Current through all regulations passed and filed through September 16, 2024
(A) This rule describes Ohio's medicaid
estate recovery program and the undue hardship waiver request
process.
(B) Definitions.
(1) "Estate" includes both of the following:
(a) All real and personal property and other
assets to be administered under Title XXI of the Revised Code and property that
would be administered under that title if not for section
2113.03 or
2113.031 of the Revised Code;
and
(b) Any other real and
personal property and other assets in which an individual had any legal title
or interest at the time of death (to the extent of the interest), including
assets conveyed to a survivor, heir, or assign of the individual through joint
tenancy, tenancy in common, survivorship, life estate, living trust, or other
arrangement.
(2) "Home"
as defined
in rule 5160:1-3-05.13 of the Administrative Code.
(3) "Individual," for the purpose of this
rule, means someone with past or current medicaid eligibility.
(4) "Permanently institutionalized
individual" as defined in section
5162.21 of the Revised
Code.
(5) "Person responsible for
the estate" as defined in section
2117.061 of the Revised Code.
(6) "Qualified long-
term care partnership (QLTCP)" as defined in rule 5160:1-6-
02.2 of the Administrative Code.
(7) "Time of death"
as defined
in section 5162.21 of the Revised
Code.
(C) The Ohio
attorney general (AGO) will seek recovery or adjustment, on behalf of the Ohio
department of medicaid (ODM), from the estates of the following individuals:
(1) A permanently institutionalized
individual of any age, in the amount of all medicaid benefits correctly paid
including managed care capitation payments;
or
(2) An individual fifty-five
years of age or older who is not permanently institutionalized, in the amount
of all medicaid benefits correctly paid including
managed care capitation payments (other than benefits paid on or after
January 1, 2010, under the medicare premium assistance programs set forth in
rule 5160:1-3- 02.1 of the Administrative Code) after
the individual attained such age.
(D) Any adjustment or recovery under
paragraph (C) of this rule may be sought only:
(1) After the death of the individual's
surviving spouse, if any; and
(2)
When the individual has no surviving child who either is under age twenty-one
or is blind or permanently and totally disabled as defined in Chapter 5160:1-3
of the Administrative Code; and
(3)
When
recovery is sought against a permanently institutionalized individual under
paragraph (C)(1) of this rule, no recovery may be made against the individual's
home while either of the following lawfully resides in the home:
(a) The permanently institutionalized
individual's sibling who:
(i) Resided in the
home for at least one year immediately before the date of the individual's
admission to the institution, and
(ii) Has resided in the home on a continuous
basis since that time.
(b) The permanently institutionalized
individual's son or daughter who:
(i) Provided
care to the permanently institutionalized individual that delayed the
individual's institutionalization, and
(ii) Resided in the home for at least two
years immediately before the date of the individual's admission to the
institution, and
(iii) Has resided
in the home on a continuous basis since that time, and
(iv) Documents that he or she has fulfilled
these requirements by submitting the following:
(a) A written statement of the date that he
or she moved into the home;
(b) A
level of care assessment showing that the individual would have become
institutionalized earlier without care provided by the adult son or
daughter;
(c) A written statement
from the individual's attending physician, stating the kind and duration of
care that was required to delay the individual's institutionalization;
and
(d) All relevant documentation
of the care that delayed institutionalization and the role the adult son or
daughter played in that care. This documentation shall include (but is not
limited to) one or more of the following:
(i)
A written statement of the number of hours per day during which the adult son
or daughter provided personal care, specifying the extent and type of care
provided;
(ii) A written statement
of any part-time or full-time jobs performed by the adult son or daughter, and
any schools or other similar institutions attended by the adult son or
daughter, while providing care; or
(iii) Written documentation from a service
agency which provided care to the individual, the dates on which care was
provided, and the extent and type of care provided.
(E) Notice requirements.
(1) When an individual was age fifty-five or
older or was permanently institutionalized at the time of death, the person
responsible for the estate shall give notice to the AGO, as required by section
2117.061 of the Revised
Code.
(2) After the individual's
death, whenever adjustment or recovery is sought by ODM or its designee, a
claim for recovery shall be presented by the AGO.
(a) The claim
shall include
all information required by Chapter 2117. of the Revised Code and
shall be
served on the person responsible for the estate or, when there is no
person responsible for the estate, any person who received or controls probate
or non-probate assets inherited from the individual.
(b) The claim shall include the
following:
(i)
The
definition of undue hardship as stated in paragraph (H) of this
rule;
(ii)
The process for requesting an undue hardship as set
forth in paragraph (I) of this rule; and
(iii) The date by which
the request for an undue hardship waiver is to be
received by ODM.
(3) The person responsible for the
estate shall notify any person who received or controls probate or non-probate
assets, inherited from the individual, affected by the proposed
recovery.
(F)
When the
person responsible for the estate from which recovery is sought requests to
satisfy the claim without selling a non-liquid asset subject to recovery, the
AGO may establish a payment schedule, promissory note, or lien.
(G) Qualified long-term care partnership
disregard.
(1) The amount of resources
disregarded at eligibility determination (as established in rule
5160:1-6- 02.2 of the Administrative Code) will be
disregarded during estate recovery.
(2) The following resources, which are not
considered a resource at eligibility determination, will not be disregarded
during estate recovery:
(a) Special needs
trusts as established in rule 5160:1-3-05.2 of the Administrative Code;
(b) Pooled trusts as established
in rule 5160:1-3-05.2 of the Administrative Code; and
(c) Annuities as described in rule
5160:1-3-05.3 of the Administrative Code.
(3) The QLTCP disregard at estate recovery is
reduced to the extent that an individual made a transfer (that would otherwise
have been considered an improper transfer under rule 5160:1-6-06 of the Administrative Code) without a
restricted medicaid coverage period.
(H) The ODM director, or designee, may grant
an undue hardship waiver on a case-by-case basis when there are compelling
circumstances.
(1) ODM may, at the sole
discretion of the ODM director or the director's designee, waive estate
recovery when recovery would work an undue hardship on an individual's
survivors. Undue hardship may be found in the following cases.
(a) The estate subject to recovery is the
sole income-producing asset of the survivor, such as a family farm or other
family business, which:
(i) Produces a limited
amount of income, or
(ii) Is the
sole asset of the survivor.
(b) Without receipt of the estate proceeds,
the survivor would become eligible for public assistance.
(c) Recovery would deprive the survivor of
necessary food, shelter or clothing. Deprivation does not include situations in
which the survivor is merely inconvenienced but would not be at risk of serious
harm.
(d) The survivor provides
clear and convincing evidence of substantial personal financial contributions
to the deceased individual, creating an equity interest in the
property.
(e) The survivor is age
sixty-five or older and financially dependent upon receipt of the estate
proceeds.
(f) The estate proceeds
are preserved for the benefit of a survivor who:
(i) Is totally and permanently disabled as
defined in Chapter 5160:1-3 of the Administrative Code; and
(ii) Is financially dependent upon receipt of
the estate proceeds.
(2) The following situations do not, without
additional showing of hardship, show undue hardship:
(a) When recovery will prevent heirs from
receiving an anticipated inheritance.
(b) When recovery results in the loss of a
pre-existing standard of living, or prevents the establishment of a source of
maintenance that did not exist prior to the individual's death.
(3) Regardless of actual hardship,
an undue hardship waiver will not be granted in the following situations:
(a) When the individual created the hardship
by using estate planning methods under which the individual divested,
transferred, or otherwise encumbered assets in whole or in part to avoid estate
recovery.
(b) When an undue
hardship waiver will result in the payment of claims to other creditors with
lower priority standing under Ohio's probate law.
(I) Request for undue hardship
waiver.
(1) Within thirty calendar days after
notice of the estate recovery claim was mailed by the AGO, an undue hardship
waiver may be requested by an heir or potential heir who would
suffer an undue hardship if a waiver is not granted, a person with an interest
in assets of the estate, or a representative of such persons. An undue hardship
waiver may not be requested by a creditor of the estate, unless such creditor
is also a potential heir of the estate.
(2) Within sixty calendar days of receipt of
the request for an undue hardship waiver, ODM shall notify the
applicant whether the waiver request has been approved (in full, in part, or
for a limited time) or denied. Failure to meet this sixty day deadline does not
result in an automatic decision on the request.
(3)
When the waiver
request was not approved in full, or when the approval was time-limited, the applicant may,
within thirty calendar days, request that the ODM director, or designee, review
the undue hardship waiver decision.
(a) The
ODM director, or designee, will review only those portions of the undue
hardship waiver request that were denied or time-limited. The director will not
deny or limit any portion of the undue hardship waiver request that has already
been granted.
(b) The ODM director,
or designee, shall review the undue hardship waiver request and
notify the applicant within sixty calendar days whether (at the director's sole
discretion) the director, or designee, has approved (in full, in part, or for a
limited time) or denied the request for an undue hardship waiver. Failure to
meet this sixty day deadline does not result in an automatic decision on the
request.
(J)
Within thirty days after notice of the estate recovery claim was mailed by the
AGO, a person with an interest in assets of the estate (or a representative of
any such person) may present a claim showing evidence that
assets of the estate are exempt assets under one of the following categories.
(1) Government reparation payments to special
populations are exempt from medicaid estate recovery.
(2) Certain American Indian and Alaska native
income and resources, including:
(a) American
Indian and Alaska native income and resources which are exempt from medicaid
estate recovery by other laws and regulations;
(b) Ownership interest (when ownership would
pass from an Indian to one or more relatives; to a tribe or tribal
organization; and/or to one or more Indians) in trust or non-trust property,
including real property and improvements:
(i)
Located on a reservation (any federally recognized Indian tribe's reservation,
pueblo, or colony, including former reservations in Oklahoma, Alaska native
regions established by Alaska native claims settlement act and Indian
allotments) or near a reservation as designated and approved by the bureau of
Indian affairs of the U.S. department of the interior; or
(ii) For any federally-recognized tribe not
described in paragraph (J)(2) (b)(i) of this rule, located within the most
recent boundaries of a prior federal reservation; or
(c) Income left as a remainder in an estate
derived from property protected in paragraph (J)(2)(b) of this rule, that was
either collected by an Indian, or by a tribe or a tribal organization and
distributed to an Indian, as long as the income clearly comes from protected
sources;
(d) Ownership interests
left as a remainder in an estate in rents, leases, royalties, or usage rights
related to natural resources (including extraction of natural resources or
harvesting of timber, other plants and plant products, animals, fish, and
shellfish) resulting from the exercise of federally-protected rights, and
income either collected by an Indian, or by a tribe or tribal organization and
distributed to an Indian derived from these sources the income or ownership
interest clearly comes from protected sources; and
(e) Ownership interests in or usage rights to
items that have unique religious, spiritual, traditional, and/or cultural
significance or rights that support subsistence or a traditional life style
according to applicable tribal law or custom.