Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Data IDs shut sites getting checks

- ERIC BESSON AND KAT STROMQUIST

LITTLE ROCK — Three nursing homes in Arkansas — and others across the country — accepted tens of thousands of dollars in federal coronaviru­s financial aid even though the facilities had closed before the pandemic started, according to federal data.

An operator behind two of the Arkansas homes, in Hope and Horseshoe Bend, which received nearly $32,000 combined, returned the money after being asked about it, the operator’s attorney said last week.

A second company, which accepted about $42,000 for a closed nursing home in Ola, is awaiting federal guidance on what to do next, its attorney said.

The facilities were included on a public list of more than 1,400 Arkansas providers who shared in an initial $50 billion distributi­on of relief grants set aside by the federal Coronaviru­s Aid, Relief and Economic Security Act. In total, Congress has allocated $175 billion to help health providers nationwide weather the crisis.

To ship out the cash quickly, officials sent a first round of money that automatica­lly went to all health care providers who billed Medicare in 2019. None had to apply — the choice was simply to accept or reject the money, according to U.S. Department of Health and Human Services guidance to providers.

Providers who accepted the cash appeared on a public list of recipients. To accept, they had to agree to spend money only “to prevent, prepare for and respond to coronaviru­s” and state they provided care “after January 31, 2020” to people who had been or could be infected, according to the program’s terms and conditions.

The three Arkansas nursing homes closed in December, months before the state reported its first confirmed coronaviru­s case March 11.

A Health and Human Services spokesman said the agency will “seek recoupment” of money paid to providers of facilities confirmed as closed.

“Many of the providers that are not operating have already returned the funds, and if an institutio­n is closed and their bank account is also closed, the funds are automatica­lly returned,” the spokesman said. “For future funding allocation­s, HHS is establishi­ng a process to exclude the known closed organizati­ons from our files.”

Eric Bell, attorney for Reliance Health Care, which received the nearly $42,000 for the closed Ola home, said the company is in conversati­ons with the federal government and “will take necessary action” based on that guidance.

“There is a 30-day window that has not yet lapsed to return the funds if they were received in error,” Bell said.

Reliance, one of the state’s largest nursing home chains, operates nearly three dozen facilities.

Reliance also received about $125,000 in CARES aid for Lexington Place Healthcare and Rehabilita­tion in Jonesboro. That facility closed March 29, state Department of Human Services spokeswoma­n Amy Webb said.

At least four other nursing homes across the country received coronaviru­s aid despite closing in 2019, according to a review of national closings and aid databases.

The findings come as Washington sends more coronaviru­s cash to nursing homes.

On Thursday, U.S. Health and Human Services said it would distribute tens of thousands more to each nursing home to compensate for falling census numbers, according to an emailed notice. Each facility was told to expect a minimum of $50,000, plus an additional $1,800-$2,000 per bed.

The Health and Human Services spokesman said the agency has “expedited payment” of CARES Act money to help “providers on the frontlines.” Accountabi­lity groups have said they are concerned by a lack of oversight written into the legislatio­n.

The inspector general for the Health and Human Services Department announced Friday a planned audit of the first $50 million sent to health providers.

‘RECENTLY CLOSED’

Reliance accepted the money for Deerview in Ola (in Yell County) and Lexington Place in Jonesboro, said Bell, its attorney.

Those homes were among five the Arkansas Department of Human Services seized in September and October from a different operator, Keith Head of Conway, amid a financial crisis.

The state tapped Reliance to operate all five during the takeover. Deerview closed in December and Lexington Place followed in March.

Reliance’s billing department accepted the money to acknowledg­e it was received, Bell said.

“Due to the fact the facilities were recently closed, Reliance has kept the funds intact in the accounts in which they were deposited and is currently seeking specific guidance on how to handle the fact that these two providers have recently shuttered operations,” Bell said.

Cathy Parsons of Greenbrier accepted the nearly $32,000 for Diamond Cove in Horseshoe Bend and Oaklawn Estates in Hope.

Those nursing homes closed in December, moving their residents to other facilities, amid a showdown between the state and an outof-state operator named Chris Brogdon.

Parsons planned to transfer the facilities to Brogdon, but the state objected. Brogdon then pulled his support from the nursing homes.

Parsons said earlier this month she would send back the money if the federal government asked for it.

“If it goes back, it goes back,” Parsons said. “That’s about the extent I’m going to say, because I’ve done nothing wrong. … If they ask for that money back, it will go back.”

She referred other questions to her attorney, Dylan Potts, who said Thursday that Parsons had returned the money “after further informatio­n was provided by [the federal Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services] to Ms. Parsons.”

Parsons also accepted money on behalf of Bear Creek Healthcare in De Queen, a facility she still operates. She hasn’t returned that money, Potts said.

ACCEPT OR REJECT

The first phase of CARES Act money functioned on an honor system.

All providers across the health-care spectrum who billed the federal Medicare insurance program in 2019 automatica­lly received payments based on two distinct formulas drawn from their billings.

Those providers included hospitals, doctors’ practices, pharmacies and nursing homes.

The payments came with federal guidance advising providers of a choice: Accept the money or reject it. Providers who accepted the money were publicly disclosed, while those who rejected it weren’t.

“The Recipient certifies that the Payment will only be used to prevent, prepare for, and respond to coronaviru­s, and that the Payment shall reimburse the Recipient only for health care related expenses or lost revenues that are attributab­le to coronaviru­s,” one of the terms says.

Karyn Schwartz, a senior fellow at health policy nonprofit Kaiser Family Foundation, said she hasn’t specifical­ly looked into the issue of closed facilities receiving payments.

Schwartz, who said she’s not a lawyer, said the terms and conditions for accepting the money include a cutoff date saying the money is for services provided after Jan. 31.

After finding the closed Arkansas nursing homes on the list of providers receiving relief money, they were compared against a national database of 166 nursing home closures in 2019.

At least four nursing homes in Ohio and Wisconsin were identified as having closed but accepted money — combined, they received about $46,000.

The number of closed nursing homes outside Arkansas accepting aid is likely higher. Two states, Mississipp­i and Missouri, didn’t respond to inquiries.

The count also omits two companies owning closed nursing homes but operate other facilities, such as a psychiatri­c hospital, at or near the same address.

Additional­ly, some parent companies with several nursing homes, some of which closed in 2019, received lumpsum payments.

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