Judge blocks pay requirements for Medicaid in-home caregivers

by Dave Ranney, KHI News Service

A federal district court judge on Wednesday blocked implementation of a U.S. Department of Labor regulation that would have required state Medicaid programs to pay in-home care workers minimum wage and overtime.

“The judge vacated the regulation,” said Mike Oxford, executive director at the Topeka Independent Living Resource Center, a nonprofit program that helps arrange in-home services for people with physical disabilities. “That means he threw the whole thing out. It’s gone.”

The ruling upheld a 40-year-old provision in the Fair Labor Standards Act that allows some care workers to be paid less than minimum wage.

“This is a very good thing for Kansas,” Oxford said. “If the regulation had gone into effect like it was supposed to on Jan. 1, the state would have been in violation of the Fair Labor Standards Act, and every provider would have been exposed to lawsuits for overtime, double overtime, back pay and economic damages.”

The ruling, he said, in no way endorsed low wages for workers who care for the state’s frail elders and for people with disabilities.

“That’s not what this is about,” Oxford said. “This was about legislative process and how the Department of Labor went about doing what it did.”

In Kansas, he said, most attendant care workers are paid between $9.50 and $10 an hour — above the hourly minimum wage of $7.25. Most do not work more than 40 hours a week.

In August, Oxford and Kansas Department for Disability and Aging Services Secretary Kari Bruffett alerted legislators to the new rule’s potential for increasing costs and reducing access to Medicaid-funded services that help frail elders and people with disabilities live in community-based settings rather than in nursing homes.

At the time, Bruffett said the regulatory change could affect more than 10,700 Kansans receiving in-home services. As many as 1,400 people, she said, could see reductions in sleep cycle support, a service that involves paying someone — often an adult family member — to stay with an individual who should not be left alone at night due to their disability or medical condition.

In Kansas, most sleep cycle support workers are paid about $25 per six-hour night, which is less than minimum wage. Many of these workers are related to those they are caring for.

Angela de Rocha, a KDADS spokesperson, declined comment on the ruling late Wednesday afternoon, noting that department officials had not had time to review the 12-page decision.

The decision stemmed from a lawsuit filed by the Home Care Association of America, International Franchise Association and National Association for Home Care and Hospice. The associations accused the Department of Labor of disregarding rejection of similar legislation by Congress on several occasions in recent years.

Bruffett filed a six-page affidavit in support of the plaintiffs’ claims, saying the regulatory change would create a “landscape of uncertainty” and potentially “disrupt services and supports for thousands of our most vulnerable Kansans.”

Offsetting the projected increases in sleep cycle support costs, she said, would cost “more than $30 million in all funds, or $21,428 per consumer.”

Last month, U.S. District Judge Richard Leon in Washington, D.C., ordered the Department of Labor to temporarily delay implementation of the new rule. In the order, Leon was harshly critical of the Labor Department, characterizing the new rule as “nothing short of yet another thinly-veiled effort to do through regulation what could not be done through legislation.”

The Department of Labor, Oxford said, could appeal the judge’s latest ruling.

“They have that option,” he said, “but for now we can continue to provide home and community-based services like we have in the past.”

The nonprofit KHI News Service is an editorially independent initiative of the Kansas Health Institute and a partner in the Heartland Health Monitor reporting collaboration. All stories and photos may be republished at no cost with proper attribution and a link back to KHI.org when a story is reposted online.
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Wyandotte County students on dean’s list, honor roll

Wyandotte County students have been named to the dean’s list and honor roll at MidAmerica Nazarene University, Olathe, Kan., for the fall semester.

Students on the dean’s list had a 3.5 to 3.99 grade point average, and students on the honor roll had a 3.2 to 3.49 grade point average.

From Wyandotte County, the students include Tyler McMahan, Bonner Springs, dean’s list; Vanessa Kelley, Kansas City, Kan., dean’s list; Edith Menhusen, Kansas City, Kan., dean’s list; Christopher Parker, Kansas City, Kan., honor roll; and Samuel Stowe, Kansas City, Kan., honor roll.

KCKCC men shock No. 13 Coffeyville with season’s biggest upset, 61-57

by Alan Hoskins

Kansas City Kansas Community College landed a haymaker of epic proportions Wednesday night, stunning Coffeyville 61-57 at Coffeyville.

Off to a 16-2 start, Coffeyville had just moved up to No. 13 in the Division I national rankings Wednesday while the Blue Devils (12-6) were coming off two difficult losses and were playing their third game in five days. A Jayhawk dynasty under coach Jay Herkelman, the Red Ravens came into this season with 11 Jayhawk East championships in the last 14 years and seven national tournament appearances.

However, while you could probably count KCKCC wins over Coffeyville (home or away) on one hand, it was the Blue Devils who led most of the way in pulling the Jayhawk’s biggest upset of the season.

After two ties and nine lead changes, the Blue Devils (12-6) grabbed the lead midway through the first half, opened a 31-27 halftime lead and stretched it to 37-27 to start the second half and never trailed the rest of the way behind sizzling shooting.

Efficiently effective the first half with 13 of 30 for 43.3 percent, the Blue Devils took just 19 second half shot, made 13 for 68.4 percent and the final gap might have been wider had not the Blue Devils converted just 3-of-9 second half free throws.

“We showed a lot of poise and patience to get high quality shots the second half,” said KCKCC coach Kelley Newton. “We only took two three-pointers the second half and made one so most of our shots were mid-range or towards the basket. LaShawn Lewis hit two jump shots at the free throw line in the second half that were big.”

Babajide Aina, the 6-2 sophomore transfer from Prairie View A&M, again led the way with a double double – 17 points and 10 rebounds while sharing the assist lead with CJ Vallejo with four. Austin Hall, the 6-5 freshman forward from Aurora, Colo., added 16 points on 5-of-8 shooting, and Lansing frosh Joe Lendway 11 points on 5-of-7.

Lendway also had seven rebounds and Hall four as the Blue Devils dominated the rebounding, allowing only six offensive rebounds in winning the board battle 35-24. Another frosh, LaShawn Lewis, added eight points and three rebounds while Ray Ridley had three assists.

“We did a good job in keeping them to just one shot,” Newton said. “They are really big so that was a credit to the kids. They locked into their goals and executed. This is a great, great program win for us, bigger than winning at Iowa Western because of the conference and how hard it’s always been to win at Coffeyville.”

Defensively, Coffeyville was held to 37 percent shooting both halves but the Red Ravens stayed in contention with 13-of-16 free throws.

The Blue Devils now return to Division II play Saturday when they serve as host to Highland, the division leader at 2-0 although just 9-9 overall.

Alan Hoskins is the sports information director at KCKCC.