Nursing homes are coming under more scrutiny during the coronavirus pandemic, this time for complaints about efforts to confiscate coronavirus stimulus checks.
Lawmakers on both sides of the aisle are calling on the
Trump administration to ensure nursing homes and assisted living
facilities aren't improperly seizing the checks from residents following
alerts from the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) and state attorneys
general.
State and federal authorities have
recently notified the public about complaints of long-term care
facilities demanding residents on Medicaid turn over their relief
payments. Those alerts prompted prominent lawmakers to lean on various
federal agencies, urging them to investigate the issue and make it clear
to facilities that they aren't entitled to the checks.
"These
economic impact payments were not designed to reimburse people," Rep.
Gwen Moore (D-Wis.) told The Hill. "And we have provisions that protect
the elderly."
Moore, a member of the House Ways
and Means Committee, authored one of several letters to federal agencies
on the nursing home issue this week. In her letter, she urged the
Treasury Inspector General for Tax Administration to exercise its
oversight authority to protect residents of nursing homes and assisted
living facilities.
State attorneys general say they've
gotten complaints about nursing homes and assisted living facilities
attempting to take residents' payments.
The FTC
in May issued alerts saying nursing homes and assisted living facilities
can't seize residents' checks just because they are on Medicaid. Agency
officials said they had heard about the issue from the Iowa attorney
general's office and other states.
"The main
message is that the money belongs to the resident," Lois Greisman,
associate director for marketing practices at the FTC, told The Hill.
"That's the word we wanted to get out loud and clear."
House Ways and Means Committee Chairman Richard Neal (D-Mass.) and
House Energy and Commerce Committee Chairman Frank Pallone Jr. (D-N.J.)
on Monday sent a letter to Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services
(CMS) Administrator Seema Verna, urging CMS to "issue guidance to
nursing homes and residents on the status of these checks and their
independence from residents' Medicaid status."
"We welcome their attention to this issue
so that facilities are not taking the stimulus checks of nursing home
residents," said Rhonda Richards, senior legislative representative at
the AARP.
Lynn Hicks, a spokesman for the Iowa attorney general's
office, said the FTC alert referred to a complaint about a long-term
care facility that had told residents they should not spend their
stimulus checks until the Iowa Department of Human Services makes
determinations about the amount of income residents have to pay to the
facility. The owner of the facility subsequently sent another letter to
residents saying they could keep their payments.
The
Iowa attorney general's office and other state attorneys general have
also been warning their residents about attempts from nursing homes to
take people's payments, particularly after the FTC issued its message.
"If
you or a relative are a Medicaid recipient living in a nursing home or
assisted living center and you qualify for a CARES Act payment, be wary
of attempts to take CARES Act payments using the Medicaid system as a
guise," Missouri Attorney General Eric Schmitt (R) said in a statement
last month. The alert from Schmitt's office said the office had received
several complaints concerning this issue.
"We have
heard some Oregon nursing homes may have taken or are attempting to take
stimulus checks from residents who are Medicaid recipients. This needs
to stop," said Oregon Attorney General Ellen Rosenblum (D). "These
stimulus checks are the property of the residents and must be returned."
Concerns
about facilities' efforts to seize residents' payments have prompted
lawmakers in recent days to urge several federal agencies to take
actions to help protect residents.
The
lawmakers also asked CMS to provide information about what actions to
take to ensure nursing homes don't seize people's payments and return
any payments that may have already been taken.
Neal and
Pallone said they have had reports of representative payees of Social
Security and supplemental security income recipients - people who manage
benefits for recipients that are incapable of doing so themselves -
being confused about whether the relief payments should be given to
long-term care facilities that demand payment.
Verna
replied to Neal and Pallone on Twitter, saying CMS requirements prohibit
nursing homes from seizing the coronavirus checks of residents on
Medicaid.
"Nursing homes engaging in this behavior will be subject to enforcement action," she said.
One
day after the House committee chairmen sent their letter, Senate
Finance Committee Chairman Chuck Grassley (R-Iowa) and ranking member
Sen. Ron Wyden (D-Ore.) urged the inspector general for the Department
of Health and Human Services to "look into these practices targeting
elderly Americans and individuals with disabilities and issue alerts to
raise awareness that this practice is improper and contrary to
congressional intent."
The direct payments are a key
part of the record $2.2 trillion coronavirus relief package President
Trump signed into law on March 27. Under the CARES Act, most Americans
are entitled to a one-time payment of up to $1,200 per adult and $500
per child. The Treasury Department said last week that it has
distributed about 159 million payments so far.
The legislation that established the direct payments
prevents the checks from being reduced due to unpaid taxes or other
debts owed to federal and state government agencies. Lawmakers say any
seizures on the part of nursing homes go against the spirit of the law.
Additionally,
the checks are advance payments of refundable tax credits. Under
federal law, advance payments of refundable credits are not considered
income for purposes of determining eligibility for which amount of
assistance from programs such as Medicaid and are not considered
resources for eligibility and assistance amount purposes for a period of
12 months after they are received.
It's unclear how many nursing homes have tried to take the residents' checks.
The
American Health Care Association and National Center for Assisted
Living said in a statement they "are not aware of widespread issues with
resident stimulus funds" and that "stimulus checks are handled in the
same manner as other resident benefit payments."
The
groups have sent a question-and-answer document to their members that
specifies that the checks don't immediately impact Medicaid eligibility.
Hicks said his office is also concerned in general about the rights of nursing home residents during the coronavirus pandemic.
Even
if complaints about nursing homes seizing coronavirus relief payments
aren't highly common, policymakers and advocates for seniors want to
make sure that confiscations don't happen at all. They note that
residents of long-term care facilities make up a significant portion of
coronavirus cases and deaths in the U.S.
At least 32,000 residents of nursing homes have died due to COVID-19, according to CMS.
Advocates
said they appreciate the efforts of lawmakers and federal agencies in
wanting to protect seniors from having their relief payments
confiscated.
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Nursing homes under scrutiny after warnings of seized stimulus checks
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