Texarkana Gazette

Arkansas fines firm $300,000 for Medicaid ride failures

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LITTLE ROCK — Months after the state of Arkansas fired a company for failing to provide required rides to Medicaid patients, the company hired in its place is being fined more than $300,000 for the same violation.

Janet Mann, director of the state Department of Human Services’ Division of Medical Services, told lawmakers earlier this week that Atlanta-based Southeastr­ans was fined $500 for each of the 645 trips it had failed to provide in recent months, the Arkansas Democrat-Gazette reported.

In February, Southeastr­ans took over a contract to offer nonemergen­cy medical transporta­tion to Medicaid recipients in 32 counties after Arkansas ousted St. Louisbased Medical Transporta­tion Management, which had also neglected to provide hundreds of trips.

Arkansas assessed a larger quantity of damages —$3.7 million — against Medical Transporta­tion Management over issues that also comprised failing to submit mandatory records on its drivers and furnishing its vehicles with cameras.

During the meeting of the state’s House and Senate public health committees, Sen. Ronald Caldwell said that a constituen­t said they missed three appointmen­ts for chemothera­py because of Southeastr­ans’ negligence.

“That’s why you’re here today,” Caldwell told the company’s representa­tives at the meeting. “It really is a life-and-death situation.”

Rob Zachrich, chief operating officer of Southeastr­ans, said its subcontrac­tors have struggled to employ drivers amid the “competitiv­e labor market” in northweste­rn Arkansas.

To fill the gap, Zachrich said that Southeastr­ans has increased providers’ wages, made $118,300 in interest-free loans to some of them to assist with costs, and has been adding its own vehicles and drivers.

Southeastr­ans expects to have a fleet of 67 vehicles in Arkansas by the end of September, he said.

“Our goal is to find people who want to be entreprene­urs, who want to start with one vehicle or maybe two vehicles, and hand those vehicles off over time,” Zachrich said.

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