already observed renewal issues and has
been working with States to develop
mitigation plans to address them. As
that work continues and new issues are
uncovered, it is important for CMS to be
able to draw upon the full range of its
enforcement tools. Additionally, other
issues may arise in the coming months
that could require CMS to take swift
action to the full extent of its
enforcement authority under section
1902(tt) of the Act. For example, States
might fail to comply with requirements
to provide appropriate notice informing
beneficiaries of the renewal process and
the steps needed to renew eligibility,
may fail to use available and reliable
information sources to assess
beneficiaries’ eligibility on an ex parte
basis, may make a determination of
ineligibility that is inconsistent with
eligibility criteria, or may fail to
appropriately notify the individual of
the eligibility determination and the
beneficiary’s right to a fair hearing. In
any of these circumstances, a major
State violation of requirements could
lead to a substantial number of
beneficiaries being unlawfully
disenrolled from coverage, creating an
immediate need for CMS to require
84727
States to take corrective action to restore
lost benefits to prevent further harm to
beneficiaries. Although States and CMS
have collaboratively worked to mitigate
these risks in preparing for and
implementing the end of the Medicaid
continuous enrollment condition, if a
State in the future is unwilling or
unable to comply with Federal renewal
or reporting requirements, CMS will
have an urgent need to be able to
enforce these Federal requirements
using the enforcement authority
implemented by this rule. And waiting
to use that enforcement authority until
August 2024 would significantly
undermine CMS’s ability to prevent
more immediate harm to beneficiaries.
In addition, unless the rule is issued
without delay, States would not have
administrative channels to pursue an
appeal before any judicial review of the
actions CMS is authorized to take under
section 1902(tt)(2)(B)(iii) of the Act.
Setting forth a clear administrative
appeals process benefits both States and
CMS by providing both parties an
opportunity to resolve disputes
administratively and thus potentially
avoid the need for additional judicial
review, and to generate a clear record
for any further judicial review in
Federal court, should it be necessary to
resolve the dispute.
For all the reasons cited previously in
this rule and summarized in Table 1,
which follows, CMS believes good cause
exists to exempt this rule from the
notice-and-comment and delay in
effective date requirements and is
proceeding with this rulemaking on an
expedited basis, to be effective upon
publication.
TABLE 1—GOOD CAUSE
Title
(regulatory citation)
Rationale
Reporting Requirements
(§ 435.927).
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FMAP Reduction (§ 435.928) ..........
Notice-and-comment rulemaking for § 435.927 is impracticable and contrary to the public interest for the
following reasons:
• The timeline for such rulemaking would extend beyond the time period during which the reporting requirements implemented by § 435.927 are in effect.
• Any delay in issuing clear reporting guidance will negatively impact States’ ability to comply with Federal
requirements and will negatively impact CMS’s ability to monitor States’ redetermination processes.
• These reporting requirements will help CMS to determine whether States are meeting Federal redetermination requirements. Unless CMS has this information promptly, during the applicable period, CMS will
be less able to take swift enforcement action to prevent unauthorized coverage loss (or gaps in coverage) for eligible individuals. Coverage loss can lead to forgone care and adverse health outcomes.
Notice-and-comment rulemaking for § 435.928 is impracticable and contrary to the public interest for the
following reasons:
• The timeline for such rulemaking would extend beyond the time period (July 1, 2023, through June 30,
2024) during which State noncompliance could trigger the FMAP reduction described in this section.
30 See https://www.cms.gov/files/document/
frequently-asked-questions-cms-waivers-
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flexibilities-and-end-covid-19-public-health-
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emergency.pdf, and https://www.medicaid.gov/
sites/default/files/2023-08/cib050823.pdf.
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TABLE 1—GOOD CAUSE—Continued
Title
(regulatory citation)
Rationale
Corrective Action Plans (§§ 430.5,
430.49(b)).
Suspension of Procedural
Disenrollments and Civil Money
Penalties (§§ 430.5, 430.49(c)).
Mitigating Circumstances (§§ 430.5,
430.49(d)).
State Reconsideration and Appeal
Rights (§ 430.3, 430.49(f), and
corresponding amendments to 45
CFR part 16).
• The FMAP reduction implemented in § 435.928 is an important component of the tools available to ensure that States comply with the reporting requirements. Without proper reporting, CMS may be unable
to effectively monitor States’ compliance with redetermination requirements during the reporting period
and will be less able to take swift enforcement action to prevent unauthorized coverage loss. This may
lead to disenrollment of eligible individuals (and/or gaps in their coverage) and result in adverse health
outcomes.
Notice-and-comment rulemaking for § 430.49(b) (along with the definitions at § 430.5 that are applicable to
this provision) is impracticable and contrary to the public interest for the following reasons:
• The timeline for such rulemaking would extend beyond the time period (April 1, 2023, to June 30, 2024)
during which State noncompliance with either the reporting requirements described at § 435.927 or Federal renewal requirements could arise and thereafter be subjected to the CAPs implemented in
430.49(b).
• The CAP provisions implemented at § 430.49(b) are an important component of the tools available to ensure that States comply with both the reporting requirements and the Federal redetermination requirements. A delay in implementing these provisions would limit CMS’ authority to quickly minimize preventable loss of coverage or gaps in coverage for eligible individuals when they are identified, which may result in forgone care and adverse health outcomes.
Notice-and-comment rulemaking for § 430.49(c) (along with the definitions at § 430.5 that are applicable to
this provision) is impracticable and contrary to the public interest for the following reasons:
• The timeline for such rulemaking would extend beyond the time period (April 1, 2023, to June 30, 2024)
during which State noncompliance could arise and thereafter be subjected to the enforcement actions
implemented in 430.49(c).
• A delay in implementing this statutory authority would limit CMS’ authority to quickly minimize preventable loss of coverage for eligible individuals, which may result in forgone care and adverse health outcomes.
Notice-and-comment rulemaking for § 430.49(d) (along with the definitions at § 430.5 that are applicable to
this provision) is impracticable and contrary to the public interest, as it would prevent CMS from exercising discretion with respect to the enforcement authority provided by section 1902(tt) of the Act, minimizing its usefulness for enforcing State compliance. CMS needs to be able to focus its limited enforcement resources on the most serious noncompliance. Tying up CMS’s limited enforcement resources on
enforcement actions in situations where mitigating circumstances would weigh against such action could
seriously inhibit or even prevent CMS from taking truly needed enforcement action in situations involving
serious noncompliance causing harm or a substantial risk of harm.
Notice-and-comment rulemaking for State reconsideration and appeal rights is impracticable and contrary
to the public interest for the following reasons:
• The timeline for such rulemaking would extend beyond the time period (April 1, 2023, to June 30, 2024)
during which State noncompliance could arise and thereafter be subjected to the enforcement actions
implemented by this rule.
• A delay in establishing appeal rights would impede States’ ability to seek administrative resolution to resolve disputes regarding the enforcement actions in this rule without necessitating review in Federal
court.
IV. Collection of Information
Requirements
Under the Paperwork Reduction Act
of 1995 (PRA) (44 U.S.C. 3501 et seq.),
we are required to provide 60-day notice
in the Federal Register and solicit
public comment before a ‘‘collection of
information’’ requirement is submitted
to OMB for review and approval. For the
purpose of the PRA and this section of
the preamble, collection of information
is defined under 5 CFR 1320.3(c) of the
PRA’s implementing regulations.
To fairly evaluate whether an
information collection should be
approved by OMB, section 3506(c)(2)(A)
of the PRA requires that we solicit
comment on the following issues:
• The need for the information
collection and its usefulness in carrying
out the proper functions of the agency.
• The accuracy of the estimate of the
information collection burden.
• The quality, utility, and clarity of
the information to be collected.
• Recommendations to minimize the
information collection burden on the
affected public, including automated
collection techniques.
We are soliciting public comment on
each of the section 3506(c)(2)(A)-
required issues for the following
information collection requirements.
A. Wage Estimates
To derive average costs, we used data
from the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics’
May 2021 National Occupational
Employment and Wage Estimates for all
salary estimates (https://www.bls.gov/
oes/current/oes_nat.htm). In this regard,
the following table presents the BLS’
mean hourly wage, our estimated cost of
fringe benefits and overhead (calculated
at 100 percent of salary), and our
adjusted hourly wage.
lotter on DSK11XQN23PROD with RULES1
TABLE 2—NATIONAL OCCUPATIONAL AND WAGE ESTIMATES
Occupation
code
Occupation title
Database Administrators .........................................................
General and Operations Manager ...........................................
Management Analyst ...............................................................
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Frm 00044
15–1242
11–1021
13–1111
Fmt 4700
Sfmt 4700
Mean
hourly wage
Fringe benefit
(at 100%)
$49.29
59.07
50.32
E:\FR\FM\06DER1.SGM
$49.29
59.07
50.32
06DER1
Adjusted
hourly wage
$98.58
118.14
100.64
Federal Register / Vol. 88, No. 233 / Wednesday, December 6, 2023 / Rules and Regulations
84729
TABLE 2—NATIONAL OCCUPATIONAL AND WAGE ESTIMATES—Continued
Occupation
code
Occupation title
Project Management Specialists .............................................
Wages for State Governments. As
indicated, we are adjusting our
employee hourly wage estimates by a
factor of 100 percent to estimate the cost
of providing fringe benefits. This is
necessarily a rough adjustment, both
because fringe benefits and overhead
costs vary significantly from employer
to employer, and because methods of
estimating these costs vary widely from
study to study. Nonetheless, we believe
that doubling the hourly wage to
estimate the total cost including fringe
benefits is a reasonably accurate
estimation method.
Cost to State Governments. To
estimate State costs, it was important to
take into account the Federal
government’s contribution to the cost of
administering the Medicaid program.
The Federal government provides
Medicaid matching funds at a rate
established in statute. All State
Medicaid programs generally receive a
50 percent Federal matching rate for
qualifying administrative activities. As
noted previously, States also receive
higher Federal Medicaid matching rates
for certain activities, such as certain
systems design and development, and
for systems maintenance and
operations, so the level of Federal
Medicaid funding provided to a State
can be significantly higher. As such,
taking into account the Federal
contribution to the costs of
administering the Medicaid program for
purposes of estimating State burden
with respect to collection of
information, we elected to use a
conservative estimate that the States
would contribute 50 percent of the
costs, even though the burden will
likely be much smaller.
lotter on DSK11XQN23PROD with RULES1
B. Information Collection Requirements
(ICRs)
1. ICRs Related to Reporting
Requirements (§ 435.927)
The following changes will be
submitted to OMB for approval under
control number 0938–TBD (CMS–
10875). At this time the control number
has yet to be determined, but it will be
assigned by OMB upon their approval of
this IFC’s collection of information
request. The public can monitor OMB’s
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Mean
hourly wage
13–1082
48.85
issuance of the control number (and the
control number’s expiration date) at
reginfo.gov.
Under § 435.927, States are required
to submit certain monthly data to CMS.
The data are already collected by States
and reported to CMS under existing
requirements that are approved by OMB
under control numbers 0938–1119
(CMS–10371), 0938–0345 (CMS–R–284),
0938–1140 (CMS–10387), and 0938–
1148 (CMS–10398 #64). However,
recognizing that some States might
encounter unusual circumstances that
interfere with reporting using existing
CMS-approved processes, CMS would
consider approving alternative
processes and timelines for States to
report required data if a State is making
a good faith effort to submit the required
data, as specified in § 435.927(b)(4). For
example, CMS would consider allowing
States experiencing special
circumstances to submit certain
summary data via email rather than via
T–MSIS, if T–MSIS is the existing
process.
Based on CMS’ ongoing work with
States to report the required data, we
estimate that eight States will request
that CMS approve an alternative process
for submitting data under
§ 435.927(c)(2) during the compliance
period of April 1, 2023, through June 30,
2024. We estimate that for each of the
eight States that request and receive
approval to use an alternative process to
submit required data, it will take a
Project Management Specialist 8 hours
at $97.70/hour and a Database
Administrator 15 hours at $98.58/hour
to develop an alternative process, reach
agreement with CMS, and submit the
required data, for an aggregate of 184
hours (8 States × 23 hours) and $18,082
[(($97.70 × 8 hours) + ($98.58 × 15
hours)) × 8 States]. Taking into account
the 50 percent Federal contribution to
Medicaid program administration, the
estimated State share would be $9,041.
2. ICRs Related to Corrective Action
Plans (CAPs) (§ 430.49(b))
The following changes will be
submitted to OMB for approval under
control number 0938–TBD (CMS–
10875). At this time the control number
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Frm 00045
Fmt 4700
Sfmt 4700
Fringe benefit
(at 100%)
48.85
Adjusted
hourly wage
97.70
has yet to be determined, but it will be
assigned by OMB upon their approval of
this IFC’s collection of information
request. The public can monitor OMB’s
issuance of the control number (and the
control number’s expiration date) at
reginfo.gov.
This rule authorizes CMS to require
States to submit a CAP to CMS if the
State is out of compliance with the
reporting requirements in section
1902(tt)(1) of the Act or Federal
eligibility redetermination requirements
(including any alternative processes and
procedures approved by CMS, such as
renewal strategies authorized under
section 1902(e)(14)(A))) of the Act
during the compliance period between
April 1, 2023 and June 30, 2024.
Based on CMS’ ongoing work with
States to unwind from the continuous
enrollment condition, we estimate that
3 States will be out of compliance with
data reporting requirements and 5 States
will be out of compliance with Federal
redetermination requirements during
the compliance period of April 1, 2023,
to June 30, 2024. Some States may be
out of compliance with both sets of
requirements and required to submit
just one CAP addressing both issues, but
for purposes of estimating State burden,
we will assume they are mutually
exclusive sets of States for a total of 8
States. We will also assume for purposes
of estimating State burden that CMS
will require a CAP from all of the 8
noncompliant States (and will not
exercise its discretion not to require a
CAP from any of them). We recognize
that, if our assumptions are incorrect,
the aggregate burden may be less or
more than estimated here.
We estimate that for each of the 8
States required to submit a CAP to CMS,
it will take a Management Analyst 20
hours at $100.64/hour and a General
and Operations Manager 8 hours at
$118.14/hour to write, clear, and submit
a CAP that includes the criteria at
§ 430.49(b)(3) for an aggregate of 224
hours (8 States × 28 hours) and $23,663
[(($100.64 × 20 hours) + ($118.14 × 8
hours)) × 8 States]. Taking into account
the 50 percent Federal contribution to
Medicaid program administration, the
estimated State share would be $11,832.
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Federal Register / Vol. 88, No. 233 / Wednesday, December 6, 2023 / Rules and Regulations
TABLE 3—SUMMARY OF PROPOSED BURDEN ESTIMATES
8
1
varies
23
184
18,082
9,041
n/a
n/a
n/a
One-Time.
8
1
varies
28
224
23,663
11,832
n/a
n/a
n/a
One-Time.
0938–TBD
....................
(CMS–10875).
..................
..............
408
41,745
20,873
n/a
n/a
n/a
One-Time.
§ 435.927 ......
0938–TBD
(CMS–10875).
0938–TBD
(CMS–10875).
§ 430.49(b) ...
Total ......
C. Submission of PRA-Related
Comments
We have submitted a copy of this rule
to OMB for its approval of the rule’s
information collection requirements.
The requirements are not effective until
they have been approved by OMB.
To obtain copies of the supporting
statement and any related forms for the
collections previously discussed in this
rule, please visit the CMS website at
https://www.cms.hhs.gov/Paperwork
ReductionActof1995, or call the Reports
Clearance Office at (410) 786–1326.
If you comment on these information
collection requirements, please submit
your comments electronically as
specified in the DATES and ADDRESSES
sections of this interim final rule.
V. Response to Comments
Because of the large number of public
comments normally received on Federal
Register documents, the Department is
not able to acknowledge or respond to
them individually. We will consider all
comments we receive by the date and
time specified in the DATES section of
this preamble, and, if we proceed with
a subsequent document, we will
respond to the comments in the
preamble to that document.
lotter on DSK11XQN23PROD with RULES1
VI. Regulatory Impact Analysis
A. Statement of Need
We have learned through working
with States as they unwind from the
continuous enrollment condition under
the FFCRA and return to normal
operations that States face challenges in
processing an unprecedented volume of
redeterminations. Through routine
monitoring and technical assistance,
CMS is working with States to address
and mitigate policy and operational
barriers to meeting all Federal eligibility
and enrollment requirements. Congress
has given CMS new tools to hold States
accountable when States fail to meet
Federal redetermination requirements
during the period from April 1, 2023, to
June 30, 2024.
In this rulemaking, we implement
State reporting requirements and CMS’
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............
Total
time
(hours)
Labor
cost
($)
Total
state
share
($)
enforcement authorities under section
1902(tt) of the Act. We interpret and
implement statutory language and
specify parameters related to when
States will be required to submit certain
data. We also specify how CMS
interprets and will calculate the FMAP
reduction required under section
1902(tt)(2)(A) of the Act for a State’s
failure to comply with the reporting
requirements in section 1902(tt)(1) of
the Act for a quarter during the period
from July 1, 2023, through June 30,
2024. We also specify parameters
related to when States that are
noncompliant with reporting
requirements in section 1902(tt)(1) of
the Act or with Federal eligibility
redetermination requirements must
submit a CAP, and when they will be
required to suspend some or all
disenrollments of eligibility for
procedural reasons, and/or pay CMPs.
We also specify the conditions under
which CMS would lift requirements to
suspend procedural disenrollments and
CMPs as States come into compliance
with Federal redetermination and
reporting requirements via submission
or implementation of their approved
CAPs. Together, the changes in this rule
will give States clear guidance about
how to comply with the new reporting
requirements and how CMS will take
enforcement action for failure to comply
with these new reporting requirements
and Federal eligibility redetermination
requirements. The new enforcement
tools in section 1902(tt) of the Act are
expected to help CMS prevent loss of
coverage for eligible beneficiaries.
B. Overall Impact
We have examined the impacts of this
rule as required by E.O. 12866 on
Regulatory Planning and Review
(September 30, 1993), E.O. 13563 on
Improving Regulation and Regulatory
Review (January 18, 2011), Executive
Order 14094 entitled ‘‘Modernizing
Regulatory Review’’ (April 6, 2023), the
Regulatory Flexibility Act (RFA)
(September 19, 1980, Pub. L. 96354),
section 1102(b) of the Act, section 202
PO 00000
Frm 00046
Fmt 4700
Sfmt 4700
Total
beneficiary
burden
(hours)
Total
nonlabor
cost
($)
Number of
responses
per
respondent
OMB
control No.
(CMS ID No.)
Hourly
labor
cost
($/hr)
Time
per
response
(hours)
Number of
respondents
Regulation
section(s)
Total
beneficiary
cost ($)
Frequency
of the Unfunded Mandates Reform Act
(UMRA) of 1995 (March 22, 1995; Pub.
L. 104–4), E.O. 13132 on Federalism
(August 4, 1999), and the Congressional
Review Act (CRA) (5 U.S.C. 804(2)).
OMB has determined that this rule is
non-major under 5 U.S. Code § 801, and
therefore, is not subject to the CRA and
has also determined that this rule is not
significant under 3(f)(1) of E.O. 12866.
We have estimated the potential
impacts of this rule on Medicaid
enrollment and expenditures. Overall,
the rule’s impact is expected to be
limited. States are already aware of
Federal redetermination requirements
and, as noted in sections I.C. and I.D of
this rule, CMS provides advice and
technical assistance to help States
comply with these requirements and the
new reporting requirements in section
1902(tt)(1) of the Act. When CMS
becomes aware of a potential violation
of Federal requirements, we first
attempt to work collaboratively with the
State to understand the nature and
scope of the problem and to identify
appropriate alternative processes and
procedures that the State can adopt to
avoid or minimize beneficiary harm
until the State can fix the problem and
come into full compliance with Federal
requirements, consistent with our
authority to enforce compliance with
section 1902 of the Act under section
1904 of the Act and § 430.35. In
addition, the new enforcement
authorities in this rule are only
applicable to State activities that occur
during a time-limited period, generally
from April 1, 2023, to June 30, 2024.
This rule implements new
enforcement tools that CMS can use to
address violations of Federal Medicaid
redetermination or reporting
requirements that occur during a period
that generally aligns with States’
unwinding periods. Beginning with the
analysis of redetermination
requirements, we start with an
assumption that in most cases
redeterminations would be accurate and
follow required processes and, thus, that
the new enforcement tools implemented
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through this rule will not be widely
needed. Even though the Federal
government and States already have
processes in place to ensure
redeterminations are done correctly and
States are already required to do so, the
new enforcement authorities will give
CMS additional tools to enforce
compliance with these requirements. As
noted in section I.D. and above, CMS
attempts to work collaboratively with a
State first to understand the nature and
scope of any potential violation of
Federal requirements and to identify
appropriate alternative processes and
procedures that the State can adopt to
avoid or minimize beneficiary harm
until the State can fix the problem and
come into full compliance with Federal
requirements. However,
notwithstanding those efforts, it is
possible that a few States might still be
noncompliant, thus making it necessary
for CMS to use the enforcement tools
implemented in this rule.
It is possible that in the course of
States coming into compliance with the
requirements enforceable through
section 1902(tt) of the Act absent this
rule, some eligible individuals would
remain enrolled who might have
otherwise been disenrolled for
procedural reasons due to a State’s
failure to comply with redetermination
requirements. The impacts estimated in
this section depend on the effectiveness
of this rule at ensuring that eligibility
redeterminations are done correctly, as
well as the assumptions about how
many unauthorized procedural
disenrollments would have occurred
absent this rule.
In the Mid-Session Review of the
President’s FY 2024 Budget,31 CMS
projected that Medicaid enrollment
would decline by about 18 million
enrollees due to the unwinding of the
Medicaid continuous enrollment
condition through the end of fiscal year
2024 (or about 19 percent as measured
from the peak of Medicaid enrollment in
March-April 2023). This does not
include individuals who newly enroll
over this period.
To develop the estimates, we started
with the following assumptions. First,
we assumed that a maximum of five
States would be out of compliance with
the Federal redetermination
requirements under this rule and be
subject to CAPs and suspensions of
procedural disenrollments and/or CMPs
if they did not submit or implement an
approvable CAP. We assumed that all
States would take the appropriate steps
to submit or implement CAPs and, thus,
31 https://www.whitehouse.gov/wp-content/
uploads/2023/07/msr_fy2024.pdf.
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that CMS would require no suspensions
of procedural disenrollments and
impose no CMPs. Second, we assumed
that States out of compliance with
Federal redetermination requirements
would have about 5 percent more
individuals found ineligible and that
those individuals would still be eligible
and would have remained enrolled if
redeterminations were done accurately.
Third, we assumed that about 40
percent of enrollees who would have
been disenrolled would have ultimately
re-enrolled within 12 months. We
assumed that this rule would bring all
States into compliance and that
individuals wrongly disenrolled would
be re-enrolled; in future cases, this rule
would also prevent those incorrect
disenrollments from occurring. We
assume that any such effects would start
by early 2024.
We estimate that the rule would
increase Medicaid enrollment by about
7,000 individuals in fiscal year 2024
and 13,000 individuals in fiscal year
2025 (average annual enrollment). We
estimate that total Medicaid spending
due to increased enrollment would be
about $50 million higher in fiscal year
2024 ($36 million Federal) and about
$93 million higher annually in fiscal
year 2025 and subsequent years ($66
million Federal).
Actual impacts could be greater than
or less than estimated here. Future
spending and enrollment could grow
faster or slower than projected. More or
fewer States could be out of compliance
than we have assumed, and the number
of unauthorized procedural
disenrollments could also be higher or
lower than we have assumed. This rule
could also be more or less effective than
we expect. Moreover, if one or more
States did not comply with these
requirements, those States could be
assessed CMPs that would result in a
transfer from States to CMS and could
lead to additional actions.
This rule also implements a statutory
FMAP reduction for noncompliance
with reporting requirements under
section 1902(tt)(1) of the Act. States out
of compliance with these reporting
requirements between July 1, 2023, and
June 30, 2024, would be assessed a
reduction in FMAP of 0.25 percentage
points for each quarter they are out of
compliance, and this would increase by
0.25 percentage points for each
additional quarter they are out of
compliance. States that fail to comply
with reporting requirements may also be
required to submit a CAP, and if the
reporting violations impeded CMS
oversight of procedural disenrollments,
States that fail to submit or implement
an approvable CAP will be required to
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84731
suspend procedural disenrollments and
will also be subject to CMPs. If the
reporting violation did not impede
CMS’ oversight of procedural
disenrollments, CMS will delay
suspension of procedural
disenrollments for 1 month but will still
impose CMPs (except in extraordinary
circumstances, as discussed in section
II.E. of this rule). We assume that at
most an additional three States would
be out of compliance with reporting
requirements for one quarter each.
Although States that are noncompliant
are at risk of additional enforcement
action, we estimate that most States will
correct violations without a CAP or, if
a CAP is imposed, will implement the
CAP to address any violations and not
be subject to additional enforcement
actions. We estimate that the impact of
the States that are noncompliant with
reporting requirements would result in
a FMAP reduction of $30 million, which
would be a transfer from those States to
the Federal government.
In total and consistent with the
assumptions noted above, the estimated
net effects of this rule would be Federal
costs of about $6 million in fiscal year
2024 ($36 million in costs for additional
enrollment, and $30 million in
collections from States assessed an
FMAP reduction) and $66 million in
fiscal year 2025. For States, the
estimated effects are $44 million in
costs in fiscal year 2024 ($14 million in
costs for additional enrollment, and $30
million in payments related to the
FMAP reduction) and $27 million in
fiscal year 2025.
The actual impact could be more or
less than we have estimated. The key
uncertainties are the number of States
out of compliance, which States those
would be (as Federal spending varies
significantly across States, depending
on the Medicaid population and
spending levels and the FMAP rates for
each State), and the number of quarters
those States are out of compliance. We
anticipate that States would quickly
remedy any issues that would result in
an FMAP reduction, and thus would be
unlikely to be assessed an FMAP
reduction in more than one quarter.
Executive Orders 12866 and 13563
direct agencies to assess all costs and
benefits of available regulatory
alternatives and, if regulation is
necessary, to select regulatory
approaches that maximize net benefits
(including potential economic,
environmental, public health and safety
effects, distributive impacts, and
equity). Executive Order 14094 amends
section 3(f) of Executive Order 12866.
The amended section 3(f) of Executive
Order 12866 defines a ‘‘significant
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regulatory action’’ as an action that is
likely to result in a rule: (1) having an
annual effect on the economy of $200
million or more in any 1 year (adjusted
every 3 years by the Administrator of
the Office of Information and Regulatory
Affairs (OIRA) for changes in gross
domestic product), or adversely affect in
a material way the economy, a sector of
the economy, productivity, competition,
jobs, the environment, public health or
safety, or State, local, territorial, or tribal
governments or communities; (2)
creating a serious inconsistency or
otherwise interfering with an action
taken or planned by another agency; (3)
materially altering the budgetary
impacts of entitlement grants, user fees,
or loan programs or the rights and
obligations of recipients thereof; or (4)
raise legal or policy issues for which
centralized review would meaningfully
further the President’s priorities or the
principles set forth in this Executive
order, as specifically authorized in a
timely manner by the Administrator of
OIRA in each case.
A regulatory impact analysis (RIA)
must be prepared for rules that are
significant under section 3(f)(1) of
Executive Order 12866 as amended by
Executive Order 14094 ($200 million or
more in any 1 year). Based on our
analysis, OIRA has designated this rule
as not significant under section 3(f)(1).
In reviewing the economic effect of this
rule, we have assumed that States will
generally meet reporting requirements
and requirements for Medicaid
eligibility redeterminations and
continue to meet the conditions for the
temporary FFCRA FMAP increase, and
thus will not be subject to FMAP
reductions, suspensions of procedural
disenrollments, CMPs, or loss of Federal
matching funds that would rise to the
level of $200 million or more in any one
year. While we assume that only a
handful of States would have failed to
comply absent this interim final rule,
even in those hypothetical cases, we
assume States will come into
compliance promptly and avoid the
enforcement actions described in this
interim final rule, further minimizing
the rule’s economic impact. For
example, we assumed States will use
existing contracts to modify systems to
ensure data are reported to CMS timely.
The RFA requires agencies to analyze
options for regulatory relief of small
businesses. For purposes of the RFA,
small entities include small businesses,
nonprofit organizations, and small
governmental jurisdictions. Most
hospitals and most other providers and
suppliers are small entities, either by
nonprofit status or by having revenues
of less than $9.0 million to $47.0
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16:08 Dec 05, 2023
Jkt 262001
million in any one year. Individuals and
States are not included in the definition
of a small entity. The good cause
exception of the APA applicable to this
rule allows CMS to waive the regulatory
impact analysis typically required under
the RFA.
In addition, section 1102(b) of the Act
requires CMS to prepare an RIA if a rule
may have a significant impact on the
operations of a substantial number of
small rural hospitals. This analysis must
conform to the provisions of section 604
of the RFA. For purposes of section
1102(b) of the Act, we define a small
rural hospital as a hospital that is
located outside a Metropolitan
Statistical Area and has fewer than 100
beds. This rule applies to State
Medicaid and CHIP agencies and will
not add requirements for rural hospitals
or other small providers. Therefore, we
are not preparing an analysis for section
1102(b) of the Act because we have
determined, and the Secretary certifies,
that this rule will not have a significant
impact on the operations of a substantial
number of small rural hospitals.
Section 202 of the UMRA also
requires that agencies assess anticipated
costs and benefits before issuing any
rule whose mandates require spending
in any one year of $100 million in 1995
dollars, updated annually for inflation.
In 2023, that is approximately $177
million. We believe that this rule will
not mandate spending by State, local, or
tribal governments nor by private sector
entities over this level.
C. Administrative Burden
We do not anticipate this rule will
significantly impact administrative
spending by the Federal Government.
D. Alternatives Considered
In developing this final rule, the
following alternatives were considered:
1. Not Finalizing the Rule
We considered not finalizing this rule
and considering the provisions of
section 1902(tt) of the Act to be selfimplementing. However, we believe the
authority to require State reporting
under section 1902(tt)(1) of the Act, to
impose CAPs on States that fail to meet
Federal redetermination requirements or
the reporting requirements under
section 1902(tt)(1) of the Act, and to
suspend procedural disenrollments and
impose CMPs on States that fail to
submit or implement a required CAP,
required regulation in order to enable
CMS to exercise its full statutory
enforcement authority fairly and
uniformly. For example, we believe the
mitigating circumstances outlined in
this rule, which memorialize when and
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how CMS will exercise its discretion to
take enforcement action under section
1902(tt)(2)(B) of the Act, necessitated
regulation.
2. Implementing Section 1902(tt) of the
Act Through Subregulatory Guidance
We considered not promulgating a
regulation but instead implementing
section 1902(tt) of the Act through
subregulatory guidance. However, CMS
believes that the policy interpretations
in this rule are different enough from
the statutory language to necessitate
regulation. For example, while the
statute gives CMS discretion regarding
whether to require a State to submit a
CAP and regarding whether to require
suspension of procedural
disenrollments or impose CMPs if a
State fails to submit or implement that
CAP, the rule outlines in detail how
CMS will exercise this discretion.
3. Promulgating a Proposed Rule
We considered promulgating a
proposed rule rather than an IFC to
implement these same provisions.
However, as outlined in section III. of
this rule, we believe notice-andcomment procedures and a delay in the
effective date of this rule are
impracticable and/or contrary to the
public interest.
E. Limitations of the Analysis
As described previously, we have
assumed that all but three States would
comply with the reporting requirements,
and all but five States would comply
with Federal redetermination
requirements referenced in this interim
final rule and be subject to the CAP
requirements at 430.49(b). It is possible
that one or more of these States would
fail to comply with the CAP
requirements, and thus be ineligible for
the temporary FFCRA FMAP increase,
or be subject to the other penalties
discussed in this rule, including
suspension of procedural
disenrollments and CMPs, and thus that
the economic impact of the rule would
be greater. In those cases, we would also
assume more individuals would be
disenrolled than would occur if the
State complied with these requirements.
We have not attempted to quantify the
non-administrative program impact
(that is, changes in enrollment and/or
spending on benefits, not the costs
associated with training/hiring workers,
programming systems, or printing
notices, for example) of a State failing to
comply with the CAP requirements in
the interim final rule.
In accordance with the provisions of
Executive Order 12866, this regulation
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was reviewed by the Office of
Management and Budget.
Chiquita Brooks-LaSure,
Administrator of the Centers for
Medicare & Medicaid Services,
approved this document on September
27, 2023.
List of Subjects
42 CFR Part 430
Administrative practice and
procedure, Grant programs—health,
Medicaid, Reporting and recordkeeping
requirements.
42 CFR Part 435
Aid to Families with Dependent
Children, Grant programs—health,
Medicaid, Reporting and recordkeeping
requirements, Supplemental Security
Income (SSI), Wages.
45 CFR Part 16
Procedures of the Departmental
Grants Appeals Board.
For the reasons set forth in the
preamble, the Centers for Medicare &
Medicaid Services and the Department
of Health and Human Services amend
42 CFR chapter IV and 45 CFR subtitle
A, subchapter A, as set forth below:
Title 42
PART 430—GRANTS TO STATES FOR
MEDICAL ASSISTANCE PROGRAMS
1. The authority citation for part 430
continues to read as follows—
■
Authority: Sec. 1102 of the Social Security
Act, (42 U.S.C. 1302).
2. Section 430.3 is amended by
revising the introductory text and
adding paragraph (d) to read as follows:
■
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§ 430.3
Appeals under Medicaid.
Four distinct types of disputes may
arise under Medicaid.
*
*
*
*
*
(d) Imposition of suspensions of
procedural disenrollments and civil
money penalties under section 430.49 of
this part. Disputes that pertain to CMS’
imposition of suspensions of procedural
disenrollments and civil money
penalties under § 430.49(c) of this part
are heard by the Board in accordance
with procedures set forth in 45 CFR part
16.
■ 3. Section 430.5 is amended by adding
definitions for ‘‘Federal redetermination
requirements’’ and ‘‘Procedural
disenrollment’’ in alphabetical order to
read as follows:
§ 430.5
Definitions.
*
*
*
*
*
Federal redetermination requirements
means, for the purposes of § 430.49,
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Federal requirements applicable to
eligibility redeterminations outlined in
42 CFR 435.916, including renewal
strategies authorized under section
1902(e)(14)(A) of the Social Security Act
or other alternative processes and
procedures approved by CMS under
section 1902(e)(14)(A) of the Act or
section 6008(f)(2)(A) of the Families
First Coronavirus Response Act.
Procedural disenrollment means, for
the purposes of § 430.49 and 45 CFR
part 16, a termination of a beneficiary’s
Medicaid eligibility after advance notice
under subpart E of part 431 for reasons
that are unrelated to a State’s
determination of whether the individual
meets eligibility criteria to qualify for
coverage, including for failure to return
a renewal form or documentation
needed by the State to make a
determination of eligibility.
*
*
*
*
*
■ 4. Section 430.49 is added to subpart
C to read as follows:
§ 430.49 Corrective action plans,
suspensions of procedural disenrollments,
and civil money penalties.
(a) Statutory basis. This section
interprets and implements section
1902(tt)(2)(B) of the Social Security Act.
(b) Corrective action plans—(1) Basis
for corrective action. After consideration
of any mitigating circumstances in
accordance with paragraph (d) of this
section and notwithstanding whether an
FMAP reduction has been imposed
under § 435.928 of this subchapter, CMS
will determine whether to require the
State to submit a corrective action plan
if CMS finds that the State is not in
compliance during the period beginning
on April 1, 2023, through June 30, 2024,
with either of the following
requirements:
(i) The requirement to submit data
required under section 1902(tt)(1) of the
Act in accordance with § 435.927 of this
subchapter; or
(ii) Federal redetermination
requirements described at § 430.5.
(2) Notice of need for corrective action
plan. If, after considering mitigating
circumstances as described in paragraph
(d) of this section, the Administrator
decides to require the State to submit
and implement a corrective action plan
for noncompliance described in
paragraph (b)(1) of this section or to
revise or resubmit such a plan, the
Administrator will provide the State
with a written notice directing the State
to submit a corrective action plan to
correct the identified areas of
noncompliance. Such notice will—
(i) Explain the violation of Federal
redetermination or reporting
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84733
requirements that CMS has identified
and the basis for CMS’ finding;
(ii) Inform the State of the
requirement to submit and implement a
corrective action plan:
(iii) Include instructions on the
method and deadline by which the State
must submit a corrective action plan to
CMS; and
(iv) Explain the enforcement actions
that CMS may pursue if the State fails
to submit or implement an approved
corrective action plan, including if CMS
disapproves the State’s submitted CAP
or if the State fails to meet the
requirements set forth in the approved
CAP, in accordance with this section.
(3) Content of corrective action plan.
A corrective action plan must describe
in detail—
(i) The actions the State will take
immediately, if needed to prevent
further harm or risk of harm to
beneficiaries while it implements the
corrective action plan, including to
prevent increased burden for
beneficiaries in completing the renewal
process, loss of coverage at renewal for
individuals who continue to meet the
substantive eligibility criteria and
whose eligibility should otherwise be
retained but for failure to meet a
procedural requirement, and delays in
access to coverage or care;
(ii) The steps the State will take to
ensure compliance with Federal
requirements, including but not limited
to new policies, procedures, operational
processes or systems changes it will
implement;
(iii) Key milestones and a detailed
timeline for achieving compliance; and
(iv) A plan for communicating the
steps the State will take to prevent
actual harm or risk of harm to
beneficiaries and to ensure compliance
with Federal requirements per
paragraphs (b)(3)(i) and (ii) of this
section to State staff, including staff of
non-Medicaid agencies or entities to
which the agency has delegated
authority to conduct redeterminations of
eligibility in accordance with
§ 431.10(c)(1)(i) of this subchapter;
CMS; and beneficiaries, as applicable.
(4) Timeframes for submission,
approval, and implementation of
corrective action plan—(i) Submission.
A State that receives a notice described
in paragraph (b)(2) of this section must
submit a corrective action plan,
including the elements in paragraph
(b)(3) of this section, not later than 14
calendar days from the date of the
notice of noncompliance.
(ii) Approval. CMS must approve or
disapprove a corrective action plan
submitted by the State within 21
calendar days of the date it is submitted.
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If CMS does not approve or disapprove
the corrective action plan within 21
calendar days of submission, the
corrective action plan will be deemed
approved.
(iii) Implementation. A State must
begin implementation of the corrective
action plan not later than 14 calendar
days after the date that either the State
receives CMS approval, or the corrective
action plan is deemed approved.
(5) Approval or disapproval of
corrective action plan. A corrective
action plan will be approved if CMS
determines that the plan–
(i) Meets the requirements at
paragraph (b)(3) of this section;
(ii) Promptly eliminates or minimizes
any harm or risk of harm to
beneficiaries, including increased
burden for beneficiaries in completing
the renewal process, loss of coverage at
renewal for individuals who continue to
meet the substantive eligibility criteria
and whose eligibility should otherwise
be retained but for failure to meet a
procedural requirement, and delays in
access to coverage or care due to the
noncompliance to be addressed by the
plan; and
(iii) Results in the State achieving
compliance in a reasonable time, taking
into account systems challenges and
circumstances faced by the agencies
involved.
(c) Suspensions of procedural
disenrollments and civil money
penalties. (1) After considering any
applicable mitigating circumstances in
accordance with paragraph (d) of this
section and notwithstanding whether
the State is subject to an FMAP
reduction under § 435.928 of this
subchapter, CMS may take one or both
of the following actions if the State fails
to submit or implement an approved
corrective action plan, including if CMS
disapproves the State’s submitted
corrective action plan due to the State’s
failure to include required elements in
accordance with the requirements
described in paragraph (b) of this
section, or if the State fails to meet the
requirements set forth in the approved
corrective action plan:
(i) Require the State to suspend some
or all procedural disenrollments, in
accordance with paragraph (c)(3)(i) of
this section; and
(ii) Impose civil money penalties in
accordance with paragraph (c)(3)(ii) of
this section.
(2) Notice. (i) Prior to requiring the
State to suspend procedural
disenrollments of Medicaid eligibility or
imposing civil money penalties, CMS
will issue a notice to the State. Such
notice will include—
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(A) A description of the enforcement
action(s) CMS is taking and the basis for
such action(s);
(B) Whether CMS is requiring the
State to suspend some or all procedural
disenrollments and, in the case of a
partial suspension, the affected
populations;
(C) The date on which the State must
begin suspending procedural
disenrollments, if applicable;
(D) The daily amount owed for any
civil money penalties imposed, the date
the penalties will begin to be charged,
the timeline for payment (including
information on how the timeline for
payment would be affected by an
appeal), and instructions on how to
submit payment;
(E) The steps the State must take to
cure its noncompliance and for CMS to
lift the enforcement action(s); and
(F) Information on the State’s appeal
rights as described in paragraph (f) of
this section, including the deadline to
submit an appeal request, and the effect
of requesting an appeal on the
applicability of any enforcement actions
pending the decision in such appeal.
The notice must also provide that the
decision outlined in the notice is final
unless it is timely appealed as described
in paragraph (f) of this section.
(ii) CMS may issue additional notices
requiring a State to take additional
actions (including paying increased
civil money penalties or implementing
or broadening the scope of a required
suspension of procedural
disenrollments) if CMS identifies
additional violations of corrective action
plan provisions. Such notices will meet
the requirements outlined in paragraph
(c)(2)(i) of this section.
(3) Scope of actions—(i) Suspensions
of procedural disenrollments. (A) If the
noncompliance determined by CMS
under paragraph (b)(1) of this section
impacts a substantial number of
(meaning all or nearly all) individuals
who are or should have been found
eligible for Medicaid, CMS will require
the State to suspend all procedural
disenrollments.
(B) If the impact of the
noncompliance is limited (for example,
to a specific population or geographic
area), CMS may limit the suspension of
procedural disenrollments to the
impacted population(s). After requiring
a limited suspension of procedural
disenrollments, CMS may later opt to
require the State to suspend all
procedural disenrollments if CMS
subsequently determines that the impact
of the noncompliance is greater than
was initially determined, or if the State
fails to comply with the initial
requirement to suspend some
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procedural disenrollments in
accordance with the notice issued under
paragraph (c)(2) of this section. In these
circumstances, CMS will issue a
subsequent notice under paragraph
(c)(2).
(ii) Civil money penalties. CMS may
require the State to pay a civil money
penalty of not more than $100,000, as
adjusted annually under 45 CFR part
102, for each day that the State has not
submitted or implemented an approved
corrective action plan in accordance
with the requirements described in
paragraph (b) of this section or has
failed to meet the requirements of the
approved plan, until the penalty is lifted
due to the State meeting the conditions
described in paragraph (e) of this
section.
(A) Civil money penalties will start
accruing five (5) calendar days after the
date of the initial notice described in
paragraph (c)(2) of this section and
become payable 60 calendar days after
the date of the notice, if not timely
appealed, or 60 calendar days after
issuance of a final determination at the
conclusion of any appeal pursuant to
paragraph (f) of this section.
(B) The amount of any applicable civil
money penalties for failure to submit or
implement a corrective action plan,
including if CMS disapproves the
State’s submitted corrective action plan
or if the State fails to meet the
requirements set forth in the approved
corrective action plan, will be
determined according to the following
formula, after the date specified in
paragraph (c)(3)(ii)(A) of this section:
Days 1–30 of noncompliance: $25,000/
day; Days 31–60 of noncompliance:
$50,000/day; and Days 61 or more of
noncompliance until lifted in
accordance with paragraph (e) of this
section: $100,000/day. Each of these
amounts is adjusted annually under 45
CFR part 102.
(C) Consistent with paragraph
(c)(2)(ii) of this section, if CMS
identifies additional violations of
corrective action plan provisions, CMS
may issue additional notices to increase
civil money penalties more quickly than
provided for by the formula in
paragraph (c)(3)(ii)(B) of this section.
(4) Noncompliance with requirements
to suspend procedural disenrollments or
pay civil money penalties. If the State
fails to suspend procedural
disenrollments as required pursuant to
a notice described in paragraph (c)(2) of
this section, or to pay civil money
penalties as specified in that notice, or
both, CMS may issue an additional
notice pursuant to paragraph (c)(2) of
this section to increase the civil money
penalties to the maximum allowable
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daily amount, if not already reached, or
may pursue additional enforcement
action under section 1904 of the Act and
§ 430.35 of this subpart, including
withholding some or all Federal
financial participation.
(d) Mitigating circumstances. CMS
will consider the following mitigating
circumstances when deciding whether
to take the following enforcement
actions:
(1) Requirement to submit corrective
action plan for violation of
redetermination requirements. In the
case of noncompliance relating to a
violation of Federal redetermination
requirements, CMS may delay requiring,
or determine not to require, a State to
submit a corrective action plan under
paragraph (b) of this section if—
(i) The noncompliance caused neither
actual harm nor a substantial risk of
harm to beneficiaries, including
increased burden for beneficiaries in
completing the renewal process, loss of
coverage at renewal for individuals who
continue to meet the substantive
eligibility criteria and whose eligibility
should otherwise be retained but for
failure to meet a procedural
requirement, and delays in access to
coverage or care to beneficiaries; or
(ii) CMS determines that there is an
emergency or other extraordinary
circumstances preventing the State’s
compliance.
(2) Requirement to submit corrective
action plan for violation of reporting
requirements. In the case of
noncompliance relating to a violation of
the reporting requirements under
§ 435.927 of this subchapter, CMS may
delay requiring, or determine not to
require, a State to submit a corrective
action plan under paragraph (b) of this
section if—
(i) CMS has determined that the State
implementing a corrective action plan is
not necessary to ensure that the
noncompliance is remedied; or
(ii) CMS determines that there is an
emergency or other extraordinary
circumstances preventing the State’s
compliance.
(3) Suspensions of procedural
disenrollments and imposition of civil
money penalties. (i) In the case of a
State that has failed to submit or
implement an approved corrective
action plan relating to a violation of
either the reporting requirements under
§ 435.927 of this subchapter or Federal
redetermination requirements, CMS
may delay or forgo imposing civil
money penalties if CMS determines that
the State faces an emergency or other
extraordinary circumstances that—
(A) Occurred after the violation
resulting in CMS’ requirement of a CAP
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for noncompliance with Federal
redetermination requirements or
reporting requirements under § 435.927;
and
(B) Has significantly impeded the
State’s ability to submit or implement a
corrective action plan.
(ii) In the case of a State’s failure to
submit or implement a corrective action
plan relating to a violation of the
reporting requirements under § 435.927
of this subchapter in which the
underlying reporting violation does not
impede CMS’ oversight of the State’s
procedural disenrollments, CMS will:
(A) Delay suspension of procedural
disenrollments for 1 month; and
(B) Impose civil money penalties,
except in cases where there are also
extraordinary circumstances as
described in paragraph (d)(3)(i) of this
section.
(e) Lifting of enforcement actions. (1)
In cases where CMS had sent a State a
notice under paragraph (c)(2) of this
section for failure to submit or
implement an approved corrective
action plan—
(i) The State will be required to
continue any suspension of procedural
disenrollments required pursuant to
such notice, and any civil money
penalties imposed in accordance with
the terms of such notice will continue
to be charged, until—
(A) For a State that failed to submit a
corrective action plan, the State submits
a corrective action plan that CMS
determines is approvable consistent
with paragraph (b)(5) of this section.
(B) For a State that failed to
implement an approved corrective
action plan, the State has implemented
or resumed implementation of such
plan.
(ii) CMS will continue the accrual of
civil money penalties from the date
specified in the original notice provided
to the State under paragraph (c)(2) of
this section until CMS determines
whether the plan is approvable. If CMS
determines that the plan is approvable,
CMS will retroactively end the accrual
of the civil money penalties on the day
the CAP was submitted and cease
charging civil money penalties
prospectively. If CMS determines that
the plan is not approvable, CMS will
continue charging civil money penalties
imposed under the terms of the
enforcement notice without interruption
until the State submits an approvable
plan.
(2) Where a State has met the
conditions under paragraph (e)(1)(i) of
this section, CMS will notify the State
that the enforcement actions are being
lifted. For States that were required to
suspend procedural disenrollments,
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84735
such notice will include the date on
which the State may resume such
disenrollments. For States that were
subject to civil money penalties, such
notice will include the date on which
such civil money penalties stopped
accruing, the total number of days for
which civil money penalties accrued
and the amount(s) of such civil money
penalties, and the total amount of civil
money penalties owed.
(f) Administrative review—(1) Appeal
to the Departmental Appeals Board. A
State that is dissatisfied with CMS’s
determination under paragraph (c) of
this section that the State must suspend
procedural disenrollments or pay civil
money penalties because the State has
failed to submit or implement an
approvable corrective action plan may
appeal, pursuant to 45 CFR part 16, the
imposition of such suspensions of
procedural disenrollments or civil
money penalties to the Departmental
Appeals Board (the Board) within 30
days after receipt of a notice described
in paragraph (c)(2) of this section. The
appeal request must comply with 45
CFR 16.7, and the process for counting
days to submit an appeal will follow the
provisions under 45 CFR 16.19. The
appeals process is governed by 45 CFR
part 16. If the State does not submit an
appeal request within the 30-day
timeframe provided for an appeal to the
Board, then the decision described in
the notice received by the State under
paragraph (c)(2) of this section is the
final decision of the Secretary and is
final agency action within the meaning
of 5 U.S.C. 704.
(2) Reconsiderations by the
Administrator. (i) If any party to the
appeal is dissatisfied with the Board’s
decision under paragraph (f)(1) of this
section, it may seek the Administrator’s
reconsideration of that decision within
15 calendar days of receiving notice of
the decision pursuant to 45 CFR 16.21.
(A) The request for reconsideration
must be filed with the Administrator
and must include a copy of the Board’s
decision, a brief statement of why the
party believes the decision was wrong,
and a statement of the amount of any
civil money penalties in dispute.
(B) The party requesting
reconsideration must send a copy of the
request described in paragraph
(f)(2)(i)(A) of this section to all other
parties to the appeal and other
participants in the appeal (as described
in 45 CFR 16.16) at the same time that
the request is filed with the
Administrator.
(C) Any other party to the appeal, or
other participant in the appeal, may
respond to the request for
reconsideration in writing and file their
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response with the Administrator within
15 calendar days of the date the request
for reconsideration is filed with the
Administrator.
(D) The Administrator will review the
Board’s decision and any additional
information submitted by the parties
and other participants under paragraphs
(f)(2)(i)(A) or (C) of this section and,
within 60 calendar days after the Board
issues notice of its decision under 45
CFR 16.21, will either affirm the Board’s
decision or issue a new decision.
(ii) Within the 60-day period that is
described in paragraph (f)(2)(i)(D) of this
section, the Administrator may also
modify or reverse the Board’s decision
even if no party to the appeal has
requested reconsideration of that
decision.
(iii) If no request for reconsideration
is filed under paragraph (f)(2)(i) of this
section and the Administrator does not
modify or reverse the Board’s decision
within the 60-day period described in
paragraph (f)(2)(ii) of this section, then
the decision of the Board is the final
determination of the Secretary and is
final agency action, as described in
paragraph (f)(2)(v) of this section, and
the Administrator will provide notice to
all parties and other participants of such
decision as described in paragraph
(f)(2)(iv) of this section.
(iv) The Administrator will provide a
notice to all parties and other
participants of the final decision
together with a notice indicating that
this is the final determination of the
Secretary and is final agency action, as
described in paragraph (f)(2)(v) of this
section.
(v) The determination of the
Administrator pursuant to paragraph
(f)(2)(i)(D) or (f)(2)(ii) of this section is
the final determination of the Secretary
and is final agency action within the
meaning of 5 U.S.C. 704.
(g) Severability. Any provision of this
section held to be invalid or
unenforceable by its terms, or as applied
to any person or circumstance, or stayed
pending further State action, shall be
severable from this section and shall not
affect the remainder thereof or the
application of the provision to persons
not similarly situated or to dissimilar
circumstances.
PART 435—ELIGIBILITY IN THE
STATES, DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA,
THE NORTHERN MARIANA ISLANDS,
AND AMERICAN SAMOA
5. The authority citation for part 435
continues to read as follows—
■
Authority: 42 U.S.C. 1302.
6. Sections 435.927 and 435.928 are
added to subpart J to read as follows:
■
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§ 435.927 Requirements for States to
submit certain data on redeterminations.
(a) Basis. This section implements
section 1902(tt)(1) of the Social Security
Act.
(b) Definitions. As used in this
section—
(1) Timely means the following:
(i) Data submitted according to an
existing process governed by CMS
regulation or guidance (other than data
submitted through the Transformed
Medicaid Statistical Information System
(T–MSIS)) are timely if they are reported
by the deadline specified in the
applicable CMS regulation or guidance.
(ii) Data submitted under the existing
process for the T–MSIS are timely if
they are submitted on a monthly basis,
before the last day of the subsequent
month.
(iii) Data that States submit according
to an alternative process approved by
CMS or an alternative timeline
approved by CMS under the
circumstances specified in paragraph
(b)(4) of this section are timely if they
are submitted on the deadline CMS
specifies when it approves the
alternative process or timeline.
(2) Complete means that all required
elements are reported.
(3) Sufficient quality means the
following:
(i) For data submitted according to an
existing process governed by CMS
regulation or guidance, the data adhere
to specifications outlined in the
applicable CMS regulation or guidance.
(ii) For data submitted according to an
alternative process approved by CMS
under the circumstances specified in
paragraph (b)(4) of this section, the data
adheres to the specifications approved
by CMS when it approves the
alternative process.
(4) Good faith effort means that—
(i) The State is experiencing
significant, unforeseeable, or
unavoidable challenges in complying
with the reporting requirements of
paragraph (c) of this section, or is
experiencing significant foreseeable
challenges in complying and is working
to remediate these challenges but needs
additional time to address them;
(ii) The State requested, and CMS
approved an alternative process for
submitting the data or an alternative
timeline; and
(iii) The approved alternative process
for submitting the data or timeline is
sufficient to ensure CMS can obtain and
use the data to meet CMS’ obligations to
report the data publicly per section
1902(tt)(1) of the Act.
(c) Reporting requirement. For data
representing activities conducted by a
State during the time period beginning
PO 00000
Frm 00052
Fmt 4700
Sfmt 4700
April 1, 2023, and ending June 30, 2024,
each State must submit to CMS the data
described in paragraph (d) of this
section, and those data must be timely,
complete, and of sufficient quality (as
those terms are defined in paragraph (b)
of this section). To meet this
requirement, a State must:
(1) Submit data via existing CMSapproved processes; or
(2) Submit data through alternative
processes approved by CMS, under the
circumstances specified in paragraph
(b)(4) of this section.
(d) Required data elements. States
must submit the following data to CMS
in accordance with paragraph (c) of this
section:
(1) Total number of Medicaid and
Children’s Health Insurance Program
(CHIP) beneficiaries for whom a renewal
was initiated.
(2) Total number of Medicaid and
CHIP beneficiaries whose Medicaid or
CHIP coverage is renewed.
(3) Of the Medicaid and CHIP
beneficiaries whose Medicaid or CHIP
coverage is renewed, the total number
whose coverage is renewed on an ex
parte basis.
(4) Total number of individuals whose
coverage for Medicaid or CHIP was
terminated.
(5) Total number of individuals whose
coverage for Medicaid or CHIP was
terminated for procedural reasons.
(6) Total number of beneficiaries who
were enrolled in a separate CHIP.
(7) For each State call center, total call
center volume.
(8) For each State call center, average
wait times.
(9) For each State call center, average
abandonment rate.
(10) For States with State-based
Exchanges (SBEs) using a NonIntegrated Eligibility System and not
using the Federal Exchange eligibility
and enrollment platform:
(i) Total number of individuals whose
accounts are received by the SBE or
Basic Health Program (BHP) due to a
Medicaid/CHIP redetermination.
(ii) Total number of individuals who
apply for coverage due to a Medicaid/
CHIP redetermination who are
determined eligible for a QHP or a BHP.
(iii) Total number of individuals who
apply for coverage due to a Medicaid/
CHIP redetermination who are
determined eligible for a QHP or a BHP,
and who make a QHP plan selection or
are enrolled in a BHP.
(11) For States with SBEs with an
Integrated Eligibility System and not
using the Federal Exchange eligibility
and enrollment platform:
(i) Total number of individuals who
apply for coverage due to a Medicaid/
E:\FR\FM\06DER1.SGM
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Federal Register / Vol. 88, No. 233 / Wednesday, December 6, 2023 / Rules and Regulations
CHIP redetermination who are
determined eligible for a QHP or a BHP.
(ii) Total number of individuals who
apply for coverage due to a Medicaid/
CHIP redetermination who are
determined eligible for a QHP or BHP,
and who make a QHP plan selection or
are enrolled in a BHP.
(e) Severability. Any provision of this
section held to be invalid or
unenforceable by its terms, or as applied
to any person or circumstance, or stayed
pending further State action, shall be
severable from this section and shall not
affect the remainder thereof or the
application of the provision to persons
not similarly situated or to dissimilar
circumstances.
lotter on DSK11XQN23PROD with RULES1
§ 435.928 Reduction in FMAP for failure to
submit certain data.
(a) Basis. This section implements
section 1902(tt)(2)(A) of the Social
Security Act.
(b) Application of the FMAP
reduction. (1) FMAP means the Statespecific Federal medical assistance
percentage as defined in the first
sentence of section 1905(b) of the Act.
(2) If CMS finds that, for a fiscal
quarter in the period beginning on July
1, 2023, and ending on June 30, 2024,
the State was noncompliant with the
requirements of § 435.927, CMS will
reduce the State’s Federal medical
assistance percentage (FMAP) for that
fiscal quarter as described in paragraph
(b)(4) of this section.
(3) A State is noncompliant in a fiscal
quarter if it has failed to comply with
the reporting requirements described in
§ 435.927 for one or more months of the
quarter.
(4) The FMAP reduction under
paragraph (b)(2) of this section will
equal the product of 0.25 percentage
points and the number of the fiscal
quarters during the period from July 1,
2023, through June 30, 2024, in which
the State is noncompliant with the
reporting requirements described in
§ 435.927. When States are
noncompliant in multiple quarters
during that period, the FMAP reduction
will increase by 0.25 percentage points
for each successive quarter of
noncompliance, even if nonconsecutive,
but in no case will the reduction for any
single quarter exceed 1 percentage
point.
(c) Severability. Any provision of this
section held to be invalid or
unenforceable by its terms, or as applied
to any person or circumstance, or stayed
pending further State action, shall be
severable from this section and shall not
affect the remainder thereof or the
application of the provision to persons
VerDate Sep<11>2014
16:08 Dec 05, 2023
Jkt 262001
84737
not similarly situated or to dissimilar
circumstances.
FEDERAL COMMUNICATIONS
COMMISSION
Title 45
47 CFR Part 25
PART 16—PROCEDURES OF THE
DEPARTMENTAL GRANT APPEALS
BOARD
[IB Docket Nos. 22–411; 22–271; FCC 23–
73; FR ID 188451]
7. The authority for part 16 continues
to read as follows:
■
Authority: 5 U.S.C. 301 and secs. 1, 5, 6,
and 7 of Reorganization Plan No. 1 of 1953,
18 FR 2053, 67 Stat. 631 and authorities cited
in the Appendix.
8. Section 16.22 is amended by
revising paragraphs (b)(3) and (4) and
adding paragraph (b)(5) to read as
follows:
■
§ 16.22
The effect of an appeal.
*
*
*
*
*
(b) * * *
(3) In programs listed in appendix A,
B.(a)(1), to this part implement a
decision to disallow Federal financial
participation claimed in expenditures
reported on a statement of expenditures,
by recovering, withholding or offsetting
payments, if the decision is issued
before the reported expenditures are
included in the calculation of a
subsequent grant;
(4) Take other action to recover,
withhold, or offset funds if specifically
authorized by statute or regulation; or
(5) Take action to require a State to
suspend procedural disenrollments, as
defined at 42 CFR 430.5, or continue the
accrual of the civil money penalties a
State owes under 42 CFR 430.49(c).
9. Appendix A of part 16 is amended
in section B by adding paragraph (a)(7)
to read as follows:
■
Appendix A to Part 16—What Disputes
the Board Reviews
*
*
*
*
*
B. * * *
(a) * * *
(7) Decisions relating to suspensions of
procedural disenrollments and civil money
penalties under 42 CFR 430.49(c).
*
*
*
*
*
Xavier Becerra,
Secretary, Department of Health and Human
Services.
[FR Doc. 2023–26640 Filed 12–4–23; 4:15 pm]
BILLING CODE 4120–01–P
PO 00000
Frm 00053
Fmt 4700
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Expediting Initial Processing of
Satellite and Earth Station Applications
Federal Communications
Commission.
AGENCY:
ACTION:
Final rule.
In this document, the Federal
Communications Commission
(Commission) adopts changes to its
rules aimed at expediting the initial
license application processing for
satellite operators. The Commission
establishes timeframes for placing
satellite and earth station applications
on public notice, eliminates a
procedural rule that prevents
consideration of requests for waiver of
the International Table of Frequency
Allocations, and removes the
prohibition on licensed-but-unbuilt
systems for non-geostationary orbit
(NGSO) operators. Additionally, the
Commission creates a new, streamlined
processing framework for earth station
operators to add satellite points of
communication under certain
circumstances. Finally, the Commission
lays the groundwork for a broader
Transparency Initiative led by the Space
Bureau to provide clarity and access to
applicants when interfacing with the
Commission’s license application
processes and filing system.
SUMMARY:
DATES:
Effective January 5, 2024.
Julia
Malette, Attorney Advisor, Satellite
Programs and Policy Division, Space
Bureau, at 202–418–2453 or
julia.malette@fcc.gov.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
This is a
summary of the Commission’s Report
and Order, FCC 23–73, adopted
September 21, 2023, and released
September 22, 2023. The document is
available for download at https://
docs.fcc.gov/public/attachments/FCC23-73A1.pdf. To request materials in
accessible formats for people with
disabilities, (e.g., Braille, large print,
electronic files, audio format, etc.) send
an email to FCC504@fcc.gov or call the
Consumer & Governmental Affairs
Bureau at 202–418–0530 (voice), or
202–418–0432 (TTY). A proposed rule
relating to further expediting satellite
and earth station application processing
is published elsewhere in this issue of
the Federal Register.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
E:\FR\FM\06DER1.SGM
06DER1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 88, Number 233 (Wednesday, December 6, 2023)]
[Rules and Regulations]
[Pages 84713-84737]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2023-26640]
=======================================================================
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES
Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services
42 CFR Parts 430 and 435
Office of the Secretary
45 CFR Part 16
[CMS-2447-IFC]
RIN 0938-AV26
Medicaid; CMS Enforcement of State Compliance With Reporting and
Federal Medicaid Renewal Requirements Under Section 1902(tt) of the
Social Security Act
AGENCY: Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS), HHS.
ACTION: Interim final rule with comment period.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: This interim final rule with request for comments (IFC)
implements reporting requirements and enforcement authorities in the
Social Security Act (the Act) that were added by the Consolidated
Appropriations Act, 2023 (CAA, 2023). CMS will use these new
enforcement authorities as described in this rule if States fail to
comply with the new reporting requirements added by the CAA, 2023 or
with Federal Medicaid eligibility redetermination requirements during a
timeframe that is generally aligned with the period when States are
restoring eligibility and enrollment operations following the end of
the Medicaid continuous enrollment condition under the Families First
Coronavirus Response Act (FFCRA). The new enforcement authorities
include requiring States to submit a corrective action plan, suspending
disenrollments from Medicaid for procedural reasons, and imposing civil
money penalties (CMPs). They also include applying a reduction to the
State-specific Federal Medical Assistance Percentage (FMAP) for failure
to meet reporting requirements.
DATES: These regulations are effective on December 6, 2023.
Comment date: To be assured consideration, comments must be
received at one of the addresses provided below, by February 2, 2024.
ADDRESSES: In commenting, please refer to file code CMS-2447-IFC.
Comments, including mass comment submissions, must be submitted in
one of the following three ways (please choose only one of the ways
listed):
1. Electronically. You may submit electronic comments on this
regulation to https://www.regulations.gov. Follow the ``Submit a
comment'' instructions.
2. By regular mail. You may mail written comments to the following
address ONLY: Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services, Department of
Health and Human Services, Attention: CMS-2447-IFC, P.O. Box 8016,
Baltimore, MD 21244-8016.
Please allow sufficient time for mailed comments to be received
before the close of the comment period.
3. By express or overnight mail. You may send written comments to
the following address ONLY: Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services,
Department of Health and Human Services, Attention: CMS-2447-IFC, Mail
Stop C4-26-05, 7500 Security Boulevard, Baltimore, MD 21244-1850.
For information on viewing public comments, see the beginning of
the SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION section.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Abby Kahn, (410) 786-4321,
[email protected], or Anna Bonelli, (443) 615-1268,
[email protected].
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Inspection of Public Comments: All comments received before the
close of the comment period are available for viewing by the public,
including any personally identifiable or confidential business
information that is included in a comment. We post all 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. Follow the search instructions on that website to
view public comments. CMS 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. CMS
continues to encourage 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.
[[Page 84714]]
I. Background
A. Enforcement Authorities Under Section 1902(tt) of the Social
Security Act
Section 1902(tt)(2) of the Social Security Act (the Act) (added by
section 5131(b) of Subtitle D of Title V of Division FF of the
Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2023 (CAA, 2023), Public Law 117-328,
enacted December 29, 2022) includes new enforcement authority for CMS
to use if it determines that a State is not in compliance with the
reporting requirements under section 1902(tt)(1) of the Act, Federal
eligibility redetermination requirements,\1\ or both.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ Medicaid regulations use both terms ``redetermination'' and
``renewal.'' For purposes of this rule, we interpret the reference
to all Federal requirements applicable to eligibility
redeterminations in section 1902(tt)(2)(B)(i) of the Act to include
Federal renewal requirements outlined in 42 CFR 435.916, as newly
defined at Sec. 430.5 in this rule.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
First, if CMS determines that a State is not in compliance with the
reporting requirements under section 1902(tt)(1) of the Act for any
fiscal quarter that occurs during the period that begins on July 1,
2023, and ends on June 30, 2024, section 1902(tt)(2)(A) of the Act
requires CMS to reduce the Federal Medical Assistance Percentage (FMAP)
as determined for the State for the quarter under section 1905(b) of
the Act by the number of percentage points (not to exceed 1 percentage
point) equal to the product of 0.25 percentage points and the number of
fiscal quarters during such period for which the State has failed to
satisfy such requirements. Per section 1902(tt)(2)(A) of the Act, the
FMAP reduction is for fiscal quarters occurring in the period beginning
on July 1, 2023, and ending on June 30, 2024. Therefore, CMS will not
apply the FMAP reduction under section 1902(tt)(2)(A) of the Act to the
quarter from April 1, 2023, to June 30, 2023, and CMS will not evaluate
State-reported data reflecting activities during these months for
purposes of the FMAP reduction.
Second, if CMS determines that a State is not in compliance with
Federal eligibility redetermination requirements, the reporting
requirements under section 1902(tt)(1) of the Act, or both, section
1902(tt)(2)(B) of the Act authorizes CMS to require a State to submit a
corrective action plan (CAP) to address the noncompliance. If the State
fails to submit or implement an approved CAP in accordance with section
1902(tt)(2)(B)(ii) of the Act, then, under section 1902(tt)(2)(B)(iii)
of the Act, CMS may require the State to suspend some or all
terminations of Medicaid eligibility that are for procedural reasons
(hereinafter referred to as ``procedural disenrollments'') and may also
impose civil money penalties (CMPs) of up to $100,000 for each day a
State is not in compliance. In this rule, CMS defines procedural
disenrollments in Sec. 430.5 to mean, for the purposes of Sec. 430.49
and 45 CFR part 16, a termination of a beneficiary's Medicaid
eligibility after providing advance notice required under 42 CFR part
431, subpart E for reasons that are unrelated to a State's
determination of whether the individual meets eligibility criteria to
qualify for coverage, including for failure to return a renewal form or
documentation needed by the State to make a determination of
eligibility. This new authority under section 1902(tt)(2)(B) of the Act
is in addition to any FMAP reduction that may also be applicable under
section 1902(tt)(2)(A) of the Act or any other enforcement authority
available to the Secretary. This new enforcement authority under
section 1902(tt)(2)(B) of the Act relates to State conduct occurring
during the period that began on April 1, 2023, and ends on June 30,
2024.
Both the new enforcement authorities in section 1902(tt)(2)(A) of
the Act and in section 1902(tt)(2)(B) of the Act took effect on April
1, 2023. As noted above, the enforcement authority in section
1902(tt)(2)(A) of the Act does not apply to State conduct during the
period from April 1, 2023, to June 30, 2023.
B. New Enforcement Needs and Considerations Given the Ending of the
Medicaid Continuous Enrollment Condition
Section 1902(tt) of the Act applies during a period when States are
conducting an unprecedented volume of Medicaid eligibility
redeterminations. Under section 6008(b)(3) of the FFCRA (Pub. L. 116-
127, originally enacted March 18, 2020), States were able to claim a
temporary 6.2 percentage point increase in their FMAP provided that
they met several conditions, including that they not disenroll most
persons enrolled in Medicaid as of or after March 18, 2020, until the
last day of the month in which the COVID-19 Public Health Emergency
(PHE) ended. This provision is known as the Medicaid continuous
enrollment condition. As of April 1, 2023, 50 States, the District of
Columbia, and the five U.S. Territories (referred to as ``States''
throughout, consistent with section 1101(a) of the Act), were claiming
the FFCRA FMAP increase, so this condition applied to all States.
Section 5131(a) of Subtitle D of Title V of Division FF of the CAA,
2023 made several changes to section 6008 of the FFCRA. As relevant
here, section 5131(a)(2)(C) of Subtitle D of Title V of Division FF of
the CAA, 2023 separated the end of the continuous enrollment condition
from the end of the COVID-19 PHE by amending section 6008(b)(3) of the
FFCRA to end continuous Medicaid enrollment as a condition for claiming
the FFCRA temporary FMAP increase on March 31, 2023.\2\ This means
that, beginning April 1, 2023, all 56 States claiming the temporary
FMAP increase were no longer required to comply with the continuous
enrollment condition. Accordingly, States must conduct a full renewal
of eligibility for each beneficiary (as part of a process referred to
as ``unwinding''), in accordance with 42 CFR 435.916 and as described
in State Health Official (SHO) letter #22-001, ``RE: Promoting
Continuity of Coverage and Distributing Eligibility and Enrollment
Workload in Medicaid, the Children's Health Insurance Program (CHIP),
and Basic Health Program (BHP) Upon Conclusion of the COVID-19 Public
Health Emergency'' (March 2022 SHO letter).\3\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\2\ Section 5131(a) of Subtitle D of Title V of Division FF of
the CAA, 2023 also amended section 6008 of the FFCRA to revise the
conditions States must meet to claim the temporary FMAP increase for
each quarter beginning April 1, 2023, to extend the availability of
the temporary FMAP increase until December 31, 2023, and to
gradually phase down the amount of the increase for each quarter
from April 1, 2023, to December 31, 2023.
\3\ https://www.medicaid.gov/Federal-policy-guidance/downloads/sho22001.pdf.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
CMS previously released guidance describing specific requirements
and recommendations for States related to unwinding from the continuous
enrollment condition. As a result of the policies described in these
guidance documents, State unwinding periods vary and do not necessarily
overlap with the compliance period for the new enforcement tools
created under section 1902(tt) of the Act. As discussed in SHO letter #
23-002, ``RE: Medicaid Continuous Enrollment Condition Changes,
Conditions for Receiving the FFCRA Temporary FMAP Increase, Reporting
Requirements, and Enforcement Provisions in the Consolidated
Appropriations Act, 2023'' (January 2023 SHO letter),\4\ beginning as
early as February 1, 2023, States have up to 12 months to initiate, and
14 months to complete, a renewal for all individuals enrolled in
Medicaid, a period commonly referred to as a State's
[[Page 84715]]
``unwinding period.'' \5\ Starting on or after April 1, 2023, States
claiming the temporary FFCRA FMAP increase may disenroll persons
determined to be ineligible by a renewal initiated during the State's
unwinding period. Likewise, the March 2022 SHO letter outlines CMS'
expectations for renewals during unwinding. As also discussed in the
January 2023 SHO letter, States had the option to initiate the first
cohort of renewals to begin their unwinding period in February, March,
or April 2023.\6\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\4\ https://www.medicaid.gov/federal-policy-guidance/downloads/sho23002.pdf.
\5\ While the requirements of section 6008 of the FFCRA do not
apply to separate CHIPs or the Basic Health Program (BHP), CMS
recognizes some States elected to apply certain provisions of
section 6008 to their separate CHIP program or BHP. In those
circumstances, subject to exceptions noted and other Federal
requirements, much of CMS' guidance related to unwinding from the
FFCRA continuous enrollment condition also applies to CHIP and BHP.
However, neither section 1902(tt) of the Act, nor this rule, applies
to separate CHIPs or BHPs.
\6\ For additional guidance about State renewals of eligibility
following the end of the continuous enrollment condition see
www.medicaid.gov/unwinding.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Section 1902(tt) of the Act took effect on April 1, 2023, the day
after the continuous enrollment condition expired. It imposes new
reporting requirements on States during a period that generally
overlaps with States' unwinding periods. It also provides CMS with new
authority to take enforcement action if States fail to comply with
Federal requirements related to eligibility redetermination or the new
reporting requirements. Notably, these new reporting requirements and
CMS' authority to enforce redetermination and data reporting
requirements apply to all 56 States, regardless of whether a State is
continuing to claim the FFCRA FMAP increase. This rule implements the
new reporting requirements in section 1902(tt)(1) of the Act and the
enforcement authorities in section 1902(tt)(2) of the Act (which are
further discussed in the section II).
C. Monitoring Eligibility Redetermination Activities
Section 1902(tt) of the Act authorizes CMS to closely monitor and
enforce Federal redetermination requirements during a period that
generally aligns with States' unwinding periods, and thus, these
authorities better position CMS to take actions to prevent unauthorized
disenrollments during this critical period. Section 1902(tt)(1) of the
Act requires that, for each month occurring during the period beginning
on April 1, 2023, and ending on June 30, 2024, States must submit on a
timely basis to CMS, and CMS must make public, certain monthly data
about activities related to eligibility redeterminations conducted
during that same period. The January 2023 SHO letter discussed these
reporting requirements under section 1902(tt)(1) of the Act in further
detail and explained that all the data States must report under these
new reporting requirements are included in existing data sources,
including the Unwinding Data Report and State-based Exchanges (SBE)
priority metrics.\7\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\7\ See the January 2023 SHO Letter. See also CMS,
``Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2023: FMAP Reduction for Failure
to Meet Reporting Requirements under Section 1902(tt)(1) of the
Social Security Act, Frequently Asked Questions for State Medicaid
and CHIP Agencies,'' (June 30, 2023) (``June 2023 FAQs'') (Available
at: https://www.medicaid.gov/federal-policy-guidance/downloads/fmap-rdctn-repot-medcid-chip-agncs-06302023.pdf).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Based on the timeframe when the reporting requirements under
section 1902(tt)(1) of the Act apply, and the title of section
1902(tt)(1) of the Act, which refers to the ``transition from [the
FFCRA] FMAP increase,'' CMS interprets the statutory data collection
and reporting requirements to be a means to help CMS monitor States'
work unwinding from the Medicaid continuous enrollment condition and
returning to regular eligibility and enrollment operations. Under our
interpretation, the reporting requirements under section 1902(tt)(1) of
the Act will help us monitor whether States are compliant--during a
timeframe that generally aligns with their return to regular
eligibility and enrollment operations--with Federal eligibility
redetermination requirements (including renewal requirements at 42 CFR
435.916, strategies authorized under section 1902(e)(14) of the Act, or
alternative strategies authorized by CMS, including alternative or
mitigation strategies CMS has authorized States to implement under
section 6008(f)(2)(A) of the FFCRA, which was added by section 5131 of
Subtitle D of Title V of Division FF of the CAA, 2023). Additionally,
because section 1902(tt) of the Act also includes the new enforcement
authorities in section 1902(tt)(2)(B) of the Act, CMS interprets the
data collection and reporting requirements under section 1902(tt)(1) to
be a tool CMS can use to monitor State compliance with Federal
eligibility redetermination requirements during a period that generally
aligns with States' unwinding periods.
CMS has also been monitoring States' implementation of other
amendments made by section 5131 of Subtitle D of Title V of Division FF
of the CAA, 2023, which create new conditions for States seeking to
receive the FFCRA temporary FMAP increase through December 31, 2023.
These new conditions for receiving the FFCRA temporary FMAP increase
also give CMS ways to incentivize States to minimize the disruption in
coverage resulting from procedural disenrollments during States'
unwinding periods. Specifically, the CAA, 2023 added to the FFCRA new
section 6008(f)(2)(A), which conditions receipt of the FFCRA FMAP
increase after April 1, 2023, on State compliance with Federal
redetermination requirements, including renewal strategies authorized
under section 1902(e)(14)(A) or other alternative processes and
procedures approved by the Secretary. New FFCRA section 6008(f)(2)(B)
conditions receipt of the FFCRA FMAP increase after April 1, 2023, on
States' maintaining up-to-date contact information for a beneficiary
before redetermining eligibility for such beneficiary, and new section
6008(f)(2)(C) conditions receipt of the FFCRA FMAP increase after April
1, 2023, on States' undertaking a good faith effort to contact an
individual using more than one modality prior to terminating their
enrollment on the basis of returned mail. The January 2023 SHO letter
outlines these new conditions for receiving the FFCRA FMAP increase in
greater detail. Because the same section of the CAA, 2023 that added
new section 1902(tt) to the Act also included both these conditions for
receiving the FFCRA FMAP increase, CMS interprets the entirety of the
changes made in section 5131 of subtitle D of division FF of the CAA,
2023 to give CMS a range of enforcement mechanisms and incentives that,
taken together, can be used to help minimize the disenrollment of
people who otherwise continue to meet the substantive eligibility
criteria and whose enrollment would be retained but for their failure
to meet a procedural requirement during States' unwinding periods. One
key purpose of section 1902(tt) is thus to enhance CMS' ability to take
enforcement action against noncompliant States during this critical
timeframe.
CMS takes seriously its responsibility to hold States accountable
for resuming routine eligibility and enrollment operations and plans to
fully exercise the new authorities at section 1902(tt) of the Act when
appropriate to do so. Since the FFCRA was enacted, CMS has been
preparing for the eventual unwinding of the FFCRA continuous enrollment
condition. CMS has explained to States the conditions of the FFCRA FMAP
increase, gauged States'
[[Page 84716]]
ability to resume redeterminations on an unprecedented scale, and
provided States with technical assistance to address challenges that
might lead to preventable loss of coverage for procedural reasons among
beneficiaries. If CMS identifies a violation of Federal redetermination
requirements, then, consistent with section 6008(f)(2)(A) of the FFCRA,
CMS will communicate to the State that its FFCRA FMAP increase will be
withheld if the State does not ensure the issue is fully resolved or
does not implement appropriate mitigations until full compliance can be
achieved.
The new enforcement tools outlined at section 1902(tt) of the Act,
which allow CMS to enforce existing Federal redetermination
requirements as well as the reporting requirements at section
1902(tt)(1) of the Act, are a key part of the suite of CMS enforcement
mechanisms and incentives added through the CAA, 2023 to minimize the
disenrollment of eligible individuals during States' unwinding periods.
These new enforcement tools are critical to enabling CMS to effectively
monitor for, and take action to protect against, States conducting
renewals that do not adhere to Federal redetermination requirements and
to support continued enrollment for those individuals who remain
eligible. Nothing in this rule affects other authorities that exist
outside of this new enforcement framework or precludes CMS from
pursuing additional enforcement action under section 1904 of the Act,
including withholding Federal financial participation (FFP), or
limiting payments, for States that fail to comply with requirements of
the Medicaid statute.
D. Pre-Compliance Engagement With States
When CMS becomes aware of a potential violation of Federal
requirements, we first attempt to work collaboratively with the State
to understand the nature and scope of the problem and to identify
appropriate alternative processes and procedures that the State can
adopt to avoid or minimize beneficiary harm until the State can fix the
problem and come into full compliance with Federal requirements,
consistent with our authority to enforce compliance with section 1902
under section 1904 of the Act and 42 CFR 430.35. Consistent with this
practice, as discussed in section II.A of this rule, CMS will provide
technical assistance to States facing unusual circumstances that
interfere with their ability to comply fully with section 1902(tt)(1)
of the Act reporting requirements and will consider approving
alternative timelines and processes for meeting those requirements. The
statute does not give CMS the discretion to avoid taking an FMAP
reduction under section 1902(tt)(2)(A) of the Act for a quarter in the
period beginning July 1, 2023, and ending June 30, 2024, if a State
ultimately fails to report each of the metrics required under section
1902(tt)(1) of the Act for that quarter. However, CMS will consider
mitigating circumstances before taking additional enforcement action
under section 1902(tt)(2)(B) of the Act if a State fails to meet the
reporting requirements under section 1902(tt)(1) of the Act during the
period from April 1, 2023, to June 30, 2024.
If CMS' efforts to work collaboratively with States are successful,
and the State takes necessary steps to address beneficiary harm and
prevent future harm (such as reinstating eligibility for affected
beneficiaries and suspending procedural disenrollments, where
appropriate), CMS might not initiate compliance action under section
1902(tt)(2)(B) of the Act. However, if CMS determines that a State
violated the section 1902(tt)(1) of the Act reporting requirements or
Federal redetermination requirements, CMS will consider exercising the
enforcement authorities in section 1902(tt)(2)(B) of the Act, as
implemented in this rule.
II. Provisions of the Interim Final Rule With Comment
This rule adds new 42 CFR 430.49 and 435.927 and 435.928 to the CFR
and amends Sec. Sec. 430.3, 430.5, and 45 CFR part 16. New Sec.
430.49 of this rule interprets and implements section 1902(tt)(2)(B) of
the Act, which authorizes CMS to do the following: (1) require States
to submit and implement a CAP for noncompliance with Federal
requirements applicable to eligibility redeterminations and the
reporting requirements described in section 1902(tt)(1) of the Act; and
(2) if the State fails to submit or implement an approvable CAP in
accordance with section 1902(tt)(2)(B)(ii), require the State to
suspend some or all disenrollments from Medicaid for procedural reasons
until the State takes appropriate corrective action, impose CMPs of not
more than $100,000 for each day the State is not in compliance, or
both. New Sec. 435.927 interprets and implements section 1902(tt)(1)
of the Act, which requires that, for each month occurring during the
period beginning on April 1, 2023, and ending on June 30, 2024, States
must submit on a timely basis to CMS, and CMS must make public, certain
monthly data about activities related to eligibility redeterminations
conducted during that same period.
New Sec. 435.928 specifies how CMS will implement the FMAP
reduction required under section 1902(tt)(2)(A) of the Act. If a State
does not satisfy the reporting requirements described in section
1902(tt)(1) of the Act for any fiscal quarter in the period that begins
on July 1, 2023 and ends on June 30, 2024, section 1902(tt)(2)(A) of
the Act requires CMS to reduce the FMAP determined for the State for
the quarter under section 1905(b) of the Act by the number of
percentage points (not to exceed 1 percentage point) equal to the
product of 0.25 percentage points and the number of fiscal quarters
during such period for which the State has failed to satisfy such
requirements.
The provisions of this rule apply to the States, District of
Columbia, and all 5 territories--Guam, Puerto Rico, the Virgin Islands,
the Northern Mariana Islands, and American Samoa. While the regulations
in part 435 apply only to the States, the District of Columbia, the
Northern Mariana Islands and American Samoa, Sec. 436.901 provides
that with one exception (not relevant here), the requirements of part
435, subchapter J, which includes Sec. Sec. 435.927 and 435.928
through this rulemaking, apply to Guam, Puerto Rico, and the Virgin
Islands.
The new enforcement authority granted to CMS under section
1902(tt)(2)(A) and (B) of the Act will improve State accountability for
complying with Federal renewal requirements while also minimizing
disruptions to coverage for eligible people during a period that
generally aligns with States' unwinding activities. The additional
enforcement activities authorized in section 1902(tt)(2) of the Act
will reinforce and augment the routine monitoring and compliance action
that CMS is already undertaking to promote State compliance with
Federal enrollment and eligibility requirements, described in section
I.C and D of this rule. These authorities will also help ensure that
States remain accountable to CMS by requiring them to submit certain
data to CMS and will increase public transparency about eligibility
redeterminations between April 1, 2023, and June 30, 2024, by requiring
CMS to publicly report the data.
Finally, the rule amends Sec. 430.5 to add new definitions of the
terms Federal redetermination requirements and procedural disenrollment
for purposes of Sec. 430.49, and (with respect to the definition of
procedural disenrollment only) for purposes of 45 CFR part 16. And this
rule creates reconsideration
[[Page 84717]]
and appeal rights for States under new Sec. 430.49(f) and
corresponding amendments to Sec. 430.3 and 45 CFR part 16, to ensure
States have clear avenues for appealing CMS decisions to require
suspension of procedural disenrollments and/or impose CMPs under the
new authorities in section 1902(tt)(2)(B)(iii) of the Act.
We have also included severability clauses at new Sec. Sec.
430.49(g), 435.927(e), and 435.928(c) to emphasize our intent that, to
the extent a reviewing court holds that any provision of these rules is
unlawful, the remaining provisions should take effect and be given the
maximum effect permitted by law. The severability clauses provide that
any provision of these sections that is held to be invalid or
unenforceable by its terms, or as applied to any person or
circumstance, or stayed pending further agency action, shall be
severable from the relevant section and shall not affect the remainder
thereof or the application of the provision to persons not similarly
situated or to dissimilar circumstances.
A. Reporting Requirements (Sec. 435.927)
Section 1902(tt)(1) of the Act requires that, for each month
occurring during the period that begins on April 1, 2023, and ends on
June 30, 2024, each State submits to CMS, and that CMS make public, a
report on the activities of the State relating to eligibility
redeterminations conducted during such period.
New Sec. 435.927 implements and interprets the reporting
requirements in section 1902(tt)(1) of the Act. The required reporting
will help CMS and others to monitor State actions during the unwinding
period and beyond because it includes reporting on metrics such as the
number of individuals disenrolled from Medicaid or CHIP and certain
information about transitions from Medicaid or CHIP coverage to
coverage through an Exchange. Reviewing and publishing these monthly
data will give CMS and the public information to help hold States
accountable for following redetermination requirements and will promote
transparency.
CMS interprets section 1902(tt)(1) of the Act to require that
States report data representing the activities conducted during each
month of the designated time period.\8\ However, CMS does not believe
the provision requires that States must submit all the required monthly
reports by June 30, 2024, because it will take States time to assemble,
review, and submit data from the months for which they are reporting.
For example, States must report on activities occurring in June 2024,
but the submission of that monthly report could occur after June 30,
2024, to allow the State time to collect, review, and submit the
data.\9\ This is reflected in new Sec. 435.927(c), which requires
States to report certain data representing activities conducted by a
State during the time period beginning April 1, 2023, and ending June
30, 2024.
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\8\ See the January 2023 SHO, and the June 2023 FAQs.
\9\ See the June 2023 FAQs.
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To help ensure that CMS and the public can use and understand the
data, avoid redundancy, and for purposes of practicality, CMS is
interpreting the data elements required under section 1902(tt)(1) of
the Act differently in Sec. 435.927(d) depending on the element.
Section 1902(tt)(1) of the Act directs the Secretary to make public
reports with data ``relating to eligibility redeterminations,'' but CMS
is not interpreting all the reporting elements listed in the subsequent
subparagraphs to be limited to data related to such redeterminations.
Specifically, CMS is interpreting the reporting elements listed in
section 1902(tt)(1)(A), (B) and (D) of the Act to represent only those
individuals who are subject to Medicaid or CHIP redeterminations but is
not interpreting the elements listed in section 1902(tt)(1)(C) or (E)
of the Act to be limited to reporting on such individuals.
Paragraphs (A) and (B) of section 1902(tt)(1) of the Act require
States to report on certain data elements for persons with coverage for
medical assistance, child health assistance, or pregnancy-related
assistance, which CMS interprets to refer to people with Medicaid or
CHIP coverage, including pregnancy-related coverage in both programs.
The data elements required under paragraphs (A) and (B) are as follows:
the number of eligibility renewals initiated, beneficiaries renewed on
a total and ex parte basis (that is, based on available reliable
information without contacting the individual consistent with Sec.
435.916(a)(2)), individuals who were disenrolled for any reason, and
the number of individuals disenrolled for procedural reasons. These
data points are all the direct result of Medicaid or CHIP eligibility
redetermination actions and thus new Sec. 435.927(d)(1) through (5)
require States to report this information only for people undergoing
Medicaid or CHIP redeterminations.
Similarly, paragraph (D) of section 1902(tt)(1) of the Act requires
States to report the number of individuals whom a Federal or State-
based Exchange determined eligible for a qualified health plan or a
Basic Health Program (BHP),\10\ as well as the number of individuals
who selected a qualified health plan or enrolled in a BHP (section
1902(tt)(1)(D)(i) and (ii) of the Act specifically require data related
to BHPs). Paragraph (D) of section 1902(tt)(1) of the Act does not
specify that these data be limited only to numbers of individuals whose
eligibility had been redetermined by the Medicaid program. However,
these data elements are only useful to CMS in understanding ``the
activities of the State relating to eligibility redeterminations,'' as
directed by section 1902(tt)(1) of the Act if the data are limited to
Medicaid and CHIP beneficiaries who have undergone an eligibility
redetermination. These data will help demonstrate if beneficiaries
found ineligible for Medicaid and CHIP during the redetermination
process are able to find other coverage on Exchanges or BHPs and will
also help CMS and other interested parties identify States in which
transitions to Exchange coverage are relatively successful and States
in which such transitions may not be as successful. These data will be
most useful for oversight of States' redetermination processes if they
are limited to the numbers of individuals' accounts that were
transferred to an Exchange or BHP because of a redetermination under
Medicaid or CHIP. To include other transfers (those of consumers who
were not enrolled in Medicaid or CHIP at the time and who newly apply
directly with their State agency and are determined ineligible) would
not help to illuminate ``eligibility redeterminations,'' because new
applicants are not in a position to lose Medicaid or CHIP coverage.
Therefore, in new Sec. 435.927(d)(10) and (11), we require the
reported data described in section 1902(tt)(1)(D) of the Act to reflect
Medicaid/CHIP redeterminations.
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\10\ The Basic Health Program (BHP) is a program for specified
individuals who do not qualify for Medicaid but whose household
income does not exceed 200 percent of the Federal poverty level
(FPL).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In previous guidance,\11\ we listed the reporting elements under
section 1902(tt)(1) of the Act related to Exchanges and the anticipated
data sources for obtaining the data for these elements. Specifically,
in the January 2023 SHO letter, in the first column of ``Table 2:
Reporting Elements Under Section 1902(tt)(1) for the Period from April
1, 2023, through June 30, 2024, and Corresponding Data Sources,'' we
stated that for States with Exchanges
[[Page 84718]]
that use the Federal Exchange eligibility and enrollment platform
(including Federally-facilitated Exchanges (FFEs) and SBEs on the
Federal platform (SBE-FPs)) we anticipated that CMS would report these
data on behalf of States and that we intended to limit the data to
information that is the result of a Medicaid or CHIP redetermination
(which would exclude data resulting from a new Medicaid or CHIP
application). In contrast, for SBEs with their own platforms that use
either a non-integrated or integrated eligibility system, we
inadvertently did not make such a distinction.\12\ Rather, column one
in Table 2 of the January 2023 SHO letter suggests that the reporting
elements would apply to Exchange activity resulting from all Medicaid
or CHIP applications. However, in the ``SBE Priority Metrics: Medicaid/
Children's Health Insurance Program (CHIP) Continuous Enrollment
Condition Unwinding Overview and Template 1.0 User Guide (version 1.0,
5/19/2023),'' which is cited in guidance that we released on June 30,
2023,\13\ we specified that SBEs will report only those required data
elements that result from Medicaid or CHIP redeterminations. As a
result, although the labeling in the first column of the table in the
January 2023 SHO letter is inconsistent, the definitions of the
required State data are consistent across types of Exchanges, and
therefore the data collected and reported will be consistent across
types of Exchanges, and in all cases, including for SBEs not using the
Federal platform, will be limited to information related to Medicaid or
CHIP redeterminations. Section 435.927(d)(10) and (11) reflect this.
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\11\ See the January 2023 SHO Letter, and the June 2023 FAQs.
\12\ States with SBEs that operate an integrated eligibility
platform have a shared operating system between the SBE and the
Medicaid/CHIP agency that conducts eligibility determinations
related to new and renewal applications for certain Medicaid and
CHIP programs and qualified health plans. In contrast, States with
SBEs that operate a non-integrated eligibility platform have
separate operating systems for the SBE and the Medicaid/CHIP agency.
Accounts are transferred between the separate operating systems
depending on the initial eligibility determination or assessment for
the programs made by either the SBE or the Medicaid/CHIP agency.
\13\ The June 2023 FAQs, in Table 1, cites to CMS, ``State-Based
Exchanges (SBE) Priority Metrics: Medicaid/Children's Health
Insurance Program (CHIP) Continuous Enrollment Condition Unwinding;
Overview and Template 1.0 User Guide,'' released May 5, 2023,
https://www.medicaid.gov/resources-for-states/downloads/sbe-medicaid-chip-con-unwind-metrics-reprt-guide.pdf. ``The priority
metrics include indicators that are specific to Medicaid/CHIP
continuous enrollment unwinding activities. For those metrics, SBEs
should count activities that were initiated through the Medicaid/
CHIP agency's renewal process, in which a consumer was determined
ineligible for limited or full benefit Medicaid or CHIP.''
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As noted, in the January 2023 SHO letter, CMS identified the
reporting requirements under section 1902(tt)(1) of the Act that relate
to Exchanges. Consistent with CMS' stated expectations in that SHO
letter, CMS will report data on behalf of States with Exchanges that
use the Federal eligibility and enrollment platform (including FFEs and
SBE-FPs) since CMS operates the Federal eligibility and enrollment
platform. Therefore, States do not have to report the data, and we are
not including in this rule any provisions implementing the requirements
under section 1902(tt)(1) of the Act that apply to States with
Exchanges that use the Federal eligibility and enrollment platform.
Section 435.927(d)(10) and (11) describe the reporting requirements
that apply to States with SBEs that do not use the Federal platform.
Section 435.927(d)(10) and (11) also reflect certain practical and
operational differences between SBEs based on whether the Exchange
eligibility system is integrated with the State's Medicaid and/or CHIP
eligibility systems. Specifically, some SBEs have integrated
eligibility systems but others do not. As Congress recognized in
section 1902(tt)(1)(D)(i) and (ii) of the Act, there is no need for an
Exchange with an integrated eligibility system to report account
transfers from the Medicaid and/or CHIP agency to the Exchange, whereas
that data point is relevant for Exchanges without integrated
eligibility systems.
In contrast to how we are interpreting section 1902(tt)(1)(A), (B),
and (D) of the Act, we are not interpreting section 1902(tt)(1)(E) of
the Act to be limited to describing only information about a Medicaid
or CHIP redetermination. States are required under section
1902(tt)(1)(E) of the Act to report data on total call center volume,
average wait times, and average abandonment rate. For these reporting
elements, it is impractical to limit the measures only to data related
to eligibility redeterminations. States do not always identify the
purpose of individual calls to call centers, calls can address multiple
purposes and beneficiaries, and reprogramming call trees and retraining
staff could take months for States to operationalize, if required. As
the period for which States are required to report these data under
section 1902(tt)(1)(E) of the Act has already begun and is time-
limited, it is impractical to limit the collection of the call center
data required under 1902(tt)(1)(E) of the Act to only those calls
related to individuals' eligibility redeterminations. Furthermore,
these call center metrics are useful because they illustrate the extent
to which all beneficiaries, including those whose eligibility is being
redetermined, can access assistance. Accordingly, new Sec.
435.927(d)(7) through (9) are not limited to just call center
information related to redeterminations.
CMS is also not interpreting section 1902(tt)(1)(C) of the Act to
be limited to describing only information about a Medicaid or CHIP
redetermination. Section 1902(tt)(1)(C) of the Act requires States to
report on the number of individuals enrolled in a separate CHIP program
under section 2101(a)(1) of the Act. Broadening the data collected
under paragraph (C) to include the total number of enrollees in a
separate CHIP, not just those enrolling subject to a Medicaid or CHIP
eligibility redetermination, provides useful information. In addition
to being new data that is not publicly reported elsewhere, the data
helps CMS and others identify whether separate CHIP programs' total
enrollment levels are changing during the applicable period, which
might indicate whether individuals are transitioning to CHIP from the
Medicaid program. New Sec. 435.927(d)(6) therefore refers to reporting
on total enrollment in separate CHIPs.
Despite not being limited to information on redeterminations, data
elements reported under section 1902(tt)(1)(C) and (E) of the Act are
still useful for purposes of providing transparency on States'
activities to conduct redeterminations. State Medicaid agency
operational data on call center activity--call volume, average wait
times, and average abandonment rates--help illuminate beneficiaries'
access to information and ability to receive assistance from the State,
as well as the eligibility process generally. Information on the
enrollment levels for separate CHIP programs helps identify trends in
enrollment that could signal whether a State is not performing
redeterminations or transitioning eligible individuals from Medicaid to
CHIP.
All the data States must report under the requirements of section
1902(tt)(1) of the Act are already being reported through existing data
reports collected by CMS. For efficiency and to improve standardization
(and hence, comparability) of the data, and because the applicable
statutes, regulations, and other guidance governing CMS' use of the
data collected through those existing data sources permit this, CMS is
not requiring States to submit separate or
[[Page 84719]]
additional reports to CMS to comply with section 1902(tt)(1) of the
Act.\14\ Rather, CMS believes the requirements of section 1902(tt)(1)
of the Act can be met through compliance with the following existing,
CMS-approved data reporting processes: the Unwinding Eligibility and
Enrollment Data Reporting (also referred to as the Unwinding Data
Report), Medicaid and CHIP Eligibility and Enrollment Performance
Indicator Data (PI data), the Transformed Medicaid Statistical
Information System (T-MSIS), and SBE Priority Metrics.\15\
Additionally, as described previously, the required data under section
1902(tt)(1) of the Act that apply to States with Exchanges that use the
Federal eligibility and enrollment platform will be reported by CMS.
Under section 1902(tt)(1) of the Act, CMS will publish all required
data after a period of time to allow for data quality and validation
reviews.
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\14\ See sections 1902(a)(4), 1902(a)(6), 1902(a)(75),
1903(r)(1)(F), and 2107(b)(1) of the Act; see also 42 CFR 431.16, 42
CFR 433.112(b)(15), 45 CFR 155.260(a)(1)(ii). See also https://www.federalregister.gov/documents/2019/02/06/2019-01157/privacy-act-of-1974-system-of-records and https://www.federalregister.gov/documents/2013/10/23/2013-24861/privacy-act-of-1974-report-of-an-altered-cms-system-of-records-notice.
\15\ See the January 2023 SHO Letter, and the June 2023 FAQs.
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Section 1902(tt)(1) of the Act requires States to submit the
required monthly data on a timely basis but does not include a
definition of timely or standards for completeness and accuracy. CMS
already collects the required data via existing processes, and the
timeliness, completeness, and quality specifications for data submitted
via those existing processes have generally been defined
previously.\16\ Under this regulation, States will generally submit
data in accordance with these existing timelines and specifications
unless CMS has approved an alternative process or timeline for
reporting, in which case the State must submit the data according to
any alternative specifications CMS approved as part of the alternative
process or timeline.
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\16\ See the January 2023 SHO Letter, and the June 2023 FAQs.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
As specified in Sec. 435.927(b)(1), CMS will consider data to be
timely when it is submitted by the deadline outlined in the applicable
existing reporting process specifications, with some variations for T-
MSIS data and to permit States to submit data according to alternative
processes and timelines approved by CMS. CMS will approve these
alternative processes and timelines when, as discussed below, a State
is making a good faith effort to meet the requirements despite facing
significant challenges that interfere with its ability to do so. As an
example of how a deadline outlined under other existing reporting
process specifications might apply here, the specifications for PI data
generally require States to submit data by the 8th of each month; \17\
thus under Sec. 435.927(b)(1), States would report these PI data on a
timely basis under section 1902(tt)(1) of the Act if they reported them
by the 8th of each month. The rule also, however, includes a variation
on how the existing T-MSIS reporting timeline would apply for purposes
of section 1902(tt)(1) of the Act data because, in order for T-MSIS
data to be useful for section 1902(tt)(1) of the Act purposes, these
data must be reported under a different timeline. Specifically, to
publicly report data under section 1902(tt)(1)(D)(i) of the Act, CMS
will use T-MSIS data to match the records of Medicaid and CHIP
beneficiaries to data from the FFEs and SBEs-FPs and identify the
number of accounts that are received at these Exchanges due to a
Medicaid/CHIP redetermination. Using these data, CMS can determine the
other metrics listed under section 1902(tt)(1)(D)(i) of the Act, such
as the total numbers of these individuals who apply for and are
determined eligible for a qualified health plan. CMS will also use T-
MSIS data to publicly report data on the number of separate CHIP
enrollees for each State, as required under section 1902(tt)(1)(C) of
the Act. CMS already requires that States maintain current data
submissions by submitting T-MSIS data monthly before the last day of
the subsequent month, although States are not considered to be out of
compliance for T-MSIS reporting until data submissions are behind by 2
or more months. As reflected in Sec. 435.927(b)(1)(ii), due to the
time-sensitive nature of these calculations and the need for up-to-date
data, States that do not submit T-MSIS data monthly by the last day of
the subsequent month may be subject to the FMAP reduction under section
1902(tt)(2)(A) of the Act or other corrective action under section
1902(tt)(2)(B) of the Act. For example, T-MSIS data reflecting March
2024 activities will be due by the end of April 2024, under Sec.
435.927(b)(1)(ii).
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\17\ CMS, ``Medicaid and Children's Health Insurance Program
Eligibility and Enrollment Data Specifications for Reporting During
Unwinding,'' updated December 2022. Available at https://www.medicaid.gov/sites/default/files/2022-12/unwinding-data-specifications-dec-2022.pdf.
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CMS recognizes that some States might encounter unusual
circumstances that interfere with reporting using existing CMS-approved
processes or that impede a State's ability to meet the deadlines in
Sec. 435.927(b)(1)(i) and (ii). For example, States may experience
unforeseeable or unavoidable challenges such as a natural disaster or
unplanned systems outages, or may be working to resolve significant
foreseeable challenges, such as a known and reported major operational
or systems issue that impacts the State's ability to submit timely and
accurate data and that the State is working to remediate but needs
additional time to fix. As reflected in Sec. 435.927(b)(1)(iii),
(b)(3)(ii), (b)(4), and (c)(2), CMS would consider approving
alternative timelines and processes for reporting required data if a
State is making a good faith effort to submit the required data. For
example, CMS would consider allowing such a State to submit certain
summary data via email. As specified in Sec. 435.927(b)(4), a good-
faith effort means that (1) the State is experiencing significant,
unforeseeable, or unavoidable challenges in complying with the
reporting requirements of Sec. 435.927(c), or is experiencing
significant foreseeable challenges in complying and is working to
remediate these challenges but needs additional time to address them;
(2) the State requested and obtained approval from CMS to submit the
data via an alternative process or timeline, and (3) the approved
alternative process for submitting the data or timeline is sufficient
to ensure CMS can obtain and use the data to meet CMS' obligations to
report the data publicly per section 1902(tt)(1) of the Act. CMS will
work with such a State to ensure that CMS has all the data it needs in
order to meet its requirement to publicly report data under section
1902(tt)(1) of the Act and will only approve alternative timelines or
reporting processes that permit CMS to meet this requirement.
States that are ultimately unable to submit required data or that
submit data via an unapproved process or according to an unapproved
timeline will be subject to the enforcement actions in section
1902(tt)(2) of the Act. Because section 1902(tt)(2)(A) requires CMS to
take an FMAP reduction if States fail to meet the section 1902(tt)(1)
of the Act reporting requirements for a quarter in the period beginning
July 1, 2023, and ending June 30, 2024, CMS does not have the authority
to exempt States from FMAP reductions for failure to meet the section
1902(tt)(1) of the Act reporting requirements during that timeframe.
However, as indicated in Sec. 430.49, CMS will consider certain
mitigating circumstances before taking the various
[[Page 84720]]
additional enforcement actions described in section 1902(tt)(2)(B) of
the Act.
The regulation also provides in Sec. 435.927(b)(2) that in order
to be considered ``complete'' for purposes of public reporting under
section 1902(tt)(1) of the Act, States must submit every data element
(although in some cases, as noted above, certain elements may be
submitted on a different or later timeframe than others, subject to CMS
approval). A State that ultimately fails to report one or more required
data elements would be subject to the FMAP reduction under section
1902(tt)(2)(A) of the Act if the State's noncompliance was for a
quarter during the period from July 1, 2023, through June 30, 2024.
Such a State might also be subject to other enforcement actions under
section 1902(tt)(2)(B) of the Act; these are discussed in section II.
of this rule.
Furthermore, in Sec. 435.927(b)(3), the regulation provides that
to be considered of ``sufficient quality,'' the State must report data
that adheres to specifications outlined in previously existing
regulation or guidance for each of the CMS-approved processes, or data
that adheres to the specifications outlined in an alternative process
approved by CMS. Existing reporting processes are governed by detailed
instructions that outline how and what States should report and help
ensure that States are reporting consistent data that CMS can publicly
report, consistent with requirements under section 1902(tt)(1) of the
Act.
New section Sec. 435.927(c) implements the reporting requirements
in section 1902(tt)(1) of the Act in light of the interpretations that
are discussed above and reflected in the other paragraphs of Sec.
435.927. Section 435.927(c) specifies that States must submit to CMS
the data described in Sec. 435.927(d), and those data must be timely,
complete, and of sufficient quality (as those terms are defined in
Sec. 435.927(b)). It further provides that States must submit the
required data via existing CMS-approved processes or through
alternative processes approved by CMS when a State is making a good
faith effort as defined in Sec. 435.927(b)(4).
B. Application of the FMAP Reduction (Sec. 435.928)
If a State does not satisfy the reporting requirements in section
1902(tt)(1) of the Act for any fiscal quarter that occurs during the
period that begins on July 1, 2023, and ends on June 30, 2024, section
1902(tt)(2)(A) of the Act requires CMS to reduce the FMAP determined
for the State for the quarter under section 1905(b) of the Act by the
number of percentage points (not to exceed 1 percentage point) equal to
the product of 0.25 percentage points and the number of fiscal quarters
during such period for which the State has failed to satisfy such
requirements. We are implementing this FMAP reduction along with our
interpretation of how it is to be applied in new Sec. 435.928.\18\ In
Sec. 435.928(b)(1), CMS interprets the statutory reference to the FMAP
determined for the State under section 1905(b) of the Act to mean the
State-specific FMAP defined in the first sentence of section 1905(b) of
the Act.\19\ In Sec. 435.928(b)(4), CMS interprets the statutory
language regarding the amount of the reduction to mean that when States
are noncompliant in multiple quarters, the FMAP reduction will increase
by 0.25 percentage points for each successive quarter of noncompliance,
regardless of whether the noncompliant quarters are consecutive. For
example, if a State were out of compliance for three quarters, the
reduction would be: a 0.25 percentage point FMAP reduction in the first
quarter of noncompliance; a 0.50 percentage point FMAP reduction in the
second quarter of noncompliance; and a 0.75 percentage point FMAP
reduction in the third quarter of noncompliance. In no case, however,
would the FMAP reduction for any single quarter exceed 1 percentage
point.
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\18\ For additional discussion about the application of the FMAP
reduction, see the January 2023 SHO Letter, and the June 2023 FAQs.
\19\ In the June 2023 FAQs, CMS explained how such a decrease
would be applied to expenditures that are matched at FMAPs
articulated elsewhere in statute, because they use the 1905(b)
State-specific FMAP as a base.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
We acknowledge that the language of the statute would allow for an
alternative interpretation that would require CMS to apply the same
percentage point reduction to all of the quarters in which a State
failed to comply with the reporting requirements. For example, if a
State were out of compliance for three quarters, CMS could apply a 0.75
percentage point reduction to the State's FMAP in all three of the
applicable quarters. To come to that conclusion, CMS would have to
interpret the statute as requiring CMS either to apply the reduction to
the relevant quarters multiple times, or to wait until the end of the
period to apply the reduction. Neither of these alternative approaches
supports transparency, as the total amount of the reduction would not
be known until up to three quarters after the State is found to be
noncompliant, making it difficult for States to budget for the amount
of State share they would need for the four-quarter period.
As specified in Sec. 435.928(b)(3), States that fail to report
data according to the requirements in Sec. 435.927 for a single month
within a quarter will be subject to the FMAP reduction for the entire
quarter. Section 1902(tt)(1) of the Act specifies that the FMAP
reduction should be applied for each fiscal quarter. As such, the
statute does not give CMS the authority to reduce a State's FMAP for a
single month.\20\
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\20\ See, the January 2023 SHO Letter, and the June 2023 FAQs.
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C. Corrective Action Plans (Sec. 430.49(b))
As noted in section I.A. of this rule, section 1902(tt)(2) of the
Act includes new enforcement authority for CMS to use if it determines
that a State is not in compliance with the reporting requirements in
section 1902(tt)(1) of the Act, Federal eligibility redetermination
requirements, or both. New Sec. 430.49(b) provides guidelines for how
CMS will exercise the CAP authority created by section 1902(tt)(2)(B)
of the Act. Specifically, Sec. 430.49(b)(1) provides that if CMS
determines that, during the period between April 1, 2023, and June 30,
2024, a State has been out of compliance with the reporting
requirements in section 1902(tt)(1) of the Act (as implemented in Sec.
435.927 of this rule) or Federal eligibility redetermination
requirements (as defined at Sec. 430.5, as amended by this rule),
then, after considering whether mitigating circumstances (discussed in
section II.E. and Sec. 430.49(d) of this rule) apply, CMS will
determine whether to require the State to submit and implement a CAP.
New Sec. 430.49(b)(2) specifies that CMS will issue a written
notice to the State informing the State of CMS' finding of
noncompliance and the requirement to submit and implement a CAP, or to
revise and resubmit an existing approved CAP to address newly
identified violations of the Federal reporting and/or redetermination
requirements, unless consideration of certain mitigating circumstances
has led CMS to delay or forgo requiring a CAP. The notice will: (1)
explain the violation of Federal redetermination or reporting
requirements that CMS has identified and the basis for CMS' finding;
(2) inform the State of the requirement to submit and implement a new
CAP or to revise and resubmit an existing CAP, with instructions on the
method and deadline by which the State must submit a CAP to CMS; and
(3) explain the additional enforcement actions that CMS may pursue if
the State fails to
[[Page 84721]]
submit or implement the CAP, including if CMS disapproves the State's
submitted CAP or if the State fails to meet the requirements set forth
in the approved CAP, in accordance with the requirements at section
1902(tt)(2)(B)(ii) of the Act, as interpreted in this rule and
discussed in section II.D. and at Sec. 430.49(b) of this rule.
As set forth in new Sec. 430.49(b)(3), a CAP must include specific
content to be approved by CMS. First, the CAP must identify actions the
State will take immediately, which means as soon as feasible, if needed
to prevent further harm or risk of harm to beneficiaries while it
implements the CAP. Harm to beneficiaries in this context includes
increased burden for beneficiaries in completing the renewal process,
loss of coverage at renewal for individuals who continue to meet the
substantive eligibility criteria and whose eligibility should otherwise
be retained but for failure to meet a procedural requirement, and
delays in access to coverage or care. Actions to prevent harm, or risk
of harm, to beneficiaries could include, if needed and appropriate,
reinstatement of coverage for impacted individuals, suspension of
procedural disenrollments, and adoption of alternative processes or
procedures under section 1902(e)(14)(A) of the Act or other alternative
strategies approved by CMS.
Next, the CAP must detail steps the State will take to ensure
compliance with Federal redetermination and/or reporting requirements,
such as new policies, procedures, operational processes, or systems
changes it will implement. The CAP must also include key milestones and
a detailed timeline for achieving compliance, as well as a plan for
communicating the steps in the CAP to: (1) State staff, including State
Medicaid agency staff and staff of any agency or other entity that is
determining eligibility under a delegation of authority under Sec.
431.10(c)(1)(i), (2) CMS, and (3) beneficiaries, as applicable. CMS
believes that an approvable CAP must include these elements because
they will allow CMS to assess at the outset whether the State's CAP
appears sufficient to resolve the noncompliance and to monitor whether
the State is making sufficient progress in its implementation.
Additionally, these elements are consistent with those that CMS has
historically required when requesting CAPs under section 1904 of the
Act and Sec. 430.35 for failure to administer the State Plan in
compliance with the provisions in section 1902 of the Act, violations
of which may result in withholding of FFP.
New Sec. 430.49(b)(4) of this rule implements section
1902(tt)(2)(B)(ii) of the Act by requiring the following timeline for
submission, approval, and implementation of a CAP after the State
receives notice that CMS is requiring it to implement a CAP:
(1) The State must submit a CAP that includes the minimum elements
described in Sec. 430.49(b)(3) to CMS not later than 14 calendar days
after receiving CMS' written notice.
(2) CMS must approve or disapprove the proposed CAP within 21
calendar days of the date the CAP is submitted by the State. If CMS
does not approve or disapprove the CAP within 21 calendar days of
submission, the CAP will be deemed approved.
(3) The State must begin implementation of the CAP not later than
14 calendar days after receiving CMS approval or after the CAP is
deemed approved.
We interpret the statute to refer to calendar days and to authorize
CMS to provide that CAPs not expressly approved or disapproved within
21 calendar days will be deemed approved. (Henceforth in this rule,
``days'' refers to calendar days unless otherwise noted.) CMS is
providing for deemed approval so that CMS and States can take quick
action to implement any strategies or system changes needed to correct
identified violations of the reporting or redetermination requirements
to promote sustained compliant operations and beneficiary coverage.
Section 430.49(b)(5) provides that CMS will consider the following
in determining whether to approve a CAP submitted by a State: (1)
whether the CAP will promptly eliminate or minimize any harm or risk of
harm to beneficiaries, including increased burden for beneficiaries in
completing the renewal process, loss of coverage at renewal for
individuals who continue to meet the substantive eligibility criteria
and whose eligibility should otherwise be retained but for failure to
meet a procedural requirement, and delays in access to coverage or
care, due to the noncompliance to be addressed by the plan; and (2)
whether the CAP will result in the State achieving compliance in a
reasonable time, taking into account systems challenges and
circumstances faced by the agencies involved. Systems challenges that
could impact the timeframe in which a State can achieve compliance
could include, for example, the timeframe needed to update coding for a
State's eligibility system, the need to create policy manuals to guide
workers on use of new system functionality, training workers on new
system changes, and/or the creation and implementation of new forms or
functions to receive or track information in the renewal process.
As discussed further in section II.E. and Sec. 430.49(d)(1) and
(2), CMS will consider certain mitigating circumstances before issuing
a notice directing a State to submit a CAP in accordance with the
requirements at Sec. 430.49(b).
D. Suspension of Procedural Disenrollments and Civil Money Penalties
(Sec. 430.49(c))
Under section 1902(tt)(2)(B)(iii) of the Act, as implemented at
Sec. 430.49(c) of this rule, if a State fails to submit or implement
an approved CAP, including if CMS disapproves the State's submitted CAP
or if the State fails to meet the requirements set forth in the
approved CAP, in accordance with section 1902(tt)(2)(B)(ii) of the Act,
the Secretary may, after consideration of any mitigating circumstances
described in section II.E. of this rule and at new Sec. 430.49(d)(3),
and in addition to any reduction applied to the FMAP under section
1902(tt)(2)(A) of the Act, take either or both of the following
actions: (1) require the State to suspend making some or all
disenrollments from Medicaid that are for procedural reasons until the
State takes appropriate corrective action; (2) impose CMPs of not more
than $100,000 for each day a State is not in compliance.
Under new Sec. 430.49(c)(2), prior to taking either or both of
these enforcement actions, CMS will issue a notice to the State. Such
notice will include: (1) a description of the enforcement actions CMS
is taking and the basis for such action(s); (2) whether CMS is
requiring suspension of some or all procedural disenrollments, and in
the case of a partial suspension, the affected populations; (3) the
date on which the State must begin suspending procedural
disenrollments, if applicable; (4) the daily amount of any CMPs
imposed, the date that assessment of the CMPs will begin, the timeline
for payment (including information on how the timeline for payment
would be affected by an appeal), and instructions on how to submit
payment; (5) the steps the State must take to cure its noncompliance
and for CMS to lift the enforcement action(s); (6) information on the
State's appeal rights as described in section II.G and at new Sec.
430.49(f) of this rule, including the deadline to submit an appeal
request and the effect of requesting an appeal on the applicability of
any enforcement actions pending the decision in such appeal.
[[Page 84722]]
The notice must also provide that the decision outlined in the notice
is final unless it is timely appealed as described in Sec. 430.49(f).
Section 430.49(c)(2)(ii) also provides that CMS may issue additional
notices to take additional actions (for example, increasing CMPs or
adding or increasing the scope of a suspension of procedural
disenrollments) if CMS identifies additional violations of a CAP's
provisions. Such notices will meet the requirements outlined in Sec.
430.49(c)(2)(i).
Suspension of Procedural Disenrollments. As noted in this rule, if
CMS finds that a State has failed to submit or implement an approved
CAP in accordance with the requirements in section 1902(tt)(2)(B) of
the Act, section 1902(tt)(2)(B)(iii) of the Act provides that CMS may
require the State to suspend either some or all procedural
disenrollments of Medicaid eligibility. We believe it is appropriate to
target any procedural disenrollment suspension to protect those
beneficiaries impacted by the State's noncompliance. If CMS requires
the State to suspend procedural disenrollments, the scope of that
requirement will be based upon the impact of the noncompliance that led
to the requirement for the CAP. Accordingly, under Sec.
430.49(c)(3)(i), if the impact of the noncompliance requiring a CAP
affects a substantial number of (meaning all or nearly all) individuals
in the State who are or should have been found eligible for Medicaid,
CMS may require the State to suspend all procedural disenrollments. If
the impact of the noncompliance is limited, for example to a specific
population or geographic area, CMS may limit the suspension only to the
affected population(s). In cases where CMS initially limits the
requirement to suspend procedural disenrollments to an affected
population or area, CMS may later opt to require the State to suspend
all procedural disenrollments if CMS subsequently determines that the
impact of the noncompliance is greater than was initially determined or
if the State fails to comply with the initial requirement to suspend
procedural disenrollments for a targeted population or area in
accordance with the notice issued under Sec. 430.49(c)(2). In these
circumstances, CMS will issue a subsequent notice under Sec.
430.49(c)(2).
CMS believes that suspension of procedural disenrollments is an
effective and necessary enforcement tool to protect beneficiaries from
harm due to a State's noncompliance and, except in one limited
circumstance discussed in section II.E of this rule, will always
require States that have failed to submit an approvable CAP or to
implement an approved CAP to suspend some or all procedural
disenrollments.
After CMS requires a State to suspend procedural disenrollments,
the State must continue suspending procedural disenrollments until CMS
determines that the State has taken appropriate corrective action. Once
CMS is satisfied that the State has taken appropriate corrective
action, CMS will inform the State of the date on which it may resume
procedural disenrollments. See section II.F of this rule for a
discussion of the circumstances under which CMS will lift enforcement
actions taken pursuant to an enforcement notice issued in accordance
with Sec. 430.49(c).
Civil Money Penalties. If CMS finds that a State has failed to
submit or implement an approved CAP, including if CMS disapproves the
State's submitted CAP or if the State fails to meet the requirements
set forth in the approved CAP, in accordance with the requirements in
1902(tt)(2)(B)(ii) of the Act and as interpreted at Sec. 430.49(b) of
this rule, CMS may also issue notice to the State in accordance with
Sec. 430.49(c)(2) indicating that CMS will impose CMPs.
The CMPs authorized under section 1902(tt)(2)(B)(ii) are a tool to
compel State compliance with corrective action as quickly as possible,
given the urgency of preventing unauthorized loss of coverage for
beneficiaries during a period that generally aligns with States'
unwinding periods. For this reason, CMS is adopting a penalty formula
that will impose a lower penalty for States with a shorter timeframe of
noncompliance and increase the penalty over time for States that do not
return to compliance. CMPs will start accruing 5 days after the date of
the notice and become payable 60 days after the date of the notice, if
not timely appealed, or 60 days after issuance of a final determination
at the conclusion of any appeals pursuant to Sec. 430.49(f). Under
Sec. 430.49(c)(3)(ii)(B) of this rule, CMS will impose CMPs for
failure to submit or implement an approved CAP according to the
following formula: Days 1-30 (after 5-day delay as specified in the
enforcement notice): $25,000/day; Days 31-60: $50,000/day; and Days 61-
until State comes into compliance with CAP requirements: $100,000/day.
All CMP amounts provided in this rule will be adjusted annually in
accordance with 45 CFR part 102.
New Sec. 430.49(c)(2)(ii) provides that CMS may issue additional
notices to take additional actions (including increasing CMPs or
imposing or broadening the scope of a suspension of procedural
disenrollments) if CMS identifies additional violations of CAP
provisions. Such notices will meet the requirements in 430.49(c)(2)(i).
Noncompliant States will be charged CMPs daily until the State
takes appropriate action to cure the noncompliance with the CAP
requirements as outlined in Sec. 430.49(e) and discussed in section
II.F. of this rule. Under Sec. 430.49(e)(2), once CMS is satisfied
that the State has taken appropriate action to cure the noncompliance
with the CAP requirements, CMS will inform the State of the total
amount of CMPs that have accrued, the balance owed if the State has
already begun payment, and the last day CMPs under the enforcement
notice were imposed.
As provided in Sec. 430.49(c)(4), if the State fails to suspend
procedural disenrollments as required pursuant to a notice described in
Sec. 430.49(c)(2) or to pay CMPs as specified in that notice, or both,
CMS may issue a subsequent notice under Sec. 430.49(c)(2) to increase
the CMPs to the maximum allowable daily amount, if not already reached,
or may pursue additional enforcement action under section 1904 of the
Act, including withholding some or all FFP for the period of
noncompliance.
CMS intends to issue additional guidance following the issuance of
this rule providing additional information regarding the process CMS
will use to collect CMPs and any operational requirements for States to
remit payment of CMPs.
E. Mitigating Circumstances (Sec. 430.49(d))
As described previously, section 1902(tt)(2)(B) of the Act, as
implemented in new Sec. 430.49, gives CMS the authority to require
States to submit a CAP for failure to meet reporting or Federal
redetermination requirements and, if the State fails to submit or
implement such CAP, including if CMS disapproves the State's submitted
CAP or if the State fails to meet the requirements set forth in the
approved CAP, in accordance with section 1902(tt)(2)(B)(ii) of the Act,
to suspend procedural disenrollments, impose CMPs of up to $100,000 per
day, or take both actions. While section 1902(tt)(2)(B) of the Act
empowers CMS to require CAPs, suspend procedural disenrollments, and
impose CMPs, the statute also gives the Secretary discretion to use
this authority or not and to determine the amount of CMPs up to the
statutory maximum.\21\
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\21\ Section 1902(tt)(2)(B)(iii) of the Act provides (emphasis
added): If a State fails to submit or implement an approved
corrective action plan in accordance with clause (ii), the Secretary
may . . . require the State to suspend making all or some
terminations of eligibility for medical assistance from the State
plan under this title (including any waiver of such plan) that are
for procedural reasons until the State takes appropriate corrective
action, as determined by the Secretary, and may impose a civil money
penalty of not more than $100,000 for each day a State is not in
compliance.
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[[Page 84723]]
CMS interprets the enforcement authorities in section 1902(tt)(2)
of the Act as tools to promote State accountability for compliance with
the reporting requirements in section 1902(tt)(1) of the Act and
Federal redetermination requirements, as defined in Sec. 430.5 of this
rule, and to maximize accurate eligibility redeterminations to promote
retention of coverage for eligible people to the greatest extent
feasible. CMS recognizes that the scope or impact of different
violations of the reporting or redetermination requirements may vary,
and there also may be an emergency or other extraordinary circumstances
preventing a State from complying with a given requirement or
submitting or implementing a CAP. Thus, consistent with the discretion
allowed under section 1902(tt)(2)(B) of the Act, CMS will take into
consideration certain mitigating circumstances related to the State's
noncompliance when determining whether to require the State to submit a
CAP or require suspension of procedural disenrollments or impose CMPs.
These circumstances are set forth at Sec. 430.49(d) of this rule.\22\
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\22\ CMS has also used its discretion in setting the amount of
the CMPs that will apply in certain circumstances, based on the
duration of the CAP violation involved, as discussed above in
section II.D.
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Mitigating Circumstances Impacting Decision to Require a CAP. In
the case of State noncompliance with Federal redetermination
requirements, Sec. 430.49(d)(1) provides that CMS may elect to not
require or to delay requiring submission of a CAP if either or both of
the following circumstances exist:
1. No Harm or Substantial Risk of Harm Occurred: The noncompliance
caused neither actual harm nor a substantial risk of harm to
beneficiaries, including increased burden for beneficiaries in
completing the renewal process, loss of coverage at renewal for
individuals who continue to meet the substantive eligibility criteria
and whose eligibility should otherwise be retained but for failure to
meet a procedural requirement, or delays in access to coverage or care.
2. Extraordinary Circumstances Exist: There is an emergency or
there are other extraordinary circumstances preventing the State's
compliance--for example, a natural disaster or catastrophic systems
outage.
In addition, in the case of noncompliance with the reporting
requirements in Sec. 435.927, Sec. 430.49(d)(2) provides that CMS may
delay requiring or elect not to require a State to submit a CAP if CMS
has determined that the State implementing a CAP is not necessary to
ensure that the noncompliance is remedied. For example, CMS might not
require a CAP if a State's noncompliance is due to an error that the
State commits to correcting and does immediately correct. As with
violations relating to Federal redetermination requirements, CMS may
also delay requiring or elect not to require a State to submit a CAP
relating to a violation of reporting requirements if CMS determines
that there is an emergency or other extraordinary circumstances
preventing the State's compliance.
Mitigating Circumstances Impacting Decision to Suspend Procedural
Disenrollments or Impose CMPs. If a State fails to submit an approvable
CAP or to implement an approved CAP, including if CMS disapproves the
State's submitted CAP or if the State fails to meet the requirements
set forth in the approved CAP, new Sec. 430.49(d)(3) provides that CMS
will consider whether any of the following mitigating circumstances
exist when deciding whether to require a suspension of procedural
disenrollments, impose CMPs, or take both actions:
1. Extraordinary Circumstances Exist: Regardless of the type of
violation that gave rise to the requirement of a CAP, CMS will consider
whether there is an emergency or other extraordinary circumstance that
occurred after the violation resulting in the requirement of a CAP that
significantly impeded the State's ability to submit or implement the
CAP. If such circumstances exist, CMS may delay or forgo imposition of
CMPs but will not delay requiring a suspension of procedural
disenrollments (beyond the one-month delay described below in the case
of reporting violations that do not impede CMS' oversight of procedural
disenrollments).
2. Reporting Violation Does Not Impede CMS' Oversight of Procedural
Disenrollments: When a State fails to submit or implement an approved
CAP that was required based on the State's violation of reporting
requirements under section 1902(tt)(1) of the Act, CMS will consider
whether the underlying reporting violation impedes CMS' oversight of
procedural disenrollments. If so, CMS will suspend procedural
disenrollments and impose CMPs. If not, CMS will delay requiring a
suspension of procedural disenrollments for 1 month to allow the State
an opportunity to comply with the data reporting requirements but will
immediately impose CMPs (unless extraordinary circumstances exist, as
discussed above).
Although all data reporting under section 1902(tt)(1) of the Act is
important to support CMS oversight of State redetermination processes
during a period that generally aligns with States' unwinding periods,
we believe that in most cases it would be too punitive to suspend
procedural disenrollments immediately if the State fails to submit or
implement a CAP related to an underlying reporting requirement
violation that does not impede CMS' understanding of the State's
procedural disenrollment rate. In contrast, where a State fails to
submit or implement a CAP related to an underlying reporting violation
that impedes CMS' oversight of procedural disenrollments in that State,
CMS will take immediate action to require suspension of procedural
disenrollments, in addition to imposing CMPs (if not delayed or forgone
by CMS due to the existence of extraordinary circumstances), to
mitigate possible harm to beneficiaries at risk of disenrollment.
For example, if a State fails to submit or implement an approved
CAP that CMS required based upon the State's failure to report data on
the volume of calls it is receiving at a call center, CMS will examine
the circumstances of the underlying reporting violation and may find
that the lack of these data does not impede its oversight of procedural
disenrollments and, if so, will delay requiring the State to suspend
procedural disenrollments for 1 month, pending the submission or
implementation of a CAP or the correction of the underlying reporting
violation, but will impose CMPs according to Sec. 430.49(c)(3)(ii)
without delay (unless there has been an extraordinary circumstance
after the violation occurred that prevented the State from submitting
or implementing the CAP).
F. Lifting of CAP Enforcement Actions (Sec. 430.49(e))
Under Sec. 430.49(e)(1) of this rule, CMS will lift any
requirement to suspend procedural disenrollments and/or stop charging
any CMPs imposed pursuant to Sec. 430.49(c) when the State cures its
noncompliance by submitting an approvable CAP (where the violation was
a failure to submit a CAP) or initiating or resuming implementation
[[Page 84724]]
of an approved CAP (where the violation was a failure to implement
according to the terms of the CAP). In cases where the State had
received a notice imposing CMPs due to failure to submit an approved
CAP, CMS will continue the accrual of CMPs from the date that a State
submits a CAP for CMS review in accordance with Sec.
430.49(e)(1)(i)(A), until CMS determines whether the CAP is approvable.
If CMS determines the CAP is approvable, CMS will retroactively end the
accrual of CMPs on the day the CAP was submitted and cease charging
CMPs prospectively. If CMS determines that the CAP is not approvable,
CMS will continue charging CMPs imposed under the terms of the
enforcement notice without interruption from the date specified in the
original notice provided to the State under Sec. 430.49(c)(2) and will
continue charging such CMPs until an approvable CAP is submitted. Under
Sec. 430.49(e)(2), once CMS is satisfied that the State has taken
appropriate action to cure the noncompliance with the CAP requirements,
CMS will inform the State of the total amount of CMPs that have
accrued, the balance owed, and the last day CMPs were imposed as well
as the date on which the State may resume procedural disenrollments.
CMS may again require suspension of procedural disenrollments and
impose CMPs that have been lifted in accordance with Sec. 430.49(e)(1)
if CMS subsequently determines that the State is not complying with the
terms of the approved CAP. In such a situation, CMS will issue a new
notice pursuant to Sec. 430.49(c)(2).
G. State Reconsideration and Appeal Rights (42 CFR 430.3, 430.49(f),
and 45 CFR Part 16)
Under new Sec. 430.49(f) and amendments to Sec. 430.3 and 45 CFR
part 16, States will be able to appeal CMS' decision to require a State
to suspend procedural disenrollments and/or pay CMPs under section
1902(tt)(2)(B)(iii) of the Act and new Sec. 430.49(c). The rule amends
Sec. 430.3 and 45 CFR part 16, Appendix A, to provide that States can
appeal these CMS decisions to the Departmental Appeals Board (Board) in
accordance with procedures set forth in 45 CFR part 16.
The rule creates a new 42 CFR 430.49(f)(1), providing that a State
dissatisfied with CMS' determination under Sec. 430.49(c) that the
State must suspend procedural disenrollments or pay CMPs will have 30
days (as counted consistent with the protocol for counting days
outlined under 45 CFR 16.19) from receipt of the notice described in
Sec. 430.49(c)(2) to appeal CMS's decision to the Board. The appeal
request must comply with 45 CFR 16.7, and the appeals process will be
governed by 45 CFR part 16. That means that the expedited appeal
procedures outlined in 45 CFR 16.12 might be available, if the
conditions in 45 CFR 16.12 are met. If the State does not submit an
appeal request within that 30-day timeframe, then the decision
described in the notice received by the State under Sec. 430.49(c)(2)
is the final decision of the Secretary and is final agency action
within the meaning of 5 U.S.C. 704.
At new 42 CFR 430.49(f)(2), we give any party to the appeal that is
dissatisfied with the Board's decision under 430.49(f)(1) an
opportunity to request that the CMS Administrator reconsider it, and we
outline the process that will govern the Administrator's
reconsideration. In particular, new Sec. 430.49(f)(2)(i) specifies
that any party to the appeal that is dissatisfied with the Board's
decision on an appeal brought by a State under Sec. 430.49(f)(1) may
request reconsideration of that decision within 15 days of receiving
notice of the decision under 45 CFR 16.21. The process for such
reconsiderations is provided under new Sec. 430.49(f)(2)(i)(A) through
(D). Under new Sec. 430.49(f)(2)(i)(A), we are providing that
reconsideration requests must be filed with the Administrator, and must
include a copy of the Board's decision, a brief statement of why the
party believes it was wrong, and a statement of the amount of any CMPs
in dispute. New Sec. 430.49(f)(2)(i)(B) requires that the party
requesting reconsideration send a copy of the request for
reconsideration to all other parties to the appeal and other
participants in the appeal (as described in 45 CFR 16.16) at the same
time the request is filed. New Sec. 430.49(f)(2)(i)(C) provides that
any other party to the appeal, or other participant in the appeal, may
respond to the request for reconsideration in writing and file such
response with the Administrator within 15 days of the date the request
for reconsideration is filed with the Administrator. Under new Sec.
430.49(f)(2)(i)(D), the Administrator will review the Board's decision
and any additional information submitted by the parties and other
participants, and either affirm the Board's decision or issue a new
decision within 60 days after the Board issues notice of its decision
under 45 CFR 16.21. Under new Sec. 430.49(f)(2)(ii), the Administrator
may, within 60 days after the Board issues notice of its decision under
45 CFR 16.21, also modify or reverse the Board's decision without
receiving a request for reconsideration under Sec. 430.49(f)(2). In
cases where the Administrator opts to review the Board's decision
without a request for reconsideration, such decision must be provided
within 60 days of the Board's issuance of its notice of decision under
45 CFR 16.21.
New Sec. 430.49(f)(2)(iii) states that if there is no request for
reconsideration filed under Sec. 430.49(f)(2)(i) and the Administrator
does not modify or reverse the decision within the 60-day period
described in Sec. 430.49(f)(2)(ii), then the Board's decision will be
the final determination of the Secretary and final agency action, and
the Administrator will provide notice to all parties and other
participants of such decision as described in Sec. 430.49(f)(2)(iv).
New Sec. 430.49(f)(2)(iv) provides that the Administrator will provide
a notice to all parties and other participants of the final decision
that communicates that it is the final determination of the Secretary
and final agency action and Sec. 430.49(f)(2)(v) provides that the
determination of the Administrator pursuant to Sec. Sec.
430.49(f)(2)(i)(D) or 430.49(f)(2)(ii) constitutes final agency action
within the meaning of 5 U.S.C. 704.
Under amendments in the rule to 45 CFR 16.22, any suspensions of
procedural disenrollments under 42 CFR 430.49(c) will continue in
effect and CMPs imposed on a State under 430.49(c) will continue to
accrue pending an appeal to the Board under Sec. 430.49(f).
Appeals of CMS decisions to take the FMAP reduction under section
1902(tt)(2)(A) of the Act will follow a different process that is
governed by already existing regulations. If CMS finds that a State is
noncompliant with reporting requirements under Sec. 435.927, CMS will
calculate the amount of the FMAP reduction under Sec. 435.928 and
request that the State make a voluntary adjustment to the Form CMS-64
to return the funds to CMS. If the State does not do so, CMS will
initiate disallowance proceedings, which will be governed by existing
regulations at Sec. 430.42. States may request reconsideration or
appeal disallowance decisions per these existing CMS regulations at
Sec. 430.42. Under Sec. 430.42, States wishing to request a
reconsideration of the Administrator's decision to impose a
disallowance must request such reconsideration within 60 days of
receiving the notice of disallowance described in Sec. 430.42(a).
We are adding new Sec. 430.49(f) and amending Sec. 430.3 and 45
CFR part 16 as outlined in this section to provide States
[[Page 84725]]
with a fair and reasonable administrative process for appealing CMS'
decisions to suspend procedural disenrollments or impose CMPs and to
ensure that accountability for those decisions is vested in a principal
officer. These changes also will provide States with accurate
information about the availability of administrative review if they are
dissatisfied with a CMS decision under 42 CFR 430.49(c). These
provisions also clarify when agency decisions are final agency action
for purposes of 5 U.S.C. 704.
H. Definitions (Sec. 430.5)
This rule adds two new definitions to Sec. 430.5 that apply to the
provisions at Sec. 430.49. One of the two new definitions will also
apply to related amendments to 45 CFR part 16. First, the rule defines
a ``procedural disenrollment'' for purposes of 42 CFR 430.49 and 45 CFR
part 16 as a termination of eligibility and disenrollment from Medicaid
for reasons that are unrelated to a State's determination of whether
the individual meets eligibility criteria to qualify for coverage,
including for failure to return a renewal form or documentation needed
by the State to make a determination of eligibility. And second, the
rule defines ``Federal redetermination requirements'' for purposes of
42 CFR 430.49 as Federal requirements applicable to eligibility
redeterminations outlined in Sec. 435.916, including renewal
strategies authorized under section 1902(e)(14)(A) or other alternative
processes and procedures approved by CMS under section 1902(e)(14)(A)
of the Act or section 6008(f)(2)(A) of the FFCRA.
III. Good Cause
The Administrative Procedure Act (APA), at 5 U.S.C. 553(b),
requires the agency to publish a notice of the proposed rule in the
Federal Register that includes a reference to the legal authority under
which the rule is proposed and the terms and substance of the proposed
rule or a description of the subjects and issues involved. Section
553(c) further requires the agency to give interested parties the
opportunity to participate in the rulemaking through public comment
before the provisions of the rule take effect. Section 553(b)(B)
provides an exception to notice-and-comment requirements, however, if
the agency for good cause finds that notice-and-comment is
impracticable, unnecessary, or contrary to the public interest and
incorporates a statement of the finding and its reasons in the rule
issued.
Section 553(d) ordinarily requires a 30-day delay in the effective
date of a final rule from the date of its publication in the Federal
Register. However, similar to the good cause exception for notice-and-
comment requirements, section 553(d)(3) excepts a rule from the 30-day
delay requirement if the agency for good cause finds that the delay is
impracticable, unnecessary, or contrary to the public interest.
Similarly, the Congressional Review Act (CRA) also allows an agency to
issue a rule that would otherwise be subject to a 60-day delayed
effective date requirement with an immediate effective date in
circumstances where a delay is impractical, unnecessary, or contrary to
the public interest (5 U.S.C. 808(2)). CMS is forgoing the usual
notice-and-comment procedures and delay in the effective date for this
rule because, for the reasons discussed in this section, following such
requirements would be impracticable and contrary to the public
interest.
Recent data on unwinding-related renewals indicates that of the 7.1
million Medicaid and CHIP beneficiaries whose eligibility was due for
renewal in July 2023, more than 1.6 million had been disenrolled.\23\
The vast majority of these disenrolled individuals (71 percent) were
disenrolled due to a procedural reason such as failure to return
paperwork, not because of a determination that the person no longer
satisfied Medicaid's substantive eligibility criteria. While we are
unable to determine the proportion of individuals who were procedurally
disenrolled but continued to meet substantive eligibility criteria, the
high rate of procedural disenrollments suggests that the options and
strategies that CMS has been working with States to implement through
their mitigation plans may not be sufficient to protect the continued
enrollment of individuals who continue to meet substantive eligibility
criteria. For this reason, the enforcement authorities established
under this rule are needed to protect access to Medicaid coverage. Any
delay in implementing the enforcement tools in this rule would thwart
CMS's ability to take an array of possible enforcement actions against
noncompliant States under section 1902(tt) of the Act and could result
in serious harm to beneficiaries.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\23\ Medicaid and CHIP National Summary of Renewal Outcomes--
March Through July 2023 Data; published October 2023; available at
https://www.medicaid.gov/sites/default/files/2023-10/july-2023-national-summary-renewal-outcomes.pdf.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In anticipating the likely impact of unwinding, the Assistant
Secretary for Planning and Evaluation (ASPE) in HHS estimated that in
the period between April 1, 2023, and June 1, 2024, 6.8 million people
will lose Medicaid coverage despite still meeting substantive
eligibility criteria.\24\ ASPE estimated that 82.7 percent of enrollees
would be determined eligible, and their eligibility would be renewed,
while 17.5 percent would be disenrolled. Of those disenrolled, ASPE
estimated 54 percent would be disenrolled because they were determined
ineligible, and 45 percent (6.8 million) would be disenrolled for
procedural reasons despite still meeting substantive eligibility
criteria. Early unwinding data from May and June 2023 renewals show a
higher percentage of renewals resulting in disenrollment (nearly 38
percent in May and just over 25 percent in June) and a significantly
higher percentage of disenrollments occurring for procedural reasons
(77 percent in May and 73 percent in June) compared to ASPE's
estimates. While these early data are limited, if disenrollments
continue at the June 2023 rates, the number of individuals who lose
Medicaid coverage for procedural reasons will be much higher than
ASPE's estimates, and many of those individuals may still meet
substantive Medicaid eligibility criteria. If CMS is unable to take all
actions within its authority to enforce Federal redetermination
requirements, the number of individuals negatively impacted may
increase.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\24\ ASPE (August 19, 2022). Unwinding the Medicaid Continuous
Enrollment Provision: Projected Enrollment Effects and Policy
Approaches. (Available at https://aspe.hhs.gov/sites/default/files/documents/404a7572048090ec1259d216f3fd617e/aspe-end-mcaid-continuous-coverage_IB.pdf).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Analyses indicate that Medicaid coverage loss could have
significant detrimental consequences, resulting in forgone medical
care, including preventive care, that could result in refilling
prescriptions less often, more emergency department visits, and
increased morbidity and mortality.25 26 Preventable coverage
loss could result from States' failure to follow Federal requirements,
which CMS cannot fully enforce without this rulemaking. Loss of
coverage by individuals who still meet substantive eligibility
criteria, which is likely followed by re-enrollment at a later point in
time, is often referred to as ``churning.'' Because churning can lead
to deferred or delayed care, it can result in greater health care
costs; such disruptions in care and medication
[[Page 84726]]
adherence create negative health outcomes that make care more costly
down the road.\27\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\25\ ASPE (April 11, 2021). Medicaid Churning and Continuity of
Care. (Available at https://aspe.hhs.gov/reports/medicaid-churning-continuity-care).
\26\ Abdus, S. (August 2014). Part-year Coverage and Access to
Care for Nonelderly Adults. (Available at https://journals.lww.com/lww-medicalcare/Fulltext/2014/08000/Part_year_Coverage_and_Access_to_Care_for.6.aspx).
\27\ Sommers, B.D., Gourevitch, R., Maylone, B., Blendon, R.J.,
Epstein, A.M. (2016). Insurance churning rates for low-income adults
under health reform: Lower than expected but still harmful for many.
Health Affairs, 35(10), 1816-1824.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
By contrast, continuous enrollment permits individuals to maintain
a regular source of care, including preventive care and ongoing
treatment of chronic conditions. A review of the research available on
continuous enrollment of children found it is related to reductions in
unmet health care needs, increases in coordination of care, including
monitoring and regular treatment adjustments as conditions change, and
greater patient/provider engagement in treatment planning, which can
lead to better health outcomes.\28\ In fact, a study of health care
outcomes in States that provided continuous eligibility to children
prior to the FFCRA's continuous enrollment condition found reductions
in insurance gaps, lower probability of children being in fair or poor
health, and, for children with serious health care needs, increased
access to preventive and specialty care.\29\ This evidence suggests
that protecting access to coverage leads to better outcomes for
enrollees. The availability of these enforcement tools is critically
important to ensure that CMS can act quickly, if needed, to address
State noncompliance. Delaying CMS' access to the full range of the
enforcement tools it could employ to require States to follow Federal
eligibility redetermination requirements and the new reporting
requirements in section 1902(tt)(1) of the Act, could thus cause actual
harm to beneficiaries.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\28\ Guevara, J.P., Moon, J., Hines, E.M., Fremont, E., Wong,
A., Forrest, C.B., Silber, H.H., & Pati, S. (2014). Continuity of
public insurance coverage: A systematic review of the literature.
Medical Care Research and Review, 71(2), 115-137.
\29\ Brantley, E., Ku, L. (2022). Continuous eligibility for
Medicaid associated with improved child health outcomes. Medical
Care Research and Review, 79(3), 404-413.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
As discussed, State submission of renewal data is critically
important to our ability to monitor State renewal processes and take
action when needed to prevent unauthorized disenrollments. CMS must be
able to use the compliance tools under section 1902(tt) of the Act to
obtain data from States that will help us to continue to quickly
identify problems with the redetermination process during the period
from April 1, 2023, through June 30, 2024, and, if needed, to take
timely action to require States to fix problems including, if
appropriate, requiring States to halt procedural disenrollments from
Medicaid.
This rule provides critical guidance to help States ensure that
they are complying with the data reporting requirements under section
1902(tt)(1) of the Act and that they understand how CAPs and CMPs will
be administered in the event that a State does not take all actions
necessary for compliance. For example, the rule provides States with
certainty regarding how CMS will interpret the requirement to report
certain data under section 1902(tt)(1) of the Act on a timely basis. A
delay in the issuance of guidance resulting from the notice-and-comment
process would forestall States' ability to be compliant with Federal
requirements that protect beneficiaries.
CMS sees the enforcement authorities--CAPs, suspensions of
procedural disenrollments, and CMPs--as tools to promote State
accountability for compliance with the reporting and redetermination
requirements, and we recognize that the scope or impact of different
violations of these requirements may vary. Thus, we believe it is
important to consider certain mitigating circumstances when determining
whether to require a State to submit a CAP or to require a suspension
of procedural disenrollments or impose CMPs. This rule gives States
additional information about the factors that CMS will weigh in
deciding whether to require CAPs, to require States to suspend
procedural disenrollments, or to impose CMPs. CMS needs to be able to
focus its limited enforcement resources on the most serious
noncompliance. Without this flexibility, CMS would be required to tie
up our limited resources on enforcement actions in situations where
mitigating circumstances would weigh against such action. This could
seriously inhibit or even prevent CMS from taking truly needed
enforcement action if a situation were to arise involving serious
noncompliance causing harm or a substantial risk of harm.
Recognizing the importance of the guidance in this rule, CMS has
moved as quickly as possible within existing constraints to complete
rulemaking. Section 1902(tt) of the Act was enacted via the CAA, 2023,
on December 29, 2022, took effect 3 months later, on April 1, 2023, and
applies to a time-limited period, from April 1, 2023, to June 30, 2024,
that began on the day that the statutory language took effect. In other
words, the effective date of section 1902(tt) of the Act is the same
date as the start of the compliance period, and there was only a 3-
month timeframe between the passage of the CAA, 2023 and the effective
date. Given the short timeframe and the evolving landscape of State
needs relating to implementation, it was not feasible for CMS to have
issued a final rule (with or without notice-and-comment) in that 3-
month timeframe, because, as is discussed in more detail below, CMS'
notice-and-comment rulemaking process ordinarily takes at least 18
months.
Moreover, given the evolving landscape of Federal guidance and
State needs before and after the end of the Medicaid continuous
enrollment condition, it would not have been feasible for CMS to begin
the rulemaking process earlier. When the CAA, 2023 was enacted on
December 29, 2022, CMS was immersed in efforts to support States as
they prepared operations for the end of the Medicaid continuous
enrollment condition. This included working with all 56 States
individually on assessing the need for and implementing temporary
strategies or plans to ensure State compliance with Federal Medicaid
redetermination requirements (often referred to as mitigation plans)
and issuing new guidance and flexibilities to enable States to maximize
their capacity to maintain the enrollment of eligible beneficiaries at
renewal during the unwinding of the Medicaid continuous enrollment
condition.
Accelerating the rulemaking process was also not a viable option
for CMS given resource constraints, even if doing so would have been
feasible. Since enactment of the CAA, 2023, CMS has devoted an
extraordinary amount of internal resources to the development of
materials, review of readiness, and availability of technical
assistance for States as they prepared for and began to return to
normal eligibility operations following the end of the FFCRA continuous
enrollment condition. We created a series of new resources designed to
assist States in protecting the enrollment of eligible individuals as
they restarted routine Medicaid renewals, met with every State to
assess its planning for unwinding and compliance with Medicaid renewal
requirements, and developed new options and strategies through which
States could address areas of noncompliance and mitigate negative
impacts on eligible individuals. These efforts did not stop when the
unwinding process began, and they continue to strain Federal agency
resources. During roughly the same timeframe, CMS was also engaged in
an unprecedented amount of work to support States, health care
providers, and Medicare, Medicaid, and CHIP beneficiaries in the
[[Page 84727]]
transition back to regular operations when numerous access-related
policies and flexibilities ended on May 11, 2023, when the COVID-19 PHE
(as declared by the Secretary under section 319 of the Public Health
Service Act) ended. This included waivers under section 1135 of the Act
that were in place for the more than 3 years of that COVID-19 PHE.\30\
Notwithstanding this unusual, extraordinary workload throughout most of
2023, CMS has developed and issued this rule as soon as was practicable
under the circumstances.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\30\ See https://www.cms.gov/files/document/frequently-asked-questions-cms-waivers-flexibilities-and-end-covid-19-public-health-emergency.pdf, and https://www.medicaid.gov/sites/default/files/2023-08/cib050823.pdf.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Had CMS proceeded through notice-and-comment rulemaking, the
resulting delay would have been significant, thereby increasing the
risk that beneficiaries would be harmed by losing coverage due to
States' violation of Federal redetermination requirements. CMS'
rulemaking cycle from proposed rulemaking to final rule typically takes
at least 18 months. This includes drafting the proposed rule and
engaging in a rigorous clearance process that concludes with CMS, HHS,
and the Office of Information and Regulatory Affairs leadership
approval. A proposed rule is typically published in the Federal
Register with a 60-day public comment period, and then CMS must review,
categorize, and consider the public comments received, which may number
in the thousands. Then the final rule can be drafted and enter the same
rigorous clearance process. If this process began immediately upon
enactment of the CAA, 2023 (December 29, 2022) and extended 18 months,
when combined with the usual 30- or 60-day delay in effective date
following publication in the Federal Register, the rule would not have
taken effect until the beginning of August 2024 at the earliest, 1
month after the compliance period ended. In the meantime, CMS would
have been significantly hampered in its efforts to enforce Federal
redetermination requirements and to enforce the reporting requirements
that help CMS quickly become aware of possible State violations of
those redetermination requirements.
Based on CMS' early and still ongoing work with States and the
information States have already reported, CMS has already observed
renewal issues and has been working with States to develop mitigation
plans to address them. As that work continues and new issues are
uncovered, it is important for CMS to be able to draw upon the full
range of its enforcement tools. Additionally, other issues may arise in
the coming months that could require CMS to take swift action to the
full extent of its enforcement authority under section 1902(tt) of the
Act. For example, States might fail to comply with requirements to
provide appropriate notice informing beneficiaries of the renewal
process and the steps needed to renew eligibility, may fail to use
available and reliable information sources to assess beneficiaries'
eligibility on an ex parte basis, may make a determination of
ineligibility that is inconsistent with eligibility criteria, or may
fail to appropriately notify the individual of the eligibility
determination and the beneficiary's right to a fair hearing. In any of
these circumstances, a major State violation of requirements could lead
to a substantial number of beneficiaries being unlawfully disenrolled
from coverage, creating an immediate need for CMS to require States to
take corrective action to restore lost benefits to prevent further harm
to beneficiaries. Although States and CMS have collaboratively worked
to mitigate these risks in preparing for and implementing the end of
the Medicaid continuous enrollment condition, if a State in the future
is unwilling or unable to comply with Federal renewal or reporting
requirements, CMS will have an urgent need to be able to enforce these
Federal requirements using the enforcement authority implemented by
this rule. And waiting to use that enforcement authority until August
2024 would significantly undermine CMS's ability to prevent more
immediate harm to beneficiaries.
In addition, unless the rule is issued without delay, States would
not have administrative channels to pursue an appeal before any
judicial review of the actions CMS is authorized to take under section
1902(tt)(2)(B)(iii) of the Act. Setting forth a clear administrative
appeals process benefits both States and CMS by providing both parties
an opportunity to resolve disputes administratively and thus
potentially avoid the need for additional judicial review, and to
generate a clear record for any further judicial review in Federal
court, should it be necessary to resolve the dispute.
For all the reasons cited previously in this rule and summarized in
Table 1, which follows, CMS believes good cause exists to exempt this
rule from the notice-and-comment and delay in effective date
requirements and is proceeding with this rulemaking on an expedited
basis, to be effective upon publication.
Table 1--Good Cause
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Title (regulatory citation) Rationale
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Reporting Requirements (Sec. Notice-and-comment rulemaking for
435.927). Sec. 435.927 is impracticable and
contrary to the public interest for
the following reasons:
The timeline for such
rulemaking would extend beyond the
time period during which the
reporting requirements implemented
by Sec. 435.927 are in effect.
Any delay in issuing clear
reporting guidance will negatively
impact States' ability to comply
with Federal requirements and will
negatively impact CMS's ability to
monitor States' redetermination
processes.
These reporting
requirements will help CMS to
determine whether States are
meeting Federal redetermination
requirements. Unless CMS has this
information promptly, during the
applicable period, CMS will be less
able to take swift enforcement
action to prevent unauthorized
coverage loss (or gaps in coverage)
for eligible individuals. Coverage
loss can lead to forgone care and
adverse health outcomes.
FMAP Reduction (Sec. 435.928)... Notice-and-comment rulemaking for
Sec. 435.928 is impracticable and
contrary to the public interest for
the following reasons:
The timeline for such
rulemaking would extend beyond the
time period (July 1, 2023, through
June 30, 2024) during which State
noncompliance could trigger the
FMAP reduction described in this
section.
[[Page 84728]]
The FMAP reduction
implemented in Sec. 435.928 is an
important component of the tools
available to ensure that States
comply with the reporting
requirements. Without proper
reporting, CMS may be unable to
effectively monitor States'
compliance with redetermination
requirements during the reporting
period and will be less able to
take swift enforcement action to
prevent unauthorized coverage loss.
This may lead to disenrollment of
eligible individuals (and/or gaps
in their coverage) and result in
adverse health outcomes.
Corrective Action Plans (Sec. Notice-and-comment rulemaking for
Sec. 430.5, 430.49(b)). Sec. 430.49(b) (along with the
definitions at Sec. 430.5 that
are applicable to this provision)
is impracticable and contrary to
the public interest for the
following reasons:
The timeline for such
rulemaking would extend beyond the
time period (April 1, 2023, to June
30, 2024) during which State
noncompliance with either the
reporting requirements described at
Sec. 435.927 or Federal renewal
requirements could arise and
thereafter be subjected to the CAPs
implemented in 430.49(b).
The CAP provisions
implemented at Sec. 430.49(b) are
an important component of the tools
available to ensure that States
comply with both the reporting
requirements and the Federal
redetermination requirements. A
delay in implementing these
provisions would limit CMS'
authority to quickly minimize
preventable loss of coverage or
gaps in coverage for eligible
individuals when they are
identified, which may result in
forgone care and adverse health
outcomes.
Suspension of Procedural Notice-and-comment rulemaking for
Disenrollments and Civil Money Sec. 430.49(c) (along with the
Penalties (Sec. Sec. 430.5, definitions at Sec. 430.5 that
430.49(c)). are applicable to this provision)
is impracticable and contrary to
the public interest for the
following reasons:
The timeline for such
rulemaking would extend beyond the
time period (April 1, 2023, to June
30, 2024) during which State
noncompliance could arise and
thereafter be subjected to the
enforcement actions implemented in
430.49(c).
A delay in implementing
this statutory authority would
limit CMS' authority to quickly
minimize preventable loss of
coverage for eligible individuals,
which may result in forgone care
and adverse health outcomes.
Mitigating Circumstances (Sec. Notice-and-comment rulemaking for
Sec. 430.5, 430.49(d)). Sec. 430.49(d) (along with the
definitions at Sec. 430.5 that
are applicable to this provision)
is impracticable and contrary to
the public interest, as it would
prevent CMS from exercising
discretion with respect to the
enforcement authority provided by
section 1902(tt) of the Act,
minimizing its usefulness for
enforcing State compliance. CMS
needs to be able to focus its
limited enforcement resources on
the most serious noncompliance.
Tying up CMS's limited enforcement
resources on enforcement actions in
situations where mitigating
circumstances would weigh against
such action could seriously inhibit
or even prevent CMS from taking
truly needed enforcement action in
situations involving serious
noncompliance causing harm or a
substantial risk of harm.
State Reconsideration and Appeal Notice-and-comment rulemaking for
Rights (Sec. 430.3, 430.49(f), State reconsideration and appeal
and corresponding amendments to rights is impracticable and
45 CFR part 16). contrary to the public interest for
the following reasons:
The timeline for such
rulemaking would extend beyond the
time period (April 1, 2023, to June
30, 2024) during which State
noncompliance could arise and
thereafter be subjected to the
enforcement actions implemented by
this rule.
A delay in establishing
appeal rights would impede States'
ability to seek administrative
resolution to resolve disputes
regarding the enforcement actions
in this rule without necessitating
review in Federal court.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
IV. Collection of Information Requirements
Under the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995 (PRA) (44 U.S.C. 3501 et
seq.), we are required to provide 60-day notice in the Federal Register
and solicit public comment before a ``collection of information''
requirement is submitted to OMB for review and approval. For the
purpose of the PRA and this section of the preamble, collection of
information is defined under 5 CFR 1320.3(c) of the PRA's implementing
regulations.
To fairly evaluate whether an information collection should be
approved by OMB, section 3506(c)(2)(A) of the PRA requires that we
solicit comment on the following issues:
The need for the information collection and its usefulness
in carrying out the proper functions of the agency.
The accuracy of the estimate of the information collection
burden.
The quality, utility, and clarity of the information to be
collected.
Recommendations to minimize the information collection
burden on the affected public, including automated collection
techniques.
We are soliciting public comment on each of the section
3506(c)(2)(A)-required issues for the following information collection
requirements.
A. Wage Estimates
To derive average costs, we used data from the U.S. Bureau of Labor
Statistics' May 2021 National Occupational Employment and Wage
Estimates for all salary estimates (https://www.bls.gov/oes/current/oes_nat.htm). In this regard, the following table presents the BLS'
mean hourly wage, our estimated cost of fringe benefits and overhead
(calculated at 100 percent of salary), and our adjusted hourly wage.
Table 2--National Occupational and Wage Estimates
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Fringe benefit Adjusted hourly
Occupation title Occupation code Mean hourly wage (at 100%) wage
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Database Administrators............. 15-1242 $49.29 $49.29 $98.58
General and Operations Manager...... 11-1021 59.07 59.07 118.14
Management Analyst.................. 13-1111 50.32 50.32 100.64
[[Page 84729]]
Project Management Specialists...... 13-1082 48.85 48.85 97.70
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Wages for State Governments. As indicated, we are adjusting our
employee hourly wage estimates by a factor of 100 percent to estimate
the cost of providing fringe benefits. This is necessarily a rough
adjustment, both because fringe benefits and overhead costs vary
significantly from employer to employer, and because methods of
estimating these costs vary widely from study to study. Nonetheless, we
believe that doubling the hourly wage to estimate the total cost
including fringe benefits is a reasonably accurate estimation method.
Cost to State Governments. To estimate State costs, it was
important to take into account the Federal government's contribution to
the cost of administering the Medicaid program. The Federal government
provides Medicaid matching funds at a rate established in statute. All
State Medicaid programs generally receive a 50 percent Federal matching
rate for qualifying administrative activities. As noted previously,
States also receive higher Federal Medicaid matching rates for certain
activities, such as certain systems design and development, and for
systems maintenance and operations, so the level of Federal Medicaid
funding provided to a State can be significantly higher. As such,
taking into account the Federal contribution to the costs of
administering the Medicaid program for purposes of estimating State
burden with respect to collection of information, we elected to use a
conservative estimate that the States would contribute 50 percent of
the costs, even though the burden will likely be much smaller.
B. Information Collection Requirements (ICRs)
1. ICRs Related to Reporting Requirements (Sec. 435.927)
The following changes will be submitted to OMB for approval under
control number 0938-TBD (CMS-10875). At this time the control number
has yet to be determined, but it will be assigned by OMB upon their
approval of this IFC's collection of information request. The public
can monitor OMB's issuance of the control number (and the control
number's expiration date) at reginfo.gov.
Under Sec. 435.927, States are required to submit certain monthly
data to CMS. The data are already collected by States and reported to
CMS under existing requirements that are approved by OMB under control
numbers 0938-1119 (CMS-10371), 0938-0345 (CMS-R-284), 0938-1140 (CMS-
10387), and 0938-1148 (CMS-10398 #64). However, recognizing that some
States might encounter unusual circumstances that interfere with
reporting using existing CMS-approved processes, CMS would consider
approving alternative processes and timelines for States to report
required data if a State is making a good faith effort to submit the
required data, as specified in Sec. 435.927(b)(4). For example, CMS
would consider allowing States experiencing special circumstances to
submit certain summary data via email rather than via T-MSIS, if T-MSIS
is the existing process.
Based on CMS' ongoing work with States to report the required data,
we estimate that eight States will request that CMS approve an
alternative process for submitting data under Sec. 435.927(c)(2)
during the compliance period of April 1, 2023, through June 30, 2024.
We estimate that for each of the eight States that request and receive
approval to use an alternative process to submit required data, it will
take a Project Management Specialist 8 hours at $97.70/hour and a
Database Administrator 15 hours at $98.58/hour to develop an
alternative process, reach agreement with CMS, and submit the required
data, for an aggregate of 184 hours (8 States x 23 hours) and $18,082
[(($97.70 x 8 hours) + ($98.58 x 15 hours)) x 8 States]. Taking into
account the 50 percent Federal contribution to Medicaid program
administration, the estimated State share would be $9,041.
2. ICRs Related to Corrective Action Plans (CAPs) (Sec. 430.49(b))
The following changes will be submitted to OMB for approval under
control number 0938-TBD (CMS-10875). At this time the control number
has yet to be determined, but it will be assigned by OMB upon their
approval of this IFC's collection of information request. The public
can monitor OMB's issuance of the control number (and the control
number's expiration date) at reginfo.gov.
This rule authorizes CMS to require States to submit a CAP to CMS
if the State is out of compliance with the reporting requirements in
section 1902(tt)(1) of the Act or Federal eligibility redetermination
requirements (including any alternative processes and procedures
approved by CMS, such as renewal strategies authorized under section
1902(e)(14)(A))) of the Act during the compliance period between April
1, 2023 and June 30, 2024.
Based on CMS' ongoing work with States to unwind from the
continuous enrollment condition, we estimate that 3 States will be out
of compliance with data reporting requirements and 5 States will be out
of compliance with Federal redetermination requirements during the
compliance period of April 1, 2023, to June 30, 2024. Some States may
be out of compliance with both sets of requirements and required to
submit just one CAP addressing both issues, but for purposes of
estimating State burden, we will assume they are mutually exclusive
sets of States for a total of 8 States. We will also assume for
purposes of estimating State burden that CMS will require a CAP from
all of the 8 noncompliant States (and will not exercise its discretion
not to require a CAP from any of them). We recognize that, if our
assumptions are incorrect, the aggregate burden may be less or more
than estimated here.
We estimate that for each of the 8 States required to submit a CAP
to CMS, it will take a Management Analyst 20 hours at $100.64/hour and
a General and Operations Manager 8 hours at $118.14/hour to write,
clear, and submit a CAP that includes the criteria at Sec.
430.49(b)(3) for an aggregate of 224 hours (8 States x 28 hours) and
$23,663 [(($100.64 x 20 hours) + ($118.14 x 8 hours)) x 8 States].
Taking into account the 50 percent Federal contribution to Medicaid
program administration, the estimated State share would be $11,832.
[[Page 84730]]
Table 3--Summary of Proposed Burden Estimates
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Total
Number of Time per Total Labor Total Total Total non-
Regulation section(s) OMB control No. (CMS Number of responses Hourly labor response time cost state beneficiary beneficiary labor Frequency
ID No.) respondents per cost ($/hr) (hours) (hours) ($) share burden cost ($) cost
respondent ($) (hours) ($)
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Sec. 435.927..................... 0938-TBD (CMS-10875).. 8 1 varies........ 23 184 18,082 9,041 n/a n/a n/a One-Time.
Sec. 430.49(b)................... 0938-TBD (CMS-10875).. 8 1 varies........ 28 224 23,663 11,832 n/a n/a n/a One-Time.
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Total.......................... 0938-TBD (CMS-10875).. ........... .......... .............. ........ 408 41,745 20,873 n/a n/a n/a One-Time.
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
C. Submission of PRA-Related Comments
We have submitted a copy of this rule to OMB for its approval of
the rule's information collection requirements. The requirements are
not effective until they have been approved by OMB.
To obtain copies of the supporting statement and any related forms
for the collections previously discussed in this rule, please visit the
CMS website at https://www.cms.hhs.gov/PaperworkReductionActof1995, or
call the Reports Clearance Office at (410) 786-1326.
If you comment on these information collection requirements, please
submit your comments electronically as specified in the DATES and
ADDRESSES sections of this interim final rule.
V. Response to Comments
Because of the large number of public comments normally received on
Federal Register documents, the Department is not able to acknowledge
or respond to them individually. We will consider all comments we
receive by the date and time specified in the DATES section of this
preamble, and, if we proceed with a subsequent document, we will
respond to the comments in the preamble to that document.
VI. Regulatory Impact Analysis
A. Statement of Need
We have learned through working with States as they unwind from the
continuous enrollment condition under the FFCRA and return to normal
operations that States face challenges in processing an unprecedented
volume of redeterminations. Through routine monitoring and technical
assistance, CMS is working with States to address and mitigate policy
and operational barriers to meeting all Federal eligibility and
enrollment requirements. Congress has given CMS new tools to hold
States accountable when States fail to meet Federal redetermination
requirements during the period from April 1, 2023, to June 30, 2024.
In this rulemaking, we implement State reporting requirements and
CMS' enforcement authorities under section 1902(tt) of the Act. We
interpret and implement statutory language and specify parameters
related to when States will be required to submit certain data. We also
specify how CMS interprets and will calculate the FMAP reduction
required under section 1902(tt)(2)(A) of the Act for a State's failure
to comply with the reporting requirements in section 1902(tt)(1) of the
Act for a quarter during the period from July 1, 2023, through June 30,
2024. We also specify parameters related to when States that are
noncompliant with reporting requirements in section 1902(tt)(1) of the
Act or with Federal eligibility redetermination requirements must
submit a CAP, and when they will be required to suspend some or all
disenrollments of eligibility for procedural reasons, and/or pay CMPs.
We also specify the conditions under which CMS would lift requirements
to suspend procedural disenrollments and CMPs as States come into
compliance with Federal redetermination and reporting requirements via
submission or implementation of their approved CAPs. Together, the
changes in this rule will give States clear guidance about how to
comply with the new reporting requirements and how CMS will take
enforcement action for failure to comply with these new reporting
requirements and Federal eligibility redetermination requirements. The
new enforcement tools in section 1902(tt) of the Act are expected to
help CMS prevent loss of coverage for eligible beneficiaries.
B. Overall Impact
We have examined the impacts of this rule as required by E.O. 12866
on Regulatory Planning and Review (September 30, 1993), E.O. 13563 on
Improving Regulation and Regulatory Review (January 18, 2011),
Executive Order 14094 entitled ``Modernizing Regulatory Review'' (April
6, 2023), the Regulatory Flexibility Act (RFA) (September 19, 1980,
Pub. L. 96354), section 1102(b) of the Act, section 202 of the Unfunded
Mandates Reform Act (UMRA) of 1995 (March 22, 1995; Pub. L. 104-4),
E.O. 13132 on Federalism (August 4, 1999), and the Congressional Review
Act (CRA) (5 U.S.C. 804(2)). OMB has determined that this rule is non-
major under 5 U.S. Code Sec. 801, and therefore, is not subject to the
CRA and has also determined that this rule is not significant under
3(f)(1) of E.O. 12866.
We have estimated the potential impacts of this rule on Medicaid
enrollment and expenditures. Overall, the rule's impact is expected to
be limited. States are already aware of Federal redetermination
requirements and, as noted in sections I.C. and I.D of this rule, CMS
provides advice and technical assistance to help States comply with
these requirements and the new reporting requirements in section
1902(tt)(1) of the Act. When CMS becomes aware of a potential violation
of Federal requirements, we first attempt to work collaboratively with
the State to understand the nature and scope of the problem and to
identify appropriate alternative processes and procedures that the
State can adopt to avoid or minimize beneficiary harm until the State
can fix the problem and come into full compliance with Federal
requirements, consistent with our authority to enforce compliance with
section 1902 of the Act under section 1904 of the Act and Sec. 430.35.
In addition, the new enforcement authorities in this rule are only
applicable to State activities that occur during a time-limited period,
generally from April 1, 2023, to June 30, 2024.
This rule implements new enforcement tools that CMS can use to
address violations of Federal Medicaid redetermination or reporting
requirements that occur during a period that generally aligns with
States' unwinding periods. Beginning with the analysis of
redetermination requirements, we start with an assumption that in most
cases redeterminations would be accurate and follow required processes
and, thus, that the new enforcement tools implemented
[[Page 84731]]
through this rule will not be widely needed. Even though the Federal
government and States already have processes in place to ensure
redeterminations are done correctly and States are already required to
do so, the new enforcement authorities will give CMS additional tools
to enforce compliance with these requirements. As noted in section I.D.
and above, CMS attempts to work collaboratively with a State first to
understand the nature and scope of any potential violation of Federal
requirements and to identify appropriate alternative processes and
procedures that the State can adopt to avoid or minimize beneficiary
harm until the State can fix the problem and come into full compliance
with Federal requirements. However, notwithstanding those efforts, it
is possible that a few States might still be noncompliant, thus making
it necessary for CMS to use the enforcement tools implemented in this
rule.
It is possible that in the course of States coming into compliance
with the requirements enforceable through section 1902(tt) of the Act
absent this rule, some eligible individuals would remain enrolled who
might have otherwise been disenrolled for procedural reasons due to a
State's failure to comply with redetermination requirements. The
impacts estimated in this section depend on the effectiveness of this
rule at ensuring that eligibility redeterminations are done correctly,
as well as the assumptions about how many unauthorized procedural
disenrollments would have occurred absent this rule.
In the Mid-Session Review of the President's FY 2024 Budget,\31\
CMS projected that Medicaid enrollment would decline by about 18
million enrollees due to the unwinding of the Medicaid continuous
enrollment condition through the end of fiscal year 2024 (or about 19
percent as measured from the peak of Medicaid enrollment in March-April
2023). This does not include individuals who newly enroll over this
period.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\31\ https://www.whitehouse.gov/wp-content/uploads/2023/07/msr_fy2024.pdf.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
To develop the estimates, we started with the following
assumptions. First, we assumed that a maximum of five States would be
out of compliance with the Federal redetermination requirements under
this rule and be subject to CAPs and suspensions of procedural
disenrollments and/or CMPs if they did not submit or implement an
approvable CAP. We assumed that all States would take the appropriate
steps to submit or implement CAPs and, thus, that CMS would require no
suspensions of procedural disenrollments and impose no CMPs. Second, we
assumed that States out of compliance with Federal redetermination
requirements would have about 5 percent more individuals found
ineligible and that those individuals would still be eligible and would
have remained enrolled if redeterminations were done accurately. Third,
we assumed that about 40 percent of enrollees who would have been
disenrolled would have ultimately re-enrolled within 12 months. We
assumed that this rule would bring all States into compliance and that
individuals wrongly disenrolled would be re-enrolled; in future cases,
this rule would also prevent those incorrect disenrollments from
occurring. We assume that any such effects would start by early 2024.
We estimate that the rule would increase Medicaid enrollment by
about 7,000 individuals in fiscal year 2024 and 13,000 individuals in
fiscal year 2025 (average annual enrollment). We estimate that total
Medicaid spending due to increased enrollment would be about $50
million higher in fiscal year 2024 ($36 million Federal) and about $93
million higher annually in fiscal year 2025 and subsequent years ($66
million Federal).
Actual impacts could be greater than or less than estimated here.
Future spending and enrollment could grow faster or slower than
projected. More or fewer States could be out of compliance than we have
assumed, and the number of unauthorized procedural disenrollments could
also be higher or lower than we have assumed. This rule could also be
more or less effective than we expect. Moreover, if one or more States
did not comply with these requirements, those States could be assessed
CMPs that would result in a transfer from States to CMS and could lead
to additional actions.
This rule also implements a statutory FMAP reduction for
noncompliance with reporting requirements under section 1902(tt)(1) of
the Act. States out of compliance with these reporting requirements
between July 1, 2023, and June 30, 2024, would be assessed a reduction
in FMAP of 0.25 percentage points for each quarter they are out of
compliance, and this would increase by 0.25 percentage points for each
additional quarter they are out of compliance. States that fail to
comply with reporting requirements may also be required to submit a
CAP, and if the reporting violations impeded CMS oversight of
procedural disenrollments, States that fail to submit or implement an
approvable CAP will be required to suspend procedural disenrollments
and will also be subject to CMPs. If the reporting violation did not
impede CMS' oversight of procedural disenrollments, CMS will delay
suspension of procedural disenrollments for 1 month but will still
impose CMPs (except in extraordinary circumstances, as discussed in
section II.E. of this rule). We assume that at most an additional three
States would be out of compliance with reporting requirements for one
quarter each. Although States that are noncompliant are at risk of
additional enforcement action, we estimate that most States will
correct violations without a CAP or, if a CAP is imposed, will
implement the CAP to address any violations and not be subject to
additional enforcement actions. We estimate that the impact of the
States that are noncompliant with reporting requirements would result
in a FMAP reduction of $30 million, which would be a transfer from
those States to the Federal government.
In total and consistent with the assumptions noted above, the
estimated net effects of this rule would be Federal costs of about $6
million in fiscal year 2024 ($36 million in costs for additional
enrollment, and $30 million in collections from States assessed an FMAP
reduction) and $66 million in fiscal year 2025. For States, the
estimated effects are $44 million in costs in fiscal year 2024 ($14
million in costs for additional enrollment, and $30 million in payments
related to the FMAP reduction) and $27 million in fiscal year 2025.
The actual impact could be more or less than we have estimated. The
key uncertainties are the number of States out of compliance, which
States those would be (as Federal spending varies significantly across
States, depending on the Medicaid population and spending levels and
the FMAP rates for each State), and the number of quarters those States
are out of compliance. We anticipate that States would quickly remedy
any issues that would result in an FMAP reduction, and thus would be
unlikely to be assessed an FMAP reduction in more than one quarter.
Executive Orders 12866 and 13563 direct agencies to assess all
costs and benefits of available regulatory alternatives and, if
regulation is necessary, to select regulatory approaches that maximize
net benefits (including potential economic, environmental, public
health and safety effects, distributive impacts, and equity). Executive
Order 14094 amends section 3(f) of Executive Order 12866. The amended
section 3(f) of Executive Order 12866 defines a ``significant
[[Page 84732]]
regulatory action'' as an action that is likely to result in a rule:
(1) having an annual effect on the economy of $200 million or more in
any 1 year (adjusted every 3 years by the Administrator of the Office
of Information and Regulatory Affairs (OIRA) for changes in gross
domestic product), or adversely affect in a material way the economy, a
sector of the economy, productivity, competition, jobs, the
environment, public health or safety, or State, local, territorial, or
tribal governments or communities; (2) creating a serious inconsistency
or otherwise interfering with an action taken or planned by another
agency; (3) materially altering the budgetary impacts of entitlement
grants, user fees, or loan programs or the rights and obligations of
recipients thereof; or (4) raise legal or policy issues for which
centralized review would meaningfully further the President's
priorities or the principles set forth in this Executive order, as
specifically authorized in a timely manner by the Administrator of OIRA
in each case.
A regulatory impact analysis (RIA) must be prepared for rules that
are significant under section 3(f)(1) of Executive Order 12866 as
amended by Executive Order 14094 ($200 million or more in any 1 year).
Based on our analysis, OIRA has designated this rule as not significant
under section 3(f)(1). In reviewing the economic effect of this rule,
we have assumed that States will generally meet reporting requirements
and requirements for Medicaid eligibility redeterminations and continue
to meet the conditions for the temporary FFCRA FMAP increase, and thus
will not be subject to FMAP reductions, suspensions of procedural
disenrollments, CMPs, or loss of Federal matching funds that would rise
to the level of $200 million or more in any one year. While we assume
that only a handful of States would have failed to comply absent this
interim final rule, even in those hypothetical cases, we assume States
will come into compliance promptly and avoid the enforcement actions
described in this interim final rule, further minimizing the rule's
economic impact. For example, we assumed States will use existing
contracts to modify systems to ensure data are reported to CMS timely.
The RFA requires agencies to analyze options for regulatory relief
of small businesses. For purposes of the RFA, small entities include
small businesses, nonprofit organizations, and small governmental
jurisdictions. Most hospitals and most other providers and suppliers
are small entities, either by nonprofit status or by having revenues of
less than $9.0 million to $47.0 million in any one year. Individuals
and States are not included in the definition of a small entity. The
good cause exception of the APA applicable to this rule allows CMS to
waive the regulatory impact analysis typically required under the RFA.
In addition, section 1102(b) of the Act requires CMS to prepare an
RIA if a rule may have a significant impact on the operations of a
substantial number of small rural hospitals. This analysis must conform
to the provisions of section 604 of the RFA. For purposes of section
1102(b) of the Act, we define a small rural hospital as a hospital that
is located outside a Metropolitan Statistical Area and has fewer than
100 beds. This rule applies to State Medicaid and CHIP agencies and
will not add requirements for rural hospitals or other small providers.
Therefore, we are not preparing an analysis for section 1102(b) of the
Act because we have determined, and the Secretary certifies, that this
rule will not have a significant impact on the operations of a
substantial number of small rural hospitals.
Section 202 of the UMRA also requires that agencies assess
anticipated costs and benefits before issuing any rule whose mandates
require spending in any one year of $100 million in 1995 dollars,
updated annually for inflation. In 2023, that is approximately $177
million. We believe that this rule will not mandate spending by State,
local, or tribal governments nor by private sector entities over this
level.
C. Administrative Burden
We do not anticipate this rule will significantly impact
administrative spending by the Federal Government.
D. Alternatives Considered
In developing this final rule, the following alternatives were
considered:
1. Not Finalizing the Rule
We considered not finalizing this rule and considering the
provisions of section 1902(tt) of the Act to be self-implementing.
However, we believe the authority to require State reporting under
section 1902(tt)(1) of the Act, to impose CAPs on States that fail to
meet Federal redetermination requirements or the reporting requirements
under section 1902(tt)(1) of the Act, and to suspend procedural
disenrollments and impose CMPs on States that fail to submit or
implement a required CAP, required regulation in order to enable CMS to
exercise its full statutory enforcement authority fairly and uniformly.
For example, we believe the mitigating circumstances outlined in this
rule, which memorialize when and how CMS will exercise its discretion
to take enforcement action under section 1902(tt)(2)(B) of the Act,
necessitated regulation.
2. Implementing Section 1902(tt) of the Act Through Subregulatory
Guidance
We considered not promulgating a regulation but instead
implementing section 1902(tt) of the Act through subregulatory
guidance. However, CMS believes that the policy interpretations in this
rule are different enough from the statutory language to necessitate
regulation. For example, while the statute gives CMS discretion
regarding whether to require a State to submit a CAP and regarding
whether to require suspension of procedural disenrollments or impose
CMPs if a State fails to submit or implement that CAP, the rule
outlines in detail how CMS will exercise this discretion.
3. Promulgating a Proposed Rule
We considered promulgating a proposed rule rather than an IFC to
implement these same provisions. However, as outlined in section III.
of this rule, we believe notice-and-comment procedures and a delay in
the effective date of this rule are impracticable and/or contrary to
the public interest.
E. Limitations of the Analysis
As described previously, we have assumed that all but three States
would comply with the reporting requirements, and all but five States
would comply with Federal redetermination requirements referenced in
this interim final rule and be subject to the CAP requirements at
430.49(b). It is possible that one or more of these States would fail
to comply with the CAP requirements, and thus be ineligible for the
temporary FFCRA FMAP increase, or be subject to the other penalties
discussed in this rule, including suspension of procedural
disenrollments and CMPs, and thus that the economic impact of the rule
would be greater. In those cases, we would also assume more individuals
would be disenrolled than would occur if the State complied with these
requirements. We have not attempted to quantify the non-administrative
program impact (that is, changes in enrollment and/or spending on
benefits, not the costs associated with training/hiring workers,
programming systems, or printing notices, for example) of a State
failing to comply with the CAP requirements in the interim final rule.
In accordance with the provisions of Executive Order 12866, this
regulation
[[Page 84733]]
was reviewed by the Office of Management and Budget.
Chiquita Brooks-LaSure, Administrator of the Centers for Medicare &
Medicaid Services, approved this document on September 27, 2023.
List of Subjects
42 CFR Part 430
Administrative practice and procedure, Grant programs--health,
Medicaid, Reporting and recordkeeping requirements.
42 CFR Part 435
Aid to Families with Dependent Children, Grant programs--health,
Medicaid, Reporting and recordkeeping requirements, Supplemental
Security Income (SSI), Wages.
45 CFR Part 16
Procedures of the Departmental Grants Appeals Board.
For the reasons set forth in the preamble, the Centers for Medicare
& Medicaid Services and the Department of Health and Human Services
amend 42 CFR chapter IV and 45 CFR subtitle A, subchapter A, as set
forth below:
Title 42
PART 430--GRANTS TO STATES FOR MEDICAL ASSISTANCE PROGRAMS
0
1. The authority citation for part 430 continues to read as follows--
Authority: Sec. 1102 of the Social Security Act, (42 U.S.C.
1302).
0
2. Section 430.3 is amended by revising the introductory text and
adding paragraph (d) to read as follows:
Sec. 430.3 Appeals under Medicaid.
Four distinct types of disputes may arise under Medicaid.
* * * * *
(d) Imposition of suspensions of procedural disenrollments and
civil money penalties under section 430.49 of this part. Disputes that
pertain to CMS' imposition of suspensions of procedural disenrollments
and civil money penalties under Sec. 430.49(c) of this part are heard
by the Board in accordance with procedures set forth in 45 CFR part 16.
0
3. Section 430.5 is amended by adding definitions for ``Federal
redetermination requirements'' and ``Procedural disenrollment'' in
alphabetical order to read as follows:
Sec. 430.5 Definitions.
* * * * *
Federal redetermination requirements means, for the purposes of
Sec. 430.49, Federal requirements applicable to eligibility
redeterminations outlined in 42 CFR 435.916, including renewal
strategies authorized under section 1902(e)(14)(A) of the Social
Security Act or other alternative processes and procedures approved by
CMS under section 1902(e)(14)(A) of the Act or section 6008(f)(2)(A) of
the Families First Coronavirus Response Act.
Procedural disenrollment means, for the purposes of Sec. 430.49
and 45 CFR part 16, a termination of a beneficiary's Medicaid
eligibility after advance notice under subpart E of part 431 for
reasons that are unrelated to a State's determination of whether the
individual meets eligibility criteria to qualify for coverage,
including for failure to return a renewal form or documentation needed
by the State to make a determination of eligibility.
* * * * *
0
4. Section 430.49 is added to subpart C to read as follows:
Sec. 430.49 Corrective action plans, suspensions of procedural
disenrollments, and civil money penalties.
(a) Statutory basis. This section interprets and implements section
1902(tt)(2)(B) of the Social Security Act.
(b) Corrective action plans--(1) Basis for corrective action. After
consideration of any mitigating circumstances in accordance with
paragraph (d) of this section and notwithstanding whether an FMAP
reduction has been imposed under Sec. 435.928 of this subchapter, CMS
will determine whether to require the State to submit a corrective
action plan if CMS finds that the State is not in compliance during the
period beginning on April 1, 2023, through June 30, 2024, with either
of the following requirements:
(i) The requirement to submit data required under section
1902(tt)(1) of the Act in accordance with Sec. 435.927 of this
subchapter; or
(ii) Federal redetermination requirements described at Sec. 430.5.
(2) Notice of need for corrective action plan. If, after
considering mitigating circumstances as described in paragraph (d) of
this section, the Administrator decides to require the State to submit
and implement a corrective action plan for noncompliance described in
paragraph (b)(1) of this section or to revise or resubmit such a plan,
the Administrator will provide the State with a written notice
directing the State to submit a corrective action plan to correct the
identified areas of noncompliance. Such notice will--
(i) Explain the violation of Federal redetermination or reporting
requirements that CMS has identified and the basis for CMS' finding;
(ii) Inform the State of the requirement to submit and implement a
corrective action plan:
(iii) Include instructions on the method and deadline by which the
State must submit a corrective action plan to CMS; and
(iv) Explain the enforcement actions that CMS may pursue if the
State fails to submit or implement an approved corrective action plan,
including if CMS disapproves the State's submitted CAP or if the State
fails to meet the requirements set forth in the approved CAP, in
accordance with this section.
(3) Content of corrective action plan. A corrective action plan
must describe in detail--
(i) The actions the State will take immediately, if needed to
prevent further harm or risk of harm to beneficiaries while it
implements the corrective action plan, including to prevent increased
burden for beneficiaries in completing the renewal process, loss of
coverage at renewal for individuals who continue to meet the
substantive eligibility criteria and whose eligibility should otherwise
be retained but for failure to meet a procedural requirement, and
delays in access to coverage or care;
(ii) The steps the State will take to ensure compliance with
Federal requirements, including but not limited to new policies,
procedures, operational processes or systems changes it will implement;
(iii) Key milestones and a detailed timeline for achieving
compliance; and
(iv) A plan for communicating the steps the State will take to
prevent actual harm or risk of harm to beneficiaries and to ensure
compliance with Federal requirements per paragraphs (b)(3)(i) and (ii)
of this section to State staff, including staff of non-Medicaid
agencies or entities to which the agency has delegated authority to
conduct redeterminations of eligibility in accordance with Sec.
431.10(c)(1)(i) of this subchapter; CMS; and beneficiaries, as
applicable.
(4) Timeframes for submission, approval, and implementation of
corrective action plan--(i) Submission. A State that receives a notice
described in paragraph (b)(2) of this section must submit a corrective
action plan, including the elements in paragraph (b)(3) of this
section, not later than 14 calendar days from the date of the notice of
noncompliance.
(ii) Approval. CMS must approve or disapprove a corrective action
plan submitted by the State within 21 calendar days of the date it is
submitted.
[[Page 84734]]
If CMS does not approve or disapprove the corrective action plan within
21 calendar days of submission, the corrective action plan will be
deemed approved.
(iii) Implementation. A State must begin implementation of the
corrective action plan not later than 14 calendar days after the date
that either the State receives CMS approval, or the corrective action
plan is deemed approved.
(5) Approval or disapproval of corrective action plan. A corrective
action plan will be approved if CMS determines that the plan-
(i) Meets the requirements at paragraph (b)(3) of this section;
(ii) Promptly eliminates or minimizes any harm or risk of harm to
beneficiaries, including increased burden for beneficiaries in
completing the renewal process, loss of coverage at renewal for
individuals who continue to meet the substantive eligibility criteria
and whose eligibility should otherwise be retained but for failure to
meet a procedural requirement, and delays in access to coverage or care
due to the noncompliance to be addressed by the plan; and
(iii) Results in the State achieving compliance in a reasonable
time, taking into account systems challenges and circumstances faced by
the agencies involved.
(c) Suspensions of procedural disenrollments and civil money
penalties. (1) After considering any applicable mitigating
circumstances in accordance with paragraph (d) of this section and
notwithstanding whether the State is subject to an FMAP reduction under
Sec. 435.928 of this subchapter, CMS may take one or both of the
following actions if the State fails to submit or implement an approved
corrective action plan, including if CMS disapproves the State's
submitted corrective action plan due to the State's failure to include
required elements in accordance with the requirements described in
paragraph (b) of this section, or if the State fails to meet the
requirements set forth in the approved corrective action plan:
(i) Require the State to suspend some or all procedural
disenrollments, in accordance with paragraph (c)(3)(i) of this section;
and
(ii) Impose civil money penalties in accordance with paragraph
(c)(3)(ii) of this section.
(2) Notice. (i) Prior to requiring the State to suspend procedural
disenrollments of Medicaid eligibility or imposing civil money
penalties, CMS will issue a notice to the State. Such notice will
include--
(A) A description of the enforcement action(s) CMS is taking and
the basis for such action(s);
(B) Whether CMS is requiring the State to suspend some or all
procedural disenrollments and, in the case of a partial suspension, the
affected populations;
(C) The date on which the State must begin suspending procedural
disenrollments, if applicable;
(D) The daily amount owed for any civil money penalties imposed,
the date the penalties will begin to be charged, the timeline for
payment (including information on how the timeline for payment would be
affected by an appeal), and instructions on how to submit payment;
(E) The steps the State must take to cure its noncompliance and for
CMS to lift the enforcement action(s); and
(F) Information on the State's appeal rights as described in
paragraph (f) of this section, including the deadline to submit an
appeal request, and the effect of requesting an appeal on the
applicability of any enforcement actions pending the decision in such
appeal. The notice must also provide that the decision outlined in the
notice is final unless it is timely appealed as described in paragraph
(f) of this section.
(ii) CMS may issue additional notices requiring a State to take
additional actions (including paying increased civil money penalties or
implementing or broadening the scope of a required suspension of
procedural disenrollments) if CMS identifies additional violations of
corrective action plan provisions. Such notices will meet the
requirements outlined in paragraph (c)(2)(i) of this section.
(3) Scope of actions--(i) Suspensions of procedural disenrollments.
(A) If the noncompliance determined by CMS under paragraph (b)(1) of
this section impacts a substantial number of (meaning all or nearly
all) individuals who are or should have been found eligible for
Medicaid, CMS will require the State to suspend all procedural
disenrollments.
(B) If the impact of the noncompliance is limited (for example, to
a specific population or geographic area), CMS may limit the suspension
of procedural disenrollments to the impacted population(s). After
requiring a limited suspension of procedural disenrollments, CMS may
later opt to require the State to suspend all procedural disenrollments
if CMS subsequently determines that the impact of the noncompliance is
greater than was initially determined, or if the State fails to comply
with the initial requirement to suspend some procedural disenrollments
in accordance with the notice issued under paragraph (c)(2) of this
section. In these circumstances, CMS will issue a subsequent notice
under paragraph (c)(2).
(ii) Civil money penalties. CMS may require the State to pay a
civil money penalty of not more than $100,000, as adjusted annually
under 45 CFR part 102, for each day that the State has not submitted or
implemented an approved corrective action plan in accordance with the
requirements described in paragraph (b) of this section or has failed
to meet the requirements of the approved plan, until the penalty is
lifted due to the State meeting the conditions described in paragraph
(e) of this section.
(A) Civil money penalties will start accruing five (5) calendar
days after the date of the initial notice described in paragraph (c)(2)
of this section and become payable 60 calendar days after the date of
the notice, if not timely appealed, or 60 calendar days after issuance
of a final determination at the conclusion of any appeal pursuant to
paragraph (f) of this section.
(B) The amount of any applicable civil money penalties for failure
to submit or implement a corrective action plan, including if CMS
disapproves the State's submitted corrective action plan or if the
State fails to meet the requirements set forth in the approved
corrective action plan, will be determined according to the following
formula, after the date specified in paragraph (c)(3)(ii)(A) of this
section: Days 1-30 of noncompliance: $25,000/day; Days 31-60 of
noncompliance: $50,000/day; and Days 61 or more of noncompliance until
lifted in accordance with paragraph (e) of this section: $100,000/day.
Each of these amounts is adjusted annually under 45 CFR part 102.
(C) Consistent with paragraph (c)(2)(ii) of this section, if CMS
identifies additional violations of corrective action plan provisions,
CMS may issue additional notices to increase civil money penalties more
quickly than provided for by the formula in paragraph (c)(3)(ii)(B) of
this section.
(4) Noncompliance with requirements to suspend procedural
disenrollments or pay civil money penalties. If the State fails to
suspend procedural disenrollments as required pursuant to a notice
described in paragraph (c)(2) of this section, or to pay civil money
penalties as specified in that notice, or both, CMS may issue an
additional notice pursuant to paragraph (c)(2) of this section to
increase the civil money penalties to the maximum allowable
[[Page 84735]]
daily amount, if not already reached, or may pursue additional
enforcement action under section 1904 of the Act and Sec. 430.35 of
this subpart, including withholding some or all Federal financial
participation.
(d) Mitigating circumstances. CMS will consider the following
mitigating circumstances when deciding whether to take the following
enforcement actions:
(1) Requirement to submit corrective action plan for violation of
redetermination requirements. In the case of noncompliance relating to
a violation of Federal redetermination requirements, CMS may delay
requiring, or determine not to require, a State to submit a corrective
action plan under paragraph (b) of this section if--
(i) The noncompliance caused neither actual harm nor a substantial
risk of harm to beneficiaries, including increased burden for
beneficiaries in completing the renewal process, loss of coverage at
renewal for individuals who continue to meet the substantive
eligibility criteria and whose eligibility should otherwise be retained
but for failure to meet a procedural requirement, and delays in access
to coverage or care to beneficiaries; or
(ii) CMS determines that there is an emergency or other
extraordinary circumstances preventing the State's compliance.
(2) Requirement to submit corrective action plan for violation of
reporting requirements. In the case of noncompliance relating to a
violation of the reporting requirements under Sec. 435.927 of this
subchapter, CMS may delay requiring, or determine not to require, a
State to submit a corrective action plan under paragraph (b) of this
section if--
(i) CMS has determined that the State implementing a corrective
action plan is not necessary to ensure that the noncompliance is
remedied; or
(ii) CMS determines that there is an emergency or other
extraordinary circumstances preventing the State's compliance.
(3) Suspensions of procedural disenrollments and imposition of
civil money penalties. (i) In the case of a State that has failed to
submit or implement an approved corrective action plan relating to a
violation of either the reporting requirements under Sec. 435.927 of
this subchapter or Federal redetermination requirements, CMS may delay
or forgo imposing civil money penalties if CMS determines that the
State faces an emergency or other extraordinary circumstances that--
(A) Occurred after the violation resulting in CMS' requirement of a
CAP for noncompliance with Federal redetermination requirements or
reporting requirements under Sec. 435.927; and
(B) Has significantly impeded the State's ability to submit or
implement a corrective action plan.
(ii) In the case of a State's failure to submit or implement a
corrective action plan relating to a violation of the reporting
requirements under Sec. 435.927 of this subchapter in which the
underlying reporting violation does not impede CMS' oversight of the
State's procedural disenrollments, CMS will:
(A) Delay suspension of procedural disenrollments for 1 month; and
(B) Impose civil money penalties, except in cases where there are
also extraordinary circumstances as described in paragraph (d)(3)(i) of
this section.
(e) Lifting of enforcement actions. (1) In cases where CMS had sent
a State a notice under paragraph (c)(2) of this section for failure to
submit or implement an approved corrective action plan--
(i) The State will be required to continue any suspension of
procedural disenrollments required pursuant to such notice, and any
civil money penalties imposed in accordance with the terms of such
notice will continue to be charged, until--
(A) For a State that failed to submit a corrective action plan, the
State submits a corrective action plan that CMS determines is
approvable consistent with paragraph (b)(5) of this section.
(B) For a State that failed to implement an approved corrective
action plan, the State has implemented or resumed implementation of
such plan.
(ii) CMS will continue the accrual of civil money penalties from
the date specified in the original notice provided to the State under
paragraph (c)(2) of this section until CMS determines whether the plan
is approvable. If CMS determines that the plan is approvable, CMS will
retroactively end the accrual of the civil money penalties on the day
the CAP was submitted and cease charging civil money penalties
prospectively. If CMS determines that the plan is not approvable, CMS
will continue charging civil money penalties imposed under the terms of
the enforcement notice without interruption until the State submits an
approvable plan.
(2) Where a State has met the conditions under paragraph (e)(1)(i)
of this section, CMS will notify the State that the enforcement actions
are being lifted. For States that were required to suspend procedural
disenrollments, such notice will include the date on which the State
may resume such disenrollments. For States that were subject to civil
money penalties, such notice will include the date on which such civil
money penalties stopped accruing, the total number of days for which
civil money penalties accrued and the amount(s) of such civil money
penalties, and the total amount of civil money penalties owed.
(f) Administrative review--(1) Appeal to the Departmental Appeals
Board. A State that is dissatisfied with CMS's determination under
paragraph (c) of this section that the State must suspend procedural
disenrollments or pay civil money penalties because the State has
failed to submit or implement an approvable corrective action plan may
appeal, pursuant to 45 CFR part 16, the imposition of such suspensions
of procedural disenrollments or civil money penalties to the
Departmental Appeals Board (the Board) within 30 days after receipt of
a notice described in paragraph (c)(2) of this section. The appeal
request must comply with 45 CFR 16.7, and the process for counting days
to submit an appeal will follow the provisions under 45 CFR 16.19. The
appeals process is governed by 45 CFR part 16. If the State does not
submit an appeal request within the 30-day timeframe provided for an
appeal to the Board, then the decision described in the notice received
by the State under paragraph (c)(2) of this section is the final
decision of the Secretary and is final agency action within the meaning
of 5 U.S.C. 704.
(2) Reconsiderations by the Administrator. (i) If any party to the
appeal is dissatisfied with the Board's decision under paragraph (f)(1)
of this section, it may seek the Administrator's reconsideration of
that decision within 15 calendar days of receiving notice of the
decision pursuant to 45 CFR 16.21.
(A) The request for reconsideration must be filed with the
Administrator and must include a copy of the Board's decision, a brief
statement of why the party believes the decision was wrong, and a
statement of the amount of any civil money penalties in dispute.
(B) The party requesting reconsideration must send a copy of the
request described in paragraph (f)(2)(i)(A) of this section to all
other parties to the appeal and other participants in the appeal (as
described in 45 CFR 16.16) at the same time that the request is filed
with the Administrator.
(C) Any other party to the appeal, or other participant in the
appeal, may respond to the request for reconsideration in writing and
file their
[[Page 84736]]
response with the Administrator within 15 calendar days of the date the
request for reconsideration is filed with the Administrator.
(D) The Administrator will review the Board's decision and any
additional information submitted by the parties and other participants
under paragraphs (f)(2)(i)(A) or (C) of this section and, within 60
calendar days after the Board issues notice of its decision under 45
CFR 16.21, will either affirm the Board's decision or issue a new
decision.
(ii) Within the 60-day period that is described in paragraph
(f)(2)(i)(D) of this section, the Administrator may also modify or
reverse the Board's decision even if no party to the appeal has
requested reconsideration of that decision.
(iii) If no request for reconsideration is filed under paragraph
(f)(2)(i) of this section and the Administrator does not modify or
reverse the Board's decision within the 60-day period described in
paragraph (f)(2)(ii) of this section, then the decision of the Board is
the final determination of the Secretary and is final agency action, as
described in paragraph (f)(2)(v) of this section, and the Administrator
will provide notice to all parties and other participants of such
decision as described in paragraph (f)(2)(iv) of this section.
(iv) The Administrator will provide a notice to all parties and
other participants of the final decision together with a notice
indicating that this is the final determination of the Secretary and is
final agency action, as described in paragraph (f)(2)(v) of this
section.
(v) The determination of the Administrator pursuant to paragraph
(f)(2)(i)(D) or (f)(2)(ii) of this section is the final determination
of the Secretary and is final agency action within the meaning of 5
U.S.C. 704.
(g) Severability. Any provision of this section held to be invalid
or unenforceable by its terms, or as applied to any person or
circumstance, or stayed pending further State action, shall be
severable from this section and shall not affect the remainder thereof
or the application of the provision to persons not similarly situated
or to dissimilar circumstances.
PART 435--ELIGIBILITY IN THE STATES, DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA, THE
NORTHERN MARIANA ISLANDS, AND AMERICAN SAMOA
0
5. The authority citation for part 435 continues to read as follows--
Authority: 42 U.S.C. 1302.
0
6. Sections 435.927 and 435.928 are added to subpart J to read as
follows:
Sec. 435.927 Requirements for States to submit certain data on
redeterminations.
(a) Basis. This section implements section 1902(tt)(1) of the
Social Security Act.
(b) Definitions. As used in this section--
(1) Timely means the following:
(i) Data submitted according to an existing process governed by CMS
regulation or guidance (other than data submitted through the
Transformed Medicaid Statistical Information System (T-MSIS)) are
timely if they are reported by the deadline specified in the applicable
CMS regulation or guidance.
(ii) Data submitted under the existing process for the T-MSIS are
timely if they are submitted on a monthly basis, before the last day of
the subsequent month.
(iii) Data that States submit according to an alternative process
approved by CMS or an alternative timeline approved by CMS under the
circumstances specified in paragraph (b)(4) of this section are timely
if they are submitted on the deadline CMS specifies when it approves
the alternative process or timeline.
(2) Complete means that all required elements are reported.
(3) Sufficient quality means the following:
(i) For data submitted according to an existing process governed by
CMS regulation or guidance, the data adhere to specifications outlined
in the applicable CMS regulation or guidance.
(ii) For data submitted according to an alternative process
approved by CMS under the circumstances specified in paragraph (b)(4)
of this section, the data adheres to the specifications approved by CMS
when it approves the alternative process.
(4) Good faith effort means that--
(i) The State is experiencing significant, unforeseeable, or
unavoidable challenges in complying with the reporting requirements of
paragraph (c) of this section, or is experiencing significant
foreseeable challenges in complying and is working to remediate these
challenges but needs additional time to address them;
(ii) The State requested, and CMS approved an alternative process
for submitting the data or an alternative timeline; and
(iii) The approved alternative process for submitting the data or
timeline is sufficient to ensure CMS can obtain and use the data to
meet CMS' obligations to report the data publicly per section
1902(tt)(1) of the Act.
(c) Reporting requirement. For data representing activities
conducted by a State during the time period beginning April 1, 2023,
and ending June 30, 2024, each State must submit to CMS the data
described in paragraph (d) of this section, and those data must be
timely, complete, and of sufficient quality (as those terms are defined
in paragraph (b) of this section). To meet this requirement, a State
must:
(1) Submit data via existing CMS-approved processes; or
(2) Submit data through alternative processes approved by CMS,
under the circumstances specified in paragraph (b)(4) of this section.
(d) Required data elements. States must submit the following data
to CMS in accordance with paragraph (c) of this section:
(1) Total number of Medicaid and Children's Health Insurance
Program (CHIP) beneficiaries for whom a renewal was initiated.
(2) Total number of Medicaid and CHIP beneficiaries whose Medicaid
or CHIP coverage is renewed.
(3) Of the Medicaid and CHIP beneficiaries whose Medicaid or CHIP
coverage is renewed, the total number whose coverage is renewed on an
ex parte basis.
(4) Total number of individuals whose coverage for Medicaid or CHIP
was terminated.
(5) Total number of individuals whose coverage for Medicaid or CHIP
was terminated for procedural reasons.
(6) Total number of beneficiaries who were enrolled in a separate
CHIP.
(7) For each State call center, total call center volume.
(8) For each State call center, average wait times.
(9) For each State call center, average abandonment rate.
(10) For States with State-based Exchanges (SBEs) using a Non-
Integrated Eligibility System and not using the Federal Exchange
eligibility and enrollment platform:
(i) Total number of individuals whose accounts are received by the
SBE or Basic Health Program (BHP) due to a Medicaid/CHIP
redetermination.
(ii) Total number of individuals who apply for coverage due to a
Medicaid/CHIP redetermination who are determined eligible for a QHP or
a BHP.
(iii) Total number of individuals who apply for coverage due to a
Medicaid/CHIP redetermination who are determined eligible for a QHP or
a BHP, and who make a QHP plan selection or are enrolled in a BHP.
(11) For States with SBEs with an Integrated Eligibility System and
not using the Federal Exchange eligibility and enrollment platform:
(i) Total number of individuals who apply for coverage due to a
Medicaid/
[[Page 84737]]
CHIP redetermination who are determined eligible for a QHP or a BHP.
(ii) Total number of individuals who apply for coverage due to a
Medicaid/CHIP redetermination who are determined eligible for a QHP or
BHP, and who make a QHP plan selection or are enrolled in a BHP.
(e) Severability. Any provision of this section held to be invalid
or unenforceable by its terms, or as applied to any person or
circumstance, or stayed pending further State action, shall be
severable from this section and shall not affect the remainder thereof
or the application of the provision to persons not similarly situated
or to dissimilar circumstances.
Sec. 435.928 Reduction in FMAP for failure to submit certain data.
(a) Basis. This section implements section 1902(tt)(2)(A) of the
Social Security Act.
(b) Application of the FMAP reduction. (1) FMAP means the State-
specific Federal medical assistance percentage as defined in the first
sentence of section 1905(b) of the Act.
(2) If CMS finds that, for a fiscal quarter in the period beginning
on July 1, 2023, and ending on June 30, 2024, the State was
noncompliant with the requirements of Sec. 435.927, CMS will reduce
the State's Federal medical assistance percentage (FMAP) for that
fiscal quarter as described in paragraph (b)(4) of this section.
(3) A State is noncompliant in a fiscal quarter if it has failed to
comply with the reporting requirements described in Sec. 435.927 for
one or more months of the quarter.
(4) The FMAP reduction under paragraph (b)(2) of this section will
equal the product of 0.25 percentage points and the number of the
fiscal quarters during the period from July 1, 2023, through June 30,
2024, in which the State is noncompliant with the reporting
requirements described in Sec. 435.927. When States are noncompliant
in multiple quarters during that period, the FMAP reduction will
increase by 0.25 percentage points for each successive quarter of
noncompliance, even if nonconsecutive, but in no case will the
reduction for any single quarter exceed 1 percentage point.
(c) Severability. Any provision of this section held to be invalid
or unenforceable by its terms, or as applied to any person or
circumstance, or stayed pending further State action, shall be
severable from this section and shall not affect the remainder thereof
or the application of the provision to persons not similarly situated
or to dissimilar circumstances.
Title 45
PART 16--PROCEDURES OF THE DEPARTMENTAL GRANT APPEALS BOARD
0
7. The authority for part 16 continues to read as follows:
Authority: 5 U.S.C. 301 and secs. 1, 5, 6, and 7 of
Reorganization Plan No. 1 of 1953, 18 FR 2053, 67 Stat. 631 and
authorities cited in the Appendix.
0
8. Section 16.22 is amended by revising paragraphs (b)(3) and (4) and
adding paragraph (b)(5) to read as follows:
Sec. 16.22 The effect of an appeal.
* * * * *
(b) * * *
(3) In programs listed in appendix A, B.(a)(1), to this part
implement a decision to disallow Federal financial participation
claimed in expenditures reported on a statement of expenditures, by
recovering, withholding or offsetting payments, if the decision is
issued before the reported expenditures are included in the calculation
of a subsequent grant;
(4) Take other action to recover, withhold, or offset funds if
specifically authorized by statute or regulation; or
(5) Take action to require a State to suspend procedural
disenrollments, as defined at 42 CFR 430.5, or continue the accrual of
the civil money penalties a State owes under 42 CFR 430.49(c).
0
9. Appendix A of part 16 is amended in section B by adding paragraph
(a)(7) to read as follows:
Appendix A to Part 16--What Disputes the Board Reviews
* * * * *
B. * * *
(a) * * *
(7) Decisions relating to suspensions of procedural
disenrollments and civil money penalties under 42 CFR 430.49(c).
* * * * *
Xavier Becerra,
Secretary, Department of Health and Human Services.
[FR Doc. 2023-26640 Filed 12-4-23; 4:15 pm]
BILLING CODE 4120-01-P