Los Angeles Times

State will cease contract with AIDS nonprofit

Foundation provides healthcare plans to 770 HIV-positive people in L.A. County.

- By Melody Gutierrez

SACRAMENTO — California will no longer contract with the AIDS Healthcare Foundation to provide healthcare plans for hundreds of HIV-positive patients in Los Angeles County after the state accused the high-profile nonprofit of engaging in improper tactics during negotiatio­ns over rates.

The foundation and its controvers­ial founder Michael Weinstein are a powerful political force in California, with the group bankrollin­g rent-control measures, challengin­g Los Angeles planning decisions and pushing statewide initiative­s to lower prescripti­on drug costs and require porn actors to wear condoms. Weinstein called the state’s move “pure retaliatio­n” for his group’s push for higher rates.

According to the state Department of Health Care Services, the foundation sent a letter to its healthcare enrollees last year alerting them that it would no longer be providing their care. At the time, the department was negotiatin­g the monthly rate the state would pay AIDS Healthcare per enrollee. A department official said the state had no plans to end the contract at the time the foundation notified its members that it would stop providing care.

The letter allegedly stoked fear among the 770 HIV-positive patients AIDS Healthcare is contracted to care for, prompting the state to call the move an inappropri­ate negotiatio­n tactic and contract violation.

“DHCS’ priority is to ensure the health and well-being of all Medi-Cal members, which is why we will not renew our Medi-Cal managed care contract with the AIDS Healthcare Foundation beyond the current contract end date of December 31, 2022,” said Michelle Baass, director of the Department of Health Care Services, in a statement Thursday. “We will take all necessary measures to assist members as they transition to other plans, including maintain

ing continuity of care.”

AIDS Healthcare has 67 outpatient healthcare centers and 55 pharmacies in 17 states, including California, Florida, Georgia, New York and Texas, according to its most recent tax filings from 2019. Outside of the United States, the foundation operates more than 400 healthcare centers.

The state paid AIDS Healthcare $9.5 million in 2018-2019, the most recent year of records publicly available online. That year, the foundation was the only Medi-Cal provider that did not meet federal requiremen­ts that 85% of spending be on direct medical care for patients. The foundation dedicated just 66% of spending on patients where the statewide average was nearly 93% during the 20182019 fiscal year. The bulk of the foundation’s $1.4-billion annual revenue is from pharmacy revenue, according to its nonprofit filings.

Weinstein said the foundation’s negotiatio­ns over increasing rates were going nowhere last year when AIDS Healthcare notified patients that they would end services at the end of 2021.

“They said we had scared the patients,” Weinstein said. “This is the bureaucrac­y caring more about the power to have providers jump when they say jump.”

The state said that the foundation could not unilateral­ly end the contract last year and negotiatio­ns over rates continued.

“The result of the controvers­y was higher rates,” Weinstein said. “We never wanted to end the contract. ... We have been subsidizin­g this plan to the tune of millions of dollars a year.”

AIDS Healthcare began with a narrowly tailored mission to provide end-of-life care to those dying of AIDS in the late 1980s, but its advocacy has expanded over the years. Now, AIDS Healthcare is one of the biggest — and most controvers­ial — nonprofits, having branched to housing and several other areas. The litigious group is the subject of a mountain of lawsuits.

Weinstein’s firebrand style of advocacy prompted one longtime Los Angeles County supervisor to call him a “thug.”

“Their approach is burn down the house, take no prisoners,” said Steve Maviglio, a Democratic political consultant who served as spokespers­on on campaigns that opposed statewide ballot measures that AIDS Healthcare supported.

“They will do anything to get their way,” added Maviglio, who filed a complaint against the group last month to the Fair Political Practices Commission. Maviglio alleges that AIDS Healthcare did not report a campaign expenditur­e in which he said the foundation hired people to protest outside his home in 2020.

AIDS Healthcare has a long track record of challengin­g Los Angeles officials on planning decisions. The group has spent years attempting to block multistory real estate projects in Hollywood and elsewhere, filing lawsuits and launching public relations campaigns.

The foundation has used the ballot box to attempt to alter housing policy in California, spending millions in 2018 and 2020 on initiative­s to expand rent control throughout the state. Voters decisively rejected both efforts. It sponsored Measure S, a 2017 ballot initiative aimed at halting approvals of new high-density developmen­t in Los Angeles for two years. Backers said it was needed to stem gentrifica­tion, but voters knocked it down by a wide margin.

The foundation has also lobbied against proposals in the statehouse to bolster California’s housing supply, including several written by state Sen. Scott Wiener, a San Francisco Democrat who advocates for changing zoning regulation­s to allow for multi-family projects.

The foundation opposed a 2019 bill to compel local government­s to allow for more apartment buildings and other dense housing constructi­on near transit and job centers, which failed, and then fought against a modified version of the proposal last year. After Newsom signed the amended measure, Senate Bill 10, AIDS Healthcare sued to block its implementa­tion, alleging that it allows local government­s to override initiative­s passed by voters.

In December, the foundation also filed a lawsuit following the Los Angeles City Council’s release of its socalled Housing Element, a planning blueprint that local officials crafted to add hundreds of thousands of new homes over the next eight years. The group alleged that the city violated environmen­tal regulation­s when it approved its plan and would create more gentrifica­tion and displaceme­nt of vulnerable people.

AIDS Healthcare also clashed with Los Angeles city and county officials over audits that found that the nonprofit overbilled the county for HIV/AIDS-related services in 2011 and 2012 and incorrectl­y charged the county for services it should have paid for using other funding sources in 2008 and 2009.

Lawsuits stemming from those audits were dismissed in Los Angeles Superior Court. In one of those lawsuits, the foundation argued the audit findings were a form of retaliatio­n for its outspoken views on policies the county did not agree with. A judge dismissed that case in 2014, finding that the foundation sued “to obtain a tactical advantage in their ongoing political battles” with the county.

 ?? L.A. Times ?? Barbara Davidson
CEO Michael Weinstein called the state’s move “pure retaliatio­n” for his group’s bid to raise rates.
L.A. Times Barbara Davidson CEO Michael Weinstein called the state’s move “pure retaliatio­n” for his group’s bid to raise rates.

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