Regulatory approval can make a belated Christmas miracle happen

Published in RINewsToday on April 8, 2024

A belated Christmas miracle may truly happen, if state and federal agencies allow the Linn Health & Rehabilitation to convert one of its floors into affordable assisted living specializing in memory and dementia care. If this happens, says the facility’s management and its Board of Trustees it will keep the East Providence-based nonprofit facility from closing, preventing the displacement of residents and staff. 

Faced with rampant inflation, rising food and utility costs, high temporary staffing agency fees, and very low state Medicaid reimbursement rates that haven’t kept pace with increasing costs in over a decade, Linn Health, established over 52 years ago, publicized its financial troubles over four months ago.   

The Best of the Best 

When the news broke about Linn Health & Rehabilitation’s financial crisis over four months ago, the facility had just been named a 2024 ‘Best Nursing Home’ and ‘High-Performing’ short-term rehabilitation home in the nation by U.S. News & World Report, states Jamie L. Sanford, LNHA, LCSW, administrator of Linn Health & Rehabilitation.

“Here we are, one of the elite nursing homes in the United States, and we are finding it difficult to stay afloat like six other homes in our local market who have gone out of business, and three others who have declared bankruptcy, and one other who recently had to downsize by 50 beds,” says Sanford.

“It’s sad that Rhode Island families who deserve an affordable 5-star nursing home like ours don’t have the option because of inadequate Medicaid reimbursement. The struggle is real,” says Sanford.

Together with Aldersbridge Communities and its volunteer Board of Trustees, Linn leaders launched a savvy PR move, calling it a “Hail Mary” effort, to find its Christmas miracle donors and funding to prevent it from closing or forcing the displacement of 71 residents and the laying off of 150 staff members. A clever twist on the message resulted in a story on Rhode Island television stations, talk radio, and pick up by other media outlets.

“Our tireless pleas for funds to keep us afloat until a slight Medicaid reimbursement rate increase is expected to take place later this year were heard, but didn’t result in us receiving any emergency gap funding. We did receive charitable contributions from generous donors in earnest, but the amount was nowhere near enough to cover our losses of $100,000 per month,” states Richard Gamache, MS, FACHCA, chief executive officer of Aldersbridge Communities. With revenues dwindling, Linn leadership came up with a solution: convert one floor of the nursing home into affordable assisted living, specializing in memory and dementia care”, he notes. 

Submitting the Application

According to Gamache, its application for recertification was submitted last month and he expects the license to be approved by the RI Department of Health soon. “Obtaining our certification so that we can bill the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services is a bigger obstacle, because the federal government is involved,” he says. But, it could take “one or two months to get the facility’s licensing and certification approved by the RI Department of Health and Human Services (RIDHS) and CMS.  

If approved and certified, Linn Health & Rehabilitation will operate “The Loft at Linn” – a new assisted living memory care unit featuring 22 private studio apartments on the second floor of the building. The third floor will remain a licensed nursing home, albeit smaller now with 33 beds.

According to Gamache, the RIDHS has recertified Linn residents currently receiving long-term care to qualify for assisted living-level memory care, enabling them to continue to live at Linn and have the same caregivers they are used to and know. 

Meanwhile, grant funding from the Rhode Island Foundation, the Ruby Linn Foundation, and other sources are being used to pay for the apartment renovations; and to re-educate and train certified nursing assistants to become certified medical technicians so they can remain on staff working at the assisted living memory care program.

Shifting operations to assisted living and repurposing existing nursing home rooms will keep the facility’s doors open. “It’s not enough to solve our financial woes completely, as we expect the nursing home to continue to lose money – just not as much as we have been losing,” notes Gamache. “The irony is that we will save Rhode Island over $780,000 in a year because of the difference between what they will reimburse us for assisted living, versus a skilled level of care per Medicaid resident,” Gamache calculates. 

As a whole, because we’re going from a 42-bed skilled nursing floor to a 22-bed assisted living floor, the state is going to save $2.8 million per year in Medicaid dollars,” notes Gamache.

It is not surprising that Rick Gamache, who has years of experience managing nursing facilities, might have just found a way to keep his facility open,” says Kathleen Heren, Rhode Island’s Ombudsman. If the request of recertification is approved by state and federal regulators to offer assisted living with memory care, residents won’t be displaced and workers won’t lose their jobs, says Heren.

“It was never a viable option to sell Linn Health to an out-of-state nursing facility chain,” says Heren, noting that there is a need for assisted living facilities offering memory care. “There are high functioning people affected with dementia, with no medical conditions, who do not need to be placed in a nursing facility,” she adds.

Comments from the Sideline 

Like Heren, Maureen Maigret, policy advisor for the Senior Agenda Coalition and member of the RI Advisory Council on Alzheimer’s Disease Research and Treatment, holds Gamache in high regard. By converting a floor to needed assisted living with a memory care, staff will not be displaced, so residents with memory issues will not be losing staff who know them and who they are comfortable with.

According to Maigret, many assisted living residences strictly limit residents on Medicaid. A few years back, the state changed the Medicaid reimbursement for assisted living to one with three levels of reimbursement with a higher level of reimbursement to encourage more residences to accept persons with higher needs who are on Medicaid. ”We know that RI has many persons with diagnoses of Alzheimer’s and related dementias so such memory care programs are critical for those who cannot pay privately with monthly rates often over $6,000,” says Maigret.

Maigret notes that the state’s Health Department reports that 34 assisted living residences are licensed as Special Care/Alzheimer’s residences, but it is does not show which ones accept Medicaid. “And even those that do often limit the number of residents on Medicaid as they can get higher reimbursements from private paying persons,” she says.

According to Gage, in 2024, RI’s nursing homes are being paid rates by Medicaid that are based on their 2011 actual costs under the price-based reimbursement system that was implemented in 2013. Core principles of this reimbursement methodology are the statutory annual inflation adjustments and a Medicaid rate analysis every three years to determine whether rates are reasonable and adequate. “In the vast majority of years in the past decade, RI Medicaid has slashed or eliminated inflation adjustments, and they have never conducted a rate analysis/adjustment.  As a direct result, RI nursing homes are losing $50-75/day on each resident receiving care under Medicaid,” he says.

Gage predicts that Linn and Scandinavian Home will not be the last to make the difficult choice to downsize or close. “Just since the start of the pandemic, six RI nursing homes have closed and three were in receivership. Now, two nonprofit homes are forced to downsize their facilities,” he noted. “RI nursing homes must be adequately reimbursed by Medicaid under a stable and sustainable reimbursement system, and there needs to be bold action to recruit and retain frontline healthcare workers at competitive rates,” he warns, calling for the state to preserve nursing facilities. 

Demographics show a silver tsunami on the horizon. We need to ensure that there will be capacity for those who will need short-term or long-term care and services in the coming years,” states Gage.

As far as any potential Medicaid savings resulting from the planned conversion, Gage says that Linn would only be able to accommodate 33 nursing facility residents down from its former capacity of 87. By downsizing the nursing home by 54 beds and transitioning that floor into low-income memory care assisted living for just 22 residents, there will be a savings to the state, he says. due to the combined capacity of the facility decreasing by 32 residents, and those who remain in the memory care unit will be receiving a lower level of care and assistance than that provided in a skilled nursing home.

At press time, Gamache waits for the license from RIDOH and certification from the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services to be approved that enables the opening of the new assisted living memory care program. 

“There is no reason while this approval shouldn’t happen,” says Gamache. “We can comply with all the regulations, we’ve identified an overwhelming community need, and we are saving the state a lot of money,” he quipped. 

“After all, this is a win/win for the state, for residents, their families and staff to enable Aldersbridge Communities continue operating a full continuum of care,” states Gamache. 

Senior Agenda Coalition of RI unveils legislative agenda to packed house of seniors

Published in RINewsToday on April 1, 2024

Last Wednesday, the main ballroom at the Crowne Plaza in Warwick was filled, to capacity. Hundreds came to the Senior Agenda Coalition of RI’s (SACRI)  2024 Legislative Leaders Forum to learn about the advocacy group’s issue priorities. House and Senate leadership, along with members of both caucuses came to listen, learn and to respond to SACRI’s four priority issues for 2024.

We’re back, and we are stronger than ever,” announced Maureen Maigret, SACRI’s Policy Advisor, to 275 attendees who came to this year’s annual legislative forum held on March 27, 2024.  Before she unveiled SACRI’s ambitious legislative priorities she painted a demographic picture of older Rhode Islanders.

The graying of Rhode Island’s population

“We know that 200,000 Rhode Islanders are age 65 and over, and this number is growing,” noted Maigret. According to the former state legislator and Director of the Department of Elderly Affairs, in just six years, 1 in 5 persons will be age 65 and over. Today, 20% of the population in 18 Rhode Island communities are in their mid-sixties and over.

Many seniors still work. They pay taxes, provide care to loved ones, volunteer to contribute to their communities, and religiously vote,” stated Maigret, who noted that they contribute over $3.28 billion to Rhode Island’s economy through Social Security benefits. 

Maigret pointed out that as the older population ages, the percentage of woman increases over men.  At age 65 and over , 56% of this age distribution are woman, 44% are men.  At age 85 and over, the percentage of women rapidly increase to 69% compared to 31% for men. And in nursing homes, 68% of residents are woman while 32% are men. 

According to the U.S. Census Bureau, many older Rhode Islanders have limited incomes. Twenty-seven percent of age 65+ households earn less than $25,000 a year, while 50% earn less than $50,000 a year.

With women leaving their jobs over the years to raise their family, it is no surprise to Maigret that women’s incomes are less than men, this ultimately resulting in a smaller Social Security benefit. The average Social Security benefits of women aged 65 and over ($20,333) is $5,000 less than their male counterparts ($25,204), she says.

Unveiling SACRI’s Legislative Agenda

“Keeping seniors strong” is the theme of this year’s legislative forum, Maigret told the hundreds of seniors and aging advocates in attendance before announcing the SACRI priorities. SACRI is pushing for legislative issues in the areas of:

·       Economic Security

·       Supports at Home

·       Community Connections

·       Housing Options

She called on the House Speaker K. Joseph Shekarchi (D-Dist. 23, Warwick), and Senate Majority Whip, Valarie Lawson (D-Dist. 14, East Providence), in attendance, to support House and Senate legislation, and state budget proposals to address these issues.

SACRI’s top legislative priority is to addressEconomic Security issues. Polls show that healthcare affordability is a major concern, and this impacts many seniors.  Maigret pointed out that Medicare premiums  and co-payment gaps have a major impact on low-income Rhode Islanders who struggle to pay for healthcare, food, rent and basic needs.”

According to Maigret, legislative proposals (S. 2399/H. 7333) would be a legislative fix to reduce high out-of-pocket costs for persons on Medicare. The bills would expand income eligibility for the Medicare Savings Program (MSP), helping an estimated 17,000 low-income seniors and disabled residents pay their $175/month Medicare Part B premium and covering co-pays and deductibles for those with very low-income.

Thousands of low-income seniors and persons with disabilities on Medicare, but not eligible to participate in the state’s Medicaid program, struggle each month to pay their Medicare Part B premiums and co-pay costs for services and prescription drugs causing many to forgo needed health care as they cannot afford to pay the co-payments.

And eligibility to join MSP qualifies those on Medicare to enroll in the federal Extra Help program that provides significant additional financial assistance to pay for

SACRI also calls on the state lawmakers to provide necessary funding in the 2025 Fiscal Year Budget to enhance programs to assist seniors to age in place in their communities. “It’s a very important legislative issue for seniors,” notes Maigret, stressing that most seniors want to stay at home when they need care.   

In large part due to the existing home care staffing shortage, 75% of those referred for state-subsidized home care wait two months or more for these services. A state study recommended home care rate increases to improve access to home health care services which would help to address the worker shortage and provide livable wages for home care workers.  Maigret urged Shekarchi and Lawson to put funding in this year’s budget to implement the study’s recommendations.

Meanwhile, SACRI supports increased funding for local Senior Centers to enable them to continue to provide “community connections” to seniors. “They do amazing work by offering meal programs, technology assistance and training and all kinds of social, health and recreations programs, says Maigret.

Seniors benefit from, and enjoy going to Senior Centers, adds Maigret, reflecting on a comment told to her by a senior attending Warwick’s Pilgrim Senior Center. “It’s my home away from home,” she says.

Governor Dan McKee’s Fiscal Year 2025 Budget would distribute $1.4 million (about $7 per person aged 65 and over in each community) to the local communities for Senior Centers and programs. SACRI calls on the General Assembly to increase this budget allocation by about $660,000 (making the funding tied to $10 per person aged 65 and over. “It’s a small funding request,” says Maigret.

Finally, SACRI urges the General Assembly to continue to address the lack of options and affordability of housing for seniors. Maigret notes that this problem is the result of the state’s growing older population with fixed incomes, combined with low housing production, skyrocketing rent increases, and high property taxes, 

There are many legislative remedies to address the state’s housing crisis, says SACRI, calling on the General Assembly to use a portion of the proposed Housing Bonds to support affordable housing options for older Rhode Islanders. She also suggested that lawmaker’s continue funding the Home Modification Program, expanding the Property Tax Relief Program and finally promoting  accessibility features in new housing developments.

Like previous years, SACRI worked hard to drive home the point of putting a spotlight to its legislative agenda by having “storytellers” translatethe priorities into personal stories.  

House Speaker talks turkey at Legislative Forum

Aging is a very important and personal issue to House Speaker Shekarchi, who is taking care of his 98-year-old father, who remains at home. “That is where he wants to be, he says. “I know that not everyone is fortunate – not everyone has the same support system,” says Shekarchi. “But it’s important that seniors have options so they can choose what’s best for them,” he says

“We need to provide support for seniors to age in place and to remain in their homes, living independently,” states Shekarchi. A great option – which is also the top legislative priority for AARP Rhode Island this year – is creating Accessory Dwelling Units (ADUs). They enable seniors – even young college graduates – to live independently while remaining near family and others, he adds.

“As for seniors who live in assisted living facilities and nursing homes, we need to ensure those facilities are adequately staffed, and that caregivers are paid a sustainable wage,” says Shekarchi. 

“We expect this to be a very challenging budget year, with many worthwhile, but competing, priorities,” says Shekarchi.

“I know the Senior Agenda has legislative priorities in 2024 that I promise we will consider very carefully. And I have a request for all of you. Please stay involved, make your voices heard at the State House,” Shekarchi suggests, “give us feedback. You can testify in person at the State House, or in writing by letter or email.

Valarie LawsonSenate Majority Whip, took the opportunity to discuss the Rhode Island HEALTH Initiative… a Senate legislative package designed to address affordability and accessibility of health care in the state.

According to Lawson, the HEALTH Initiative seeks to ensure the strength of the state’s community hospitals, attract, and retain primary care doctors and makes sure Rhode Islanders can access quality, affordable care. The legislation includes a bill by Sen. Alana DiMario to create a drug affordability commission in Rhode Island … which is a critical step to make the state’s prescription drug system less complicated and less costly. And Sen. V. Susan Sosnowski’s legislation to transform and mandate a continuous Medicaid reimbursement rate review process by the Office of the Health Insurance Commission.

Lawson noted the Senate was working on the SACRI MSP priority legislation and that she is a co-sponsor of the bill. She said that the Senate shares the Senior Agenda’s  priority of making Rhode Island a place where residents can age with comfort and security. “At the State House… we rely on your voices to help guide us,” she said.

Call to Action

Diane Santos, SACRI Board Chair, ended the forum with a Call to Action for attendees to let their voices be heard by contacting their local legislators to express their concerns and to support programs to help keep seniors strong.

SACRI Legislative Leaders Forum organizational partners included: Cranston Enrichment CenterEdward King HouseLeon Mathieu Senior CenterMeals on Wheels RI, Pilgrim Senior Center, Ocean State Center for Independent LivingSt. Martin de Porres CenterThe RI Organizing Project and The Village Common of RI.

To watch the 2024 Senior Agenda Coalition Leaders Forum Conference, go to: https://capitoltvri.cablecast.tv/show/9023