Visiting Nurse Ass'n of North Shore, Inc. v. Bullen , 93 F.3d 997 ( 1996 )


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  • UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE FIRST CIRCUIT
    No. 95-1849
    VISITING NURSE ASSOCIATION OF NORTH SHORE, INC., ET AL.,
    Plaintiffs, Appellees,
    v.
    BRUCE M. BULLEN, ET AL.,
    Defendants, Appellants.
    No. 95-1999
    VISITING NURSE ASSOCIATION OF NORTH SHORE, INC., ET AL.,
    Plaintiffs, Appellants,
    v.
    BRUCE M. BULLEN, ET AL.,
    Defendants, Appellees.
    APPEALS FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
    FOR THE DISTRICT OF MASSACHUSETTS
    [Hon. Nancy Gertner, U.S. District Judge]
    Cyr, Boudin and Stahl,
    Circuit Judges.
    Douglas H. Wilkins,  Assistant Attorney General, with  whom Scott
    Harshbarger,  Attorney  General,  and  William  L.  Pardee,  Assistant
    Attorney General, were on brief for appellants Bullen, et al.
    Richard P. Ward,  with whom John H. Mason, Susan T. Nicholson and
    Ropes & Gray were on brief for appellees Visiting Nurse Association of
    North Shore, Inc., et al.
    August 22, 1996
    2
    CYR,  Circuit Judge.   Nine  Massachusetts  health care
    CYR,  Circuit Judge.
    providers initiated  this civil rights  action under 42  U.S.C.
    1983,  alleging  substantive  and procedural  violations  of  the
    Medicaid Act, see 42 U.S.C.    1396a(a)(30) ("Act"), by the named
    defendants,  various  officials  of  the  Massachusetts  Medicaid
    program.  The district court granted partial summary judgment for
    plaintiffs,  declaring defendants  in noncompliance  with certain
    procedural  requirements   relating  to   the  establishment   of
    reimbursement rates for health care services provided to Medicaid
    recipients.   Defendants appealed.   Plaintiffs  cross-appealed a
    district  court ruling  dismissing their  remaining  claims.   We
    reverse  the  district  court  judgment  against  defendants  and
    dismiss the cross-appeal.
    I
    I
    BACKGROUND
    BACKGROUND
    Medicaid is  a joint federal-state program  designed to
    afford medical benefits to low-income individuals.  See 42 U.S.C.
    1396 et seq.; Wilder v. Virginia Hosp. Ass'n, 
    496 U.S. 498
    , 502
    (1990).   A  State which  elects  to participate  in Medicaid  is
    eligible  to receive  federal funds  only  if its  State Plan  is
    approved  by  the Federal  Health  Care Financing  Administration
    ("HCFA").1  Among the sixty-two  criteria for HCFA approval,  see
    1Authority to administer the Medicaid program and promulgate
    implementing   regulations  has   been  delegated   to  HCFA,   a
    constituent   agency  of  the  Department  of  Health  and  Human
    Services.   See  42 U.S.C.    1302; 
    49 Fed. Reg. 35,247
    , 35,249
    (1984); see  also Elizabeth  Blackwell Health  Ctr. for Women  v.
    Knoll, 
    61 F.3d 170
    , 174 (3d Cir. 1995), cert. denied, 
    116 S. Ct. 816
     (1996).
    3
    42 U.S.C.    1396a(a)(1)-(62),  is the  so-called "equal  access"
    clause:
    [A State  plan for  medical assistance  must]
    provide such methods  and procedures relating
    to the utilization  of, and the payment  for,
    care and  services available  under the  plan
    (including but not limited to utilization re-
    view plans  as provided for in  section 1396b
    (i)(4)  of this title) as may be necessary to
    safeguard against unnecessary  utilization of
    such care  and services  and  to assure  that
    payments  are  consistent   with  efficiency,
    economy, and quality of  care and are  suffi-
    cient to enlist enough providers so that care
    and services are available  under the plan at
    least to the  extent that such care  and ser-
    vices are available to the general population
    in the geographic area.
    
    Id.
       1396a(a)(30) (emphasis added); 42 C.F.R.   447.201(b) ("The
    plan  must describe  the policy  and the  methods to  be  used in
    setting payment rates for each type of service . . . .").
    Massachusetts  establishes   its  reimbursement   rates
    through  the  Massachusetts  Rate  Setting  Commission, with  the
    approval  of the Division of  Medical Assistance of the Massachu-
    setts Executive Office of Health and Human Services ("DMA").  See
    Mass. Gen.  L. ch. 6A,     32, 36.    Before  1991, Massachusetts
    used a "cost-based" methodology  for setting reimbursement rates,
    laconically described in  its approved plan as  "fixed negotiated
    fee schedules."    Ostensibly, the term  "negotiated" connoted an
    intent to  calculate a different rate for  each individual health
    care provider,  based on its  reported costs for  delivering five
    different  categories  of  medical  services  (skilled   nursing,
    occupational, physical and  speech therapy, and  home-health-aide
    services) during  the preceding  fiscal year,  adjusted for  such
    4
    uniform  factors as  inflation and  allowing  for incentive  caps
    (e.g., to promote efficiency).   See Mass. Regs. Code tit. 114.3,
    3.00.
    In 1991, however, Massachusetts decided  to convert its
    rate-setting methodology  to  a so-called  "class  rate"  system.
    Rather than basing  reimbursement rates on the  individual health
    care  provider's idiosyncratic costs  for the previous  year, DMA
    decided to propose a single, fixed reimbursement rate for each of
    the  five  medical  services categories,  supra,  which  would be
    applied across-the-board  to all in-state health  care providers,
    without regard to their individual costs.  During  the transition
    to the new "class rate" system, a series of "interim" and "phase-
    in" rates were to be utilized.
    Under  the Medicaid Act  and regulations, a  State must
    meet two  conditions before  instituting "material" or  "signifi-
    cant" changes in its Medicaid program:2   i.e., (1) submit a Plan
    amendment to HCFA  for approval, "describ[ing]" the  methods used
    to set  rates under  42 U.S.C.    1396a(a)(30),  see 42 C.F.R.
    447.201(b)  (emphasis  added),  and  (2)  provide  public  notice
    "describing the proposed change[s]" and "[e]xplain[ing] why  [it]
    is changing its  methods and standards," see id.   447.205(c)(1),
    (3) (emphasis added).
    During a  thirty-month period  beginning in  June 1991,
    Massachusetts  issued public  notices  relating  to the  proposed
    2We  accept,  arguendo,  defendants'   concession  that  the
    conversion to a  "class rate" system constituted  a "significant"
    and "material" change.
    5
    change,  and published a series of regulations, setting forth the
    interim,  phase-in, and final class rates in "bottom-line" dollar
    figures for each  of the five medical service categories, without
    detailing  the particular formula  and factors used  to arrive at
    the  proposed  "bottom-line"  rate  figures.     Thereafter,  DMA
    conducted a series  of public  meetings to  explain the  proposed
    changes  to health care providers, including appellees, and other
    interested parties.   On January  1, 1994, the final  class rates
    took effect, superseding the interim and phase-in rates.
    Plaintiffs  soon   filed  this  section   1983  action,
    alleging  that the DMA commissioner and  its members had violated
    various substantive and procedural requirements prescribed  by 42
    U.S.C.    1396a(a)(30).3   By way  of procedural  violations, the
    complaint alleged that the pre-January 1994 public notices issued
    by defendants contained legally  deficient "descriptions" of  the
    proposed new methods  and procedures, by failing to  disclose the
    formula defendants used  to arrive at either  the interim, phase-
    in, or  final class  rates.  The  complaint further  alleged that
    3As substantive  violations, plaintiffs  first alleged  that
    the  State  had  adopted  its  new  methodology  solely  for  the
    impermissible purpose of limiting its financial outlays under the
    Medicaid  program, contrary  to 42  U.S.C.    1396a.   See Amisub
    (PSL), Inc.  v. Colorado  Dep't of Social  Servs., 
    879 F.2d 789
    ,
    800-01  (10th  Cir. 1989),  cert.  denied, 
    496 U.S. 935
     (1990).
    Second, plaintiffs  alleged that the class rates arrived at under
    the new fixed-rate methodology were so arbitrary and unreasonably
    low  that  many health  care  providers would  have  no financial
    incentive to participate  in the Massachusetts  Medicaid program,
    thereby ensuring that  "equal access" to needed  medical services
    could not  be  provided  to all  low-income  individuals  in  all
    geographical areas at  the same level as  the general population.
    See 42 U.S.C.   1396a(a)(30).
    6
    defendants  failed  to  file  an  appropriate  amendment  to  the
    Massachusetts Plan,  "describing" the  "material" changes  in its
    reimbursement  rate methodology.   Plaintiffs  moved for  partial
    summary judgment on their two procedural claims.
    Massachusetts filed a Plan amendment ("Amendment  003")
    with  the HCFA  regional office  in March  1994.4   The amendment
    indicated the proposed change from a cost-based to a "class rate"
    system by deleting a single  word from the original Plan descrip-
    tion:  "fixed negotiated fee schedules" now became simply  "fixed
    fee schedules."   Although  a Plan  amendment is  deemed approved
    unless HCFA acts within ninety days of its filing,  see 42 C.F.R.
    430.16(a), HCFA  tolled  the  ninety-day  period  by  advising
    defendants that additional  information was needed     i.e., "the
    methodology or formula for the  calculation of the fixed rate"
    to  enable  a   final  approval   determination.     See  
    id. 430
    .16(a)(ii).
    Prior to the time DMA responded to the HCFA request for
    information, and before any final HCFA decision on Amendment 003,
    the   district  court  granted   partial  summary   judgment  for
    plaintiffs  on  their  procedural  claims,  ruling  that  neither
    Amendment 003  nor defendants'  pre-January  1994 public  notices
    provided adequate detail on the proposed "methods and procedures"
    for calculating final  class rates.  See Visiting  Nurse Ass'n of
    4Retroactive  effect    to  "the first day  of the quarter,"
    viz., January 1, 1994    is accorded any "approvable plan [amend-
    ment] . .  . submitted to [the HCFA] regional office."  42 C.F.R.
    430.20(b) (emphasis added); see also 
    id. 447
    .256(c).
    7
    N. Shore,  Inc. v. Bullen, 
    866 F. Supp. 1444
    ,  1459-62 (D. Mass.
    1994).  The court concluded that these procedural lapses rendered
    the  final  class rates  invalid,  thus  obviating  any  need  to
    determine  whether  the   proposed  new   methodology  or   rates
    reasonably ensured compliance with the substantive requirement
    "equal access" to medical care    imposed by section 1396(a)(30).
    
    Id. at 1462
    .
    Without  conceding  any  procedural  lapse,  defendants
    issued another public notice on September 23, 1994, containing  a
    detailed description  of the  methodology used  to calculate  the
    "new" final class rates, which were to take effect on November 1,
    1994.  In December 1994, defendants filed a second Plan amendment
    with  HCFA ("Amendment 023"),  which provided  the same  level of
    detail as the September 24,  1994 public notice.  Defendants then
    asked the district  court to declare them in  compliance with the
    procedural  requirements of section 1396a(a)(30).  Then, in April
    1995, while  Amendments 003  and 023  remained pending,  HCFA was
    notified  that defendants wished  to revise and  update Amendment
    003  to include the  detailed information contained  in Amendment
    023.   Defendants  thus  sought to  make any  HCFA Plan-amendment
    approval  fully retroactive  to  January  1,  1994,  rather  than
    October 1994.  See supra note 4.  Three days later, HCFA approved
    Amendment 003, as revised, retroactive to January 1, 1994.
    The  district court  entered final  judgment, based  on
    four essential holdings.  Visiting  Nurse Ass'n of N. Shore, Inc.
    v. Bullen, No.  94-10123-NG (D. Mass. June 30, 1995).  First, the
    8
    court reaffirmed its  August 1994 declaratory ruling  that defen-
    dants' initial implementation of the final class rates on January
    1, 1994 was invalid for failure to comply with the  public notice
    and  Plan  amendment requirements  of  section  1396a(a)(30), and
    directed entry of its  declaratory judgment nunc pro tunc  (i.e.,
    effective September 30, 1994), the date on which its initial stay
    of the judgment expired.  Id., slip op. at 2.  Second, defendants
    were  found  to   have  been  in  compliance   with  the  section
    1396a(a)(30)  procedural requirements  as  of  November 1,  1994,
    after  providing detailed  descriptions of  the new  rate-setting
    methodology   in  their  September  1994  public  notice  and  in
    Amendment  023.   Id.    Third,  the  district court  ruled  that
    defendants  had never  violated  the section  1396a(a)(30) public
    notice and  Plan amendment  requirements relating  to their  pre-
    January  1994 imposition  of  the  interim  and  phase-in  rates,
    presumably  because these  transitional rates,  unlike the  final
    class rates, did not effect  a "material" or "significant" change
    from pre-1991  "cost-based" methods and procedures.   Id. at 2-3.
    Finally,  the  district  court  dismissed  plaintiffs'  remaining
    claims     alleging that the  new final class rates  violated the
    substantive  requirements  of  the  section  1396a(a)(30)  "equal
    access" clause    since its  decision invalidating the rates  due
    to  procedural defects rendered  further decision on  the alleged
    substantive violations unnecessary.  Id. at 3.
    II
    II
    DISCUSSION
    DISCUSSION
    9
    A.   Standards of Review
    A.   Standards of Review
    We review  the grant of  summary judgment  de novo,  to
    determine  whether   the  pleadings,   depositions,  answers   to
    interrogatories, admissions on  file, and affidavits, as  well as
    any reasonable  inferences therefrom,  when viewed  in the  light
    most favorable to the nonmoving party,  demonstrate that there is
    no genuine  issue as  to any  material fact  and that the  moving
    party is entitled to judgment as a matter of  law.  See McCabe v.
    Life-Line  Ambulance Serv.,  Inc., 
    77 F.3d 540
    , 544  (1st Cir.),
    petition for  cert. filed, 
    64 U.S.L.W. 3808
     (U.S. May  29, 1996)
    (No. 95-1929).
    Normally, we  accord  plenary review  to  the  district
    court's  statutory and regulatory  interpretations.  See  Nowd v.
    Rubin, 
    76 F.3d 25
    , 26 n.1 (1st Cir. 1996).  When a federal agency
    charged with  administering a  particular program interprets  its
    own enabling statute, however, we engage in a two-tiered review:
    "First, always, is the question whether  Con-
    gress  has  directly  spoken to  the  precise
    question at issue.  If the intent of Congress
    is clear, that is the end of the matter;  for
    the court, as  well as the agency,  must give
    effect to the  unambiguously expressed intent
    of Congress.   If, however,  the court deter-
    mines Congress has not directly addressed the
    precise question at issue, the court does not
    simply  impose its  own  construction on  the
    statute, as would be necessary in the absence
    of an administrative interpretation.  Rather,
    if the  statute is  silent or  ambiguous with
    respect to a specific issue, the question for
    the court  is whether the agency's  answer is
    based on  a permissible  construction of  the
    statute."
    Heno  v. FDIC,  
    20 F.3d 1204
    , 1208-09  (1st Cir.  1994) (quoting
    10
    Chevron  U.S.A., Inc. v. Natural Resources Defense Council, Inc.,
    
    467 U.S. 837
    , 842-43 (1984)) (emphasis added) ("Chevron").
    As  a federal  agency  charged  with administering  the
    Medicaid program, see  supra note 1, HCFA plainly  is entitled to
    Chevron  deference in  its  interpretations of  the  Act and  the
    implementing  regulations.  See  North Carolina v.  United States
    Dep't of Health and  Human Servs., 
    999 F.2d 767
    , 769-70 (4th Cir.
    1993) (noting that an HCFA  interpretation of its own regulations
    is entitled  to "considerable  deference"); Folden  v. Washington
    State Dep't of Social and Health Servs., 
    981 F.2d 1054
    , 1058 (9th
    Cir. 1992); Missouri Dep't of Social Servs. v. Sullivan, 
    957 F.2d 542
    , 544  (8th Cir.  1992).   Indeed, when a  federal agency  has
    promulgated  and published  a  regulation  pursuant  to  its  own
    enabling statute, we review its interpretation of that regulation
    under a standard  even "more deferential . . . than that afforded
    under Chevron"  to the  agency's interpretation  of the  Statute.
    National Med.  Enters. v.  Shalala, 
    43 F.3d 691
    , 697  (D.C. Cir.
    1995); e.g. Indiana Ass'n of Homes for the Aging, Inc. v. Indiana
    Office of  Medicaid Policy  and Planning, 
    60 F.3d 262
    ,  266 (7th
    Cir. 1995)  (applying heightened deference  to HCFA regulations);
    see  Thomas Jefferson  Univ. v.  Shalala, 
    114 S. Ct. 2381
    , 2386
    (1994) (deferring  to HHS interpretation of Medicare regulation);
    Stinson  v. United  States, 
    508 U.S. 36
    ,  44 (1993);  Johnson v.
    Watts Regulator Co.,  
    63 F.3d 1129
    , 1134-35 (1st  Cir. 1995); see
    also Consarc Corp. v. United  States Treasury Dep't, 
    71 F.3d 909
    ,
    915 (D.C. Cir.  1995). "[P]rovided an agency's  interpretation of
    11
    its own regulation does not violate the Constitution or a federal
    statute, it  must  be  given  `controlling weight  unless  it  is
    plainly  erroneous   or  inconsistent   with  the   regulation.'"
    Stinson, 
    508 U.S. at 44
     (citation omitted)  (emphasis added); see
    Loma  Linda Univ.  v. Schweiker,  
    705 F.2d 1123
    , 1126  (9th Cir.
    1983) (noting that an  HCFA interpretation of its  own regulation
    is entitled to deference "if it is within the range of reasonable
    meanings the words permit").
    B.   Defendants' Appeal
    B.   Defendants' Appeal
    Defendants  appeal  from  that  portion  of  the  final
    judgment  declaring them in violation of the section 1396a(a)(30)
    procedural  requirements  during  the  period  January 1  through
    October 31, 1994.  Defendants claim, alternatively,  that (1) the
    procedural requirements imposed  by section 1396a(a)(30)  are not
    enforceable  by health care  providers, (2) even  if enforceable,
    however, defendants violated neither procedural requirement cited
    by plaintiffs,  (3) the district  court abused its  discretion in
    August  1994 by  ruling  that  defendants  had  violated  section
    1396a(a)(30), rather than staying the district  court proceedings
    while  Amendment 003  remained  pending before  HCFA, or  (4) the
    declaratory judgment entered by the district court granted retro-
    spective relief barred by the Eleventh Amendment, see U.S. Const.
    amend. XI.
    1.   Standing: Enforceable Rights
    1.   Standing: Enforceable Rights
    Section 1983 enables  a private action against  a State
    official to vindicate federal statutory rights enforceable by the
    12
    plaintiff.   See  42 U.S.C.    1983; Albiston v.  Maine Comm'r of
    Human Servs., 
    7 F.3d 258
    , 261 (1st Cir. 1993).   Whether section
    1396a(a)(30)  creates  "enforceable" procedural  and  substantive
    rights
    turns on  "whether  [it]  was  intend[ed]  to
    benefit  the putative  plaintiff[s]." If  so,
    the  provision creates  an enforceable  right
    unless  it reflects  merely a  "congressional
    preference"  for a  certain  kind of  conduct
    rather  than  a  binding  obligation  on  the
    governmental unit, or unless the interest the
    plaintiff   asserts   is  "'too   vague   and
    amorphous'"  such  that  it  is "'beyond  the
    competence of the judiciary to enforce.'"
    Wilder, 
    496 U.S. at 509
     (citations omitted).5
    a)   Substantive Rights6
    a)   Substantive Rights
    Section  1396a(a)(30) arguably  describes two  distinct
    substantive "equal access" rights:   the right to require a State
    medicaid program to  use reimbursement  "methods and  procedures"
    5In January 1996,  Congress enacted 42  U.S.C.   1320a-2  (a
    Medicaid  Act  provision  will "not  []  be  deemed unenforceable
    because  of its inclusion  in a section  . . .  requiring a State
    plan or specifying the required contents of a State plan"), which
    overturned,  in part,  the  Supreme Court  decision  in Suter  v.
    Artist  M., 
    503 U.S. 347
     (1992).  Before    1320a-2 was enacted,
    some commentators had suggested that Suter's rationale supplanted
    the traditional Wilder  test. But see, e.g., Albiston,  
    7 F.3d at 262-63
      (holding that Suter  did not overturn  Wilder, but merely
    superimposed an  additional threshold  test).   Consequently,  we
    assume that Congress  intended that   1320a-2  serve to resurrect
    the Wilder test, with no Suter overlay.
    6We  address  the  enforceability   of  the     1396a(a)(30)
    substantive  requirements  as  a  threshold  issue  because   the
    district court judgment dismissed plaintiffs' substantive claims,
    albeit  on other  grounds.   See infra  Section II.B.2(b).   Even
    though  we find  those other  grounds infirm,  we may  uphold the
    district court ruling on any ground supported by the record.  See
    Four Corners Serv. Station, Inc. v. Mobil Oil Corp., 
    51 F.3d 306
    ,
    314 (1st Cir. 1995).
    13
    which (1) will "safeguard against unnecessary utilization of such
    [medical]  care and  services  and []  assure  that payments  are
    consistent  with efficiency, economy,  and quality of  care," and
    (2) are "sufficient  to enlist enough providers so  that care and
    services are available under the plan at least to the extent that
    such care and services are available to the general population in
    the geographic area."  42 U.S.C.   1396a(a)(30).
    In  Wilder, the  Supreme  Court  held  that  comparable
    provisions of  section 1396a(a)(13)  ("the Boren  Amendment") did
    create  enforceable substantive  rights for  institutional health
    care  providers.      See  Wilder,  
    496 U.S. at 520
    .    Section
    1396a(a)(13) mandates that the State Plan provide:
    (A) for payment . . . of the hospital servic-
    es, nursing  facility services,  and services
    in an  intermediate  care  facility  for  the
    mentally  retarded  provided under  the  plan
    through  the  use  of  rates  (determined  in
    accordance   with   methods   and   standards
    developed by the State . . .) which the State
    finds, and  makes assurances  satisfactory to
    the Secretary, are reasonable and adequate to
    meet  the  costs which  must  be incurred  by
    efficiently    and    economically   operated
    facilities  in  order  to  provide  care  and
    services in conformity  with applicable State
    and  Federal laws,  regulations, and  quality
    and  safety  standards  and  to  assure  that
    individuals eligible  for medical  assistance
    have reasonable  access .  .  . to  inpatient
    hospital services of adequate quality.
    42 U.S.C.   1396a(a)(13) (emphasis added).
    Every  court that  has  considered whether  the  Wilder
    rationale likewise  applies to  the second  "equal access"  right
    described  in section 1396(a)(30) has determined that health care
    providers  were  intended  beneficiaries  under  both  the  Boren
    14
    Amendment and section 1396(a)(30),  since health care  providers,
    as payees, obviously are affected by substantive changes in State
    reimbursement schemes under  Medicaid.  See, e.g.,  Arkansas Med.
    Soc'y, Inc. v. Reynolds, 
    6 F.3d 519
    , 528 (8th Cir. 1993);  Sobky
    v. Smoley, 
    855 F. Supp. 1123
    , 1137-38 (E.D. Cal. 1994); Oklahoma
    Nursing Home Ass'n v.  Demps, 
    792 F. Supp. 721
    , 727 (W.D.  Okla.
    1992); Illinois Hosp. Ass'n v.  Edgar, 
    765 F. Supp. 1343
    , 1348-49
    (N.D.  Ill. 1991).   Without  citation  to supporting  authority,
    defendants nonetheless  insist that  section 1396(a)(30)  and the
    Boren Amendment are distinguishable.
    i)   Intended Beneficiaries
    i)   Intended Beneficiaries
    The  Wilder  Court  reasoned  that  because  the  Boren
    Amendment "establishes  a system for  reimbursement of  providers
    and is phrased  in terms benefiting  health care providers .  . .
    [in that] [i]t requires a state plan  to provide for `payment . .
    .  of the  hospital  services,  nursing  facility  services,  and
    services  in an  intermediate  care  facility  for  the  mentally
    retarded provided under the plan,'" "[t]here can be little  doubt
    that  health  care  providers  are  the intended  beneficiaries."
    Wilder, 
    496 U.S. at 510
    .7  Defendants argue, however, that unlike
    the  Boren Amendment, section 1396a(a)(30) does not list specific
    7Although    Medicaid   recipients    also   are    intended
    beneficiaries  under the "equal access" requirement as it affects
    the availability of  their medical care, it is  well settled that
    Congress may create more than one class of  intended beneficiary.
    See Freestone  v. Cowan, 
    68 F.3d 1141
    ,  1150 n.10 (9th Cir. 1995)
    (citing Golden  State Transit Corp.  v. City of Los  Angeles, 
    493 U.S. 103
    , 110 (1989); Carelli v. Howser, 
    923 F.2d 1208
    , 1211 (6th
    Cir. 1991)).
    15
    categories  of health  care providers  (e.g.,  hospitals, nursing
    facilit[ies],  and  intermediate  care  facilit[ies]),  hence  it
    cannot  be said  that Congress  focused on  providers  as section
    1396a(a)(30) beneficiaries.   We are not persuaded.
    The  Wilder Court first  observed that the  statute "is
    phrased  in terms benefiting  health care providers,"  and leaves
    "little doubt that health care providers are the intended benefi-
    ciaries," then proceeded to illustrate  how the plain language of
    the  Boren Amendment "establishes  a system for  reimbursement of
    providers" through its  listing of specific types  of health care
    providers.  Nowhere did the  Court indicate that the more general
    term "providers" would not suffice, however, or that a listing of
    specific types  of providers is  a sine  qua non without  which a
    congressional intent to  benefit health care providers  could not
    be inferred.   As long as the  two statutory provisions  evince a
    congressional  concern  for  preserving financial  incentives  to
    providers    by ensuring adequate reimbursement payment levels
    providers  are appropriately  considered intended  beneficiaries.
    See Arkansas Med. Soc'y, Inc., 
    6 F.3d at 526
    .
    (ii) "Preference" or "Binding Obligation"
    (ii) "Preference" or "Binding Obligation"
    Defendants argue that  section 1396a(a)(30) articulates
    a  more discretionary "access"  standard than  that in  the Boren
    Amendment,  and that  the  additional  discretion thus  conferred
    belies  a congressional  intendment  to  lay  down  any  "binding
    obligations"  on the State  in section 1396(a)(30).   See Wilder,
    
    496 U.S. at 509
    .  As  defendants see it, the Boren Amendment  (1)
    16
    requires the  State not  only to meet  the ultimate  benchmark of
    providing  comparable  "access"  to medical  care,  but  also the
    preliminary  obligation  to  make  "findings"  and  "assurances,"
    satisfactory to the Secretary, that State reimbursement rates can
    ensure  reasonable and  adequate access,  as well as  comply with
    "State  and Federal  laws, regulations,  and  quality and  safety
    standards,"  and (2)  limits the potential  reimbursement methods
    and procedures  that the State  can employ to the  institution of
    "rates,"  rather  than  permitting  more  innovative  or  ad  hoc
    reimbursement systems that might be less rate-dependent.  We find
    no  indication that the Wilder holding  turned on these consider-
    ations.
    First  and foremost,  the  Boren Amendment  and section
    1396a(a)(30) are  prefaced with  the same  mandatory language
    "[a] State plan  for medical assistance must . . . [p]rovide," 42
    U.S.C.    1396a(a); see  Edgar, 
    765 F. Supp. at
    1349     and the
    "reasonable" and  "equal" access requirements upon  which federal
    Medicaid funding  depends, see 42 U.S.C.    1396c, are conditions
    precedent to an approvable State  Plan.  See Wilder, 
    496 U.S. at 511
     (contrasting with statute in  Pennhurst State Sch. & Hosp. v.
    Halderman, 
    451 U.S. 1
    , 24 (1981),  where hortatory language  did
    not make "compliance with the provision a condition of receipt of
    federal funding"); Arkansas Med. Soc'y,  Inc., 
    6 F.3d at 526
    ; see
    also supra note 5 (discussing newly enacted 42 U.S.C.   1320a-2).
    Thus,  the mandatory  language in  section  1396a(a) defies  fair
    characterization as a mere "congressional preference."
    17
    Second, the  majority opinion  in Wilder mentioned  the
    Boren  Amendment   requirement  that  there  be   "findings"  and
    "assurances"  merely to rebut a  suggestion in the Wilder dissent
    that  Congress  had  intended to  accord  plaintiffs  standing to
    assert a  judicial challenge  to a State's  default on  these two
    procedural  obligations,  but  not  to  challenge  a  substantive
    default (i.e.,  a State's  adoption of rates  that do  not ensure
    "reasonable access,"  or that  are not  "adequate" to  compensate
    "efficient[]" provider costs).  See  Wilder, 
    496 U.S. at 514
     ("We
    reject  that argument  because  it  would  render  the  statutory
    requirements  of findings  and assurances,  and  thus the  entire
    reimbursement  provision, essentially meaningless  [since] .  . .
    [i]t would make  little sense for Congress to require  a State to
    make  findings without requiring those findings to be correct.").
    The premise that procedural rights normally exist only as aids to
    the enforcement of substantive rights is not interchangeable with
    the  proposition that substantive  rights cannot exist  absent an
    express  provision of  attendant procedural  rights.   Thus,  the
    majority opinion  in Wilder in  no sense suggests that  the Boren
    Amendment's substantive  "access"  requirement  would  have  been
    found any  less mandatory  if, like  section 1396(a)(30), it  had
    contained no  explicit procedural  requirement of "findings"  and
    "assurances."
    iii) Judicial Enforceability
    iii) Judicial Enforceability
    Defendants   intimate,   however,   that   absent   any
    requirement of "findings" and "assurances," section  1396a(a)(30)
    18
    is less amenable to effective judicial enforcement than the Boren
    Amendment.     As   we  have   explained,  however,   substantive
    requirements are  not "impermissibly vague simply  because [they]
    require[] judicial  inquiry into `reasonableness,'"  or "adequate
    rates," as  long as "the action or purpose whose `reasonableness'
    [or `adequacy'] is commanded  has been clearly delineated  and is
    susceptible  of judicial ascertainment."  Albiston, 
    7 F.3d at 267
    (collecting cases).
    The Boren  Amendment and  section 1396a(a)(30)  contain
    nearly  identical substantive  requirements  that  the rates,  or
    methods  and  procedures,  used  to determine  reimbursements  to
    health  care providers ultimately  ensure reasonable, adequate or
    equal "access" to medical care, which the Supreme Court in Wilder
    decided did not constitute a  standard too vague or amorphous for
    judicial  enforcement.    See Wilder,  
    496 U.S. at 515
      ("[T]he
    statute imposes  the concomitant  obligation to  adopt reasonable
    and  adequate rates.").     Indeed, the  term "equal  access," as
    employed  in  section  1396a(a)(30),  arguably  provides  a  more
    concrete standard, objectively measurable against the health care
    access afforded among  the general population, whereas  the Boren
    Amendment  employs   the  somewhat   less  objective   benchmark:
    "reasonable" access.
    Nor  do we discern  a material distinction  between the
    focus on "methods and procedures" required by section 1396(a)(30)
    and the focus  on "rates" required  by the Boren  Amendment.   In
    either instance, the required determination     as to whether the
    19
    State methods or procedures, or the resultant rates of reimburse-
    ment, are adequate to ensure "access"    is neither more nor less
    daunting a  judicial task.  See 
    id. at 519
     (noting that although
    States have great flexibility in choosing among a broad "range of
    reasonable rates," "the statute and regulation[s] set out factors
    which  a State  must consider  in  adopting its  rates," so  that
    "there certainly are some rates  outside that range that no State
    could ever find to be reasonable and adequate under the Act.").8
    For the foregoing reasons,  therefore, we conclude that
    plaintiffs possess  standing to  enforce the  substantive section
    1396a(a)(30)  requirement  that  the  State  adopt  "methods  and
    procedures"  which will afford "equal  access" to medical care as
    defined in section 1396a(a)(30).
    b)   Procedural Rights
    b)   Procedural Rights
    Plaintiffs further  contend that  section 1396a(a)(30),
    as  interpreted and applied through the HCFA implementing regula-
    tions,   establishes  two   coincident  procedural   requirements
    designed  to ensure  that health care  providers may  enforce the
    8We  reject the implicit  suggestion by defendants  that the
    absence  of a  "findings" and  "assurances"  requirement under
    1396a(a)(30)    makes   meaningful    judicial   review    wholly
    impracticable  in  that the  courts  have  no factual  bases  for
    ascertaining whether  the State's chosen "methods and procedures"
    satisfy the  substantive  "equal access"  requirement.    Setting
    aside  the  question  whether  the     1396a(a)(30)  implementing
    regulations afford any procedural rights that ensure  disclosure,
    see  infra  Section  II.B.2(a), plaintiffs  may  adduce  evidence
    concerning the  inadequacy of  the State's  selected methods  and
    procedures, or flaws  in the  State's substantive  decisionmaking
    processes,  in any number of  ways; for example, with information
    acquired by or from the State during public hearings, in proposed
    Plan changes, or in the published State regulations.
    20
    substantive right of  "equal access":  the  requirements that the
    State file a Plan amendment  and a public notice "describing" its
    proposed new "methods  and procedures" in some detail.   Since we
    conclude  that  defendants  have  not violated  these  procedural
    requirements, see  infra Section II.B.2(a), we need not reach the
    enforceability issue.9
    2.   Claimed Violations of Enforceable Rights
    2.   Claimed Violations of Enforceable Rights
    a)   Procedural Rights
    a)   Procedural Rights
    9We  likewise reserve  judgment  as  to  whether,  and  what
    extent,  procedural  rights prescribed  only in  the implementing
    regulations, rather than  directly by statute, may be enforced in
    a   1983  action.  See, e.g., Oklahoma Nursing Home Ass'n, 
    792 F. Supp. at 725-26
    .
    21
    i)   Plan Amendment 003
    i)   Plan Amendment 003
    Prior  to the time Amendment 003  was submitted to HCFA
    in  March 1994,  the approved  Massachusetts  Plan described  its
    "methods  and  procedures" for  reimbursing  providers  as "fixed
    negotiated fee schedules."  Amendment 003 purportedly altered the
    "methods and procedures" to be  employed under the new class rate
    system  simply by deleting the word "negotiated," with the result
    that the new rates were to be based on "fixed fee schedules."
    Plaintiffs  argue that  the cryptic  phrase "fixed  fee
    schedules"  is patently deficient to describe the proposed change
    in the Massachusetts reimbursement "methods  and procedures," and
    that  under whatever conceivable  definition the phrase  might be
    given,  it  utterly  failed  to notify  HCFA  or  plaintiffs that
    defendants planned to change from  a cost-based system to a class
    rate system, or to explain  with any precision the methodology or
    formula   defendants   used   to  arrive   at   the   bottom-line
    reimbursement  figures announced in the DMA regulation. See Mass.
    Regs. Code tit. 114.3,   3.04(4).  We do not agree.
    First,  HCFA  itself  implicitly  determined  that  the
    phrase  "fixed  fee  schedules"  met  the  section   1396a(a)(30)
    mandate,  otherwise  it  could not  have  approved  Amendment 003
    retroactive to January 1,  1994.  See supra note 4.   In order to
    be  entitled  to  retroactive effect  to  January  1,  1994, Plan
    amendment 003 had to have been "approvable" as submitted in March
    1994,  when  it  contained  merely   the  three-word  description
    presently challenged  by  plaintiffs as  insufficient to  satisfy
    22
    section  1396a(a)(30).10  We  must therefore review  the implicit
    interpretation given section 1396a(a)(30) by HCFA in this case.
    At  its  initial  stage,   Chevron  review  accords  no
    deference to the interpretation an  agency gives to its  enabling
    statute. See supra Section II.A.  If the reviewing court indepen-
    dently determines  that the  intent of the  statute is  clear, as
    disclosed  in  its  plain  language  and  design,  the  statutory
    language is to be given full  effect.  See Grunbeck v. Dime  Sav.
    Bank  of  N.Y.,  FSB,  
    74 F.3d 331
    ,  340-41  (1st  Cir.  1996);
    Strickland v. Commissioner of Me.  Dep't of Human Servs., 
    48 F.3d 12
    , 16-17 (1st Cir.), cert. denied, 
    116 S. Ct. 145
     (1995).
    Section 1396a(a)(30) mandates that a State Plan provide
    "methods and  procedures relating  to .  . .  the payment  for []
    [medical]  care and services."   Plaintiffs argue  that "methods"
    has a plain or  acquired meaning that necessitates  disclosure of
    the formula the State used  to arrive at its proposed bottom-line
    reimbursement  figures.    Thus,   plaintiffs  suggest  that  the
    solitary statutory term "rates" might permit a Plan amendment  to
    list only bottom-line figures, cf.  42 U.S.C.   1396a(a)(13), but
    that the  presence  of  the  term "methods"  forecloses  such  an
    approach.  Once again, we are unable to agree.
    10Thus  viewed, the  HCFA  interpretation  comports with  42
    C.F.R.   430.16(a)(ii), which empowers  HCFA to ask the State for
    any  "additional information"  the agency  needs  to conduct  its
    "final  [approval] determination."    On the  other hand,  if the
    requested "additional information"  were a necessary part  of the
    initial submission by the State, and hence of its Plan, Amendment
    003 would only  have been retroactive to January  1995. See supra
    p. 9.
    23
    Even if  the distinction  suggested by plaintiffs  were
    deemed sound,  the question  would remain:   with what  degree of
    specificity or detail  must a State describe the methodology used
    in its Plan  amendment?  In this case, for example, although non-
    exhaustive,  the terms "cost-based"  and "class  rates" assuredly
    are  to  some  degree  descriptive  of  the  proposed  change  in
    methodology,  particularly among the initiated, viz., health care
    providers.   Yet we are  unable to say that  section 1396a(a)(30)
    defines,  in plain language,  the term "methods  and procedures,"
    nor, more  importantly, that  it prescribes  the level  of detail
    with which a Plan must describe "methods and procedures."  Unlike
    the Boren  Amendment,  moreover, section  1396a(a)(30)  does  not
    require the State to make "findings" and "assurances," a require-
    ment that  arguably might  be thought  to  anticipate a  somewhat
    greater   degree  of  detail   and  specificity  from   a  Plan's
    description.    As we  are  unable  to  discern either  a  "plain
    language" meaning or  design in section 1396a(a)(30)  relating to
    "the  precise question  at issue,"  Chevron, 
    467 U.S. at
    842
    i.e.,  the degree  of specificity  required in  a Plan  amendment
    description  of proposed new "methods and  procedures"    we next
    turn to defendants'  contention that Congress meant to leave this
    matter for determination by HCFA, the administering agency.11
    The  second stage in  the Chevron analysis  counsels "a
    11Plaintiffs do  not claim  that  the available  legislative
    history provides useful guidance.   See Strickland, 
    48 F.3d at 17
    (stating  that  reviewing  court  may  "examine  the  legislative
    history, albeit skeptically, in search of an unmistakable expres-
    sion of congressional intent").
    24
    high degree  of respect for  the agency's role"  in administering
    its enabling statute.  See Strickland, 
    48 F.3d at 17
     ("The agency
    need not write a rule that serves the statute in the best or most
    logical manner;   it need only write a rule that flows rationally
    from a permissible construction  of the statute.") see Lamore  v.
    Ives,  
    977 F.2d 713
    ,  718  (1st Cir.  1992);  accord  Caribbean
    Petroleum Corp. v. United  States EPA, 
    28 F.3d 232
    , 234 (1st Cir.
    1994);  Cabral v. INS,  
    15 F.3d 193
    , 194  (1st Cir. 1994) (agency
    interpretation  "is  entitled  to   deference  unless  arbitrary,
    capricious,  or  manifestly contrary  to  the  statute").   As  a
    general rule, longstanding agency interpretations are entitled to
    greater deference than  more recent ones.  See  Bowen v. American
    Hosp. Ass'n, 
    476 U.S. 610
    , 646 n. 34 (1986); Mayburg v. Secretary
    of Health and  Human Servs., 
    740 F.2d 100
    , 106 (1st  Cir. 1984).
    Further,   the  more  persuasive  the  rationale  for  an  agency
    interpretation, the more  deference it is due, especially  if the
    statute  administered by  the agency  involves complex  questions
    peculiarly   within   the   agency's   acquired,  technical,   or
    institutional expertise.  Bowen, 
    476 U.S. at 646
    .
    Plaintiffs stress that these HCFA regulations  describe
    a State Plan as a  "comprehensive written statement," 42 C.F.R.
    430.10 (emphasis added),  which must (i) "contain[]  all informa-
    tion necessary  for HCFA to  determine whether the plan  [or plan
    amendment]  can be  approved  to  serve as  a  basis for  Federal
    financial participation  (FFP) in  the State  program," 
    id.,
      and
    (ii) "describe the policy and the  methods to be used in  setting
    25
    payment rates  for each type  of service included in  the State's
    Medicaid   program,"  id.      447.201.    Although   these  HCFA
    regulations   are   not   facially   inconsistent  with   section
    1396a(a)(30),  neither  do they  expressly resolve  the ambiguity
    inherent in the statute.
    Contrary to plaintiffs'  assertion, the section  430.10
    reference  to comprehensiveness  accurately  describes the  State
    Plan, even  under the  minimalist interpretation  given the  term
    "description" by  defendants and HCFA, since we  think one cannot
    rationally contend that a State  Plan itself, which must cover no
    less  than  sixty-two   different  criteria,  see  42   U.S.C.
    1396a(a)(1)-(62),  is not a  "comprehensive" document.   For this
    reason and because HCFA's regulations do not  prescribe the level
    of  specificity  and comprehensiveness  with  which "methods  and
    procedures" must  be described  in a Plan,  we must  consider the
    implicit interpretation HCFA has given its own regulations.
    Plaintiffs concede that the initial Massachusetts  Plan
    approved  by  HCFA  had  been  in existence  for  years,  yet  it
    contained  only  a  bare-bones,  four-word  description   of  its
    "methods and procedures."  When Massachusetts decided in  1991 to
    effect a material change in its rate-setting system, from a cost-
    based to a class-rate system, it reasonably  understood that HCFA
    had  interpreted its own  implementing regulations to  require no
    greater degree of  specificity in the Amended  Plan's description
    of   reimbursement  rates  than  that  provided  in  the  initial
    Massachusetts Plan, which  had gone unchallenged for  many years.
    26
    See Bowen, 
    476 U.S. at
    646 n. 34; Lynch v. Dawson, 
    820 F.2d 1014
    ,
    1020  (9th Cir. 1987)  (agency's interpretation of  regulation is
    accorded  various  degrees  of deference  based  on  duration and
    consistency of agency position).
    Plaintiffs correctly  contend,  of  course,  that  this
    longstanding  HCFA interpretation  does  not foreclose  a federal
    court from determining  whether the interpretation an  agency has
    given  its own regulations rationally comports with the statutory
    and regulatory language.   Nevertheless, their argument seriously
    devalues the heightened Chevron  judicial deference reaffirmed in
    Stinson, which requires the reviewing court to decide whether the
    agency's  interpretation  of  its  own  regulation   is  "plainly
    erroneous or  inconsistent with  the regulation."   Stinson,  
    508 U.S. at 45
     (emphasis added).
    Since  sections  430.10   and  447.201,  like   section
    1396a(a)(30)   itself,  do   not   preclude  the   interpretation
    implicitly  given  them by  HCFA,  we  may not  second-guess  its
    reasonable  policy  judgment.    See  Bowen,  
    476 U.S. at 646
    ;
    Massachusetts  Fed'n of Nursing  Homes v. Commonwealth  of Mass.,
    
    772 F. Supp. 31
    , 39 (D. Mass. 1991) ("The HCFA certainly has more
    expertise in this complicated area of the law than the courts.").
    And because  plaintiffs have not  chosen to join HCFA  as a party
    defendant, see 42 U.S.C.   1396c, we can only infer the rationale
    for  HCFA's  longstanding  practice from  its  prior  approval of
    Amendment 003  and its  predecessor.  Moreover,  we find  readily
    apparent a sound policy reason for the HCFA's action.
    27
    The Medicaid Act designedly affords States considerable
    flexibility in administering their respective Medicaid  programs,
    allowing  each to  devise  and  modify its  Plan  in response  to
    prevailing  local medical  and financial  conditions.   Once  the
    sixty-two  statutory minima  in section  1396a(a)  are met,  each
    participating  State has  "wide  discretion in  administering its
    local program."    See,  e.g.,  Erie  County  Geriatric  Ctr.  v.
    Sullivan, 
    952 F.2d 71
    , 73-74 (3d Cir. 1991);  Lewis v. Hegstrom,
    
    767 F.2d 1371
    ,  1373  (9th  Cir.  1985).    HCFA's   regulatory
    interpretation     permitting terse descriptions of  "methods and
    procedures," such  as "cost-based"  or "class  rate"     arguably
    serves this  salutary goal as well.  Mandating the inclusion of a
    detailed formula in  the State Plan itself could  require a State
    to file  a new Plan  amendment each time  it needed to  alter any
    significant integer in its formula, thereby imposing a cumbersome
    administrative  burden on  the  State  as well  as  HCFA.   Thus,
    whatever one might think  of its wisdom,  we cannot say that  the
    implicit policy choice made by  HCFA was precluded, either by the
    statute or HCFA regulations.   See Massachusetts Fed'n of Nursing
    Homes, 
    772 F. Supp. at 39
     (noting that  HCFA approval of  Plan,
    unless  inconsistent with  the statute or  regulation, implicitly
    establishes definition  of comprehensiveness of the term "methods
    and procedures" as a matter of law).
    Nor  do   we  think   the  agency   decision  approving
    defendants' description  of the new  class rate system     as one
    utilizing "fixed fee  schedules"    was impermissible,  given the
    28
    original  Massachusetts Plan's  longstanding  description of  its
    provider-cost-based system as a  "negotiated fixed fee schedule."
    HCFA  fairly  and sensibly  reasoned  that deletion  of  the term
    "negotiated" signified  clearly enough that  individual providers
    no longer  would be entitled to reimbursement rates set according
    to  their idiosyncratic cost  experiences, but would  be confined
    for the most  part to across-the-board "fixed"  rates established
    for services rendered in each  of the five covered health service
    classifications.  Accordingly, as the longstanding interpretation
    reflected  in the  HCFA regulations  was  not plainly  erroneous,
    defendants were entitled  to place reasonable reliance  on HCFA's
    interpretation  in preparing and submitting their March 1994 Plan
    Amendment  003.  Cf.  Sekula v. FDIC,  
    39 F.3d 448
    ,  457 (3d Cir.
    1994)  ("[A]  person  `proceeding in  good  faith  should  not be
    subjected  to a  trap brought  about  by an  interpretation of  a
    regulation hidden in the bosom of the agency' . . . . [b]ut there
    is no `trap' when the  agency's interpretation of a regulation is
    public and long-standing.") (citation omitted).
    ii)  Public Notice Under Section 447.205
    ii)  Public Notice Under Section 447.205
    Plaintiffs  next  contend  that  the  HCFA  regulations
    mandate that the  public notices issued by the  State relating to
    reimbursement   rate   changes   likewise  contain   a   complete
    description  of  the  proposed change  in  methodology.   Section
    447.205 provides, in pertinent part:
    (a)  When  notice  is  required.   Except  as
    specified in paragraph  (b) of this  section,
    the agency must provide public notice  of any
    significant  proposed change  in its  methods
    29
    and standards  for setting payment  rates for
    services. . . .
    . . . .
    (c) Content of notice.  The notice must--
    (1)  Describe  the  proposed change
    in methods and standards;
    (2)  Give  an estimate  of any  expected
    increase or decrease  in annual ag-
    gregate expenditures;
    (3)  Explain why the  agency is changing
    its methods and standards;
    (4)  Identify  a  local agency  in  each
    county (such as the social services
    agency or health  department) where
    copies of the  proposed changes are
    available for public review;
    (5)  Give an address  where written com-
    ments may  be sent and  reviewed by
    the public;  and
    (6)  If there are  public hearings, give
    the  location,  date and  time  for
    hearings or tell  how this informa-
    tion may be obtained.
    42 C.F.R.   447.205.
    Defendants respond  that section  447.205 was  complied
    with because the representative public notice hereinafter  quoted
    explained "why DMA is changing its methods  and standards," i.e.,
    "to  implement a  class rate  system by  eliminating many  of the
    idiosyncratic  adjustments  that  existed  previously [under  the
    cost-based rate setting system]":
    The  proposed amendments  do not  change
    the existing  methodology from July 1, 1992 -
    December  31, 1992 except  for a provision to
    allow some eligible providers to request rate
    reviews  based  on  their cost  report,  with
    inflation equal to 1.0.  Effective January 1,
    1992,  the  proposed  amendments  change  the
    structure of the reimbursement methodology to
    a   class  rate   system:  establishing   new
    criteria   for  administrative   adjustments;
    eliminating, among other things, costs beyond
    30
    agency   control,   management   initiatives,
    program  innovation  rate   adjustments,  and
    appeals sections  of the  regulation.   It is
    estimated that  the proposed  amendments will
    increase   program   expenditures    by   the
    Department of Public Welfare by approximately
    $335,000.  (Emphasis added.)
    For  the reasons  discussed  in Section  II.B.2.(a)(i),
    supra, we believe  the public notices  issued by defendants  need
    not have  "describ[ed]" the  proposed changes  in greater  detail
    than  that provided  in Plan  Amendment 003.   Absent  a reliable
    indication to the  contrary, we must  assume that HCFA  construes
    the term "describe" in section 447.205(c)(1) as it interprets the
    same term in  42 C.F.R.   447.201 (providing  that Plan amendment
    "must  describe the  policy and  methods  to be  used in  setting
    payment rates  for each type  of service included in  the state's
    Medicaid  program").   Cf. Gustafson  v. Alloyd  Co., 
    115 S. Ct. 1061
    , 1067 (1995) (noting presumption  that a word or phrase used
    more  than  once  in a  statute  is  intended  to  have the  same
    meaning);  United States  v.  Rhode  Island Insurers'  Insolvency
    Fund, 
    80 F.3d 616
    , 622 n.4 (1st Cir. 1996).12
    Plaintiffs complain that interested parties cannot know
    whether  proposed   changes   in   methodology   threaten   their
    substantive rights under  section 1396a(a)(30) unless  the public
    12The only case remotely  on point, see Methodist Hosps.  v.
    Indiana  Family and  Social Servs.,  
    860 F. Supp. 1309
    ,  1326-28
    (N.D.  Ind.  1994),  does  not  undercut  HCFA's  interpretation.
    Although  the  notice  involved in  that  case  contained greater
    detail than these  notices, the court found the  notice adequate,
    not  inadequate.    Consequently, the  case  is  not particularly
    instructive as to how much less detail might have been considered
    permissible.
    31
    notice  is sufficiently  informative.   As  their name  suggests,
    however, "notice" provisions are neither invariably nor primarily
    designed to afford exhaustive disclosure, but to alert interested
    parties  that  their  substantive  rights may  be  affected  in a
    forthcoming  public proceeding.   See Mississippi Hosp.  Ass'n v.
    Heckler, 
    701 F.2d 511
    , 520 (5th Cir. 1983) (noting that notice is
    designed  to "outline[] the  substance of the  plan in sufficient
    detail to allow  interested parties to decide how  and whether to
    seek more  information on  the plan's  particular aspects");  see
    also 42 C.F.R.    447.205(c)(4), (6) (mandating  the provision of
    information  to  allow interested  parties to  initiate follow-up
    after    447.205  notice).   Accordingly,  HCFA might  reasonably
    anticipate   that  the   State   would  provide   more   detailed
    information, relating to its methodology, at the public hearings,
    especially  since it  is in  the State's  interest to  respond to
    reasonable  requests  for  further   information  at  the  public
    hearings, if for no other reason than to forfend a future section
    1983 action by disgruntled health care providers.  See supra note
    8 (describing potential  discovery burdens facing the  State in
    1983   action).      Thus,   HCFA's   interpretation   cannot  be
    characterized  as either  plainly erroneous or  inconsistent with
    the Medicaid statute.13
    13Since the public notices complied  with   447.205, we need
    not determine  whether plaintiffs  acquired actual  notice during
    the  two and  a half  years of  public consultative  hearings and
    meetings,  or whether  any such  actual  notice might  excuse the
    alleged  procedural default under    447.205.  See North Carolina
    Dep't of  Human Resources, 
    999 F.2d at 771
     (finding  that actual
    notice did not cure procedural default).
    32
    Since    defendants    violated    neither   procedural
    requirement  established in section 1396a(a)(30), we do not reach
    defendants' two remaining arguments    i.e., whether the district
    court erred  in  refusing to  stay its  partial summary  judgment
    while Amendment 003 remained pending before HCFA, and whether the
    district court's  declaratory judgment  constituted retrospective
    relief barred by the Eleventh Amendment.14
    14Plaintiffs urge us to affirm the district court on another
    ground.   See Four Corners  Serv. Station, Inc.,  
    51 F.3d at 314
    .
    Before  implementing the  final  class  rates  in  January  1994,
    defendants  failed  to  consult with  the  medical  care advisory
    committee  (MCAC),  appointed   by  the  Massachusetts   Medicaid
    director  to  represent, inter  alios, consumer  groups, Medicaid
    recipients, and  health care providers specializing in low-income
    medical  services.   See 42  U.S.C.    1396a(a)(4);  42 C.F.R.
    431.12(e).  We decline plaintiffs' request.
    The alleged MCAC violation was  first raised in the  amended
    complaint filed in September 1994.  The State subsequently recon-
    vened a MCAC, with which  it consulted regarding the final rates.
    The    431.12(e) case law  suggests that States  should undertake
    their MCAC consultations as  early in the Plan  amendment process
    as  practicable, preferably before any final decision on proposed
    changes  to their reimbursement  methodologies.  See  Morabito v.
    Blum,  
    528 F. Supp. 252
    ,  264 (S.D.N.Y. 1981) (collecting cases).
    Nonetheless,  the Medicaid  Act contains  no express  requirement
    that a  State establish a MCAC, see 42  U.S.C.    1396a(a)(4), an
    entity   entirely   the  creature   of   the   HCFA  implementing
    regulations.   See Morabito, 
    528 F. Supp. at 264
    .   Further, the
    HCFA regulations prescribe  no time bar for  the recommended MCAC
    consultation.  Thus,  HCFA might reasonably  conclude that (1)  a
    State's  failure to  consult  an MCAC,  while  not the  preferred
    practice,   does  not   constitute   a   sufficient  ground   for
    disapproving  a Plan amendment in  all circumstances, or (2) MCAC
    consultation is  sufficient as  along as  it occurs  before final
    HCFA approval of  the Plan amendment.   Given that the MCAC  is a
    purely  advisory  body,  with  no  veto  power  over  the State's
    decisions,  see Burgess v.  Affleck, 
    683 F.2d 596
    , 600  (1st Cir.
    1982)   (upholding    district   court's   refusal    to   enjoin
    implementation of rates for alleged MCAC  violation which was not
    "egregious"); cf. Mississippi Hosp. Ass'n, Inc., 
    701 F.2d at 523
    (noting  court's reluctance to "read more into [  431.12(e)] than
    is  clearly expressed,"  where  "the  federal  agency  whose  own
    regulation is  in question  has approved  the state's  actions"),
    this interpretation is neither plainly erroneous nor inconsistent
    33
    b)   Substantive Right to "Equal Access"
    b)   Substantive Right to "Equal Access"
    The district court first dismissed plaintiffs' substan-
    tive claims on the mistaken ground that plaintiffs had stipulated
    to  their dismissal.    Upon  reconsideration,  the  court  again
    dismissed the substantive claims, apparently because its decision
    on   the  procedural   claims   had  rendered   their  resolution
    unnecessary.  Insofar as the district court meant to suggest that
    defendants' procedural  violations from January to October, 1994,
    were sufficient in themselves to invalidate the final class rates
    during the January-October 1994 period, without regard to whether
    the rates violated plaintiffs' substantive "equal access" rights,
    its  dismissal order cannot stand.   See supra Section II.B.2(a).
    Since we  have concluded  that the State  was in  full procedural
    compliance,  plaintiffs must  now adduce  evidence  that (1)  the
    methods and procedures  adopted by the  State were inadequate  to
    ensure  "equal  access,"  or (2)  the  bottom-line  reimbursement
    figures derived  under that  methodology were  too low  to retain
    health care providers in the Massachusetts Medicaid program.  See
    supra note 8.       Conversely,  if the  district court  meant to
    suggest  that  judicial  resolution  of  plaintiffs'  substantive
    claims  was  unnecessary   because  HCFA  has   already  approved
    Amendment  003 retroactive to  January 1, 1994,  we cannot agree.
    HCFA's  approval of the  State's proposed methods  and procedures
    (i.e.,  "class rates"), though arguably entitled to the customary
    level of Chevron  deference, are not automatically  conclusive at
    with   1396a(a)(4).
    34
    the  summary judgment  stage.  Further,  the  as-yet  undeveloped
    factual record  relating to  plaintiffs' substantive  claims does
    not reveal HCFA's  rationale for approving the  substantive terms
    of defendants' Plan amendment, or  whether the final class  rates
    have the  actual effect of  creating "unequal access"  to medical
    services.
    35
    C.   Plaintiffs' Cross-Appeal
    C.   Plaintiffs' Cross-Appeal
    Plaintiffs cross-appeal from the district court rulings
    that  (1)  defendants   were  in  compliance  with   the  section
    1396a(a)(30)  procedural requirements as of November 1, 1994, and
    (2) defendants  did not  violate the  procedural requirements  by
    instituting  their  interim  and phase-in  rates.    Although the
    district  court  did not  reveal  the  rationale  for the  latter
    holding,  we presume  that it  found that  the transitional  rate
    methodologies  had not  effected  a  "material" or  "significant"
    change from the pre-1991 methodologies.  In light of our previous
    holding,  see supra  Section II.B.,  we  deny plaintiffs'  cross-
    appeal on both fronts.
    First, if defendants complied with the putative  proce-
    dural requirements in  filing Amendment 003 and  publishing their
    pre-January  1994 notices,  it  necessarily  follows  that  their
    filing  of the more detailed Amendment 023 and their post-October
    1994 notices likewise would comply with the procedural thresholds
    prescribed by  the HCFA regulations.  Second,  since we conclude,
    on the specific facts of this case, that  deference is due HCFA's
    conclusion  that a "description"  of "methods and  procedures" is
    adequate  as long as it  differentiates between a cost-based rate
    and a class  rate system, we affirm the  district court's finding
    that the  interim and phase-in rates, which retained some aspects
    of  the pre-1991 "cost-based"  or "negotiated" rate  systems, did
    not represent a  cognizable change in the methods  and procedures
    such as necessitated a Plan amendment or public notice.
    36
    III
    III
    CONCLUSION
    CONCLUSION
    To  the extent  section 1396a(a)(30)  might create  the
    purported  procedural  rights  advocated by  plaintiffs,  Chevron
    deference is  due  HCFA's longstanding  statutory and  regulative
    interpretation that a State sufficiently describes its cost-based
    system as  a "fixed  negotiated fee schedule,"  and its  proposed
    class rate system as "fixed fee schedules."  We therefore reverse
    the district court  ruling that defendants  were in violation  of
    section 1396a(a)(30)'s procedural requirements  from January 1 to
    October  31, 1994.   We  likewise affirm  the two  district court
    rulings challenged in plaintiffs' cross-appeal.  Finally, because
    summary  judgment   was  improvidently  granted   on  plaintiff's
    procedural  claims, the district court ruling that no disposition
    was necessary on plaintiffs' substantive claims was in error.
    Accordingly, the district court judgment for plaintiffs
    on their procedural claims is vacated and the case is remanded to
    the  district  court  for  further   proceedings  on  plaintiffs'
    substantive claims, consistent with this opinion.
    SO ORDERED.  The parties shall bear their own costs.5
    SO ORDERED.  The parties shall bear their own costs.
    37
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 95-1849, 95-1999

Citation Numbers: 93 F.3d 997

Judges: Boudin, Cyr, Stahl

Filed Date: 8/22/1996

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 8/3/2023

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