By Virgil Dickson
A judge in the U.S.
District Court for the Northern District of Mississippi has granted a
request by the American Health Care Association to bar the CMS from
implementing a rule that bans arbitration agreements in skilled-nursing
facilities.
A federal rule finalized by the Obama administration
earlier this year prohibits nursing facilities from entering binding
arbitration agreements before a dispute arises. The provision went much
further than the restrictions proposed in the draft rule and is expected
to kick in on Nov. 28.
The AHCA argued that the rule exceeds the
CMS’ statutory authority and is wholly unnecessary to protect the health
and safety of residents.
In a 40 page-decision released Monday, Judge Michael Mills said he agreed.
“As
sympathetic as this court may be to the public policy considerations
which motivated the rule, it is unwilling to play a role in
countenancing the incremental ‘creep’ of federal agency authority beyond
that envisioned by the U.S. Constitution,” Mills wrote.
Throughout
the opinion, Mills reiterated that while there may truly be a problem
with executing arbitration contracts during the nursing home admissions,
only Congress, not the CMS, can do something about it.
“While
there is undoubtedly a great deal of congressional gridlock, Congress’
failure to enact positive legislation should not serve as an excuse for
the executive branch to assume powers which are properly reserved for
the legislative branch,” Mills said.
Arbitration agreements
prevent families who believe their loved ones received bad care at
nursing homes from seeking legal recourse. Some families say they often
feel pressured to sign the contracts and don’t understand what they’re
agreeing to. They also don’t know that awards through arbitration in
nursing home cases are usually lower than those reached in court.
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Federal Judge Grants Nursing Home Arbitration Injunction
Well, we knew this was coming, didn't we?
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