Christ the King Manor, Inc. v. Secretary United States Department of Health & Human Services , 730 F.3d 291 ( 2013 )


Menu:
  •                                     PRECEDENTIAL
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE THIRD CIRCUIT
    _____________
    Nos. 12-3401 and 12-3501
    _____________
    CHRIST THE KING MANOR, INC.; BALDOCK
    ASSOCIATES, d/b/a Baldock Health Care Center;
    BONHAM NURSING CENTER; BRIARLEAF NURSING
    AND CONVALESCENT CENTER, INC.; BROOKMONT
    HEALTH CARE CENTER, LLC; CATHEDRAL VILLAGE;
    ELLEN MEMORIAL HEALTH CARE CENTER-
    HONESDALE, INC.; GREENLEAF NURSING AND
    CONVALESCENT CENTER, INC.; HUMBERT LANE
    ASSSOCIATES, d/b/a Humbert Lane Nursing and
    Rehabilitation Center; JEWISH HOME OF GREATER
    HARRISBURG; KINKORA PYTHIAN HOME
    CORPORATION; KUTZTOWN MANOR, INC.;
    MISERICORDIA CONVALESCENT HOME; CPSR
    ASSOCIATES, LLC, d/b/a Mon Valley Care Center;
    PICKERING MANOR HOME; 4144 SCHAPER AVENUE
    OPERATING COMPANY, LLC, d/b/a Presque Isle
    Rehabilitation & Nursing Center; RHEEMS NURSING AND
    REHABILITATION, LLC; RESIDENCE FOR RENTAL
    CARE AT SHADYSIDE, LTD; PERINI
    SERVICE/SOUTHHAMPTON MANOR LIMITED, d/b/a
    Shippensburg Health Care Center; SIEMON NURSING
    HOME, INC.; WINDSOR, IN.C, d/b/a Snyder Memorial
    Health Care Center; SOUTHWESTERN GROUP, LTD, d/b/a
    Southwestern Nursing Center; CARBON-SCHUYLKILL
    COMMUNITY HOSPITAL, INC., d/b/a St. Luke's Miners
    Memorial Geriatric Center; SUSQUEHANNA VALLEY
    NURSING AND REHABILITATION CENTER, LLC; 890
    WEATHERWOOD LANE OPERATING COMPANY, LLC,
    d/b/a The Rehabilitation and Nursing Center at Greater
    Pittsburgh; WESTWOOD OPERARTOR, L.P., d/b/a Village
    at Pennwood; MISERICORDIA CONVALESCENT HOME
    v.
    SECRETARY UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT OF
    HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES; CHARLENE
    FRIZZERA, in her official capacity as Acting Administrator
    of the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS);
    HARRIET DICHTER, in her official capacity as Secretary of
    Public Welfare for the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania,
    Department of Public Welfare
    CHRIST THE KING MANOR, INC.; BONHAM NURSING
    CENTER; CATHEDRAL VILLAGE; ELLEN MEMORIAL
    HEALTH CARE CENTER-HONESDALE, INC.;
    SUSQUEHANNA VALLEY NURSING AND
    REHABILITATION CENTER, LLC;
    RHEEMS NURSING & REHABILITATION, LLC
    SOUTHWESTERN GROUP, LTD. d/b/a Southwestern
    Nursing Center; CPSR ASSOCIATES, LLC d/b/a Mon
    Valley Care Center; KINKORA PYTHIAN HOME CORP.;
    SIEMON NURSING HOME, INC. d/b/a Siemon's Lakeview
    Manor Estate; 4114 SCHAPER AVENUE OPERATING
    CO., LLC d/b/a Presque Isle Rehabilitation & Nursing
    Center; 890 WEATHERWOOD LANE OPERATING
    COMPANY, LLC d/b/a The Rehabilitation and Nursing
    2
    center at Greater Pittsburgh; BRIARLEAF NURSING &
    CONVALESCENT CENTER, INC.; BROOKMOMT
    HEALTH CARE CENTER; KUTZTOWN MANOR, INC.;
    GREENLEAF NURSING AND COVALESCENT CENTER;
    WINDOSR, INC. d/b/a Snyder memorial Health Care Center;
    CARBON-SCHUYKILL COMMUNITY HOSPITAL, INC.
    d/b/a St. Luke's Miner's Memorial Geriatric Center;
    PICKERING MANOR HOME,
    Appellants in 12-3401
    BALDOCK ASSOCIATES, d/b/a Baldock Health Care
    Center; HUMBERT LANE ASSOCIATES, d/b/a Humbert
    Lane Nursing and Rehabilitation Center,
    Appellants in 12-3501
    _______________
    On Appeal from the United States District Court
    for the Middle District of Pennsylvania
    (D.C. No. 09-cv-02007)
    District Judge: Hon. John E. Jones, III
    _______________
    Argued: May 31, 2013
    Before: JORDAN and VANASKIE, Circuit Judges, and
    RAKOFF*, Senior District Judge.
    _______________
    * Honorable Jed S. Rakoff, United States District
    Court Senior Judge for the Southern District of New York,
    sitting by designation.
    3
    (Filed: September 19, 2013)
    _______________
    Daniel K. Katirboff [ARGUED]
    Capozzi & Associates
    P.O. Box 5866
    Harrisburg, PA 17110
    Counsel for Appellants
    Sheila Lieber
    United States Dep’t of Justice
    Federal Programs Branch
    901 E Street, NW
    Washington, DC 20004
    Jeffrey E. Sandberg [ARGUED]
    United States Dep’t of Justice
    Appellate Section
    950 Pennsylvania Avenue, NW
    Washington, DC 20530
    Counsel for Appellees
    Patrick S. Crawley
    Sean A. Kirkpatrick [ARGUED]
    Office of Attorney General of Pennsylvania
    Strawberry Square – 15th Fl.
    Harrisburg, PA 17120
    Counsel for Appellee Harriet Dichter
    _______________
    OPINION OF THE COURT
    _______________
    4
    JORDAN, Circuit Judge.
    This appeal arises from a challenge to the approval by
    the Secretary of the United States Department of Health and
    Human Services (“the Secretary” or “HHS”) of a 2008
    amendment to Pennsylvania’s state plan for administering its
    Medicaid program. Numerous private nursing facilities that
    provide services to Medicaid recipients argue that the state
    plan amendment, or “SPA,” violates Title XIX of the Social
    Security Act, 42 U.S.C. §§ 1396 et seq. (the “Medicaid Act”
    or the “Act”). Specifically, they contend that the SPA
    adjusted Pennsylvania’s method for determining Medicaid
    reimbursement rates to private nursing facilities for the 2008-
    09 fiscal year without considering quality of care, which they
    say violates 42 U.S.C. § 1396a(a)(30)(A) (“Section 30(A)”),
    and without satisfying the public process requirements of 42
    U.S.C. § 1396a(a)(13)(A) (“Section 13(A)”). To remedy
    those alleged violations, Plaintiffs invoke the Administrative
    Procedure Act (the “APA”) and the Supremacy Clause of the
    Constitution, and seek declaratory and injunctive relief
    against the Secretary, the Administrator of the Centers for
    Medicare and Medicaid Services (“CMS”) (collectively, the
    “Federal Defendants”), and the Secretary of Pennsylvania’s
    Department of Public Welfare (“DPW” or the “State
    Defendant”).1     The District Court granted in part the
    1
    When the nursing facilities first brought suit, the
    Secretary of DPW was Estelle B. Richman, and the
    Administrator of CMS was Charlene Frizzera. Since then,
    others have served in both positions. The current Secretary of
    DPW is Gary D. Alexander, and the current Administrator of
    CMS is Marilyn Tavenner. Kathleen Sebelius has been the
    Secretary of HHS since the complaint was filed.
    5
    Defendants’ motions to dismiss, and then entered summary
    judgment in their favor on the remaining claims. For the
    reasons that follow, we will affirm those rulings in part and
    reverse them in part.
    I.     Background
    A.     Factual and Statutory Background
    Medicaid is “a cooperative federal-state program that
    provides medical care to needy individuals.” Douglas v.
    Indep. Living Ctr. of S. Cal., 
    132 S. Ct. 1204
    , 1208 (2012).
    States that choose to participate in the program are
    responsible for developing and implementing a state
    Medicaid plan and have considerable control over the plan’s
    details and administration.       Pa. Pharmacists Ass’n v.
    Houstoun, 
    283 F.3d 531
    , 533 (3d Cir. 2002) (en banc) (citing
    Wilder v. Va. Hosp. Ass’n, 
    496 U.S. 498
    , 502 (1990)). In
    order to qualify for federal funding, however, a state plan
    must comply with the requirements of the Medicaid Act. 42
    U.S.C. § 1396a (defining the requirements a state plan must
    satisfy for approval); id. § 1396b(a) (providing for federal
    payments “to each [s]tate which has a plan approved”).
    Those requirements include, among other things, the so-called
    “equal access provision” of Section 30(A), which mandates
    that a state plan provide “methods and procedures” to assure
    that the state pays participating nursing facilities and other
    Medicaid providers at rates that are consistent with efficiency,
    economy, quality of care, and adequate access to providers by
    Medicaid beneficiaries. 42 U.S.C. § 1396a(a)(30)(A); see
    Ark. Med. Soc’y, Inc. v. Reynolds, 
    6 F.3d 519
    , 522 (8th Cir.
    1993) (explaining that Section 30(A) “is typically called the
    equal access provision”). State plans must also satisfy
    6
    Section 13(A) of the Act, which requires that rates of
    payment to hospitals and nursing facilities be determined
    using a public process similar to notice-and-comment
    rulemaking. 42 U.S.C. § 1396a(a)(13)(A).
    CMS is the division of HHS tasked with ensuring that
    state plans comply with those and other requirements of the
    Medicaid Act. States must submit their proposed plans to
    CMS, and the agency must review each plan, “make a
    determination as to whether it conforms to the requirements
    for approval,” 42 U.S.C. § 1316(a)(1), and “approve any plan
    which fulfills the conditions specified” in the Medicaid Act,
    42 U.S.C. § 1396a(b). See also 42 C.F.R. § 430.12
    (describing the submittal of state plans to CMS). A state may
    later amend an approved plan, but any amendments must also
    be submitted to CMS, and the agency must “determine
    whether the [amended] plan continues to meet the
    requirements for approval.”       42 C.F.R. § 430.12(c)(2)(i).
    States are required to amend their plans “whenever necessary
    to reflect,” among other things, “[m]aterial changes in State
    law, organization, or policy, or in the State’s operation of the
    Medicaid program.” Id.
    Pennsylvania has elected to participate in the Medicaid
    program, and it has designated DPW as the “single [s]tate
    agency” responsible for creating and administering the state’s
    Medicaid plan.2 See 42 U.S.C. § 1396a(a)(5) (requiring states
    to establish or designate “a single [s]tate agency to administer
    … the plan”). Since 1996, Pennsylvania, in accordance with
    2
    Recognizing that Pennsylvania is typically referred to
    as a “Commonwealth,” we nonetheless use the term “state,”
    for ease of reference.
    7
    an approved state plan, has paid participating nursing
    facilities for Medicaid-related services using an “annual
    prospective payment rate” often referred to as the “case-mix
    rate.”3 See 55 Pa. Code § 1187.95 (“Prices will be set
    prospectively on an annual basis … .”); Christ the King
    Manor v. Pennsylvania, 
    911 A.2d 624
    , 630 (Pa. Commw. Ct.
    2006) (“Since July 1996, DPW compensated both public and
    private nursing facilities through its [Medicaid] program
    under what is known as the case-mix payment system.”).
    DPW calculates the “case-mix rate” using a complex formula
    that produces an individualized per diem reimbursement rate
    for each facility based on the “allowable costs” incurred by
    facilities,4 the acuity level of residents,5 and other factors.
    See 55 Pa. Code § 1187.96 (describing the “[p]rice and rate-
    setting computations”).        (See also J.A. at 232-242
    (Pennsylvania’s State Plan).) The rate is effective for one
    year, from July 1 through the following June 30, and it is
    adjusted quarterly, based on resident acuity. 55 Pa. Code §
    1187.95(a).
    3
    Pennsylvania uses the term “rate” in this context to
    mean payment level, and we adopt that usage, even though
    “rate” is often used to refer to “the proportion by which
    quantity or value is adjusted.” See Black’s Law Dictionary
    1289 (8th ed. 2004).
    4
    Pennsylvania defines “allowable costs” as costs
    “which are necessary and reasonable for an efficiently and
    economically operated nursing facility to provide services to
    [Medicaid] residents.” 55 Pa. Code Ann. § 1187.2.
    5
    “Acuity” refers to the severity of illness a patient
    experiences. See Stedman’s Medical Dictionary (28th ed.), at
    22.
    8
    Under       that     methodology,       Pennsylvania’s
    reimbursement rates to nursing facilities have risen steadily
    each year, and, beginning in 2000, the state grew concerned
    that the pace of that inflation was creating unsustainable
    costs. In June 2005, DPW announced that reimbursement
    rates had increased by 29.4% over the previous five years,
    and that, unless rates were somehow limited, there would be
    “insufficient funds available to make case-mix payments to
    [Medicaid] nursing facilities in accordance with the existing
    case-mix payment methodology.” 35 Pa. Bull. 3267 (June 4,
    2005). Therefore, after soliciting public comments and
    receiving input from Pennsylvania’s Medical Assistance
    Advisory Committee,6 DPW proposed using a budget
    adjustment factor, or “BAF,” to slow the increasing rates.
    As it has come to be used in Pennsylvania, a BAF is a
    fraction by which each provider’s case-mix payment rate is
    multiplied, thereby reducing the reimbursement rate by a
    certain percentage. For example, if a case-mix rate of $100
    was multiplied by a BAF of 0.900, the resulting
    reimbursement rate would be $90, or 10% less than what was
    called for by the case-mix calculation.             Under the
    methodology proposed by DPW in 2005, the size of the BAF
    was to be dictated by the funds appropriated by the state
    legislature for payments to nursing facilities for the 2005-06
    fiscal year. Application of the BAF would therefore “cap”
    payments to providers based on budget allocation decisions
    by the Pennsylvania legislature. 35 Pa. Bull. 6232 (Nov. 12,
    6
    States are required to “provide for a medical care
    advisory committee … to advise the Medicaid agency
    director about health and medical care services.” 42 C.F.R.
    431.12(b).
    9
    2005). For the 2005-06 fiscal year, the BAF rate cap allowed
    payments to increase by 2.8% from the previous year.
    Although the BAF reduces the case-mix rate for a given year,
    that does not necessarily mean that the adjusted rate will be
    less than it was the previous year. As described above, rates
    calculated using the case-mix methodology have steadily
    increased each year. If an annual increase is larger than the
    reduction imposed by the BAF in that year, then rates can still
    increase in absolute terms. For example, if rates increased
    under the case-mix methodology by five percent from one
    year to the next, and then the BAF reduced rates by three
    percent, there would still be an overall increase in rates from
    the previous year.
    Although DPW initially portrayed the BAF as “an
    interim measure, applicable only to the computation of
    payment rates for the 2005-2006 fiscal year,” id., BAFs
    became a fixture of the state’s rate-calculation methodology.
    For each year between 2005 and 2008, the Pennsylvania
    legislature authorized the use of a BAF, after which DPW
    submitted the BAF to CMS as a state plan amendment, and
    the agency approved the change. As a result, the case-mix
    rate calculated for each of those years was reduced by the
    amount defined in that year’s BAF; the 2005-06 rates were
    reduced by 4.878%, the 2006-07 rates by 6.245%, and the
    2007-08 rates by 6.806%, as compared to what the rates
    would have been without the application of the BAF.7
    7
    The BAFs for those years were 0.95122, 0.93755,
    and 0.93194, respectively. Because the annual case-mix rate
    is multiplied by the BAF, it is reduced by a certain
    percentage. For example, if you multiply a case-mix rate by
    0.95122, you arrive at a figure that is 95.122% of the original
    10
    On June 28, 2008, two days before the prior legislative
    authorization for a BAF was set to expire, DPW issued a
    public notice and request for comment announcing the state’s
    intent to “authorize the continued use of a budget adjustment
    factor” in calculating nursing facility payment rates. 38 Pa.
    Bull. 3561 (June 28, 2008) (the “June Notice”). The June
    Notice explained that the continued use of a BAF would
    ensure that “the aggregate increase in the Statewide day-
    weighted average payment rate … does not exceed the
    percentage rate of increase permitted by the funds
    appropriated for nursing facility services.” Id. It defined the
    formula for calculating the BAF, which, as in years 2005 to
    2008, was determined by the amount the legislature allocated
    for nursing facility reimbursements. The June Notice also
    projected that for fiscal year 2008-09 the BAF would be
    0.90551, meaning that the per diem rates under the case-mix
    method would be decreased by 9.449% from what they would
    have been without the application of the BAF. Id. That
    projection was based on the funds allocated for nursing
    facility services in the governor’s proposed budget.
    A week later, on July 4, 2008, the Pennsylvania
    legislature passed “Act 44,” 62 Pa. Stat. Ann. § 443.1(7)(iii).
    As if the bureaucratese were not already painfully thick in
    this field, the Act directed DPW to apply what it called a
    “revenue adjustment neutrality factor,” which is another term
    for a BAF, in each fiscal year between July 1, 2008 and June
    30, 2011. 62 Pa. Stat. Ann. § 443.1(7)(iii)(A). Act 44 also
    codified the methodology announced in the June Notice, and
    rate. That decrease amounts to the 4.878% reduction
    described above.
    11
    provided that “the revenue adjustment neutrality factor shall
    limit the estimated aggregate increase in the [s]tatewide day-
    weighted average payment rate … to the amount permitted by
    the funds appropriated by the General Appropriations Act for
    those fiscal years.” Id. Translation: the BAF would continue
    to cap annual rates at the amount Pennsylvania decided it
    could afford to pay. On the same day, the legislature enacted
    the General Appropriations Act for fiscal year 2008-09,
    which appropriated slightly more funds for nursing facility
    services than had been called for in the governor’s proposed
    budget. Soon after those enactments, DPW published another
    notice and request for comment regarding provider rates. 38
    Pa. Bull. 3943 (July 19, 2008) (the “July Notice”). The July
    Notice announced that DPW had calculated proposed annual
    per diem rates for 2008-09, and that, “[c]ontingent on CMS
    approval,” it would apply a BAF to those rates. Id.
    On September 30, 2008, DPW submitted a proposed
    BAF for 2008-09, designated as “SPA 08-007,” to CMS for
    approval.8 In a brief cover letter accompanying the SPA,
    8
    DPW actually submitted two SPAs, one regarding
    the rate-calculation methodology for private nursing facilities
    (SPA 08-007) and one regarding the calculation for public
    nursing facilities (SPA 08-008). In their complaint, Plaintiffs
    challenge both SPAs, but they raised no specific objection to
    SPA 08-008 in the District Court or in this appeal, and they
    have therefore waived any argument against it. See McCray
    v. Fidelity Nat’l Title Ins. Co., 
    682 F.3d 229
    , 241 (3d Cir.
    2012) (“[A]n appellant waives an argument in support of
    reversal if he does not raise that argument in his opening brief
    … .” (alteration and internal quotation marks omitted));
    United States v. Dupree, 
    617 F.3d 724
    , 727 (3d Cir. 2010)
    12
    DPW explained that its purpose was “to authorize the
    continued use of the budget adjustment factor (BAF) for non-
    public nursing facility payment rates for the 2008-2009 rate
    year.” (J.A. at 191.) The letter described the formula for
    calculating the BAF, and said that “the non-public BAF
    produced by this formula [for rate year 2008-09] is .90891.”
    (J.A. at 192.) It further explained that the BAF served “to
    moderate the growth of nursing facility payment rates
    consistent with the fiscal resources of the Commonwealth,
    while still providing payment rate increases sufficient to
    assure that consumers will continue to have access to
    medically necessary nursing facility services.” (J.A. at 191.)
    Finally, the letter assured CMS that Pennsylvania had
    “provided advance notice of its intent to amend its State Plan”
    by publishing public notices in the Pennsylvania Bulletin.
    (J.A. at 192.) With the cover letter, DPW submitted to CMS
    a SPA submittal form, a chart showing that the total cost of
    the state’s Medicaid program was within the regulatory
    limits,9 copies of the June and July Notices, and a description
    of the methods and standards used to calculate the per diem
    payment rates. That description did not explain the basis for
    the particular BAF proposed for 2008-09 but rather referred
    (noting the “well-established proposition that arguments not
    raised in the district courts are waived on appeal”). In any
    event, Plaintiffs are all private nursing facilities and so were
    unaffected by the changes proposed in SPA 08-008.
    9
    Federal regulations require that Medicaid payments
    not exceed an “upper payment limit” that is defined as “a
    reasonable estimate of the amount that would be paid for the
    services furnished” under the payment principles defined in
    the Act. 42 C.F.R. 447.272(b).
    13
    to Pennsylvania’s statutory provisions defining the case-mix
    method and explained the use of BAFs generally. No other
    information regarding the reasons behind the new BAF, or its
    anticipated effect on care, was included in DPW’s initial
    submission.
    In November 2008, DPW published a public notice
    that included the information it had provided to CMS. 38 Pa.
    Bull. 6343 (Nov. 15, 2008) (the “November Notice”). The
    November Notice announced that, based on the amounts
    appropriated by the state legislature, the BAF for the 2008-09
    fiscal year would be 0.90891. Id. That BAF was the same as
    stated in the SPA, but it differed from the estimate included in
    the June Notice because of the disparity between the
    governor’s proposed budget and the one the legislature
    actually passed, which increased appropriations to nursing
    facilities slightly. Still, the proposed BAF represented the
    largest downward adjustment to the case-mix rate calculation
    since Pennsylvania had introduced BAFs, reducing each
    nursing facility’s proposed per diem rate by 9.109%.10
    Application of the BAF to the 2008-09 case-mix rates meant
    that, on average, provider payments would be one percent
    higher in fiscal year 2008-09 than they had been in fiscal year
    10
    As described above, see supra note 7 and
    accompanying text, per diem rates calculated using the case-
    mix methodology are multiplied by the BAF. A case-mix rate
    multiplied by 0.90891 (the BAF for the 2008-09 fiscal year)
    will be 90.891% of its original value. In other words,
    application of the proposed BAF reduces the case-mix rate by
    9.109%. Plaintiffs incorrectly state in their opening brief that
    the 2008-09 BAF “results in a reduction of 9.0891%.”
    (Appellants’ Opening Br. at 26.)
    14
    2007-08, due to the continuing increase in per diem rates
    under the case-mix methodology.11
    Meanwhile, CMS was reviewing SPA 08-007. Keith
    Leuschner, the CMS employee responsible for reviewing
    Pennsylvania’s SPAs, contacted DPW in November 2008 to
    clarify what effect the SPA would have on the federal dollars
    flowing to Pennsylvania. In particular, Leuschner was
    concerned because the form DPW submitted with its SPA
    showed negative numbers in the “federal budget impact” box
    for fiscal years 2008 and 2009, which suggested “that
    nonpublic nursing facilities would be paid less [under the
    amended plan] than if the state continued using the existing
    payment methodology.” (J.A. at 180.) Leuschner asked
    DPW if that was the case, and the agency responded that the
    numbers on the form were actually incorrect, and “that
    11
    As discussed above, rates can still increase in
    absolute terms from year to year, even with the application of
    a BAF, because of the continuing use of the case-mix
    methodology. The specific basis for the one percent increase
    in 2008-09 is not entirely clear, as the case-mix rates for the
    2007-08 fiscal year are not in the record. What we do know
    is that: (1) the 2007-08 rates were calculated using the case-
    mix methodology, and were then reduced by 6.806% (using
    the 2007-08 BAF); (2) the 2008-09 rates were calculated
    using the case-mix methodology, and were then reduced by
    9.109% (using the 2008-09 BAF); and (3) the 2008-09 rates
    resulted in payments that, overall, were one percent higher
    than in the previous year. The increase therefore must have
    been due to some component of the case-mix formula, as the
    change in the BAF served only to reduce the case-mix rates
    by a larger amount.
    15
    nonpublic nursing homes were going to be paid more under
    the proposed rate methodology for state rate-setting year
    2008-2009 than they would have been paid if the existing rate
    structure were not changed.” (J.A. at 180.) To demonstrate
    that assertion, DPW provided a spreadsheet, which Leuschner
    understood to be comparing the rates for the 2008-09 fiscal
    year     calculated    “under      Pennsylvania’s    proposed
    methodology” with those “calculated in accordance with the
    methodology Pennsylvania had in place under the existing
    and (at that time approved) rate-setting method.”12 (J.A. at
    181.) Leuschner “concluded that the total payments to
    private nursing homes were estimated to increase slightly
    during federal fiscal years 2008 and 2009 under the proposed
    SPAs,” and so “recommended proceeding with approval.”
    (J.A. at 182.) CMS made a few “pen and ink” changes to the
    transmittal form to correct the federal budget impact numbers
    (J.A. at 221), and, on December 12, 2008, it approved the
    SPA. In doing so, it specifically certified that the SPA
    conformed with the requirements of Section 13(A) and
    Section 30(A), and retroactively made the SPA’s effective
    date July 1, 2008.13
    12
    As discussed infra, Leuschner’s understanding does
    not appear to have been accurate, as he implies that the 2008-
    09 rates would have been lower if the SPA were not
    approved. That is incorrect, because if CMS did not
    authorize the use of a BAF for the 2008-09 fiscal year, as
    requested by SPA 08-007, then the per diem rates would not
    have been adjusted at all. Leuschner was correct, however,
    that reimbursement rates would increase in absolute terms
    from 2007-08 to 2008-09.
    13
    Regulations permit CMS in some situations to make
    a plan amendment retroactively effective. See 42 C.F.R.
    16
    In March 2009, DPW published a final public notice
    announcing the finalized annual per diem payment rates, after
    the application of the BAF, for private nursing facilities for
    2008-09. 39 Pa. Bull. 1596 (Mar. 28, 2009). It then sent
    letters to all participating nursing facilities to notify them of
    their final individualized rates.
    B.     Procedural History
    Following DPW’s publication of the final payment
    rates, Plaintiffs filed timely state administrative appeals with
    DPW’s Bureau of Hearings and Appeals (the “BHA”)
    challenging those rates and asking that DPW “recalculate
    them consistent with [the] law.” (Administrative Appeal,
    Doc. 20, Ex. A, at 14.) See 55 Pa. Code §§ 41.5 (giving BHA
    “exclusive jurisdiction over provider appeals”) & 41.31
    (allowing “[a] provider that is aggrieved by an agency action”
    to “appeal and obtain review of that action by the [BHA] by
    filing a request for hearing”). They claimed that DPW had
    violated the Medicaid Act and its own regulations by
    providing inadequate notice of and public process for the
    proposed rate changes, by retroactively setting the 2008-09
    rates, and by failing to provide CMS with any information on
    which that agency of the federal government could base its
    conclusion that SPA 08-007 satisfied Section 30(A)’s
    requirements. In particular, Plaintiffs alleged that there was
    §§ 430.20(b)(2) & 447.256(c) (permitting a state plan
    amendment that changes the state’s payment methods and
    standards to become effective as early as “the first day of the
    calendar quarter in which an approvable amendment is
    submitted”).
    17
    no evidence of any consideration of the SPA’s effect on
    quality of care.
    In October 2009, with those state administrative
    appeals pending, Plaintiffs filed the present action in the
    United States District Court for the Middle District of
    Pennsylvania, bringing claims for declaratory and injunctive
    relief against the Secretary of HHS, the Administrator of
    CMS, and the Secretary of DPW. Specifically, the complaint
    asserted a claim under the APA against the Federal
    Defendants, seeking to have HHS’s approval of SPA 08-007
    set aside as being contrary to law. The complaint also
    included a claim under the Supremacy Clause against the
    State Defendant, seeking to bar the application of SPA 08-
    007 in the determination of payment rates. Those claims
    were primarily based on the Federal and State Defendants’
    alleged violations of Section 30(A) and Section 13(A) in their
    development and approval of the 2008-09 state plan
    amendments.
    Both the Federal and the State Defendants filed timely
    motions to dismiss Plaintiffs’ claims.          The Federal
    Defendants argued that the APA claim was barred by
    sovereign immunity, but the District Court disagreed,
    concluding that the claim fell within the scope of the waiver
    of federal sovereign immunity provided for in the APA.14 It
    14
    The APA provides a waiver of federal sovereign
    immunity to people “adversely affected or aggrieved by
    agency action within the meaning of the relevant statute,” 5
    U.S.C. § 702, when the agency action is made reviewable by
    statute or there is a final agency action “for which there is no
    18
    therefore denied the Federal Defendants’ motion to dismiss.
    The State Defendant’s motion raised three independent bases
    for dismissal: the abstention doctrine described in Younger v.
    Harris, 
    401 U.S. 37
     (1971), mootness, and Eleventh
    Amendment sovereign immunity. The District Court granted
    the motion in part. It abstained from deciding the Supremacy
    Clause claim insofar as it related to “conduct occurring prior
    to CMS approval of the proposed amendments[,]” as those
    issues could be adequately addressed in the ongoing state
    administrative proceeding. Christ the King Manor, Inc. v.
    Sebelius, No. 1:09-cv-2007, at 19 (M.D. Pa. June 29, 2010)
    (slip op.). It also dismissed the request for declaratory relief
    on immunity grounds, explaining that, if it “were to issue a
    declaratory decree to the effect that State Defendant’s
    implementation of the [SPA] violated federal law,” the decree
    could have res judicata effect in the state administrative
    appeals process, which “would leave to the state system ‘only
    a form of accounting proceeding whereby damages or
    restitution would be computed.’” Id. at 25 (quoting Green v.
    Mansour, 
    474 U.S. 64
    , 73 (1985)).) The District Court held
    that the case was not moot, however, and it did not dismiss
    Plaintiffs’ claim for injunctive relief regarding the continuing
    application of the amended state plan.
    The parties proceeded to discovery, and subsequently
    filed cross motions for summary judgment on the remaining
    claims. The District Court granted the Federal and State
    Defendants’ motions on July 24, 2012,15 holding that,
    other adequate remedy,” id. § 704. On appeal, the Federal
    Defendants do not contest that the waiver applies here.
    15
    The case was stayed from March 2011 until March
    2012 while the Supreme Court decided Douglas v.
    19
    “[g]iven [the] regulatory framework … and the deference
    afforded agency decision-making, … there is substantial
    evidence in the [administrative record] to support the
    Secretary’s approval of the SPAs under [S]ection 30(A).”
    Christ the King Manor, Inc. v. Sebelius, No. 1:09-cv-2007,
    
    2012 WL 3027543
    , at *8 (M.D. Pa. July 24, 2012). It further
    held that CMS could properly conclude that DPW had
    substantially complied with the public process requirements
    of Section 13(A). Id. at *15. The Court therefore found that
    HHS’s approval of SPA 08-007 was not arbitrary or
    capricious, and that the State Defendant’s implementation of
    the SPA was proper. Id. at *16-*17. Accordingly, it denied
    Plaintiffs’ motion and entered judgment for the Defendants.
    Id. at *17. This timely appeal followed, in which Plaintiffs
    appeal both the grant of summary judgment and the earlier
    partial dismissal of Plaintiffs’ claim against the State
    Defendant.
    II.   Discussion16
    On appeal, Plaintiffs ask that we reverse the District
    Court’s orders and enter judgment in their favor on all counts.
    They repeat their contention that HHS’s approval of SPA 08-
    Independent Living Center of Southern California, 
    132 S. Ct. 1204
     (2012), a case discussed infra that arose from
    California’s cuts to Medicaid reimbursement rates.
    16
    The District Court had jurisdiction pursuant to 28
    U.S.C. § 1331 and 5 U.S.C. §§ 701-706. We have
    jurisdiction pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1291.
    20
    007,17 as well as DPW’s implementation of it, violates federal
    law, specifically Sections 30(A) and 13(A) of the Medicaid
    Act. They also argue that their claim against the State
    Defendant can be addressed in this proceeding and should be
    resolved in their favor. This appeal therefore presents two
    distinct issues: first, whether the Federal Defendants’
    approval of SPA 08-007 was proper under the APA, and,
    second, what relief, if any, Plaintiffs can obtain from the State
    Defendant in this suit.
    A.     APA Claim Against the Federal Defendants
    Plaintiffs argue that HHS’s approval of SPA 08-007
    was improper for two reasons.18 First, they say that there was
    17
    For simplicity, we will generally refer to “HHS” or
    “the Secretary” when discussing the SPA approval process.
    We recognize that CMS conducted the approval process and
    exercised delegated authority in approving SPA 08-007.
    18
    Although SPA 08-007 only defined nursing
    facilities’ reimbursement rates for the 2008-09 fiscal year, no
    party contends that Plaintiffs’ challenge to HHS’s approval
    decision is moot. Nonetheless, we have an independent
    obligation to determine whether Plaintiffs’ claim presents a
    justiciable case or controversy. Rendell v. Rumsfeld, 
    484 F.3d 236
    , 240 (3d Cir. 2007). “[A] case will be considered moot,
    and therefore nonjusticiable as involving no case or
    controversy, if the issues presented are no longer ‘live’ or the
    parties lack a legally cognizable interest in the outcome.” In
    re Surrick, 
    338 F.3d 224
    , 229 (3d Cir. 2003) (quoting In re
    Kulp Foundry, Inc., 
    691 F.2d 1125
    , 1128 (3d Cir. 1982))
    (internal quotation marks omitted). We conclude that
    Plaintiffs’ claim against the Federal Defendants is not moot.
    21
    insufficient evidence in the administrative record to support
    any conclusion that the SPA satisfies Section 30(A) of the
    Medicaid Act. Discussed in more depth below, that provision
    requires that a state plan provide “methods and procedures”
    necessary to “assure” that payments to providers are
    “consistent with” efficiency, economy, quality of care, and
    adequate access to providers. 42 U.S.C. § 1396a(a)(30)(A).
    Plaintiffs note that SPA 08-007 categorically reduced – by
    more than nine percent – the per diem payments which are
    called for by the state’s own case-mix calculation, and which
    Although SPA 08-007 will not define their reimbursement
    rates in the future, nursing facilities continue to believe that
    the HHS’s decision to approve the SPA violated federal law,
    and that they are entitled to reimbursement rates for 2008-09
    that are calculated in accordance with a properly approved
    state plan. This appeal provides an opportunity for them to
    obtain some measure of relief, since, if the agency’s action
    was arbitrary or capricious under the APA, we must set that
    action aside and require the agency to conform its action to
    federal law. 5 U.S.C. § 706(2)(A) (“The reviewing court
    shall … hold unlawful and set aside agency action … found
    to be … arbitrary, capricious, an abuse of discretion, or
    otherwise not in accordance with law … .”); see also Fla.
    Power & Light Co. v. Lorion, 
    470 U.S. 729
    , 744 (1985)
    (explaining that, “[i]f the record before the agency does not
    support the agency action, … the proper course, except in rare
    circumstances, is to remand to the agency for additional
    investigation or explanation”). Plaintiffs therefore have an
    interest in the outcome of this appeal “that is real and not
    hypothetical,” and their claim against the Federal Defendants
    provides an “occasion for meaningful relief.” Rendell, 484
    F.3d at 240 (internal quotation marks omitted).
    22
    are represented by the state as reflecting what is “necessary
    and reasonable for an efficiently and economically operated
    nursing facility to provide services to [Medicaid] residents.”
    55 Pa. Code § 1187.2. They say that the arbitrary reduction
    imposed by the SPA threatens the quality of care provided to
    Medicaid recipients, yet the administrative record is “silent”
    as to the Defendants’ “consideration of the quality of care
    factor.” (Appellants’ Opening Br. at 45.) Therefore, they
    contend, HHS improperly concluded that the amended state
    plan satisfies Section 30(A). Plaintiffs’ second contention is
    that HHS erred in concluding that DPW had satisfied the
    public process requirements of Section 13(A).           More
    particularly, they say that the only public notice published
    before the SPA’s effective date failed to comply with federal
    regulations regarding the content of such notices.
    The District Court rejected both lines of argument.
    According significant deference to HHS’s interpretations of
    the Medicaid Act, the Court held that the record was
    sufficient to support the Secretary’s approval of the SPA.
    Christ the King Manor, 
    2012 WL 3027543
    , at *8-*9. For the
    reasons elaborated herein, we disagree in part. Although we
    agree with the District Court that we must defer to HHS’s
    reasonable interpretations of the Medicaid Act, and that DPW
    satisfied the public process requirements of Section 13(A), we
    part ways when it comes to the District Court’s decision that
    HHS could properly conclude on the evidence before it that
    SPA 08-007 complies with Section 30(A). Our conclusion is,
    to the contrary, that HHS’s approval of the SPA was arbitrary
    and capricious, and must be set aside.
    23
    1.     Standard of Review
    “We apply de novo review to a district court’s grant of
    summary judgment in a case brought under the APA, and in
    turn apply the applicable standard of review to the underlying
    agency decision.” Pa. Dep’t of Pub. Welfare v. Sebelius, 
    674 F.3d 139
    , 146 (3d Cir. 2012) (internal quotation marks
    omitted). Section 706 of the APA governs our review of the
    agency action. CBS Corp. v. FCC, 
    663 F.3d 122
    , 137 (3d Cir.
    2011). It provides that we shall “hold unlawful and set aside
    agency action, findings, and conclusions” that are “arbitrary,
    capricious, an abuse of discretion, or otherwise not in
    accordance with law.” 5 U.S.C. § 706(2)(A). Under that
    restricted standard of review, we must consider whether the
    agency “examine[d] the relevant data and articulate[d] a
    satisfactory explanation for its action,” while being careful
    “not to substitute [our own] judgment for that of the agency.”
    Motor Vehicle Mfrs. Ass’n of U.S., Inc. v. State Farm Mut.
    Auto. Ins. Co., 
    463 U.S. 29
    , 43 (1983); see also Prometheus
    Radio Project v. FCC, 
    373 F.3d 372
    , 389-90 (3d Cir. 2004)
    (“[W]e must ensure that, in reaching its decision, the agency
    examined the relevant data and articulated a satisfactory
    explanation for its action, including a ‘rational connection
    between the facts found and the choice made.’” (quoting State
    Farm, 463 F.3d at 43)). An agency action may be arbitrary
    and capricious “if the agency has relied on factors which
    Congress has not intended it to consider, entirely failed to
    consider an important aspect of the problem, offered an
    explanation for its decision that runs counter to the evidence
    before the agency, or is so implausible that it could not be
    ascribed to a difference in view or the product of agency
    expertise.” State Farm, 463 U.S. at 43.
    24
    In determining whether any of those circumstances
    exist, we are conscious of our responsibility to “uphold a
    decision of less than ideal clarity if the agency’s path may
    reasonably be discerned.” Id. (quoting Bowman Transp. Inc.
    v. Ark.-Best Freight Sys., 
    419 U.S. 281
    , 286 (1974) (internal
    quotation marks omitted)). Nevertheless, we should not
    “supply a reasoned basis for the agency’s action that the
    agency itself has not given.” Id. (internal quotation marks
    omitted).      Our review must also be based on “the
    administrative record [that was] already in existence” before
    the agency, not “some new record made initially in the
    reviewing court” or “post-hoc rationalizations” made after the
    disputed action. Rite Aid of Pa., Inc. v. Houstoun, 
    171 F.3d 842
    , 851 (3d Cir. 1999) (internal quotation marks omitted).
    The agency action at issue here is HHS’s approval of
    Pennsylvania’s SPA 08-007, which Plaintiffs argue was
    arbitrary and capricious because there was insufficient
    evidence in the administrative record that, as required by
    Section 30(A), DPW had considered the SPA’s impact on
    quality of care, or that it had followed the public process
    requirements of Section 13(A). In so arguing, Plaintiffs
    implicitly take issue with HHS’s interpretation of the
    Medicaid Act. By approving SPA 08-007, HHS evidently
    concluded that Pennsylvania’s amended state plan satisfies
    the requirements of Sections 30(A) and 13(A) of the Act. See
    42 U.S.C. § 1316(a)(1) (requiring the Secretary to “make a
    determination as to whether [the submitted plan] conforms to
    the requirements for approval”). To reach that conclusion,
    the agency had to determine what those requirements entail,
    which involves interpreting the relevant provisions.
    Therefore, we must establish at the outset whether to accord
    Chevron deference to agency interpretations of the Medicaid
    25
    Act inherent in HHS approval of a state plan amendment.19
    See Chevron, U.S.A., Inc. v. Natural Res. Def. Council, Inc.,
    
    467 U.S. 837
    , 842-44 (1984) (barring a court from
    “substitut[ing] its own construction of a statutory provision
    for a reasonable interpretation made by the administrator of
    an agency”).
    Under the Supreme Court’s decision in United States
    v. Mead Corp., “administrative implementation of a particular
    statutory provision qualifies for Chevron deference when it
    appears that Congress delegated authority to the agency
    generally to make rules carrying the force of law, and that the
    agency interpretation claiming deference was promulgated in
    the exercise of that authority.” 
    533 U.S. 218
    , 226-27 (2001).
    As the United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
    recently explained, the Supreme Court “[a]rguably … has
    already concluded that SPA approvals meet” that standard,
    and thus are entitled to Chevron deference. Managed
    Pharmacy Care v. Sebelius, 
    716 F.3d 1235
    , 1246 (9th Cir.
    2013). In Douglas v. Independent Living Center of Southern
    California, Inc., the Supreme Court said that “[t]he Medicaid
    Act commits to the federal agency the power to administer a
    federal program,” and that, in approving a SPA, “the agency
    19
    We have previously held that Chevron deference
    applies to HHS’s interpretations of the Medicaid Act in the
    context of a challenge to a state plan amendment, but only in
    a case that was decided before the Supreme Court’s decision
    in United States v. Mead Corp., 
    533 U.S. 218
     (2001), which
    limited that deference to certain types of agency action. See
    Erie Cnty. Geriatric Ctr. v. Sullivan, 
    952 F.2d 71
    , 77 (3d Cir.
    1991) (granting “substantial deference” to the Secretary’s
    interpretations of the Act).
    26
    has acted under [that] grant of authority.” 
    132 S. Ct. 1204
    ,
    1210 (2012). The Douglas Court noted that the agency’s
    approval “carries weight,” especially when “the language of
    the particular provision at issue … is broad and general,
    suggesting that the agency’s expertise is relevant in
    determining its application.” Id. Although the Court stopped
    short of explicitly holding that the Chevron framework
    applies to SPA approvals, those statements in dicta strongly
    suggest as much, and we “do not view them lightly.” Galli v.
    N.J. Meadowlands Comm’n, 
    490 F.3d 265
    , 274 (3d Cir. 2007)
    (alteration and internal quotation marks omitted); see also id.
    (“To ignore what we perceive as persuasive statements by the
    Supreme Court is to place our rulings … in peril.”).
    In addition to that suggestion from the Supreme Court,
    some of our sister circuits have held that SPA approvals are
    the type of agency action entitled to Chevron deference under
    Mead, and no circuit court precedent holds to the contrary. In
    Managed Pharmacy Care, for example, the Ninth Circuit
    concluded that “Congress explicitly granted the Secretary
    authority to determine whether a State’s Medicaid plan
    complies with federal law,” and that “[i]t is well within the
    Secretary’s mandate to interpret the statute via case-by-case
    SPA adjudication.” 716 F.3d at 1249. Similarly, the D.C.
    Circuit has held that, through express delegation of
    interpretive authority, “Congress manifested its intent that the
    Secretary’s determinations, based on interpretation of the
    relevant statutory provisions, should have the force of law.”
    Pharm. Research & Mfrs. of Am. v. Thompson, 
    362 F.3d 817
    ,
    822 (D.C. Cir. 2004). In short, the reasoning goes, the
    Chevron framework applies to SPA approvals. Id. at 821; see
    also Managed Pharmacy Care, 716 F.3d at 1248 (“Chevron
    applies to SPA approvals … .”); Harris v. Olszewski, 442
    
    27 F.3d 456
    , 467 (6th Cir. 2006) (“[T]he agency’s approval of
    the state plan amendment is entitled to Chevron deference.”).
    We agree. The Medicaid Act expressly states that the
    Secretary must “approve any plan which fulfills the
    conditions specified” in the statute. 42 U.S.C. § 1396a(b).
    Through that provision, Congress delegated to the agency the
    responsibility to make interpretive decisions regarding which
    state plans satisfy the Act’s requirements. Those decisions
    carry the force of law, as HHS is prohibited from making
    payments to states whose plans do not comply with the Act,
    42 U.S.C. § 1396c,20 and the state must pay for Medicaid
    services “using rates determined in accordance with methods
    and standards specified in an approved State plan,” 42 C.F.R.
    447.253(i). See Nat’l Cable & Telecomms. Ass’n v. Brand X
    Internet Servs., 
    545 U.S. 967
    , 980-81 (2005) (applying the
    Chevron framework because a statute gave an agency “the
    authority to promulgate binding legal rules” (citing Mead,
    533 U.S. at 231-34)). SPA approvals are therefore the type of
    agency action that warrants Chevron deference under Mead.
    20
    Section 1396c was held unconstitutional in certain
    respects, not applicable here, in National Federation of
    Independent Businesses v. Sebelius. 
    132 S. Ct. 2566
    , 2607
    (2012) (holding that HHS “cannot apply § 1396c to withdraw
    existing Medicaid funds for failure to comply with the
    requirements set out in the [Medicaid] expansion” provided
    for in the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act, 124
    Stat. 119).
    28
    With that in mind, we turn to HHS’s approval of SPA
    08-007, given the strictures of Section 30(A) and Section
    13(A).
    2.    Compliance with Section 30(A)
    Section 30(A) requires that a state Medicaid plan:
    provide such methods and procedures relating
    to the utilization of, and the payment for, care
    and services available under the plan … 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
    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)(A) (emphasis added). Put more
    simply, it mandates that a state plan include “methods and
    procedures” that “assure that payments to providers produce
    four outcomes: (1) ‘efficiency,’ (2) ‘economy,’ (3) ‘quality of
    care,’ and (4) adequate access to providers by Medicaid
    beneficiaries.” Pa. Pharmacists Ass’n, 283 F.3d at 537
    (quoting 42 U.S.C. § 1396a(a)(30)(A)). Section 30(A) is one
    of the statutory prerequisites a state plan must satisfy to
    receive federal approval, and thus federal funding. See 42
    U.S.C. § 1396a(a) (defining the requirements that a state plan
    “must” satisfy); id. § 1396a(b) (“The Secretary shall approve
    29
    any plan which fulfills the conditions specified in subsection
    (a) of this section … .”).
    We have considered Section 30(A)’s requirements on
    two previous occasions. In Rite Aid of Pennsylvania v.
    Houstoun, we held that it mandates “substantive compliance”
    with the four specified factors, but it “does not impose any
    particular method or process for getting to that result.” 171
    F.3d at 851. Rather, in contrast to an earlier and now-
    repealed provision of the Medicaid Act known as the “Boren
    Amendment,” which “specifically requir[ed] that states take
    into account certain findings” and make particular
    assurances,21 Section 30(A) leaves it “up to a state how it will
    21
    The Boren Amendment required that a state pay
    providers using rates that “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 … .” 42 U.S.C. § 1396a(a)(13)(A) (1994). The
    Boren Amendment was interpreted to impose both procedural
    and substantive requirements on states in setting
    reimbursement rates, and to be enforceable in a private right
    of action under 42 U.S.C. § 1983. See Wilder v. Va. Hosp.
    Ass’n, 
    496 U.S. 498
    , 524 (1990) (“The Boren Amendment …
    creates a right, enforceable in a private cause of action
    pursuant to § 1983, to have the State adopt rates that it finds
    are reasonable and adequate rates to meet the costs of an
    efficient and economical health care provider.”). The
    Amendment was repealed in 1997, after substantial lobbying
    30
    ‘assure’ the [required] outcomes.” Id. at 852. Nonetheless,
    we said that the state’s “process of decision-making” in
    setting a rate methodology must be “reasonable and sound,”
    id. at 853, and “budgetary considerations may not be the sole
    basis for a rate revision,” id. at 856. In Pennsylvania
    Pharmacists Association v. Houstoun, we again interpreted
    Section 30(A), this time for the purpose of determining
    whether it granted Medicaid providers a cause of action under
    42 U.S.C. § 1983. 283 F.3d at 534-35. In holding that it does
    not, we explained that “Section 30(A), unlike the Boren
    Amendment, does not demand that payments be set at levels
    that are sufficient to cover provider costs,” but instead
    requires that they be “sufficient to meet recipients’ needs.”22
    Id. at 538.         Therefore, under this Court’s existing
    jurisprudence, Section 30(A) allows states to set a rate
    methodology using any process that is reasonable, considers
    more than simply budgetary factors, and results in payments
    that are sufficient to meet recipients’ needs.
    But while those prior interpretations help guide our
    analysis, they do not necessarily control the outcome here.
    Under Chevron, if HHS applied a different but nonetheless
    permissible interpretation of Section 30(A), then we must
    efforts by states seeking greater latitude in setting their rates.
    Pa. Pharmacists Ass’n, 283 F.3d at 536, 539 & n.12.
    22
    Of course, the law of supply and demand does not
    disappear, no matter how much one might wish it would, so a
    focus on recipients that gives no thought to provider costs
    will soon leave ample demand from needy recipients and no
    providers to supply services. Setting payment levels to meet
    recipients’ needs must therefore inevitably take into account
    provider costs.
    31
    defer to that interpretation, even if it conflicts with our
    precedent. As the Supreme Court has made clear, a judicial
    precedent cannot displace a conflicting agency construction
    unless the statute “unambiguously forecloses the agency’s
    interpretation.” See Brand X, 545 U.S. at 982-83. The
    question before us is therefore whether HHS’s approval of
    SPA 08-007 was based on a permissible construction of
    Section 30(A), not whether the SPA satisfies our prior
    interpretation of the statute. Cf. Managed Pharmacy Care,
    716 F.3d at 1246-50 (deferring to HHS’s interpretation of
    Section 30(A) instead of applying the court’s prior
    interpretation of that provision).
    To answer that question, we must consider the basis
    HHS had for concluding that Section 30(A) is satisfied, which
    requires that we examine the record it had before it during the
    SPA approval process. Rite Aid, 171 F.3d at 851 (“[I]n
    reviewing section 30(A) issues a court must confine itself to
    the agency’s administrative record … .”). That record is
    remarkably thin, especially when compared to the
    administrative records developed in other Section 30(A)
    challenges. In Rite Aid, for example, the state amended
    reimbursement rates to pharmacies after conducting cost
    studies of pharmacy pricing data, considering input from
    interested parties, seeking additional data on the
    reimbursement rates of third-party payors, and comparing
    Pennsylvania’s rates to the rates in neighboring states. Id. at
    848; see also, e.g., Long Term Care Pharmacy Alliance v.
    Ferguson, 
    362 F.3d 50
    , 52 (1st Cir. 2004) (noting that the
    state agency revised rates after it “held hearings … and
    sought data from Massachusetts pharmacies as to their costs
    of acquisition of individual drugs”). Here, on the other hand,
    there is no indication in the record as to how Pennsylvania
    32
    settled on the particular rate-calculation methodology
    proposed in SPA 08-007. Although DPW explained that the
    2008-09 BAF was intended to limit payments to the amount
    appropriated by the state legislature, that explanation is the
    same as the one offered for BAFs overall. It reveals nothing
    about how the particular BAF proposed in SPA 08-007 –
    which differed from the ones imposed in years past and
    required independent approval – was selected, other than that
    it was based on legislative appropriations for that fiscal year.
    Absent information on how the appropriated amount was
    determined, or a reasoned explanation for why that amount
    allows for rates that are “consistent with” efficiency,
    economy, quality of care, and adequate access, DPW’s
    description of the BAF methodology provides no insight into
    whether the SPA complies with Section 30(A). The state
    gave no such information, and HHS did not request any.
    There are no studies or analyses of any kind in the record, and
    the only “data” DPW provided was a spreadsheet comparing
    rates under the proposed SPA with those paid the previous
    year. HHS therefore had to base its approval decision solely
    on the proposed methodology itself, a comparison to the
    previous year’s rates, and DPW’s unsupported assertion that
    the new BAF would permit “payment rate increases sufficient
    to assure that consumers will continue to have access to
    medically necessary nursing facility services.” (J.A. at 191.)
    Notwithstanding the sparseness of the administrative
    record, the Federal Defendants argue that it supports the
    Secretary’s approval of SPA 08-007. Specifically, they say
    that HHS could properly conclude that the SPA satisfies
    Section 30(A) for three reasons: first, payments to nursing
    facilities increased slightly from the previous fiscal year
    under the proposed SPA, second, Pennsylvania had
    33
    previously employed BAFs without harming quality of care,
    and, third, other statutory provisions independently assure
    that Medicaid recipients will receive quality care.        The
    Federal Defendants focus particularly on the overall increase
    in payments, emphasizing that “the budget adjustment factor
    did not cut payment rates in absolute terms, but rather served
    to moderate the rate of increase in provider payments under
    the case-mix system and thereby avoid an unsustainable pace
    of inflation.” (U.S. Br. at 19.)
    But while that assertion is undisputed, and reducing
    unsustainable inflation is certainly a laudable and entirely
    legitimate state objective, the small absolute increase in
    payments from 2007 to 2008 reveals practically nothing about
    SPA 08-007’s compliance with Section 30(A). As the
    Federal Defendants acknowledge, that increase is due to the
    application of the case-mix methodology, which has been in
    place since 1996. An essential premise of their argument
    seems to be that the case-mix method results in payments that
    are unduly high, and that do not in fact reflect the “necessary”
    costs of providing care to Medicaid recipients. That may be
    the case, but there is no evidence of it anywhere in the record,
    and DPW never suggests that the state’s underlying
    methodology is flawed. Rather, the state repeatedly explains
    that it must reduce the case-mix rates for budgetary reasons,
    not because they are based on a rate-calculation methodology
    that overcompensates providers.
    The case-mix method sets per diem rates for each
    nursing facility by considering, among other things, the
    projected acuity level of Medicaid recipients and the costs
    “which are necessary and reasonable for an efficiently and
    economically operated nursing facility to provide services” to
    34
    those patients. 55 Pa. Code § 1187.2. In other words, it
    determines payments by considering the costs of providing
    care to Medicaid recipients, which means that the increase in
    payment rates is due, at least in part, to increasing costs. The
    contested SPA does not change that aspect of the rate
    calculation methodology; it just adds one last step: using a
    BAF to reduce the final per diem rates. The overall increase
    in payments therefore tells us nothing about the SPA’s effect
    on quality of care; it just shows that the cost of caring for
    Medicaid recipients – as determined under the case-mix
    methodology – continues to go up.
    To demonstrate that point, we need only look to
    DPW’s proposed rate revisions for 2005. The BAF initially
    proposed for the 2005-06 fiscal year would have allowed
    rates to increase two percent from the previous year – twice
    the increase allowed by the 2008-09 BAF. After interested
    parties raised numerous criticisms about the proposed change,
    the legislature appropriated additional funds and the BAF was
    revised to allow for a 2.8% increase in rates. 35 Pa. Bull.
    6233 (Nov. 12, 2005). DPW explained that the adjustment in
    the cap addressed quality of care concerns, and thus DPW
    effectively acknowledged that rates can increase in absolute
    terms while still being inadequate to meet recipients’ needs.
    Id. at 6233-34.
    In reviewing SPA 08-007, however, HHS not only
    treated the absolute increase as sufficient assurance of quality
    of care; it also seemed to misunderstand the SPA’s effect on
    Pennsylvania’s rate calculation methodology. Based on a
    spreadsheet showing the one percent increase in payments
    from the previous year, the CMS employee responsible for
    reviewing the SPA concluded that rates would be higher
    35
    under the SPA than they would have been “if the existing rate
    structure were not changed,” in effect concluding that the
    SPA was responsible for the rate increase. (J.A. at 180.) But
    that cannot be the case, as the only change proposed in the
    SPA was the use of a BAF that more substantially reduced the
    case-mix rates than in any previous year. See supra note 12.
    Moreover, under the previously approved state plan, BAFs
    were authorized only through 2008, meaning that the
    approved rate-calculation method did not involve the use of
    any BAF for the 2008-09 fiscal year. Rates were therefore
    projected to increase in 2008-09 despite the proposed SPA,
    not because of it.
    Pennsylvania’s previous use of BAFs also provides no
    assurance that payments under SPA 08-007 would be
    consistent with quality of care. According to the Federal
    Defendants, because Pennsylvania had “already employed a
    budget adjustment factor in three previous fiscal years” (U.S.
    Br. at 19) without causing “any apparent issues with quality
    of care or beneficiary access to services” (id. at 20), HHS
    could reasonably conclude that SPA 08-007 “was likewise
    compliant with Section 30(A)” (id.). They emphasize that,
    even with ongoing monitoring activities, HHS had not been
    made “aware of any complaints by beneficiaries or nursing
    facilities … about payments made pursuant to the BAF
    system.” (Id.) They further note that federal regulations
    permit HHS to approve a state plan amendment “on the basis
    of policy statements and precedents previously approved” by
    the agency. 42 C.F.R. § 430.15(b). Therefore, they argue,
    HHS could reasonably conclude that the proposed
    amendment, which “employed a substantially similar
    methodology” to the one taken the previous three years, “was
    likewise compliant with Section 30(A).” (U.S. Br. at 20.)
    36
    The obvious flaw in that argument is that earlier
    adjustments do not reveal how a later and different
    adjustment may change a system already affected by the
    earlier adjustments. The fifth blow to a boxer’s chin may be
    no more forceful than the previous four, but still be forceful
    enough to shatter a weakened jaw. And if the fifth blow is
    more forceful, a “no worries” mindset is even less warranted.
    The 2008-09 fiscal year’s adjustment of 9.109% is not
    necessarily the same in its impact as the 6.806% adjustment
    that was proposed for 2007-08.
    The Federal Defendants portray the continued use of
    BAFs generally as the key change proposed by SPA 08-007,
    and they treat BAFs as simply another variable in the case-
    mix methodology. Just as provider costs and resident acuity
    vary year to year under the approved rate-calculation formula,
    so too does the BAF, they imply. But a BAF is not simply a
    variable in an approved formula; each new BAF effectively
    establishes a new formula by which final rates are calculated,
    and hence is a “[m]aterial change[]” to the state’s plan that
    requires its own approval. See 42 C.F.R. § 430.12(c)(1)(ii)
    (requiring a state to amend its plan when necessary to reflect
    “[m]aterial changes … in the State’s operation of the
    Medicaid program”). Depending on what the state legislature
    decides, a BAF could cut per diem rates by less than five
    percent, as it did in 2005, or by nine percent, as SPA 08-007
    proposed, or potentially by even more. Yet under the Federal
    Defendants’ reasoning, the use of any BAF, regardless of its
    size, could be justified by the fact that a previous, smaller
    adjustment to the cost-based rate proved acceptable. That
    conclusion is unsupported and unsupportable. A BAF is – at
    base – simply a budget-based cut to provider payments, and
    37
    the size of that cut matters to Medicaid recipients and
    providers. Although it may be possible to decrease payments
    by nine percent, as SPA 08-007 does, and not affect quality of
    care, it is also very possible that care will be significantly and
    negatively affected, and the success of earlier cuts does not
    suggest otherwise. It is simply not reasonable to conclude
    that, because prior cuts did not seem too painful, a deeper cut
    would not hurt.
    That leaves “independent statutory assurances” as the
    only basis, beyond DPW’s bare assertion that consumers will
    still have access to Medicaid services, upon which HHS could
    conclude that the rate-calculation methodology of SPA 08-
    007 will produce payments that are consistent with quality of
    care. It is true, as the Federal Defendants note, that we have
    previously considered it reasonable for a state “to rely upon
    laws or regulations which independently ensure quality care”
    when setting payment rates under Section 30(A). Rite Aid,
    171 F.3d at 855. Seizing upon that statement, the Federal
    Defendants describe provisions of the Nursing Home Reform
    Act, 42 U.S.C. §§ 1395i-3, 1396, that allow for “oversight
    and inspection of nursing facilities” and “require[]
    certification that participating facilities satisfy certain ‘quality
    of care’ standards.” (U.S. Br. at 21 (citing those provisions).)
    They also note that in 2005 Pennsylvania instructed nursing
    facilities that they have an obligation “to provide appropriate,
    high-quality care” that “exists independent of any particular
    payment rate or any features of the rate-setting methodology.”
    (Id. (quoting 35 Pa. Bull. 6232 (Nov. 12, 2005)) (internal
    quotation marks omitted).) Based on our holding in Rite Aid,
    the Federal Defendants contend that HHS could have
    reasonably relied upon such “independent assurances of
    quality of care” when it approved SPA 08-007.
    38
    Those assurances cannot be the sole basis for a rate
    revision, however, or Section 30(A)’s quality of care
    component – and HHS’s review of that component – would
    be rendered meaningless. In Rite Aid, independent statutory
    assurances were but one feature of an ample record. See 171
    F.3d at 848 (describing the studies conducted). We never
    suggested that, as long as states declare their insistence on
    quality care under other statutory provisions, reimbursement
    rates will be deemed to satisfy Section 30(A). Such an
    interpretation of Section 30(A) not only defies its plain
    language and nullifies HHS’s review process under that
    provision, see Erie Cnty. Geriatic Ctr. v. Sullivan, 
    952 F.2d 71
    , 78 (3d Cir. 1991) (declining to interpret the Medicaid Act
    in a manner that renders HHS review “hardly more than
    ministerial”), it also ignores fiscal realities by implying that a
    state can continue to assure quality of care by holding nursing
    homes to high standards while simultaneously underfunding
    them. In short, simply passing a statute saying that nursing
    homes will provide quality care does not make it so. Section
    30(A) cannot reasonably be interpreted to mean that once a
    state has declared its commitment to quality of care, it need
    not consider that factor in setting its reimbursement rates.
    Nor is a state’s unsupported assertion that its plan
    meets Section 30(A)’s requirements, without any
    accompanying explanation or evidence, a sufficient basis to
    support HHS approval. In approving a state plan, HHS must
    be able to conclude that the plan “provide[s] such methods
    and procedures … as may be necessary … to assure that
    payments are consistent with efficiency, economy, and
    quality of care.” 42 U.S.C. § 1396a(a)(30)(A). It is true that
    Section 30(A) grants states considerable latitude in selecting a
    39
    method for calculating reimbursement rates, and that it “does
    not impose any particular method or process” for meeting its
    substantive requirements. Rite Aid, 171 F.3d at 851. But that
    latitude is not limitless. The reimbursement rates that states
    select affect the funding they are entitled to receive from the
    federal government, and material changes to those rates are
    thus subject to federal approval. Section 30(A) gives teeth to
    the approval process, allowing HHS to reject state plans that
    provide inadequate assurance that payments will be consistent
    with efficiency, economy, quality of care, and adequate
    access. See 42 C.F.R. § 430.15(c)(1) (providing that CMS,
    with HHS’s approval, “retains authority for determining that
    proposed plan material is not approvable or that previously
    approved material no longer meets the requirements for
    approval”). And HHS has done so before, denying approval
    to state plan amendments when states “provide[] no … data to
    substantiate [their] proposed rates,” Alaska Dep’t of Health &
    Soc. Servs. v. Ctrs. for Medicare & Medicaid Servs., 
    424 F.3d 931
    , 937 (9th Cir. 2005), or when they provide “unsupported
    assertions” of compliance with Section 30(A), Minnesota v.
    Ctrs. for Medicare & Medicaid Servs., 
    495 F.3d 991
    , 996 (8th
    Cir. 2007) (internal quotation marks omitted).
    If we were to hold that DPW’s bare assertion is
    sufficient to satisfy Section 30(A), we would make that
    provision a dead letter. The Medicaid Act requires that HHS
    “approve any plan which fulfills the conditions” imposed on
    state plans. 42 U.S.C. § 1396a(b). Therefore, in order for
    HHS to deny approval on Section 30(A) grounds, a plan must
    fail to fulfill its conditions. If a state could satisfy those
    conditions simply by asserting that it has done so, then HHS
    would lack the authority to disapprove a plan due to a state’s
    lack of data or its “unsupported assertions.” No court has
    40
    countenanced such an impotence-inducing interpretation of
    Section 30(A). On the contrary, in holding that Section 30(A)
    confers no private right of action against the state under 42
    U.S.C. § 1983, courts have repeatedly assured Medicaid
    providers and recipients that the quality of care and access
    requirements will not “go unenforced” because “HHS [is]
    responsible for ensuring that state plans are administered in
    accordance with these requirements.” Pa. Pharmacists Ass’n,
    283 F.3d at 543-44; see also Long Term Care Pharm.
    Alliance v. Ferguson, 
    362 F.3d 50
    , 56 (1st Cir. 2004) (“Of
    course, the Secretary of HHS … can enforce compliance with
    [Section 30(A)] and implementing regulations … by
    disapproving a state plan … .”). There is no suggestion in the
    text, its accompanying regulations, or the legislative history
    that HHS’s oversight role in enforcing Section 30(A)’s
    requirements involves simply accepting a state’s assertions at
    face value. See 42 U.S.C. § 1396a(b) (requiring the Secretary
    to approve plans that “fulfill[] the conditions specified in
    subsection (a),” which include Section 30(A)); 42 C.F.R.
    § 430.12(c) (requiring “[p]rompt submittal of amendments …
    [s]o that CMS can determine whether the plan continues to
    meet the requirements for approval”); 146 Cong. Rec.
    H11682-02 (explaining that, even with the repeal of the
    Boren Amendment, the Medicaid Act ensures through
    Section 30(A) that states “provide adequate reimbursement”).
    Therefore, to the extent that HHS’s approval of a SPA rests
    on such an interpretation, it is not a “permissible construction
    of the statute” entitled to deference under Chevron. 467 U.S.
    at 842-43.23
    23
    Before the District Court, the Federal Defendants
    argued that HHS “was required to more rigorously scrutinize
    a proposed amendment only when [the state’s] assurances
    41
    were questionable on their face.” Christ the King Manor,
    
    2012 WL 3027543
    , at *6. Although the Federal Defendants
    do not repeat that argument on appeal, we take a moment to
    address it here, as the District Court seems to have found it
    convincing. See id. at *8-*9 (agreeing with the Federal
    Defendants’ interpretation of the state’s obligations under
    Section 30(A)); see also id. at *14 (concluding that “it was
    within CMS’s expertise to determine whether DPW’s
    representations concerning approval of the SPAs, which
    mirrored those approved in the past, complied with section
    30(A)”). HHS may choose not to exercise the same rigor in
    scrutinizing all state plan amendments. But it must actually
    scrutinize them, at least to the extent necessary to “make a
    determination as to whether [the amendment] conforms to the
    requirements for approval.”        42 U.S.C. § 1316(a)(1).
    Furthermore, we reject the notion that, as a threshold matter,
    we must determine whether a SPA is facially questionable
    before reviewing the agency’s action. Such an approach
    would require a reviewing court to make its own assessment
    of whether a proposed change should have raised red flags
    regarding quality of care, a task which is for HHS and which
    we are ill-equipped to perform. Here, for example, the
    Federal Defendants indicate that a 9.109% reduction is
    nothing to worry about, but, absent information justifying that
    assertion, a court has no way to know if such a reduction
    should have caused HHS to take a closer look. The BAF
    proposed in SPA 08-007 could have reduced rates by 5%,
    10%, 15%, or something even greater, and presumably the
    Federal Defendants would agree that, at some point, it would
    be arbitrary and capricious for HHS to approve the SPA
    based solely on soothing words from the state. For that
    reason, the burden is on the agency, not on the reviewing
    42
    Of course, as the Federal Defendants rightly note,
    there is a bit more in the record in this case than the state’s
    assertion that SPA 08-007 would “still provid[e] payment rate
    increases sufficient to assure that consumers will continue to
    have access to medically necessary nursing facility services.”
    (J.A. at 191.) There is also “data,” in the form of the
    spreadsheet DPW submitted at HHS’s request, “showing that
    payments to nonpublic nursing facilities would increase”
    from the prior fiscal year. (U.S. Br. at 23.) But, as described
    above, that increase does not, by itself, tell us or HHS
    anything about the SPA’s effect on quality of care or access
    to providers.24 So far as the record shows, Pennsylvania
    decided to reduce its cost-based per diem rates to the amount
    that it could afford to pay, without taking any steps to ensure
    that payments would still be consistent with quality of care
    and adequate access. In approving that decision, HHS seems
    to have “entirely failed to consider” those “important
    court, to supply a reasoned basis for its action. See State
    Farm, 463 U.S. at 43.
    24
    Although Plaintiffs focus their argument on the
    “quality of care” factor, we note that “quality of care” and
    “adequate access to providers” are related concepts, and that
    budget cuts have the capacity to affect both components of
    Section 30(A). If, for example, a state reduces its payments
    to significantly below the amount necessary for a nursing
    facility to treat its patients, some facilities might cut corners
    and provide inadequate care, whereas others might stop
    accepting Medicaid patients altogether and thus restrict access
    to providers. See Orthopaedic Hosp. v. Belshe, 
    103 F.3d 1491
    , 1498 (9th Cir. 1997) (discussing the possible effects of
    payment reductions on access to providers).
    43
    aspect[s]” of Section 30(A). See State Farm, 463 U.S. at 43.
    Indeed, the record suggests that the agency misunderstood the
    proposed changes and blessed the SPA based solely on the
    absolute increase in payments from the previous year. There
    is no indication that the agency “examine[d] the relevant
    data,” nor did it “articulate a satisfactory explanation for its
    action.” Id. Therefore, because we cannot discern from the
    record a reasoned basis for the agency’s decision, we
    conclude that its approval of SPA 08-007 was arbitrary and
    capricious under the APA.
    In so holding, we do not imply that the payments
    Pennsylvania made to providers during the 2008-09 fiscal
    year were in fact inconsistent with any of Section 30(A)’s
    requirements. It is possible that the state was able to adjust
    the per diem rates by nine percent while maintaining quality
    care and ensuring adequate access to providers. But it is also
    possible that the state’s nine percent adjustment threatened to
    harm care to Medicaid recipients in ways that previous,
    smaller adjustments had not. The problem here is that, at
    least so far as the record shows, HHS did not actually
    determine which scenario it confronted, and thus we are
    obligated to set its approval decision aside. 5 U.S.C. § 706(2)
    (requiring courts to “hold unlawful and set aside agency
    action … found to be arbitrary, capricious, an abuse of
    discretion, or otherwise not in accordance with law”).25
    25
    That does not mean that Plaintiffs will necessarily be
    entitled to a rate recalculation, and we in no way suggest that
    they should have been paid in accordance with the previously
    approved state plan, which did not involve the use of any
    BAF for the 2008-09 fiscal year. When, as here, “the record
    before the agency does not support the agency action,” the
    44
    3.     Compliance with Section 13(A)
    Plaintiffs also contend that HHS’s approval of SPA
    08-007 was arbitrary and capricious because the state failed to
    comply with the public process requirements of Section
    13(A) and its accompanying regulations. They say that,
    although DPW provided numerous public notices of its
    proposed changes, only the June Notice was published before
    the SPA’s effective date, and it inadequately described the
    new rate methodology and did not include certain details
    required by federal regulations. Specifically, they complain
    that the Notice was published only two days before the SPA’s
    proposed effective date, did not include the specific BAF
    ultimately adopted, failed to provide an estimate of the
    expected increase or decrease in aggregate expenditures, and
    did not identify any local agencies where copies of the
    proposed changes would be available for public review.
    Because of those alleged deficiencies, they argue that HHS
    could not have lawfully accepted DPW’s assurance that
    Pennsylvania had “provided advance notice of its intent to
    amend its State Plan.” (J.A. at 192.)
    agency may be afforded an opportunity “for additional
    investigation or explanation,” upon which the agency could
    lawfully base its action. Fla. Power & Light Co., 470 U.S. at
    744. Cf. 42 U.S.C. § 1316(a)(4) (providing that, when a court
    of appeals reviews a state’s appeal of an agency decision
    regarding a state plan, the court “may remand the case to the
    Secretary to take further evidence, and [she] may thereupon
    make new or modified findings of fact and may modify [her]
    previous action”).
    45
    Section 13(A) of the Medicaid Act requires that states
    seeking to change their rate-setting methodologies provide a
    public process under which:
    (i) proposed rates, the methodologies
    underlying the establishment of such rates, and
    justifications for the proposed rates are
    published,
    (ii) providers, beneficiaries and their
    representatives, and other concerned State
    residents are given a reasonable opportunity for
    review and comment on the proposed rates,
    methodologies, and justifications, [and]
    (iii) final rates, the methodologies underlying
    the establishment of such rates, and
    justifications for such final rates are published
    ….
    42 U.S.C. § 1396a(a)(13)(A). In other words, a state must
    provide notice of “proposed rates together with the
    methodologies and justifications used to establish those
    rates,” and give “concerned state residents … a reasonable
    opportunity” to review and comment on them. Children’s
    Seashore House v. Waldman, 
    197 F.3d 654
    , 659 (3d Cir.
    1999). Federal regulations provide further guidance on the
    substantive requirements of that notice. Under 42 C.F.R.
    § 447.205, notice of a “significant proposed change” in a
    state’s rate-setting methodology must “[d]escribe the
    proposed change in methods and standards,” “[g]ive an
    estimate of any expected increase or decrease in annual
    aggregate expenditures,” “[e]xplain why the agency is
    46
    changing its methods and standards,” and “[i]dentify a local
    agency … where copies of the proposed changes are available
    for public review.” 42 C.F.R. § 447.205(a), (c). Section
    447.205 also provides that the notice must “[b]e published
    before the proposed effective date of the change.” Id.
    § 447.205(d)(1). Those notice requirements must be satisfied
    in order for a state plan amendment to receive approval. Id.
    § 447.253(h).
    Our review of the state’s compliance with Section
    13(A) is circumscribed by HHS’s decision to approve the
    SPA. As the Ninth Circuit has explained, “[o]ur duty is not to
    determine for ourselves whether the State’s notice sufficiently
    complied with the statute and regulations; that duty is
    imposed on the Secretary.” Indep. Acceptance Co. v.
    California, 
    204 F.3d 1247
    , 1251-52 (9th Cir. 2000). We must
    instead consider, as we did with Section 30(A), “whether the
    Secretary acted arbitrarily or capriciously when she accepted
    the State’s assurance of notice as satisfactory to her.” Id. at
    1252. In doing so, we accord deference to the Secretary’s
    reasonable interpretations of Section 13(A), see supra Section
    II.A.1, and we must give controlling weight to her
    interpretations of her own regulations unless they are
    inconsistent with the regulation or plainly erroneous. Thomas
    Jefferson Univ. v. Shalala, 
    512 U.S. 504
    , 512 (1994).
    Under that standard, we cannot say that it was arbitrary
    or capricious for HHS to accept DPW’s assurance that it had
    provided adequate notice of the proposed changes to its rate-
    calculation methodology.       Section 13(A) speaks very
    generally, requiring simply that the state provide notice and a
    “reasonable opportunity” for comment on proposed rate
    revisions. 42 U.S.C. § 1396a(a)(13)(A). The June Notice did
    47
    so, as it put providers and beneficiaries on notice of the
    estimated BAF for 2008-09, informed them as to how and
    why the BAF would be determined, and provided thirty days
    for submission of comments. See Evergreen Presbyterian
    Ministries, Inc. v. Hood, 
    235 F.3d 908
    , 920 (5th Cir. 2000)
    (holding that a state satisfied Section 13(A)’s notice
    requirements because its notices “outlined 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” (internal quotation marks omitted)),
    abrogation on other grounds recognized by Equal Access for
    El Paso, Inc. v. Hawkins, 
    509 F.3d 697
    , 704 (5th Cir. 2007).
    Although the Notice was published just days before the
    SPA’s requested effective date of July 1, 2008, the new rates
    were not actually implemented on that date; rather the SPA
    was made retroactively effective when it was approved in
    December 2008. Interested parties therefore had ample
    opportunity to review and comment on the proposed changes
    before they were finalized.26 Furthermore, although the BAF
    described in the June Notice differed slightly from the one
    submitted in the SPA, the revised BAF was, on its face, more
    favorable to nursing facilities. HHS could therefore have
    reasonably concluded that the June Notice “outlined the
    substance” of the new rate calculation methodology “in
    sufficient detail” to alert nursing facilities to the scope and
    nature of the proposed change. Evergreen, 235 F.3d at 920.
    That DPW may have failed to literally comply with
    federal regulations regarding public notice does not make
    26
    Notably, Plaintiffs do not contend that they lacked
    actual notice of the proposed changes, or that they were
    denied adequate opportunity to comment on the new BAF.
    48
    HHS’s acceptance of its assurances arbitrary or capricious.
    According to Plaintiffs, the June Notice violated 42 C.F.R.
    § 447.205(c) by not providing a numeric estimate of the
    “expected increase or decrease in annual aggregate
    expenditures,” and by not identifying any county offices
    where copies of the Notice would be available for public
    review. (Appellants’ Opening Br. at 59.) Plaintiffs do not
    dispute, however, that the estimated BAF included in the
    Notice revealed the percentage by which rates would be
    adjusted, which HHS could reasonably have found to be an
    acceptable substitute to a dollar estimate of the state’s
    aggregate expenditures. See Evergreen, 235 F.3d at 921
    (permitting “the use of a percentage, rather than a dollar
    figure” in a state’s notice of a proposed amendment).
    Plaintiffs also do not contend that the June Notice was
    unavailable for public review – they just say it was not made
    available in the precise manner provided for in the regulation.
    But again, it is within the Secretary’s discretion to consider
    publication in the Pennsylvania Bulletin the effective
    equivalent of distributing a notice to county offices. In any
    event, based on the record before it, HHS could readily
    conclude that Pennsylvania had “substantial[ly] compli[ed]”
    with federal notice requirements, which is all that is necessary
    for the Secretary to reasonably accept a state’s assurances to
    that effect. Indep. Acceptance Co., 204 F.3d at 1252 (holding
    that “in accepting the State’s assurance, the Secretary was not
    required to hold the State to absolutely literal compliance
    with the notice requirements,” but rather “had discretion to
    determine whether the State had given sufficient assurance
    that its notice was in substantial compliance”); see also
    Oklahoma v. Shalala, 
    42 F.3d 595
    , 603 (10th Cir. 1994)
    (deferring to CMS’s decision to “relax[] the notice
    49
    requirement from full formal compliance to ‘at least minimal
    compliance’ through publication of ‘an appropriate public
    notice before the effective date of the proposed change’”).
    We therefore agree with the District Court that HHS
    was neither arbitrary nor capricious in accepting DPW’s
    assurance that the state had satisfied Section 13(A)’s public
    process requirements. That does not mean that Plaintiffs’
    dissatisfaction with the process at issue here is unreasonable.
    Their fundamental complaint – that DPW published an
    incomplete notice two days before the proposed effective date
    of a major change to the administration of its Medicaid
    program – is an accurate description of the state’s actions.
    But HHS accepted those actions as being sufficiently
    compliant with federal law, and, particularly in light of the
    actual time the public had to consider the proposed change,
    we cannot say that the agency’s conclusion was arbitrary or
    capricious on this record.
    50
    B.      Supremacy Clause Claim Against the State
    Defendant27
    In addition to their claim against the Federal
    Defendants, Plaintiffs also seek declaratory and injunctive
    relief against the Secretary of DPW. The underlying
    substance of that claim is virtually identical to Plaintiffs’
    complaint against the Federal Defendants – they say that the
    rate revisions adopted by SPA 08-007 violate Section 30(A)
    and Section 13(A) of the Medicaid Act, and are thus
    preempted by federal law. Plaintiffs ask that we therefore
    enjoin the “continuing application” of the SPA (J.A. at 111),
    and that we require DPW to pay nursing facilities “using rates
    determined in accordance with the methods and standards
    27
    We note at the outset that it is questionable whether
    Plaintiffs can sustain a cause of action under the Supremacy
    Clause at all. In Douglas v. Independent Living Center, the
    Supreme Court granted certiorari “to decide whether
    Medicaid providers and recipients may maintain a cause of
    action under the Supremacy Clause to enforce a federal
    Medicaid law.” 132 S. Ct. at 1207. The Court declined to
    answer that question, however, instead concluding that
    federal approval of the contested state plan put the case “in a
    different posture” and remanding the case to the court of
    appeals. Id. at 1210. Therefore, although the dissent strongly
    suggested that the Supremacy Clause does not provide a
    cause of action when Congress has declined to provide one,
    id. at 1211, the Court’s previous decision in Shaw v. Delta Air
    Lines, 
    463 U.S. 85
    , 96 n.14 (1983), which recognized a
    private right of action under the Supremacy Clause, remains
    binding on us. Lewis v. Alexander, 
    685 F.3d 325
    , 346 n.20
    (3d Cir. 2012).
    51
    specified in the [state plan] in effect prior to changes
    contained in the vacated amendments” (J.A. at 140).
    The District Court rejected Plaintiffs’ claim for several
    reasons. First, invoking Younger v. Harris, 
    401 U.S. 37
    (1971), it abstained from deciding the claim to the extent it
    challenged state conduct that occurred before federal approval
    of the SPA. The Court also denied all declaratory relief,
    concluding that such relief was barred by Eleventh
    Amendment sovereign immunity. That left only Plaintiffs’
    request for an injunction, which the Court allowed to proceed
    to discovery. The District Court subsequently entered
    summary judgment in favor of the State Defendant on that
    claim because of its conclusion “that the Federal Defendants’
    approval of the SPAs was not arbitrary or capricious under
    the APA.” Christ the King Manor, 
    2012 WL 3027543
    , at
    *17. Although we have now decided that that conclusion was
    in error, we will nonetheless affirm the District Court’s grant
    of summary judgment to the State Defendant on the basis that
    the Eleventh Amendment deprives us of jurisdiction to grant
    the requested relief.28
    28
    “We exercise plenary review over a district court’s
    grant of summary judgment,” and we will affirm only if
    “there is no genuine dispute as to any material fact and the
    movant is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.” Mabey
    Bridge & Shore, Inc. v. Schoch, 
    666 F.3d 862
    , 867 (3d Cir.
    2012) (internal quotation marks omitted). “Dismissal of an
    action based upon sovereign immunity is subject to plenary
    review by this Court.” Blanciak v. Allegheny Ludlum Corp.,
    
    77 F.3d 690
    , 694 (3d Cir. 1996).
    52
    The Eleventh Amendment to the Constitution
    provides that:
    The Judicial power of the United States shall
    not be construed to extend to any suit in law or
    equity, commenced or prosecuted against one of
    the United States by Citizens of another State,
    or by Citizens or Subjects of any Foreign State.
    U.S. Const. amend. XI. The Supreme Court has made clear
    that, under that Amendment, “an unconsenting State is
    immune from suits brought in federal courts by her own
    citizens as well as by citizens of another State.” Edelman v.
    Jordan, 
    415 U.S. 651
    , 663 (1974) (citing Hans v. Louisiana,
    
    134 U.S. 1
    , 10 (1890)). Therefore, unless Congress has
    “specifically abrogated” the states’ sovereign immunity or a
    state has unequivocally consented to suit in federal court, we
    lack jurisdiction to grant relief in such cases. Blanciak v.
    Allegheny Ludlum Corp., 
    77 F.3d 690
    , 694 (3d Cir. 1996); id.
    at 694 n. 2 (“[T]he Eleventh Amendment is a jurisdictional
    bar which deprives federal courts of subject matter
    jurisdiction.”).
    Suits against state officials are a different matter,
    however. Based on its landmark holding in Ex parte Young,
    
    209 U.S. 123
     (1908), the Supreme Court has permitted suits
    against state officials that seek prospective relief to end an
    ongoing violation of federal law. Pa. Fed’n of Sportsmen’s
    Clubs, Inc. v. Hess, 
    297 F.3d 310
    , 323 (3d Cir. 2002). The
    theory behind Young is that a state officer lacks the authority
    to enforce an unconstitutional state enactment, and thus the
    officer is “stripped of his official or representative character
    and becomes subject to the consequences of his individual
    53
    conduct.” Id. (quoting MCI Telecomm. Corp v. Bell Atl. Pa.,
    
    271 F.3d 491
    , 506 (3d Cir. 2001)) (internal quotation marks
    omitted). Plaintiffs can therefore bring suit against state
    officers, but their remedies are limited to those that are
    “designed to end a continuing violation of federal law.”
    Green v. Mansour, 
    474 U.S. 64
    , 68 (1985). Plaintiffs may not
    be awarded damages or other forms of retroactive relief.
    Pennhurst State Sch. & Hosp. v. Halderman, 
    465 U.S. 89
    ,
    103 (1984).
    That bar on retroactive relief includes forms of
    equitable relief that are functionally equivalent to damage
    awards. Green, 474 U.S. at 69-70 (citing Edelman, 415 U.S.
    at 666-69).      As we explained in Blanciak v. Allegheny
    Ludlum Corp., “relief that essentially serves to compensate a
    party injured in the past by the action of a state official, even
    though styled as something else, is barred by the Eleventh
    Amendment.” 77 F.3d at 697-98 (citing Green, 474 U.S. at
    68; Edelman, 415 U.S. at 664-68). We contrasted such relief
    with remedies that may have “a substantial ancillary effect on
    the state treasury,” but primarily serve “to bring an end to a
    present, continuing violation of federal law.” Id. at 698
    (quoting Papasan v. Allain, 
    478 U.S. 265
    , 278 (1986))
    (internal quotation marks omitted). The label given to the
    requested relief is “of no importance” – we must “look to the
    substance rather than the form of the relief requested” to
    determine if it is barred by the Eleventh Amendment. Id.
    When an action “is in essence one for the recovery of money
    from the state, the state is the real, substantial party in interest
    and is entitled to invoke its sovereign immunity from suit
    even though individual officers are nominal defendants.”
    Edelman, 415 U.S. at 663 (quoting Ford Motor Corp. v.
    54
    Dep’t of Treasury, 
    323 U.S. 459
    , 464 (1945)) (internal
    quotation marks omitted).
    Under that standard, the remedies Plaintiffs seek
    against the State Defendant cannot properly be characterized
    as claims for prospective relief “designed to end a continuing
    violation of federal law.” Green, 474 U.S. at 68. Plaintiffs
    challenge the Secretary of DPW’s development and
    application of SPA 08-007, which, as already extensively
    discussed, used a BAF to adjust reimbursement rates for the
    2008-09 fiscal year.29 That SPA has not been in effect since
    July 1, 2009, and Plaintiffs do not claim that Pennsylvania’s
    current rate-calculation methodology violates federal law.
    More to the point, they do not identify any ongoing conduct
    by the Secretary of DPW that must be enjoined to ensure the
    supremacy of federal law. Instead, they challenge the rates
    DPW paid five years ago, and they argue that they are entitled
    to “prospective corrective payments” from the state.
    29
    The District Court construed Plaintiffs’ claim more
    broadly, saying that it challenged not only SPA 08-007, but
    also “the underlying methodology” contained in the SPA –
    that is, the use of budget-based adjustments generally. That
    construction is too generous. Plaintiffs’ complaint is quite
    specific in stating that it challenges SPA 08-007 and SPA 08-
    008 (which, as discussed supra note 8, is no longer at issue).
    Moreover, all of the factual allegations in the complaint focus
    on the state’s adoption and implementation of SPA 08-007,
    and key to Plaintiffs’ argument is that the BAF in that SPA
    was more damaging than in previous years. We therefore
    construe Plaintiffs’ complaint as a challenge to the particular
    rates calculated using SPA 08-007, not as a generalized
    challenge to the use of a budget adjustment factor.
    55
    (Appellants’ Opening Br. at 72.) Their overall case against
    the State Defendant therefore seems to be precisely the kind
    of suit that is barred by the Eleventh Amendment, as it seeks
    “to compensate a party injured in the past by the action of a
    state official,” not to “bring an end to a present, continuing
    violation of federal law.” Blanciak, 77 F.3d at 697-98.
    A closer look at the requested remedy exposes the
    problem. Plaintiffs ask for an injunction that “requires” the
    Secretary of DPW “to assure” that the state “pays for nursing
    facility provider services” using the pre-SPA rates, and that
    “precludes” DPW “from any further reliance” on SPA 08-
    007. (J.A. at 113.) In other words, they ask that we require
    DPW to pay the 2008-09 rates in accordance with the
    previously approved state plan, which did not apply a BAF at
    all. Because SPA 08-007 is no longer in effect, that remedy
    will not help prevent future violations of federal law, and it is
    useful to Plaintiffs only if it “might be offered in state-court
    proceedings as res judicata on the issue of liability, leaving to
    the state courts only a form of accounting proceeding
    whereby damages or restitution would be computed.” Green,
    474 U.S. at 73. In fact, the record strongly suggests the
    Plaintiffs will do just that, as they have initiated state
    administrative proceedings requesting that DPW “recalculate”
    the 2008-09 rates “consistent with [the] law.”
    (Administrative Appeal, Doc. 20, Ex. A, at 14.) The relief
    requested here would therefore “have much the same effect as
    a full-fledged award of damages or restitution by the federal
    court” – forms of relief that are clearly barred by the Eleventh
    Amendment.30 Green, 474 U.S. at 73.
    30
    The District Court reached a similar conclusion,
    holding that “insofar as [Plaintiffs] request … declaratory
    56
    Plaintiffs’ arguments to the contrary are unavailing.
    They make no attempt to argue that there is an ongoing
    violation of federal law; rather, they contend that,
    notwithstanding the Eleventh Amendment, they are entitled to
    “complete retroactive relief” against the State Defendant.
    (Appellants’ Opening Br. at 68.) First, they suggest that
    Pennsylvania consented to suit in federal court by
    participating in Medicaid. That argument clearly fails, as the
    Supreme Court has previously held that a state’s participation
    in Medicaid is not “sufficient to waive the protection of the
    Eleventh Amendment.” Fla. Dep’t of Health & Rehab. Servs.
    v. Fla. Nursing Home Ass’n, 
    450 U.S. 147
    , 150 (1981).
    relief that the State Defendant’s implementation” of the SPA
    “violates federal law,” that claim is barred by sovereign
    immunity under Edelman and Green. Christ the King Manor,
    Inc. v. Sebelius, No. 1:09-cv-2007, at 25 (M.D. Pa. June 29,
    2010). The Court concluded that Plaintiffs had one viable
    request for prospective relief, however – their request for
    “injunctive relief preventing the State Defendant from basing
    its Medicaid reimbursement payments” on SPA 08-007. Id.
    But, as described above, that relief cannot be considered
    prospective, because Plaintiffs do not ask that we enjoin a
    continuing violation of federal law, but rather that we require
    DPW to pay nursing facilities using the state plan in effect
    prior to the challenged SPA. When, as in this case, there is
    no ongoing violation of federal law, the requested injunction
    is effectively a request for a declaration that the prior rate
    calculations were unlawful, and is thus barred by the Eleventh
    Amendment.
    57
    Plaintiffs’ second contention is that their claim under
    the APA can somehow include relief against the State
    Defendant. They say that, when a plaintiff’s Supremacy
    Clause claims “are inextricably intertwined” with an APA
    claim, “the APA claim must be deemed to provide for and
    permit the related resolution” of the Supremacy Clause
    claims. (Appellants’ Opening Br. at 69.) But the only
    support Plaintiffs provide for that truly novel proposition is
    the Supreme Court’s recent decision Douglas v. Independent
    Living Center, which held nothing of the sort. Indeed,
    Douglas strongly suggested that once an APA claim arises
    due to a SPA approval, a Supremacy Clause claim
    challenging the SPA is unsustainable, because allowing “a
    Supremacy Clause action to proceed once the agency has
    reached a decision threatens potential inconsistency or
    confusion.” 132 S. Ct. at 1210. In any event, Douglas
    certainly did not hold that the presence of a cause of action
    against a federal agency under the APA abrogates a state’s
    immunity from suit in federal court.
    Finally, Plaintiffs say that “the State Defendant is an
    indispensable party” under Rule 19 of the Federal Rules of
    Civil Procedure. (Appellants’ Opening Br. at 70.) Even if
    that were the case (and we express no opinion on the issue),
    being an indispensable party does not affect a state’s
    sovereign immunity. Under the Eleventh Amendment, an
    unconsenting state cannot be sued in federal court by one of
    its citizens, regardless of whether the state is an essential
    party to the controversy.
    Therefore, as Plaintiffs do not contend that there is an
    ongoing violation of federal law, we conclude that their claim
    against the State Defendant is barred by Eleventh
    58
    Amendment sovereign immunity. Accordingly, since we can
    affirm on any basis supported by the record, Travelers Indem.
    Corp. v. Dammann & Co., Inc., 
    594 F.3d 238
    , 256 n.12 (3d
    Cir. 2010), we will affirm the District Court’s grant of
    summary judgment to the State Defendant.31
    III.   Conclusion
    In sum, we will affirm in part and reverse in part the
    District Court’s orders. Because the State Defendant is
    immune from Plaintiffs’ requested relief under the Eleventh
    Amendment, we will affirm the District Court’s orders
    entering judgment in favor of that defendant. The District
    Court erred, however, in granting summary judgment to the
    Federal Defendants. By approving SPA 08-007 without any
    assurance that the amended plan would produce payments
    that are consistent with quality of care, the Secretary of HHS
    acted arbitrarily and capriciously, and the APA requires that
    we set that approval aside. Accordingly, we will reverse the
    District Court’s grant of summary judgment to the Federal
    Defendants and will remand the case with instructions to
    enter a declaratory judgment in favor of Plaintiffs on their
    claim that HHS’s approval of SPA 08-007 was arbitrary and
    capricious under the APA.
    31
    Because we hold that the Eleventh Amendment bars
    all requested relief against the State Defendant, which
    deprives us of subject matter jurisdiction, we do not reach the
    question of whether the District Court properly abstained
    from resolving certain components of Plaintiffs’ claim, nor do
    we consider whether their claim is moot.
    59
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 12-3401, 12-3501

Citation Numbers: 730 F.3d 291

Judges: Jordan, Rakoff, Vanaskie

Filed Date: 9/19/2013

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 8/7/2023

Authorities (44)

Long Term Care v. Ferguson , 362 F.3d 50 ( 2004 )

46-socsecrepser-227-medicare-medicaid-guide-p-42977-state-of , 42 F.3d 595 ( 1994 )

Pennsylvania, Department of Public Welfare v. Sebelius , 674 F.3d 139 ( 2012 )

In the Matter of Establishment Inspection of Kulp Foundry, ... , 691 F.2d 1125 ( 1982 )

United States v. Dupree , 617 F.3d 724 ( 2010 )

childrens-seashore-house-v-william-waldman-commissioner-of-the-new , 197 F.3d 654 ( 1999 )

Anne Galli v. New Jersey Meadowlands Commission Susan Bass ... , 490 F.3d 265 ( 2007 )

edward-g-rendell-in-his-official-capacity-as-governor-of-the-commonwealth , 484 F.3d 236 ( 2007 )

Travelers Indem. Co. v. Dammann & Co., Inc. , 594 F.3d 238 ( 2010 )

In Re: Robert B. Surrick , 338 F.3d 224 ( 2003 )

pennsylvania-pharmacists-association-bell-edge-pharmacy-broad-street , 283 F.3d 531 ( 2002 )

prometheus-radio-project-v-federal-communications-commission-united-states , 373 F.3d 372 ( 2004 )

pennsylvania-federation-of-sportsmens-clubs-inc-pennsylvania-chapter , 297 F.3d 310 ( 2002 )

robert-j-blanciak-raymond-bowman-william-burkett-marlin-d-byers-richard , 77 F.3d 690 ( 1996 )

Equal Access for El Paso, Inc. v. Hawkins , 509 F.3d 697 ( 2007 )

Minnesota v. CENTERS FOR MEDICARE AND MEDICAID , 495 F.3d 991 ( 2007 )

mci-telecommunication-corporation-a-delaware-corporation-mcimetro-access , 271 F.3d 491 ( 2001 )

rite-aid-of-pennsylvania-inc-v-feather-o-houstoun-pennsylvania , 171 F.3d 842 ( 1999 )

evergreen-presbyterian-ministries-inc-health-service-district-1-pointe , 235 F.3d 908 ( 2000 )

erie-county-geriatric-center-a-pennsylvania-non-profit-corporation-county , 952 F.2d 71 ( 1991 )

View All Authorities »