Medicaid Administrative Fair Hearings

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The attorney filing an initial application for Medicaid home care benefits must gather a plethora of documents to prove eligibility (passport; birth certificate; marriage certificate or divorce decree or death certificate of spouse; lease or deed or coop stock certificate; utility bill; Social Security card; Medicare card; supplemental health insurance card; Social Security award letter; pension statement; supplemental health insurance premium coupon and current financial statements). For a Medicaid nursing home application, in addition, monthly statements for the preceding five years will also be required. These documents can run into the hundreds and even thousands of pages.

It is discouraging to then wait months for a decision on the application. It is even more dispiriting to receive a notice from Medicaid that the application has been denied. It is especially disheartening when the denial is based upon an agency mistake. Many of these errors are the result of routine agency oversights such as account balance not being read correctly; the same account counted twice; or an exempt retirement account counted as non-retirement.

Even if the application is approved, there may be an error in the date that benefits are to commence or in the amount of monthly income attributed to the recipient. There are still others who have already been found eligible for Medicaid benefits and later received a notice that their benefits are to be reduced or terminated.

All of these errors can be challenged by the fair hearing process.

Denial Reduction or Termination



A denial or reduction or termination of benefits must be made in written form and sent to the applicant or recipient. The notice must include the reason for the action, the statutory basis for the decision and for existing cases, the date that the action will be implemented. Such notice is the touchstone in the fair hearing process and is constitutionally guaranteed by Goldberg v. Kelly, 397 US 254 (1970). That Supreme Court decision found that due process required a public welfare agency to provide prior notice and opportunity to have a hearing before benefits could be terminated.

The original decision on eligibility for Medicaid is made by the local county Department of Social Services. To challenge a negative decision, a request for a fair hearing can be made online; by mail; by fax; by telephone or in person (in New York and Albany only). The fair hearings are under the auspices of the New York State Office of Temporary and Disability Assistance (OTDA) and the fair hearing itself is conducted by an administrative law judge (ALJ).

Medicaid home care recipients who receive their services from Managed Long-Term Care Plans (MLTCPs) and wish to challenge decisions (such as to the number of hours of care to be provided) must first make an internal appeal to the MLTCP. They can only request a fair hearing through OTDA after they have exhausted their internal appeal.

A fair hearing must ordinarily be requested within 60 days of the adverse notice. The time within which to request the fair hearing is tolled if the fair hearing notice is defective or notice was not received by the applicant or recipient or their representative.