Bill Text: FL S0844 | 2013 | Regular Session | Introduced
NOTE: There are more recent revisions of this legislation. Read Latest Draft
Bill Title: Medicaid
Spectrum: Slight Partisan Bill (? 2-1)
Status: (Introduced - Dead) 2013-04-29 - Laid on Table, companion bill(s) passed, see CS/CS/HB 939 (Ch. 2013-150), SB 1520 (Ch. 2013-48) [S0844 Detail]
Download: Florida-2013-S0844-Introduced.html
Bill Title: Medicaid
Spectrum: Slight Partisan Bill (? 2-1)
Status: (Introduced - Dead) 2013-04-29 - Laid on Table, companion bill(s) passed, see CS/CS/HB 939 (Ch. 2013-150), SB 1520 (Ch. 2013-48) [S0844 Detail]
Download: Florida-2013-S0844-Introduced.html
Florida Senate - 2013 SB 844 By Senator Grimsley 21-01001-13 2013844__ 1 A bill to be entitled 2 An act relating to Medicaid fraud; amending s. 3 409.907, F.S.; increasing the number of years a 4 provider must keep records; adding an additional 5 provision relating to a change in principal that must 6 be included in a Medicaid provider agreement with the 7 Agency for Health Care Administration; adding 8 definitions for “administrative fines” and 9 “outstanding overpayment”; revising provisions 10 relating to the agency’s onsite inspection 11 responsibilities; revising provisions relating to who 12 is subject to background screening; amending s. 13 409.91212, F.S.; requiring the agency to enter into an 14 interagency agreement with the Division of Insurance 15 Fraud regarding anti-fraud plans by managed care 16 plans; delaying the imposition of certain fines for 17 failing to report; amending s. 409.913, F.S.; 18 authorizing the agency to review and analyze sources 19 other than providers in order to carry out its duties 20 with respect to its Medicaid oversight 21 responsibilities; increasing the number of years a 22 provider must keep records; revising provisions 23 specifying grounds for terminating a provider from the 24 program, for seeking certain remedies for violations, 25 and for imposing certain sanctions; providing a 26 limitation on the information the agency may consider 27 when making a determination of overpayment; specifying 28 the type of records a provider must present to contest 29 an overpayment; deleting the requirement that the 30 agency pay interest on certain payments withheld from 31 a provider and revising when a provider must reimburse 32 overpayments; revising venue requirements; adding 33 provisions relating to the payment of fines; amending 34 s. 409.920, F.S.; clarifying provisions relating to 35 immunity from liability for persons who provide 36 information about Medicaid fraud; providing an 37 effective date. 38 39 Be It Enacted by the Legislature of the State of Florida: 40 41 Section 1. Paragraph (c) of subsection (3) of section 42 409.907, Florida Statutes, is amended and paragraph (k) is added 43 to that subsection, and subsections (6), (7), and (8) of that 44 section are amended to read: 45 409.907 Medicaid provider agreements.—The agency may make 46 payments for medical assistance and related services rendered to 47 Medicaid recipients only to an individual or entity who has a 48 provider agreement in effect with the agency, who is performing 49 services or supplying goods in accordance with federal, state, 50 and local law, and who agrees that no person shall, on the 51 grounds of handicap, race, color, or national origin, or for any 52 other reason, be subjected to discrimination under any program 53 or activity for which the provider receives payment from the 54 agency. 55 (3) The provider agreement developed by the agency, in 56 addition to the requirements specified in subsections (1) and 57 (2), shall require the provider to: 58 (c) Retain all medical and Medicaid-related records for 6a59period of 5years to satisfy all necessary inquiries by the 60 agency. 61 (k) Report a change in any principal of the provider, 62 including any officer, director, agent, managing employee, or 63 affiliated person, or any partner or shareholder who has an 64 ownership interest equal to 5 percent or more in the provider, 65 to the agency in writing within 30 days after the change occurs. 66 For a hospital licensed under chapter 395 or a nursing home 67 licensed under part II of chapter 400, a principal of the 68 provider is one who meets the definition of a controlling 69 interest under s. 408.803. 70 (6) A Medicaid provider agreement may be revoked, at the 71 option of the agency, due toas the result ofa change of 72 ownership of any facility, association, partnership, or other 73 entity named as the provider in the provider agreement. 74 (a) If there isIn the event ofa change of ownership, the 75 transferor remains liable for all outstanding overpayments, 76 administrative fines, and any other moneys owed to the agency 77 before the effective date of the changeof ownership.In78addition to the continuing liability of the transferor,The 79 transferee is also liable to the agency for all outstanding 80 overpayments identified by the agency on or before the effective 81 date of the change of ownership.For purposes of this82subsection, the term “outstanding overpayment” includes any83amount identified in a preliminary audit report issued to the84transferor by the agency on or before the effective date of the85change of ownership.In the event of a change of ownership for a 86 skilled nursing facility or intermediate care facility, the 87 Medicaid provider agreement shall be assigned to the transferee 88 if the transferee meets all other Medicaid provider 89 qualifications. In the event of a change of ownership involving 90 a skilled nursing facility licensed under part II of chapter 91 400, liability for all outstanding overpayments, administrative 92 fines, and any moneys owed to the agency before the effective 93 date of the change of ownership shall be determined in 94 accordance with s. 400.179. 95 (b) At least 60 days before the anticipated date of the 96 change of ownership, the transferor mustshallnotify the agency 97 of the intended changeof ownershipand the transferee must 98shallsubmit to the agency a Medicaid provider enrollment 99 application. If a change of ownership occurs without compliance 100 with the notice requirements of this subsection, the transferor 101 and transferee areshall bejointly and severally liable for all 102 overpayments, administrative fines, and other moneys due to the 103 agency, regardless of whether the agency identified the 104 overpayments, administrative fines, or other moneys before or 105 after the effective date of the changeof ownership. The agency 106 may not approve a transferee’s Medicaid provider enrollment 107 application if the transferee or transferor has not paid or 108 agreed in writing to a payment plan for all outstanding 109 overpayments, administrative fines, and other moneys due to the 110 agency. This subsection does not preclude the agency from 111 seeking any other legal or equitable remedies available to the 112 agency for the recovery of moneys owed to the Medicaid program. 113 In the event of a change of ownership involving a skilled 114 nursing facility licensed under part II of chapter 400, 115 liability for all outstanding overpayments, administrative 116 fines, and any moneys owed to the agency before the effective 117 date of the change of ownership shall be determined in 118 accordance with s. 400.179 if the Medicaid provider enrollment 119 application for change of ownership is submitted before the 120 changeof ownership. 121 (c) As used in this subsection, the term: 122 1. “Administrative fines” includes any amount identified in 123 a notice of a monetary penalty or fine which has been issued by 124 the agency or other regulatory or licensing agency that governs 125 the provider. 126 2. “Outstanding overpayment” includes any amount identified 127 in a preliminary audit report issued to the transferor by the 128 agency on or before the effective date of a change of ownership. 129 (7)The agency may require,As a condition of participating 130 in the Medicaid program and before entering into the provider 131 agreement, the agency may requirethatthe provider to submit 132 information, in an initial and any required renewal 133 applications, concerning the professional, business, and 134 personal background of the provider and permit an onsite 135 inspection of the provider’s service location by agency staff or 136 other personnel designated by the agency to perform this 137 function. Before entering into a provider agreement, the agency 138 mayshallperform ana randomonsite inspection, within 60 days139after receipt of a fully complete new provider’s application,of 140 the provider’s service locationprior to making its first141payment to the provider for Medicaid servicesto determine the 142 applicant’s ability to provide the services in compliance with 143 the Medicaid program and professional regulationsthat the144applicant is proposing to provide for Medicaid reimbursement. 145The agency is not required to perform an onsite inspection of a146provider or program that is licensed by the agency, that147provides services under waiver programs for home and community148based services, or that is licensed as a medical foster home by149the Department of Children and Family Services.As a continuing 150 condition of participation in the Medicaid program, a provider 151 mustshallimmediately notify the agency of any current or 152 pending bankruptcy filing. Before entering into the provider 153 agreement, or as a condition of continuing participation in the 154 Medicaid program, the agency may also require that Medicaid 155 providers reimbursed on a fee-for-services basis or fee schedule 156 basis thatwhichis not cost-based, post a surety bond not to 157 exceed $50,000 or the total amount billed by the provider to the 158 program during the current or most recent calendar year, 159 whichever is greater. For new providers, the amount of the 160 surety bond shall be determined by the agency based on the 161 provider’s estimate of its first year’s billing. If the 162 provider’s billing during the first year exceeds the bond 163 amount, the agency may require the provider to acquire an 164 additional bond equal to the actual billing level of the 165 provider. A provider’s bond needshallnot exceed $50,000 if a 166 physician or group of physicians licensed under chapter 458, 167 chapter 459, or chapter 460 has a 50 percent or greater 168 ownership interest in the provider or if the provider is an 169 assisted living facility licensed under chapter 429. The bonds 170 permitted by this section are in addition to the bonds 171 referenced in s. 400.179(2)(d). If the provider is a 172 corporation, partnership, association, or other entity, the 173 agency may require the provider to submit information concerning 174 the background of that entity and of any principal of the 175 entity, including any partner or shareholder having an ownership 176 interest in the entity equal to 5 percent or greater, and any 177 treating provider who participates in or intends to participate 178 in Medicaid through the entity. The information must include: 179 (a) Proof of holding a valid license or operating 180 certificate, as applicable, if required by the state or local 181 jurisdiction in which the provider is located or if required by 182 the Federal Government. 183 (b) Information concerning any prior violation, fine, 184 suspension, termination, or other administrative action taken 185 under the Medicaid laws or,rules, or regulationsof this state 186 or of any other state or the Federal Government; any prior 187 violation of the laws or,rules, or regulationsrelating to the 188 Medicare program; any prior violation of the rulesor189regulationsof any other public or private insurer; and any 190 prior violation of the laws or,rules, or regulationsof any 191 regulatory body of this or any other state. 192 (c) Full and accurate disclosure of any financial or 193 ownership interest that the provider, or any principal, partner, 194 or major shareholder thereof, may hold in any other Medicaid 195 provider or health care related entity or any other entity that 196 is licensed by the state to provide health or residential care 197 and treatment to persons. 198 (d) If a group provider, identification of all members of 199 the group and attestation that all members of the group are 200 enrolled in or have applied to enroll in the Medicaid program. 201 (8)(a)Each provider, or each principal of the provider if 202 the provider is a corporation, partnership, association, or 203 other entity, seeking to participate in the Medicaid program, 204 including Medicaid managed care network providers, must submit a 205 complete set of his or her fingerprints to the agency for the 206 purpose of conducting a criminal history record check. 207 Principals of the provider include any officer, director, 208 billing agent, managing employee, or affiliated person, or any 209 partner or shareholder who has an ownership interest equal to 5 210 percent or more in the provider. However, for a hospital 211 licensed under chapter 395 or a nursing home licensed under 212 chapter 400, principals of the provider are those who meet the 213 definition of a controlling interest under s. 408.803. A 214 director of a not-for-profit corporation or organization is not 215 a principal for purposes of a background investigationas216 required by this section if the director: serves solely in a 217 voluntary capacity for the corporation or organization, does not 218 regularly take part in the day-to-day operational decisions of 219 the corporation or organization, receives no remuneration from 220 the not-for-profit corporation or organization for his or her 221 service on the board of directors, has no financial interest in 222 the not-for-profit corporation or organization, and has no 223 family members with a financial interest in the not-for-profit 224 corporation or organization; and if the director submits an 225 affidavit, under penalty of perjury, to this effect to the 226 agency and the not-for-profit corporation or organization 227 submits an affidavit, under penalty of perjury, to this effect 228 to the agency as part of the corporation’s or organization’s 229 Medicaid provider agreement application. Notwithstanding the 230 above, the agency may require a background check for any person 231 reasonably suspected by the agency to have been convicted of a 232 crime. 233 (a) This subsection does not apply to: 2341. A hospital licensed under chapter 395;2352. A nursing home licensed under chapter 400;2363. A hospice licensed under chapter 400;2374. An assisted living facility licensed under chapter 429;238 1.5.A unit of local government, except that requirements 239 of this subsection apply to nongovernmental providers and 240 entities contracting with the local government to provide 241 Medicaid services. The actual cost of the state and national 242 criminal history record checks must be borne by the 243 nongovernmental provider or entity; or 244 2.6.Any business that derives more than 50 percent of its 245 revenue from the sale of goods to the final consumer, and the 246 business or its controlling parent is required to file a form 247 10-K or other similar statement with the Securities and Exchange 248 Commission or has a net worth of $50 million or more. 249 (b) Background screening shall be conducted in accordance 250 with chapter 435 and s. 408.809. The cost of the state and 251 national criminal record check shall be borne by the provider. 252(c) Proof of compliance with the requirements of level 2253screening under chapter 435 conducted within 12 months before254the date the Medicaid provider application is submitted to the255agency fulfills the requirements of this subsection.256 Section 2. Subsections (1) and (6) of section 409.91212, 257 Florida Statutes, are amended to read: 258 409.91212 Medicaid managed care fraud.— 259 (1) Each managed care plan, as defined in s. 409.920(1)(e), 260 shall adopt an anti-fraud plan addressing the detection and 261 prevention of overpayments, abuse, and fraud relating to the 262 provision of and payment for Medicaid services and submit the 263 plan to the Office of Medicaid Program Integrity within the 264 agency for approval. The office shall enter into an interagency 265 agreement with the Division of Insurance Fraud in the Department 266 of Financial Services which delineates the responsibilities of 267 the agency in reviewing and approving anti-fraud plans for 268 entities that are also required to submit anti-fraud plans under 269 s. 626.9891. At a minimum, the anti-fraud plan must include: 270 (a) A written description or chart outlining the 271 organizational arrangement of the plan’s personnel who are 272 responsible for the investigation and reporting of possible 273 overpayment, abuse, or fraud; 274 (b) A description of the plan’s procedures for detecting 275 and investigating possible acts of fraud, abuse, and 276 overpayment; 277 (c) A description of the plan’s procedures for the 278 mandatory reporting of possible overpayment, abuse, or fraud to 279 the Office of Medicaid Program Integrity within the agency; 280 (d) A description of the plan’s program and procedures for 281 educating and training personnel on how to detect and prevent 282 fraud, abuse, and overpayment; 283 (e) The name, address, telephone number, e-mail address, 284 and fax number of the individual responsible for carrying out 285 the anti-fraud plan; and 286 (f) A summary of the results of the investigations of 287 fraud, abuse, or overpayment which were conducted during the 288 previous year by the managed care organization’s fraud 289 investigative unit. 290 (6) Each managed care plan shall report all suspected or 291 confirmed instances of provider or recipient fraud or abuse 292 within 15 calendar days after detection to the Office of 293 Medicaid Program Integrity within the agency. At a minimum the 294 report must contain the name of the provider or recipient, the 295 Medicaid billing number or tax identification number, and a 296 description of the fraudulent or abusive act. The officeof297Medicaid Program Integrity in the agencyshall forward the 298 report of suspected overpayment, abuse, or fraud to the 299 appropriate investigative unit, including, but not limited to, 300 the Bureau of Medicaid program integrity, the Medicaid fraud 301 control unit, the Division of Public Assistance Fraud, the 302 Division of Insurance Fraud, or the Department of Law 303 Enforcement. 304 (a) Failure to timely report shall result in an 305 administrative fine of $1,000 per calendar day after the 60th 30615thday of detection. 307 (b) Failure to timely report may result in additional 308 administrative, civil, or criminal penalties. 309 Section 3. Subsections (2), (9), (13), (15), (16), (21), 310 (22), (25), (28), (29), (30) and (31) of section 409.913, 311 Florida Statutes, are amended to read: 312 409.913 Oversight of the integrity of the Medicaid 313 program.—The agency shall operate a program to oversee the 314 activities of Florida Medicaid recipients, and providers and 315 their representatives, to ensure that fraudulent and abusive 316 behavior and neglect of recipients occur to the minimum extent 317 possible, and to recover overpayments and impose sanctions as 318 appropriate. Beginning January 1, 2003, and each year 319 thereafter, the agency and the Medicaid Fraud Control Unit of 320 the Department of Legal Affairs shall submit a joint report to 321 the Legislature documenting the effectiveness of the state’s 322 efforts to control Medicaid fraud and abuse and to recover 323 Medicaid overpayments during the previous fiscal year. The 324 report must describe the number of cases opened and investigated 325 each year; the sources of the cases opened; the disposition of 326 the cases closed each year; the amount of overpayments alleged 327 in preliminary and final audit letters; the number and amount of 328 fines or penalties imposed; any reductions in overpayment 329 amounts negotiated in settlement agreements or by other means; 330 the amount of final agency determinations of overpayments; the 331 amount deducted from federal claiming as a result of 332 overpayments; the amount of overpayments recovered each year; 333 the amount of cost of investigation recovered each year; the 334 average length of time to collect from the time the case was 335 opened until the overpayment is paid in full; the amount 336 determined as uncollectible and the portion of the uncollectible 337 amount subsequently reclaimed from the Federal Government; the 338 number of providers, by type, that are terminated from 339 participation in the Medicaid program as a result of fraud and 340 abuse; and all costs associated with discovering and prosecuting 341 cases of Medicaid overpayments and making recoveries in such 342 cases. The report must also document actions taken to prevent 343 overpayments and the number of providers prevented from 344 enrolling in or reenrolling in the Medicaid program as a result 345 of documented Medicaid fraud and abuse and must include policy 346 recommendations necessary to prevent or recover overpayments and 347 changes necessary to prevent and detect Medicaid fraud. All 348 policy recommendations in the report must include a detailed 349 fiscal analysis, including, but not limited to, implementation 350 costs, estimated savings to the Medicaid program, and the return 351 on investment. The agency must submit the policy recommendations 352 and fiscal analyses in the report to the appropriate estimating 353 conference, pursuant to s. 216.137, by February 15 of each year. 354 The agency and the Medicaid Fraud Control Unit of the Department 355 of Legal Affairs each must include detailed unit-specific 356 performance standards, benchmarks, and metrics in the report, 357 including projected cost savings to the state Medicaid program 358 during the following fiscal year. 359 (2) The agency shall conduct, or cause to be conducted by 360 contract or otherwise, reviews, investigations, analyses, 361 audits, or any combination thereof, to determine possible fraud, 362 abuse, overpayment, or recipient neglect in the Medicaid program 363 andshallreport the findings of any overpayments in audit 364 reports as appropriate. At least 5 percent of all audits must 365shallbe conducted on a random basis. As part of its ongoing 366 fraud detection activities, the agency shall identify and 367 monitor, by contract or otherwise, patterns of overutilization 368 of Medicaid services based on state averages. The agency shall 369 track Medicaid provider prescription and billing patterns and 370 evaluate them against Medicaid medical necessity criteria and 371 coverage and limitation guidelines adopted by rule. Medical 372 necessity determination requires that service be consistent with 373 symptoms or confirmed diagnosis of illness or injury under 374 treatment and not in excess of the patient’s needs. The agency 375 shall conduct reviews of provider exceptions to peer group norms 376 andshall, using statistical methodologies, provider profiling, 377 and analysis of billing patterns, shall detect and investigate 378 abnormal or unusual increases in billing or payment of claims 379 for Medicaid services and medically unnecessary provision of 380 services. The agency may review and analyze information from 381 sources other than enrolled Medicaid providers in conducting its 382 activities under this subsection. 383 (9) A Medicaid provider shall retain medical, professional, 384 financial, and business records pertaining to services and goods 385 furnished to a Medicaid recipient and billed to Medicaid for 6a386period of 5years after the date of furnishing such services or 387 goods. The agency may investigate, review, or analyze such 388 records, which must be made available during normal business 389 hours. However, 24-hour notice must be provided if patient 390 treatment would be disrupted. The provider must keepis391responsible for furnishing to the agency, and keepingthe agency 392 informed of the location of, the provider’s Medicaid-related 393 records. The authority of the agency to obtain Medicaid-related 394 records from a provider is neither curtailed nor limited during 395 a period of litigation between the agency and the provider. 396 (13) The agency shallimmediatelyterminate participation 397 of a Medicaid provider in the Medicaid program and may seek 398 civil remedies or impose other administrative sanctions against 399 a Medicaid provider, if the provider or any principal, officer, 400 director, agent, managing employee, or affiliated person of the 401 provider, or any partner or shareholder having an ownership 402 interest in the provider equal to 5 percent or greater, has been 403 convicted of a criminal offense under federal law or the law of 404 any state relating to the practice of the provider’s profession, 405 or a criminal offense listed under s. 409.907(10), s. 406 408.809(4), or s. 435.04(2)has been:407(a) Convicted of a criminal offense related to the delivery408of any health care goods or services, including the performance409of management or administrative functions relating to the410delivery of health care goods or services;411(b) Convicted of a criminal offense under federal law or412the law of any state relating to the practice of the provider’s413profession; or414(c) Found by a court of competent jurisdiction to have415neglected or physically abused a patient in connection with the416delivery of health care goods or services. If the agency 417 determines that theaprovider did not participate or acquiesce 418 in theanoffensespecified in paragraph (a), paragraph (b), or419paragraph (c),termination will not be imposed. If the agency 420 effects a termination under this subsection, the agency shall 421 take final actionissue an immediate final order pursuant to s.422120.569(2)(n). 423 (15) The agency shall seek a remedy provided by law, 424 including, but not limited to, any remedy provided in 425 subsections (13) and (16) and s. 812.035, if: 426 (a) The provider’s license has not been renewed, or has 427 been revoked, suspended, or terminated, for cause, by the 428 licensing agency of any state; 429 (b) The provider has failed to make available or has 430 refused access to Medicaid-related records to an auditor, 431 investigator, or other authorized employee or agent of the 432 agency, the Attorney General, a state attorney, or the Federal 433 Government; 434 (c) The provider has not furnished or has failed to make 435 available such Medicaid-related records as the agency has found 436 necessary to determine whether Medicaid payments are or were due 437 and the amounts thereof; 438 (d) The provider has failed to maintain medical records 439 made at the time of service, or prior to service if prior 440 authorization is required, demonstrating the necessity and 441 appropriateness of the goods or services rendered; 442 (e) The provider is not in compliance with provisions of 443 Medicaid provider publications that have been adopted by 444 reference as rules in the Florida Administrative Code; with 445 provisions of state or federal laws, rules, or regulations; with 446 provisions of the provider agreement between the agency and the 447 provider; or with certifications found on claim forms or on 448 transmittal forms for electronically submitted claims that are 449 submitted by the provider or authorized representative, as such 450 provisions apply to the Medicaid program; 451 (f) The provider or person who ordered, authorized, or 452 prescribed the care, services, or supplies has furnished, or 453 ordered or authorized the furnishing of, goods or services to a 454 recipient which are inappropriate, unnecessary, excessive, or 455 harmful to the recipient or are of inferior quality; 456 (g) The provider has demonstrated a pattern of failure to 457 provide goods or services that are medically necessary; 458 (h) The provider or an authorized representative of the 459 provider, or a person who ordered, authorized, or prescribed the 460 goods or services, has submitted or caused to be submitted false 461 or a pattern of erroneous Medicaid claims; 462 (i) The provider or an authorized representative of the 463 provider, or a person who has ordered, authorized, or prescribed 464 the goods or services, has submitted or caused to be submitted a 465 Medicaid provider enrollment application, a request for prior 466 authorization for Medicaid services, a drug exception request, 467 or a Medicaid cost report that contains materially false or 468 incorrect information; 469 (j) The provider or an authorized representative of the 470 provider has collected from or billed a recipient or a 471 recipient’s responsible party improperly for amounts that should 472 not have been so collected or billed by reason of the provider’s 473 billing the Medicaid program for the same service; 474 (k) The provider or an authorized representative of the 475 provider has included in a cost report costs that are not 476 allowable under a Florida Title XIX reimbursement plan,after 477 the provider or authorized representative had been advised in an 478 audit exit conference or audit report that the costs were not 479 allowable; 480 (l) The provider is charged by information or indictment 481 with fraudulent billing practices or an offense referenced in 482 subsection (13). The sanction applied for this reason is limited 483 to suspension of the provider’s participation in the Medicaid 484 program for the duration of the indictment unless the provider 485 is found guilty pursuant to the information or indictment; 486 (m) The provider or a person whohasordered, authorized, 487 or prescribed the goods or services is found liable for 488 negligent practice resulting in death or injury to the 489 provider’s patient; 490 (n) The provider fails to demonstrate that it had available 491 during a specific audit or review period sufficient quantities 492 of goods, or sufficient time in the case of services, to support 493 the provider’s billings to the Medicaid program; 494 (o) The provider has failed to comply with the notice and 495 reporting requirements of s. 409.907; 496 (p) The agency has received reliable information of patient 497 abuse or neglect or of any act prohibited by s. 409.920; or 498 (q) The provider has failed to comply with an agreed-upon 499 repayment schedule. 500 501 A provider is subject to sanctions for violations of this 502 subsection as the result of actions or inactions of the 503 provider, or actions or inactions of any principal, officer, 504 director, agent, managing employee, or affiliated person of the 505 provider, or any partner or shareholder having an ownership 506 interest in the provider equal to 5 percent or greater, in which 507 the provider participated or acquiesced. 508 (16) The agency shall impose any of the following sanctions 509 or disincentives on a provider or a person for any of the acts 510 described in subsection (15): 511 (a) Suspension for a specific period of time of not more 512 than 1 year. Suspension precludesshall precludeparticipation 513 in the Medicaid program, which includes any action that results 514 in a claim for payment to the Medicaid program foras a result515offurnishing, supervising a person who is furnishing, or 516 causing a person to furnish goods or services. 517 (b) Termination for a specific period of time rangingof518 from more than 1 year to 20 years. Termination precludesshall519precludeparticipation in the Medicaid program, which includes 520 any action that results in a claim for payment to the Medicaid 521 program foras a result offurnishing, supervising a person who 522 is furnishing, or causing a person to furnish goods or services. 523 (c) Imposition of a fine of up to $5,000 for each 524 violation. Each day that an ongoing violation continues, such as 525 refusing to furnish Medicaid-related records or refusing access 526 to records, is considered, for the purposes of this section, to527bea separate violation. Each instance of improper billing of a 528 Medicaid recipient; each instance of including an unallowable 529 cost on a hospital or nursing home Medicaid cost report after 530 the provider or authorized representative has been advised in an 531 audit exit conference or previous audit report of the cost 532 unallowability; each instance of furnishing a Medicaid recipient 533 goods or professional services that are inappropriate or of 534 inferior quality as determined by competent peer judgment; each 535 instance of knowingly submitting a materially false or erroneous 536 Medicaid provider enrollment application, request for prior 537 authorization for Medicaid services, drug exception request, or 538 cost report; each instance of inappropriate prescribing of drugs 539 for a Medicaid recipient as determined by competent peer 540 judgment; and each false or erroneous Medicaid claim leading to 541 an overpayment to a provider is considered, for the purposes of542this section, to bea separate violation. 543 (d) Immediate suspension, if the agency has received 544 information of patient abuse or neglect or of any act prohibited 545 by s. 409.920. Upon suspension, the agency must issue an 546 immediate final order under s. 120.569(2)(n). 547 (e) A fine, not to exceed $10,000, for a violation of 548 paragraph (15)(i). 549 (f) Imposition of liens against provider assets, including, 550 but not limited to, financial assets and real property, not to 551 exceed the amount of fines or recoveries sought, upon entry of 552 an order determining that such moneys are due or recoverable. 553 (g) Prepayment reviews of claims for a specified period of 554 time. 555 (h) Comprehensive followup reviews of providers every 6 556 months to ensure that they are billing Medicaid correctly. 557 (i) Corrective-action plans thatwouldremain in effectfor558providersfor up to 3 years and that arewould bemonitored by 559 the agency every 6 months while in effect. 560 (j) Other remedies as permitted by law to effect the 561 recovery of a fine or overpayment. 562 563 If a provider voluntarily relinquishes its Medicaid provider 564 number or an associated license, or allows the associated 565 licensure to expire after receiving written notice that the 566 agency is conducting, or has conducted, an audit, survey, 567 inspection, or investigation and that a sanction of suspension 568 or termination will or would be imposed for noncompliance 569 discovered as a result of the audit, survey, inspection, or 570 investigation, the agency shall impose the sanction of 571 termination for cause against the provider. The Secretary of 572 Health Care Administration may make a determination that 573 imposition of a sanction or disincentive is not in the best 574 interest of the Medicaid program, in which case a sanction or 575 disincentive mayshallnot be imposed. 576 (21) When making a determination that an overpayment has 577 occurred, the agency shall prepare and issue an audit report to 578 the provider showing the calculation of overpayments. The 579 agency’s determination must be based solely upon information 580 available to it before issuance of the audit report and, in the 581 case of documentation obtained to substantiate claims for 582 Medicaid reimbursement, based solely upon contemporaneous 583 records. 584 (22) The audit report, supported by agency work papers, 585 showing an overpayment to a provider constitutes evidence of the 586 overpayment. A provider may not present or elicit testimony,587eitheron direct examination or cross-examination in any court 588 or administrative proceeding, regarding the purchase or 589 acquisition by any means of drugs, goods, or supplies; sales or 590 divestment by any means of drugs, goods, or supplies; or 591 inventory of drugs, goods, or supplies, unless such acquisition, 592 sales, divestment, or inventory is documented by written 593 invoices, written inventory records, or other competent written 594 documentary evidence maintained in the normal course of the 595 provider’s business. A provider may not present records to 596 contest an overpayment or sanction unless such records are 597 contemporaneous and, if requested during the audit process, were 598 furnished to the agency or its agent upon request or were 599 furnished within 30 days after the provider received the final 600 audit report. This limitation does not apply to Medicaid cost 601 report audits. Notwithstanding the applicable rules of 602 discovery, all documentation tothat willbe offered as evidence 603 at an administrative hearing on a Medicaid overpayment or an 604 administrative sanction must be exchanged by all parties at 605 least 14 days before the administrative hearing ormustbe 606 excluded from consideration. 607 (25)(a) The agency shall withhold Medicaid payments, in 608 whole or in part, to a provider upon receipt of reliable 609 evidence that the circumstances giving rise to the need for a 610 withholding of payments involve fraud, willful 611 misrepresentation, or abuse under the Medicaid program, or a 612 crime committed while rendering goods or services to Medicaid 613 recipients. If it is determined that fraud, willful 614 misrepresentation, abuse, or a crime did not occur, the payments 615 withheld must be paid to the provider within 14 days after such 616 determinationwith interest at the rate of 10 percent a year.617Any money withheld in accordance with this paragraph shall be618placed in a suspended account, readily accessible to the agency,619so that any payment ultimately due the provider shall be made620within 14 days. 621 (b) The agency shall deny payment, or require repayment, if 622 the goods or services were furnished, supervised, or caused to 623 be furnished by a person who has been suspended or terminated 624 from the Medicaid program or Medicare program by the Federal 625 Government or any state. 626 (c) Overpayments owed to the agency bear interest at the 627 rate of 10 percent per year from the date of determination of 628 the overpayment by the agency, and payment arrangements must be 629 made within 30 days after the date of the final order and are 630 not subject to further appealat the conclusion of legal631proceedings.A provider who does not enter into or adhere to an632agreed-upon repayment schedule may be terminated by the agency633for nonpayment or partial payment.634 (d) The agency, upon entry of a final agency order, a 635 judgment or order of a court of competent jurisdiction, or a 636 stipulation or settlement, may collect the moneys owed by all 637 means allowable by law, including, but not limited to, notifying 638 any fiscal intermediary of Medicare benefits that the state has 639 a superior right of payment. Upon receipt of such written 640 notification, the Medicare fiscal intermediary shall remit to 641 the state the sum claimed. 642 (e) The agency may institute amnesty programs to allow 643 Medicaid providers the opportunity to voluntarily repay 644 overpayments. The agency may adopt rules to administer such 645 programs. 646 (28) Venue for all Medicaid program integrityoverpayment647 cases liesshall liein Leon County, at the discretion of the 648 agency. 649 (29) Notwithstanding other provisions of law, the agency 650 and the Medicaid Fraud Control Unit of the Department of Legal 651 Affairs may review a person’s or provider’s Medicaid-related and 652 non-Medicaid-related records in order to determine the total 653 output of a provider’s practice to reconcile quantities of goods 654 or services billed to Medicaid with quantities of goods or 655 services used in the provider’s total practice. 656 (30) The agency shall terminate a provider’s participation 657 in the Medicaid program if the provider fails to reimburse an 658 overpayment or pay an agency-imposed fine that has been 659 determined by final order, not subject to further appeal, within 660 3035days after the date of the final order, unless the 661 provider and the agency have entered into a repayment agreement. 662 (31) If a provider requests an administrative hearing 663 pursuant to chapter 120, such hearing must be conducted within 664 90 days following assignment of an administrative law judge, 665 absent exceptionally good cause shown as determined by the 666 administrative law judge or hearing officer. Upon issuance of a 667 final order, the outstanding balance of the amount determined to 668 constitute the overpayment and fines isshall becomedue. If a 669 provider fails to make payments in full, fails to enter into a 670 satisfactory repayment plan, or fails to comply with the terms 671 of a repayment plan or settlement agreement, the agency shall 672 withholdmedical assistancereimbursement payments for Medicaid 673 services until the amount due is paid in full. 674 Section 4. Subsection (8) of section 409.920, Florida 675 Statutes, is amended to read: 676 409.920 Medicaid provider fraud.— 677 (8) A person who provides the state, any state agency, any 678 of the state’s political subdivisions, or any agency of the 679 state’s political subdivisions with information about fraud or 680 suspected fraudulent actsfraudby a Medicaid provider, 681 including a managed care organization, is immune from civil 682 liability for libel, slander, or any other relevant tort for 683 providingtheinformation about fraud or suspected fraudulent 684 acts, unless the person acted with knowledge that the 685 information was false or with reckless disregard for the truth 686 or falsity of the information. Such immunity extends to reports 687 of fraudulent acts or suspected fraudulent acts conveyed to or 688 from the agency in any manner, including any forum and with any 689 audience as directed by the agency, and includes all discussions 690 subsequent to the report and subsequent inquiries from the 691 agency, unless the person acted with knowledge that the 692 information was false or with reckless disregard for the truth 693 or falsity of the information. For purposes of this subsection, 694 the term “fraudulent acts” includes actual or suspected fraud 695 and abuse, insurance fraud, licensure fraud, or public 696 assistance fraud, including any fraud-related matters that a 697 provider or health plan is required to report to the agency or a 698 law enforcement agency. 699 Section 5. This act shall take effect July 1, 2013.