Public Health Law Section 2808

    § 2808. Residential health care facilities; rates of payment.
    1-a.  Notwithstanding  sections  one  hundred  twelve  and one hundred
  sixty-three  of  the  state  finance  law  and  any  other  inconsistent
  provision   of  law,  the  commissioner  shall  make  grants  to  public
  residential health care facilities without a competitive bid or  request
  for  proposal  process  for  the  purposes  of  addressing  the  overall
  increases in input costs borne by such  facilities.  Such  modifications
  shall  also  be  primarily  intended to promote the provision of quality
  health care, quality operation, updated technology  and  improved  staff
  development  and support by such facilities. Such grants shall be in the
  following aggregate amounts for the following periods: five million  for
  the period April first, two thousand six through March thirty-first, two
  thousand seven; fifteen million for the period April first, two thousand
  seven  through  March  thirty-first, two thousand eight; and ten million
  for  the  period  April  first,  two  thousand   eight   through   March
  thirty-first, two thousand nine.
    The  amount  allocated to each eligible public residential health care
  facility for each period shall be calculated as the result  of  (i)  the
  total  payment  for  each period multiplied by (ii) the ratio of patient
  days for patients eligible for  medical  assistance  pursuant  to  title
  eleven of article five of the social services law provided by the public
  residential  health  care facility, divided by the total of such patient
  days summed for all eligible public residential health care  facilities.
  Grants under this subdivision shall be made on a quarterly basis.
    * 2.  (a)  The  commissioner,  with the approval of the state hospital
  review  and  planning  council,  shall  promulgate  regulations  to	be
  effective  the  first  day  of  January, nineteen hundred seventy-eight,
  relating the rate of payment for each residential health  care  facility
  to real property costs.
    (b)  Such  regulations  may  differentiate  based  upon  the  form  of
  ownership of the facility, and shall provide for consideration  of  such
  factors as the age, size, location and condition of the facility.
    (c)  For  facilities  granted  operating  certificates  prior to March
  tenth, nineteen hundred seventy-five, the real property costs  shall  be
  computed  upon  a  cost valuation basis of the facility as determined by
  the commissioner, who, subject to the approval of the  director  of  the
  budget,  may  provide  exceptions  in  circumstances where he finds that
  application of the regulations would result in  excessive  reimbursement
  or   in   severe  economic  hardship  to  the  facility  not  caused  by
  circumstances reasonably under the control of the facility.
    (d) For facilities granted operating certificates on  or  after  March
  tenth, nineteen hundred seventy-five, recognition of real property costs
  in such regulations shall be based upon historical costs to the owner of
  the facility, provided that payment for real property costs shall not be
  in  excess of the actual debt service, including principal and interest,
  and payment with  respect  to  owner's  equity.  For  purposes  of  this
  subdivision,  owner's  equity  shall be calculated without regard to any
  surplus created by revaluation of assets and shall not  include  amounts
  resulting from mortgage amortization where the payment therefor has been
  provided by real property cost reimbursement.
    (e)  All  transactions,  including leases and mortgages, which are not
  bona fide and reasonable shall be disregarded.
    * NB Expired December 31, 1978
    2-a. (a) The commissioner, with the approval  of  the  state  hospital
  review   and  planning  council,  shall  promulgate  regulations  to  be
  effective the first  day  of  January,  nineteen  hundred  seventy-nine,
  relating  the  rate of payment for each residential health care facility
  to real property costs.
    (b)  Such  regulations  may  differentiate  based  upon  the  form  of
  ownership  of  the facility, and shall provide for consideration of such
  factors as the age, size, location and condition of the facility.
    (c)  For  facilities  granted  operating  certificates  prior to March
  tenth, nineteen hundred seventy-five, the real property costs  shall  be
  computed  upon  a  cost valuation basis of the facility as determined by
  the commissioner, who, subject to the approval of the  director  of  the
  budget,  may  provide  exceptions  in  circumstances where he finds that
  application of the regulations would result in  excessive  reimbursement
  or   in   severe  economic  hardship  to  the  facility  not  caused  by
  circumstances reasonably under the control of the facility.
    (d) For facilities granted operating certificates on  or  after  March
  tenth, nineteen hundred seventy-five, recognition of real property costs
  in such regulations shall be based upon historical costs to the owner of
  the facility, provided that payment for real property costs shall not be
  in  excess of the actual debt service, including principal and interest,
  and payment with  respect  to  owner's  equity.  For  purposes  of  this
  subdivision,  owner's  equity  shall be calculated without regard to any
  surplus created by revaluation of assets and shall not  include  amounts
  resulting from mortgage amortization where the payment therefor has been
  provided by real property cost reimbursement.
    (e)  All  transactions,  including leases and mortgages, which are not
  bona fide and reasonable shall be disregarded.
    2-b. Notwithstanding any inconsistent provision of  this  section,  or
  any  other  contrary provision of law and subject to the availability of
  federal financial participation, the operating cost component  of  rates
  of  payment  by governmental agencies for inpatient services provided on
  and after January first, two thousand seven by residential  health  care
  facilities shall be in accordance with the following:
    (a)  (i)  Subject to the provisions of subparagraphs (ii) through (vi)
  of this paragraph, for the two thousand seven rate period the  operating
  cost  component  of  rates  of  payment shall reflect the operating cost
  component of rates effective for October first,  two  thousand  six,  as
  adjusted  for  inflation in accordance with paragraph (c) of subdivision
  ten of section twenty-eight hundred seven-c of this article; and for the
  January first,  two  thousand  eight  through  March  thirty-first,  two
  thousand  nine  rate  period  the  operating  cost component of rates of
  payment shall reflect the operating cost component  of  rates  effective
  for  December  thirty-first, two thousand six, as adjusted for inflation
  in  accordance  with  paragraph  (c)  of  subdivision  ten  of   section
  twenty-eight hundred seven-c of this article.
    (ii)  Rates  for the periods two thousand seven and two thousand eight
  shall be further adjusted by a per diem add-on amount, as determined  by
  the  commissioner, reflecting the proportional amount of each facility's
  projected Medicaid benefit to the total projected Medicaid  benefit  for
  all  facilities  of  the imputed use of the rate-setting methodology set
  forth in paragraph (b) of this subdivision, provided, however, that  for
  those  facilities  that  do  not  receive  a  per diem add-on adjustment
  pursuant to this  subparagraph,  rates  shall  be  further  adjusted  to
  include the proportionate benefit, as determined by the commissioner, of
  the expiration of the opening paragraph and paragraph (a) of subdivision
  sixteen  of this section and of paragraph (a) of subdivision fourteen of
  this section, provided, further, however, that the  aggregate  total  of
  the rate adjustments made pursuant to this subparagraph shall not exceed
  one  hundred  thirty-seven million five hundred thousand dollars for the
  two thousand seven rate period and one hundred sixty-seven million  five
  hundred thousand dollars for the two thousand eight rate period.
    (iii)  Revisions  to  two  thousand  six  rates occurring on and after
  January first, two  thousand  seven,  shall  be  annually  incorporated,
  retroactively  and  prospectively,  into  two  thousand  seven  and  two
  thousand eight rates on or about November thirtieth, two thousand  seven
  and November thirtieth, two thousand eight, respectively.
    (iv)  The  capital  cost component of rates pursuant to this paragraph
  shall fully reflect the cost of local property taxes and  payments  made
  in  lieu  of  local  property taxes, as reported in each facility's cost
  report submitted for the year two years prior to the rate year.
    (v) Rates for the two thousand  seven  and  two  thousand  eight  rate
  periods, as computed pursuant to this paragraph, shall not be subject to
  case  mix  adjustment,  provided,  however,  that  a  facility  may,  in
  accordance with its  existing  full  house  schedule  of  submission  of
  patient  review  instruments,  submit data in support of a request for a
  rate adjustment to reflect an increased facility case mix  equal  to  or
  greater  than  .05, provided further, however, that such a facility will
  be  required  to  continue  to  make  such  full  house  submissions  in
  accordance  with  its  existing  submission schedule for rate periods up
  through December thirty-first, two thousand eight.
    (vi) For the period January first, two thousand seven through December
  thirty-first, two thousand eight, notwithstanding any contrary provision
  of law or regulation, voluntary facilities  shall  not  be  required  to
  deposit   reimbursement   received  for  depreciation  expenses  into  a
  segregated depreciation fund account.
    (b) (i) Subject to the provisions of subparagraphs (ii) through  (xiv)
  of  this  paragraph,  for periods on and after April first, two thousand
  nine through March thirty-first, two thousand  ten  the  operating  cost
  component of rates of payment shall reflect allowable operating costs as
  reported  in  each  facility's  cost  report  for  the  two thousand two
  calendar  year,  as  adjusted  for  inflation  on  an  annual  basis  in
  accordance   with   the  methodology  set  forth  in  paragraph  (c)  of
  subdivision ten of section twenty-eight hundred seven-c of this article,
  provided, however, that for those facilities which do not receive a  per
  diem add-on adjustment pursuant to subparagraph (ii) of paragraph (a) of
  this  subdivision,  rates  shall  be  further  adjusted  to  include the
  proportionate  benefit,  as  determined  by  the  commissioner,  of  the
  expiration  of  the  opening  paragraph and paragraph (a) of subdivision
  sixteen of this section and of paragraph (a) of subdivision fourteen  of
  this  section, and provided further that the operating cost component of
  rates of payment for those facilities which did not receive a  per  diem
  adjustment in accordance with subparagraph (ii) of paragraph (a) of this
  subdivision  shall  not  be  less  than  the  operating  component  such
  facilities received in the two thousand eight rate period,  as  adjusted
  for  inflation on an annual basis in accordance with the methodology set
  forth in paragraph  (c)  of  subdivision  ten  of  section  twenty-eight
  hundred  seven-c  of  this  article  and further provided, however, that
  rates for facilities whose operating cost component reflects  base  year
  costs  subsequent  to  January  first, two thousand two shall have rates
  computed  in  accordance  with  this  paragraph,   utilizing	 allowable
  operating  costs  as  reported  in such subsequent base year period, and
  trended forward to the rate year in accordance with applicable inflation
  factors.
    (ii) The operating component of rates shall be  subject  to  case  mix
  adjustment  through  application  of  the  relative resource utilization
  groups system  of  patient  classification  (RUG-III)  employed  by  the
  federal government with regard to payments to skilled nursing facilities
  pursuant  to  title XVIII of the federal social security act (Medicare),
  as revised by regulation to reflect New  York  state  wages  and  fringe
  benefits,  provided,  however,  that  such RUG-III classification system
  weights shall be increased in the following amounts  for  the  following
  categories of residents: (A) thirty minutes for the impaired cognition A
  category,  (B)  forty minutes for the impaired cognition B category, and
  (C) twenty-five minutes for the reduced physical functions  B  category.
  Such  adjustments  shall  be  made  in January and July of each calendar
  year. Such adjustments  and  related  patient  classifications  in  each
  facility shall be subject to audit review in accordance with regulations
  promulgated by the commissioner.
    (iii)  Specified  adjustments  to  the operating component of rates in
  effect for periods prior to  January  first,  two  thousand  nine,  with
  regard  to extended care for persons with traumatic brain injury and for
  the cost of providing hepatitis B vaccinations  shall  continue  on  and
  after January first, two thousand nine.
    (iv)  The  capital cost component of rates on and after January first,
  two thousand nine shall fully reflect the cost of local  property  taxes
  and  payments  made in lieu of local property taxes, as reported in each
  facility's cost report submitted for the year two  years  prior  to  the
  rate year.
    (v)  The  direct  component  of  the  operating  component of rates of
  payment shall include allowable  direct  therapy  costs  and  associated
  overhead  costs  and shall exclude administrative overhead costs related
  to pharmacy  services  and  the  costs  of  non-prescription  drugs  and
  supplies,  which  shall be reflected in facility rates as non-comparable
  costs.
    (vi) For purposes of computing peer group cost ceilings for the direct
  and indirect component of the operating component of  rates,  facilities
  shall  be  organized  into  peer groups consisting of: (A) free-standing
  facilities with certified bed capacities  of  less  than  three  hundred
  beds;  (B)  free-standing  facilities  with  certified bed capacities of
  three hundred beds or more; and (C) hospital based facilities.
    (vii) In determining the operating cost component of rates,  for  each
  peer  group,  a  corridor  shall  be developed around the statewide mean
  direct and indirect price per day, provided, however, that the  corridor
  around  each mean direct and indirect price per day shall have a base no
  less than eighty-five percent and no greater than ninety percent of each
  mean direct and indirect price per day and a ceiling no greater than one
  hundred fifteen percent and no less than one hundred ten percent of each
  mean direct and indirect price per day, and further  provided,  however,
  that  the total financial impact of the application of the ceiling shall
  be substantially equal to the total financial impact of the  application
  of the base.
    (viii) The operating component of rates shall be adjusted to reflect a
  per  diem  add-on  amount  of  eight dollars, trended forward to reflect
  applicable inflation factors from two thousand six to two thousand  nine
  and  prospectively thereafter, for each patient who: (A) qualifies under
  both  the  RUG-III  impaired  cognition  and  the  behavioral	  problems
  categories,  or  (B)  has  been  diagnosed  with  Alzheimer's disease or
  dementia, is classified in the reduced physical functions A, B or C,  or
  in behavioral problems A or B categories, and has an activities of daily
  living index score of ten or less.
    (ix)  The  operating component of rates shall be adjusted to reflect a
  per diem add-on amount of seventeen dollars, trended forward to  reflect
  applicable  inflation factors from two thousand six to two thousand nine
  and prospectively thereafter, for each patient whose body mass index  is
  greater than thirty-five.
    (x)  For  periods  on  and  after  January  first,  two thousand nine,
  notwithstanding any contrary provision of law or  regulation,  voluntary
  facilities  shall  not be required to deposit reimbursement received for
  depreciation expenses into a segregated depreciation fund account.
    (xi)  Public  facilities,  and  non-public  facilities with fewer than
  eighty certified beds, which have a facility  specific  direct  adjusted
  payment  price  per  day equal to the ceiling direct price per day shall
  have such direct adjusted payment price per day further adjusted through
  the addition of fifty percent of the difference between  the  facility's
  specific  direct  cost  per  day  and  the ceiling direct price per day.
  Public facilities, and non-public  facilities  with  fewer  than  eighty
  certified beds, which have a facility specific indirect adjusted payment
  price  per  day  equal  to the ceiling indirect price per day shall have
  such indirect adjusted payment price per day  further  adjusted  through
  the  addition  of fifty percent of the difference between the facility's
  specific indirect cost per day and the ceiling indirect price  per  day.
  Such  adjustments to direct and indirect adjusted payment prices per day
  shall be increased to the rate year by  application  of  the  applicable
  inflation  factor and adjusted by the regional direct and indirect input
  price adjustment factors calculated pursuant to subdivision seventeen of
  this section.
    (xii) Public facilities shall receive rates that are  consistent  with
  the  provisions  of  this paragraph, provided, however, that in no event
  shall such rates,  in  aggregate,  exceed  the  amount  permitted  under
  federal  upper  payment  limits  applicable to public facilities. In the
  event such public facilities are, pursuant to this subparagraph, subject
  to limitations on such rates, the commissioner shall  make  grants  from
  state  funds  to  such  facilities  equal  to one-half of the additional
  amount that such facilities would have received if such limitations  had
  not been applied.
    (xiii)  The  appointment  of  a receiver or the establishment of a new
  operator or replacement or renovation of  an  existing  facility  on  or
  after  January  first, two thousand seven shall not result in a revision
  to the operating component of the facility's rates for any  rate  period
  through  December  thirty-first, two thousand eleven, provided, however,
  that the provisions of this subparagraph shall not apply to  a  facility
  which has a certificate of need application filed with the department as
  of  December  thirty-first,  two  thousand  six,  which  is subsequently
  approved and which otherwise meets existing department criteria for  the
  establishment of a new base year for rate-setting purposes.
    (xiv) The commissioner may promulgate regulations, including emergency
  regulations, to implement the provisions of this paragraph.
    (c) In order to ensure that the quality of resident care is maintained
  and  improved  for rate periods on and after January first, two thousand
  seven, no less  than  sixty-five  percent  of  the  additional  Medicaid
  reimbursement  received  by  a  residential health care facility that is
  attributable  to  the  per-diem  add-on  amount  received  pursuant	to
  subparagraph  (ii)  of  paragraph  (a)  of this subdivision or, for rate
  periods on and after January first, two thousand nine, that  is  related
  to utilization of two thousand two reported base year costs, as compared
  to  the  reimbursement  each  such facility would have received had such
  facility's Medicaid reimbursement rates continued to reflect  base  year
  costs  used with regard to such facility's two thousand six rates, shall
  be  allocated  for  the  purpose  of  recruitment   and   retention	of
  non-supervisory   workers  or  any  worker  with  direct  resident  care
  responsibility or for purposes authorized under the nursing home quality
  improvement demonstration program as established by section twenty-eight
  hundred eight-d of this article, provided, however, in  no  circumstance
  shall  facilities be required to spend more than seventy-five percent of
  such funds for these purposes, and provided further, the commissioner is
  authorized to audit each such  facility  for  the  purpose  of  ensuring
  compliance  with  the  provisions of this paragraph and shall recoup any
  amount determined to have been in contravention of the  requirements  of
  this paragraph, provided, however, that, upon application of a facility,
  the  commissioner  may,  after  determining  that  other  funds  are not
  available, waive the application of this  paragraph  insofar  as  it  is
  determined by the commissioner that additional funds must be expended by
  such  facility  to  correct  deficiencies  that  constitute  a threat to
  resident safety.
    (d) Cost reports submitted by residential health care  facilities  for
  the	two  thousand  two  calendar  year  or  any  part  thereof  shall,
  notwithstanding any contrary provision  of  law,  be  subject  to  audit
  through  December  thirty-first,  two  thousand  fourteen and facilities
  shall retain for the purpose of such audits all fiscal  and  statistical
  records  relevant to such cost reports, provided, however, that any such
  audit  commenced  on  or  before  December  thirty-first,  two  thousand
  fourteen,  may  be  completed  and used for the purpose of adjusting any
  Medicaid rates which utilize such costs.
    (e) For rate periods subsequent to two  thousand  nine  which  utilize
  reported  costs  from  a  base  year subsequent to two thousand two, the
  following  categories  of  facilities,  as   established   pursuant	to
  applicable  regulations,  shall  receive  rates  that  are  no less than
  equivalent, as determined by the commissioner, to the rates that were in
  effect for such facilities on December thirty-first, two  thousand  six,
  trended  forward  for  inflation to the applicable rate period: (A) AIDS
  facilities or discrete AIDS units within facilities, (B) discrete  units
  for  residents  receiving  care  in a long term inpatient rehabilitation
  program for traumatic brain injured persons, (C) discrete units for long
  term  ventilator  dependent  residents,  (D)  discrete  units  providing
  specialized  programs  for residents requiring behavioral interventions,
  and (E) facilities or discrete  units  within  facilities  that  provide
  extensive   nursing,	 medical,  psychological  and  counseling  support
  services solely to children.
    (f) The operating component of Medicaid rates of payment shall, by  no
  later  than  the  two thousand twelve rate period, be based on allowable
  costs, as reported on annual facility cost reports,  from  a  base  year
  period  no  earlier than three years prior to the initial rate year, and
  then trended forward by applicable inflation  factors.  Thereafter,  the
  base  year  utilized  for  rate-setting  purposes shall be updated to be
  current no less frequently than every six years provided, however,  that
  for  the  purposes  of  this  paragraph,  current  shall  mean  that the
  operating components of the initial rate  year  utilizing  such  updated
  base  year  shall reflect allowable costs as reported in annual facility
  cost reports for periods no earlier  than  three  years  prior  to  such
  initial  rate  year  and  then  trended  forward  to  the  rate  year in
  accordance with applicable inflation factors.
    (g) Notwithstanding any contrary provision of this subdivision or  any
  other  contrary  provision  of law, rule or regulation, rates of payment
  for inpatient services provided on and after April first,  two  thousand
  nine  by  residential  health  care  facilities  shall,  except  for the
  establishment of any statewide or any peer group base, mean  or  ceiling
  prices  per  day,  be  calculated  utilizing only the number of patients
  properly assessed and reported in each patient classification group  and
  eligible for medical assistance pursuant to title eleven of article five
  of the social services law.

Subdivision 2-c - Regional Pricing Budget Language from Article VII Bill

2-c. (a) Notwithstanding any inconsistent provision of this section or any other contrary provision of law and subject to the availability of federal financial participation, the operating costs of rates of payment by governmental agencies for inpatient services provided by residential health care facilities on and after April first, two thousand ten shall be determined in accordance with the following: (i) The direct and indirect components of the operating cost component of such rates will be computed on a regional basis, using allowable operating costs, as determined by the commissioner, from two thousand seven certified cost reports on file with the department as of January first, two thousand nine, as adjusted for inflation in accordance with applicable statutes. (ii) The non-comparable component of the operating component of such rates shall be computed on a facility specific basis, using allowable operating costs, as determined by the commissioner, from two thousand seven certified cost report submitted by each facility and on file with the department on January first, two thousand nine, as adjusted for inflation in accordance with applicable statutes. (iii) The capital component of rates computed pursuant to this section shall fully reflect the cost of local property taxes and payments made in lieu of local property taxes, as reported in each facility's cost report submitted for the year two years prior to the rate year. (iv) The direct component of the operating component of rates shall be subject to case mix adjustment through application of the minimum data set (MDS) classification employed by the federal government with regard to payments to skilled nursing facilities pursuant to title XVIII of the federal social security act (medicare) to reflect patient service intensity, as may be adjusted by the commissioner. Such adjustments shall be made semi-annually in each calendar year, and both the adjustments and the related patient classifications in each facility shall be subject to audit review in accordance with regulations promulgated by the commissioner. (v) Notwithstanding any contrary provision of this section or any other contrary provision of law, rule or regulation, rates of payment shall, except for the establishment of any regional prices, be calculated utilizing the number of patients reported in each patient classification group and eligible for medical assistance pursuant to title eleven of article five of the social services law. (vi) Notwithstanding subparagraph (i) of this paragraph, the operating cost component of the rates, effective April first, two thousand ten for the following categories of facilities, as established pursuant to applicable regulations, shall reflect the rates in effect for such facilities on March thirty-first, two thousand ten, as adjusted for inflation in accordance with applicable statutes: (A) AIDS facilities or discrete AIDS units within facilities, (B) discrete units for residents receiving care in a long-term inpatient rehabilitation program for traumatic brain injured persons, (C) discrete units providing specialized programs for residents requiring behavioral interventions, (D) discrete units for long-term ventilator dependent residents, and (E) facilities or discrete units within facilities that provide extensive nursing, medical, psychological and counseling support services solely to children. Such rate shall remain in effect until the department, in consultation with representatives of the nursing home industry, as selected by the commissioner, develops a regional pricing or alternative methodology for determining such rates. (vii) The operating component of rates of payment, as adjusted for inflation in accordance with subparagraph (i) of this paragraph, shall, by no later than the two thousand thirteen rate period, be based on allowable costs, as reported on annual facility cost reports submitted as required by the commissioner, from a base year period no earlier than three years prior to the initial rate year. Thereafter, the base year utilized for rate-setting purposes shall be updated to be current no less frequently than every six years; provided, however, that for the purposes of this paragraph, current shall mean that the operating components of the initial rate year, utilizing such updated base year, shall reflect allowable costs as reported in annual facility cost reports for periods no earlier than three years prior to such initial rate year, as adjusted for inflation in accordance with subparagraph (i) of this paragraph. (b) The operating component of rates may be adjusted to reflect a per diem add-on, as determined by the commissioner, for the following patients: (i) each patient whose body mass index is greater than thirty-five; (ii) each patient who qualifies under the RUG-III impaired cognition and behavioral problems categories, or has been diagnosed with Alzheimer's disease or dementia, and is classified in the reduced physician functions A, B, or C, or in behavioral problems A or B categories, and has an activities of daily living index score of less than ten; and (iii) each patient who qualifies for extended care as a result of traumatic brain injury as defined by applicable regulations. (c) The commissioner may promulgate regulations to implement the provisions of this subdivision. (d) (i) Subject to the availability of federal financial participation, the commissioner is authorized to establish a quality of care incentive pool or pools for eligible residential health care facilities and increase Medicaid rates of payment for such eligible facilities from this pool or pools. Within amounts available, payments will be determined by the commissioner by applying criteria, including, but not limited to, the quality components of the minimum data set required under federal law, survey information, direct care staffing, including labor costs, and other facility data. (ii) Facilities that fall within one or more of the categories below during a review period will be excluded from award eligibility: (A) any residential health care facility that is currently designated by the centers for medicare and Medicaid services as a "special focus facility"; (B) any residential health care facility for which the department has issued a finding of immediate jeopardy during the most recently completed federal fiscal year; (C) any residential health care facility that has received a citation for substandard quality of care in the areas of quality of life, quality of care, resident behavior, and/or facility practices during the most recently completed federal fiscal year; (D) any residential health care facility that is part of a continuing care retirement community; (E) any residential health care facility that operates as a transitional care unit; and (F) any other exclusions as deemed appropriate by the commissioner. (iii) Notwithstanding any inconsistent provision of law or regulation to the contrary, in the event that the total amount of funding allocated for a particular fiscal year is not distributed, funds shall be reserved and accumulated from year to year so that any funds remaining at the end of a particular fiscal year will be available for distribution during the following fiscal year. (e) Subject to the availability of federal financial participation and within amounts available, the commissioner may make transition adjustments to rates of payment for residential health care facilities for state fiscal years beginning April first, two thousand ten to facilitate improvements in residential health care facility operations and finances in accordance with the following: (i) Residential health care facilities eligible for distributions pursuant to this paragraph shall be those non-public facilities and state operated public residential health care facilities, which have an average annual Medicaid utilization percentage of fifty percent or greater for the two years prior to the rate year and which, as determined by the commissioner, experience a reduction in their Medicaid revenue of a percentage as determined by the commissioner as a result of the application of regional pricing as described in this subdivision. (ii) Transition funds distributed pursuant to this paragraph shall be allocated based on each eligible facility's relative need as determined by the commissioner. (iii) Payments made pursuant to this paragraph shall not be subject to retroactive adjustment or reconciliation and may be added to rates of payment or made as lump sum payments. (iv) Each residential health care facility receiving funds pursuant to this paragraph shall, as a condition for eligibility for such funds, adopt a resolution of the board of directors or submit a report by the owner acceptable to the commissioner setting forth its current financial condition and a plan for reforming and improving such financial condition, including ongoing board or owner oversight, and shall, after two years, issue a report as adopted by each such board or issue a further report by the owner acceptable to the commissioner setting forth what progress has been achieved regarding such improvement, provided, however, if such further report is not submitted to the commissioner, or if such further report fails to set forth adequate progress, as determined by the commissioner, the commissioner may deem such facility ineligible for further distributions pursuant to this paragraph and may redistribute such further distributions to other eligible facilities in accordance with the provisions of this paragraph. The commissioner shall be provided with copies of all such resolutions and reports. (f) Such rates shall be adjusted to reflect appropriate cost differentials related to direct care staffing. Such adjustment may be made to the direct component of the operating cost component of such rate, through a quality of care incentive pool pursuant to paragraph (d) of this subdivision or using such other mechanism as deemed appropriate by the commissioner, after consideration of any recommendations and discussions of the workgroup established by section forty-eight of part C of chapter one hundred nine of the laws of two thousand six. 3. The commissioner, with the approval of the state hospital review and planning council, shall promulgate regulations to be effective the first day of January, nineteen hundred seventy-eight, which shall relate the rate of payment to the efficient operation and program management of the facility, as well as to the quality of patient care provided by the facility. Such regulations shall be consistent with the requirements of subdivision three of section twenty-eight hundred seven of this chapter and with federal laws and regulations. 4. The commissioner, in determining and certifying to the director of the budget the rates of payment to residential health care facilities, shall exclude the following costs: (a) contributions or other payments to political parties, candidates or organizations; (b) direct or indirect costs incurred for advertising or promotion except as allowed by the commissioner; (c) costs incurred for the promotion or opposition, directly or indirectly, of the passage of bills or resolutions pending before or passed by a legislative body of any jurisdiction; (d) costs which principally afford diversion, entertainment or amusement to their owners, operators or employees not properly related to patient care or treatment; (e) any penalty imposed by governmental agencies or courts, and the costs of policies obtained solely to insure against the imposition of such a penalty; and (f) costs incurred by the residential health care facility to obtain the security required under the provisions of section twenty-eight hundred nine of this chapter. 5. (a) Any operator withdrawing equity or assets from a hospital operated for profit so as to create or increase a negative net worth or when the hospital is in a negative net worth position, calculated without regard to any surplus created by revaluation of assets, must obtain the prior approval of the commissioner in accordance with regulations promulgated by the commissioner with the approval of the state hospital review and planning council. The commissioner shall make a determination to approve or disapprove a request for withdrawal of equity or assets under this subdivision within sixty days of the date of the receipt of such a request. Requests shall be made in a form acceptable to the department by certified or registered mail. In addition to any other remedy or penalty available under this chapter, and after opportunity for a hearing, the commissioner may require replacement of the withdrawn equity or assets and may impose a penalty for violation of the provisions of this subdivision, relating to withdrawing equity or assets, or the regulations promulgated thereunder, in an amount not to exceed ten percent of any amount withdrawn without prior approval. No facility shall enter into a real property mortgage or lease transaction without thirty days prior notice in writing to the commissioner. (b) On and after April first, two thousand eight, no residential health care facility may withdraw equity or transfer assets which in the aggregate exceed three percent of such facility's total Medicaid revenue in any calendar year, without prior written notification to the commissioner. Notification shall be made in a form acceptable to the department by certified or registered mail. (c) Notwithstanding any inconsistent provision of this subdivision, on and after April first, two thousand nine, no non-public residential health care facility, whether operated as for-profit facility or as a not-for-profit facility, may withdraw equity or transfer assets which in the aggregate exceed three percent of such facility's total Medicaid revenue in the prior calendar year, without the prior written approval of the commissioner. The commissioner shall make a determination to approve or disapprove a request for withdrawal of equity or assets under this subdivision within sixty days of the date of the receipt of a written request from the facility. Requests shall be made in a form acceptable to the department by certified or registered mail. In reviewing such requests the commissioner shall consider the facility's overall financial condition, any indications of financial distress, whether the facility is delinquent in any payment owed to the department, whether the facility has been cited for immediate jeopardy or substandard quality of care, and such other factors as the commissioner deems appropriate. In addition to any other remedy or penalty available under this chapter, and after opportunity for a hearing, the commissioner may require replacement of the withdrawn equity or assets and may impose a penalty for violation of the provisions of this subdivision in an amount not to exceed ten percent of any amount withdrawn without prior approval. * 6. Prior to the approval by the state hospital review and planning council of any regulations promulgated pursuant to this section, the commissioner shall convene a public hearing, upon at least seven days notice, to consider the proposed regulations. The commissioner shall include a summary of the comments made at such hearing in a report to the state hospital review and planning council at the meeting at which it considers the regulations for approval. * NB Expired December 31, 1985 * 7. The commissioner may assess an annual fee on each residential health care facility to be used to reimburse any first instance appropriation for the purpose of making payments to receivers pursuant to subdivision three of section twenty-eight hundred ten of this article. Such fee shall not exceed thirty dollars per bed certified pursuant to this article, and shall be a reimbursable expense for the purposes of determining rates of payment made by government agencies. The reimbursement rate for a facility must reflect the cost of the annual fee prior to requiring that the facility pay the fee. The commissioner shall seek to obtain federal approval to include such fee as a reimbursable expense for purposes of computing reimbursement rates pursuant to title XVIII of the federal social security act. * NB (Effective pending Federal Law - Expired December 31, 1983) 8. Every lease or lease renewal executed on or after September first, nineteen hundred eighty-six between a landlord and the operator of a residential health care facility shall contain a provision terminating any interest the operator of such facility may have in any lease of premises used for the operation of such facility after the public health council has approved the establishment of a new operator. Nothing herein shall be construed to affect any interest such operator may have in any movable equipment located on the premises of the facility. In the event any lease or lease renewal executed on or after September first, nineteen hundred eighty-six fails to contain the termination provision required by this subdivision, the lease or lease renewal shall be deemed to be terminated upon the public health council approval of a new operator. The commissioner, the landlord, or the new operator shall be entitled to maintain a summary proceeding to recover possession of the real property in any court of competent jurisdiction upon such termination. 9. Trend factors. (a) The commissioner, in accordance with the methodology developed by the consultants pursuant to paragraph (b) of this subdivision, shall establish trend factors to project for the effect of inflation. The factors shall be applied to the appropriate portion of reimbursable costs of residential health care facilities. The methodology for developing the trend factor shall include the appropriate external price indicators and shall also include the data from major collective bargaining agreements as reported quarterly by the federal department of labor, bureau of labor statistics, for nonsupervisory employees. (b) The methodology shall be developed by four independent consultants with expertise in health economics appointed by the commissioner pursuant to paragraph (b) of subdivision ten of section twenty-eight hundred seven-c of this chapter. On or about September first of each year following the effective date of this subdivision, the consultants shall provide to the commissioner and the council the methodology to be used to determine the trend factors for subsequent rate periods only, beginning with the nine month period commencing April first, nineteen hundred ninety-one and for subsequent twelve month periods commencing January first, nineteen hundred ninety-two and thereafter. The commissioner shall monitor the actual price movements during these periods of the external price indicators used in the methodology, shall report the results of the monitoring to the consultants and shall implement the recommendations of the consultants for one prospective interim annual adjustment to the trend factors to reflect such price movements and to be effective on January first, one year after the initial trend factor was established and one prospective final annual adjustment to the trend factors to reflect such price movements and to be effective on January first, two years after the initial trend factor was established. * 10. Subject to the availability of funds, the commissioner shall authorize health occupation development and workplace demonstration programs pursuant to the provisions of section two thousand eight hundred seven-h of this article for residential health care facilities, and the commissioner is hereby directed to make rate adjustments to cover the cost of such programs. * NB Effective until July 1, 2011 * 10. Subject to the availability of funds, the provisions of clause (B) of subparagraph (iii) of paragraph (e) of subdivision one of section twenty-eight hundred seven-c of this article shall apply to residential health care facilities. * NB Effective July 1, 2011 11. Residential health care facility reimbursement rate promulgation. With regard to a residential health care facility, the provisions of subdivision seven of section twenty-eight hundred seven of this article relating to advance notification of rates shall not apply to prospective or retroactive adjustments to rates that are based on rate appeals filed by such facility, audits, changes in patient conditions or acuity levels, the correction of errors or omissions of data or errors in the computations of such rates, the submission of cost report data from facilities without an established cost basis, the judicial annulment or invalidation of existing rates or changes in the methodology used to compute rates which changes are promulgated following the judicial annulment or invalidation of existing rates or as otherwise authorized by law. Notwithstanding any inconsistent provision of law or regulation, as of April first, two thousand nine, with regard to administrative rate appeals, the department will only review such appeals for (a) the correction of computational errors or omissions of data by the department in determining the operating rate based upon the information provided to the department prior to the computation of the rate, (b) capital cost reimbursement, or (c) such reasons as the commissioner determines are appropriate. The department will not consider any revisions made to a facility's annual cost report for operating rate adjustment purpose later than the due date established by the commissioner. 12. (a) Notwithstanding any inconsistent provision of law or regulation, the commissioner shall increase rates of payment established pursuant to this article for non-state operated public residential health care facilities in an aggregate amount not to exceed one hundred million dollars in additional reimbursement for payments for services provided during the period July first, nineteen hundred ninety-five through March thirty-first, nineteen hundred ninety-six. The commissioner may adopt rules and regulations necessary to implement this paragraph. (b) Notwithstanding any inconsistent provision of law or regulation, the commissioner shall provide, in addition to payments established pursuant to this article prior to application of this section, additional payments under the medical assistance program pursuant to title eleven of article five of the social services law for non-state operated public residential health care facilities, excluding public residential health care facilities operated by a town or city within a county, in an aggregate amount of two hundred fifty-seven million dollars in additional payments in the period August first, nineteen hundred ninety-six through March thirty-first, nineteen hundred ninety-seven. (c) Notwithstanding any inconsistent provision of law or regulation, the commissioner shall provide, in addition to payments established pursuant to this article prior to application of this section, additional payments under the medical assistance program pursuant to title eleven of article five of the social services law for non-state operated public residential health care facilities, including public residential health care facilities located in the county of Nassau and the county of Westchester, but excluding public residential health care facilities operated by a town or city within a county, in an aggregate amount of $631.1 million in additional payments in the period April first, nineteen hundred ninety-seven through March thirty-first, nineteen hundred ninety-eight, and a like amount in the period April first, nineteen hundred ninety-eight through March thirty-first, nineteen hundred ninety-nine. (d) Notwithstanding any inconsistent provision of law or regulation, the commissioner shall provide, in addition to payments established pursuant to this article prior to application of this section, additional payments under the medical assistance program pursuant to title eleven of article five of the social services law for non-state operated public residential health care facilities, including public residential health care facilities located in the county of Nassau and the county of Westchester, but excluding public residential health care facilities operated by a town or city within a county, in an aggregate amount of $914.5 million in additional payments in the period April first, nineteen hundred ninety-nine through March thirty-first, two thousand. (e) Notwithstanding any inconsistent provision of law or regulation, the commissioner shall provide, in addition to payments established pursuant to this article prior to application of this section, additional payments under the medical assistance program pursuant to title eleven of article five of the social services law for non-state operated public residential health care facilities, including public residential health care facilities located in the county of Nassau and the county of Westchester, but excluding public residential health care facilities operated by a town or city within a county, in an aggregate amount of up to $991.5 million in additional payments each state fiscal year for the period beginning April first, two thousand through March thirty-first, two thousand five. (e-1) Notwithstanding any inconsistent provision of law or regulation, the commissioner shall provide, in addition to payments established pursuant to this article prior to application of this section, additional payments under the medical assistance program pursuant to title eleven of article five of the social services law for non-state operated public residential health care facilities, including public residential health care facilities located in the county of Nassau, the county of Westchester and the county of Erie, but excluding public residential health care facilities operated by a town or city within a county, in aggregate annual amounts of up to one hundred fifty million dollars in additional payments for the state fiscal year beginning April first, two thousand six and for the state fiscal year beginning April first, two thousand seven and for the state fiscal year beginning April first, two thousand eight and of up to three hundred million dollars in such aggregate annual additional payments for the state fiscal year beginning April first, two thousand nine, and for the state fiscal year beginning April first, two thousand ten and for the state fiscal year beginning April first, two thousand eleven. The amount allocated to each eligible public residential health care facility for this period shall be computed in accordance with the provisions of paragraph (f) of this subdivision, provided, however, that patient days shall be utilized for such computation reflecting actual reported data for two thousand three and each representative succeeding year as applicable. (f) The amount allocated to each eligible public residential health care facility for each period shall be calculated as the result of (A) the total payment for each period multiplied by (B) the ratio of patient days for patients eligible for medical assistance pursuant to title eleven of article five of the social services law provided by the public residential health care facility, divided by the total of such patient days summed for all eligible public residential health care facilities. For the period August first, nineteen hundred ninety-six through March thirty-first, nineteen hundred ninety-seven, nineteen hundred ninety-four patient days shall be utilized; for the period April first, nineteen hundred ninety-seven through March thirty-first, nineteen hundred ninety-eight, nineteen hundred ninety-five patient days shall be utilized; for the period April first, nineteen hundred ninety-eight through March thirty-first, nineteen hundred ninety-nine, nineteen hundred ninety-six patient days shall be utilized; for the period April first, nineteen hundred ninety-nine through March thirty-first, two thousand, nineteen hundred ninety-seven patient days shall be utilized; for the period April first, two thousand through March thirty-first, two thousand one, nineteen hundred ninety-eight patient days shall be utilized; for the period April first, two thousand one through March thirty-first, two thousand two, nineteen hundred ninety-nine patient days shall be utilized; for the period April first, two thousand two through March thirty-first, two thousand three, two thousand patient days shall be utilized; for the period April first, two thousand three through March thirty-first, two thousand four, two thousand one patient days shall be utilized; for the period April first, two thousand four through March thirty-first, two thousand five, two thousand two patient days shall be utilized. (g) Payments may be made based on adjustments to rates of payment for services provided during the applicable period or as lump sum payments to an eligible residential health care facility. 13. Notwithstanding any inconsistent provision of law or regulation to the contrary, residential health care facility rates of payment determined pursuant to this article for governmental agencies for services provided on or after July first, nineteen hundred ninety-five through March thirty-first, nineteen hundred ninety-six shall be reduced by the commissioner, to reflect the elimination of operational requirements previously mandated by law or, consistent with the standards specified in subparagraph (v) of paragraph (a) of subdivision two of section twenty-eight hundred three of this article, regulation or the commissioner or other governmental agency, by a factor determined as follows: (i) an aggregate reduction shall be calculated for each residential health care facility as the result of (A) fifty-six million dollars on an annualized basis for nineteen hundred ninety-five, trended to the rate year by the trend factor for projection of reimbursable costs to the rate year, multiplied by (B) the ratio of patient days for patients eligible for payments made by governmental agencies provided in a base year two years prior to the rate year by a residential health care facility, divided by the total of such patient days summed for all residential health care facilities; and (ii) the result for each residential health care facility shall be divided by such patient days provided in the residential health care facility, for a per diem reduction in rates of payment for such residential health care facility for patients eligible for payments made by governmental agencies. 14. (a) Notwithstanding any inconsistent provision of law or regulation to the contrary, for purposes of establishing rates of payment by governmental agencies for residential health care facilities for services provided on or after April first, nineteen hundred ninety-five through March thirty-first, nineteen hundred ninety-nine and for services provided on or after July first, nineteen hundred ninety-nine through March thirty-first, two thousand and on and after April first, two thousand through March thirty-first, two thousand three and on and after April first, two thousand three through March thirty-first, two thousand six and on and after April first, two thousand six through December thirty-first, two thousand six, the reimbursable base year administrative services and fiscal services costs, as defined in the New York state residential health care facility accounting and reporting manual, of a residential health care facility, excluding a provider of services reimbursed on an initial budget basis, shall, except as otherwise provided in this subdivision, not exceed the statewide average of total reimbursable base year administrative and fiscal services costs of residential health care facilities. For the purposes of this subdivision, reimbursable base year administrative and fiscal services costs shall mean those base year administrative and fiscal services costs remaining after application of all other efficiency standards, including but not limited to, peer group cost ceilings or guidelines. (b) A separate statewide average of total reimbursable base year administrative and fiscal services costs shall be determined for each of those facilities wherein eighty percent or more of its patients are classified with a patient acuity equal to or less than .83 which is used as the basis for a facility's case mix adjustment. For the period July first, two thousand through March thirty-first, two thousand one, the total reimbursable base year administrative and fiscal services costs of such facilities shall not exceed such separate statewide average plus one and one-half percentage points. For annual periods thereafter through December thirty-first, two thousand six, the total reimbursable base year administrative and fiscal services costs of such facilities shall not exceed such separate statewide average. In no event shall the calculation of such separate statewide average result in a change in the statewide average determined under paragraph (a) of this subdivision. (c) The limitation on reimbursement for provider administrative and fiscal expenses provided by this subdivision shall be expressed as a percentage reduction of the operating cost component of the rate promulgated by the commissioner for each residential health care facility. 15. Notwithstanding any inconsistent provision of law or regulation to the contrary, for services provided by residential health care facilities for the period April first, nineteen hundred ninety-five through March thirty-first, nineteen hundred ninety-six, the commissioner shall not be required to revise a certified rate of payment established pursuant to this article based on consideration of rate appeals filed by a residential health care facility. In cases where the commissioner determines that a significant financial hardship exists, he or she may, subject to the approval of the director of the budget, consider an exemption to this subdivision. Beginning April first, nineteen hundred ninety-six and thereafter, the commissioner shall consider such rate appeals within a reasonable period. After April first, nineteen hundred ninety-six, through March thirty-first, nineteen hundred ninety-seven, the commissioner shall revise certified rates of payment not to exceed an aggregate payment of forty-seven million dollars, state share medical assistance. 16. Notwithstanding any inconsistent provision of law or regulation to the contrary, residential health care facility rates of payment determined pursuant to this article for governmental agencies for services provided on or after April first, nineteen hundred ninety-six through March thirty-first, nineteen hundred ninety-nine and on or after July first, nineteen hundred ninety-nine through March thirty-first, two thousand and on and after April first, two thousand through March thirty-first, two thousand three and on and after April first, two thousand three through March thirty-first, two thousand six and on and after April first, two thousand six through December thirty-first, two thousand six, shall be further reduced by the commissioner to encourage improved productivity and efficiency by providers by a factor determined as follows: (a) an aggregate reduction shall be calculated for each residential health care facility commencing April first, nineteen hundred ninety-six through March thirty-first, nineteen hundred ninety-nine and on or after July first, nineteen hundred ninety-nine through March thirty-first, two thousand and on and after April first, two thousand through March thirty-first, two thousand three and on and after April first, two thousand three through March thirty-first, two thousand six and on and after April first, two thousand six through December thirty-first, two thousand six as the result of (i) fifty-six million dollars on an annualized basis multiplied by (ii) the ratio of patient days for patients eligible for payments made by governmental agencies provided in a base year two years prior to the rate year by a residential health care facility, or for residential health care facility beds not fully in operation in such base year by an estimate of projected utilization for the rate year, divided by the total of such patient days summed for all residential health care facilities; and (b) the result for each residential health care facility shall be divided by such patient days provided in the residential health care facility, for a per diem reduction in rates of payment for such residential health care facility for patients eligible for payments made by governmental agencies. 17. Notwithstanding any inconsistent provision of law or regulation to the contrary, for the period April first, nineteen hundred ninety-seven through March thirty-first, nineteen hundred ninety-eight, the commissioner shall not be required to revise a certified rate of payment established pursuant to this article based on consideration of rate appeals filed by a residential health care facility or based upon adjustments to capital cost reimbursement as a result of approval by the commissioner of an application for construction under section twenty-eight hundred two of this article. For the period April first, nineteen hundred ninety-eight, through March thirty-first, nineteen hundred ninety-nine, the commissioner shall revise certified rates of payment in an aggregate amount not to exceed twenty million dollars, state share medical assistance. In cases where the commissioner determines that a significant financial hardship exists, he or she may, subject to the approval of the director of the budget, consider an exemption to this subdivision. Beginning April first, nineteen hundred ninety-nine and thereafter, the commissioner shall consider such rate appeals within a reasonable period. 17-a. Notwithstanding any inconsistent provision of law or regulation to the contrary, for purposes of establishing rates of payment by governmental agencies for residential health care facilities for services provided on and after January first, nineteen hundred ninety-eight, the regional direct and indirect input price adjustment factors to be applied to any such facility's rate calculation shall be based upon the utilization of either nineteen hundred eighty-three, nineteen hundred eighty-seven or nineteen hundred ninety-three calendar year financial and statistical data and for periods beginning April first, two thousand four through March thirty-first, two thousand nine based on either nineteen hundred eighty-three, nineteen hundred eighty-seven, nineteen hundred ninety-three or two thousand one calendar year financial and statistical data; provided, however, the state share amount for the utilization of two thousand one calendar year data shall be no more than twenty-two million dollars on a pro rata basis per calendar year. The determination of which calendar year's data to utilize shall be based upon a methodology that ensures that the particular year chosen by each facility results in a factor that yields no less reimbursement to the facility than would result from the use of any of the other three years' data. Such methodology shall utilize the nineteen hundred eighty-three and nineteen hundred eighty-seven regional direct and indirect input price adjustment factor corridor percentages in existence on January first, nineteen hundred ninety-seven as well as nineteen hundred ninety-three regional direct and indirect input price adjustment factor corridor percentage in existence on January first, two thousand four as well as a two thousand one regional direct and indirect input price adjustment factor corridor percentage calculated in the same manner as the nineteen hundred ninety-three direct and indirect input price adjustment factor corridor percentages in existence on January first, two thousand four; provided, however, for rate periods on and after April first, two thousand nine, the regional input price adjustment factors shall be based on the case mix predicted staffing for registered nurses, licensed practical nurses, nurses' aides, licensed therapists and therapist aides. For the rate period beginning April first, two thousand nine through March thirty-first, two thousand ten, the regional direct and indirect input price adjustment factors to be applied to a facility's rate calculation shall be based upon the utilization of two thousand two calendar year financial and statistical data. Such methodology shall utilize two thousand two regional direct and indirect input price adjustment factor corridor percentages calculated in the same manner as the two thousand one regional direct and indirect input price adjustment factor corridor percentages in existence on December thirty-first, two thousand six except that every region shall receive a corridor to reflect the region's actual variation subject to a maximum statewide average variable corridor percentage of ten percent. 18. Residential health care facility recruitment and retention of health care workers. Notwithstanding any inconsistent provision of law, rule or regulation and subject to the availability of federal financial participation: (a) (i) The commissioner shall adjust inpatient medical assistance rates of payment established pursuant to this article for non-public residential health care facilities in accordance with subparagraph (ii) of this paragraph for purposes of recruitment and retention of health care workers in the following aggregate amounts for the following periods: (A) fifty-three million five hundred thousand dollars on an annualized basis for the period April first, two thousand two through December thirty-first, two thousand two; eighty-three million three hundred thousand dollars on an annualized basis for the period January first, two thousand three through December thirty-first, two thousand three; one hundred fifteen million eight hundred thousand dollars on an annualized basis for the period January first, two thousand four through December thirty-first, two thousand six; fifty-seven million nine hundred thousand dollars for the period January first, two thousand seven through June thirtieth, two thousand seven, fifty-seven million nine hundred thousand dollars for the period July first, two thousand seven through March thirty-first, two thousand eight, and fifty-nine million four hundred thousand dollars for the period April first, two thousand eight through March thirty-first, two thousand nine. (ii) Such increases shall be allocated proportionally based on each non-public residential health care facility's reported total gross salary and fringe benefit costs on exhibit H of the 1999 RHCF - 4 cost report or exhibit 11 of the 1999 institutional cost report submitted as of November first, two thousand one, where applicable, to the total of such reported costs for all non-public residential health care facilities, provided, however, that for periods on and after July first, two thousand seven, fifty percent of such increases shall be allocated proportionally, based on each non-public residential health care facility's reported total gross salary and fringe benefit costs on exhibit H of the nineteen hundred ninety-nine RHFC - 4 cost report or exhibit 11 of the nineteen hundred ninety-nine institutional cost report submitted to the department prior to November first, two thousand one, where applicable, to the total of such reported costs for all non-public residential health care facilities, and fifty percent of such increases shall be allocated proportionately, based on each such non-public facility's reported Medicaid revenue, as reported in the applicable two thousand five cost report as submitted to the department prior to November first, two thousand six, to the total of such Medicaid revenue reported by all such non-public facilities. These amounts shall be included as a reimbursable cost add-on to medical assistance inpatient rates of payment established pursuant to this article for non-public residential health care facilities, based on medical assistance utilization data in each facility's annual cost report submitted two years prior to the rate year. Such amounts shall not be reconciled to reflect changes in medical assistance utilization between the year two years prior to the rate year and the rate year. (b) (i) Notwithstanding sections one hundred twelve and one hundred sixty-three of the state finance law and any other inconsistent provision of law, the commissioner shall make grants to public residential health care facilities without a competitive bid or request for proposal process for purposes of recruitment and retention of health care workers in the following aggregate amounts for the following periods: (A) seven million five hundred thousand dollars on an annualized basis for the period April first, two thousand two through December thirty-first, two thousand two; eleven million seven hundred thousand dollars on an annualized basis for the period January first, two thousand three through December thirty-first, two thousand three; sixteen million two hundred thousand dollars on an annualized basis for the period January first, two thousand four through December thirty-first, two thousand six; and eight million one hundred thousand dollars for the period January first, two thousand seven through June thirtieth, two thousand seven, eight million one hundred thousand dollars for the period July first, two thousand seven through March thirty-first, two thousand eight, six million six hundred ninety thousand dollars for the period April first, two thousand eight through March thirty-first, two thousand nine. (ii) Such grants shall be allocated proportionally based on each public residential health care facility's reported total gross salary and fringe benefit costs on exhibit H of the 1999 RHCF - 4 cost report or exhibit 11 of the 1999 institutional cost report submitted as of November first, two thousand one, where applicable, to the total of such reported costs for all public residential health care facilities. (c) (i) Non-public and public residential health care facilities in operation as of the effective date of this paragraph which have not submitted 1999 RHCF-4 cost reports or 1999 institutional cost reports but which have submitted such reports for cost years subsequent to 1999, shall have distributions authorized in subparagraph (i) of paragraph (a) of this subdivision or in subparagraph (i) of paragraph (b) of this subdivision allocated based on total gross salary and fringe benefit costs on exhibit H of the earliest subsequently submitted RHCF-4 cost report or exhibit 11 of the earliest subsequently submitted institutional cost report, as trended downward to 1999 using trend factors authorized in accordance with the provisions of section twenty-one of chapter one of the laws of nineteen hundred ninety-nine. (ii) Non-public and public residential health care facilities in operation as of the effective date of this paragraph which have not submitted 1999 or subsequent RHCF-4 cost reports or institutional cost reports, shall have distributions authorized in subparagraph (i) of paragraph (a) of this subdivision or in subparagraph (i) of paragraph (b) of this subdivision allocated based on imputed total gross salary and fringe benefit costs reflecting the average of such costs in the region in which each such facility is located, provided, however, that for periods on and after July first, two thousand seven, facilities that have not submitted two thousand five cost reports shall have distributions allocated based on imputed days of care to patients eligible for medical assistance, reflecting the average of such medicaid days of care in the region in which such facilities are located. (iii) Non-public and public residential health care facilities which received allocations pursuant to subparagraph (ii) of this paragraph and which subsequently submit RHCF-4 cost reports or institutional cost reports shall, for the purpose of setting medical assistance rates of payment, have such allocations adjusted to reflect costs which were incurred in connection with such allocations and which are contained in such cost reports. (d) Residential health care facilities which have their rates adjusted or receive grants pursuant to paragraphs (a), (b) and (c) of this subdivision, respectively, shall use such funds for the purpose of recruitment and retention of non-supervisory workers at health care facilities or any worker with direct patient care responsibility and are prohibited from using such funds for any other purpose. Funds under this subdivision are not intended to supplant support provided by a local government. Each such residential health care facility shall submit, at a time and in a manner to be determined by the commissioner, a written certification attesting that such funds will be used solely for the purpose of recruitment and retention of non-supervisory workers at health care facilities or any worker with direct patient care responsibility. The commissioner is authorized to audit each residential health care facility to ensure compliance with the written certification required by this paragraph and shall recoup any funds determined to have been used for purposes other than recruitment and retention of non-supervisory workers at health care facilities or any worker with direct patient care responsibility. Such recoupment shall be in addition to applicable penalties under sections twelve and twelve-b of this chapter. (e) Residential health care facilities which have their rates adjusted or receive grants pursuant to paragraphs (a), (b) and (c) of this subdivision, respectively, shall use such funds for the purpose of recruitment and retention of non-supervisory workers at health care facilities or any worker with direct patient care responsibility and are prohibited from using such funds for any other purpose. Funds under this subdivision are not intended to supplant support provided by a local government. Each such residential health care facility shall submit, at a time and in a manner to be determined by the commissioner, a written certification attesting that such funds will be used solely for the purpose of recruitment and retention of non-supervisory workers at health care facilities or any worker with direct patient care responsibility. The commissioner is authorized to audit each residential health care facility to ensure compliance with the written certification required by this paragraph and shall recoup any funds determined to have been used for purposes other than recruitment and retention of non-supervisory workers at health care facilities or any worker with direct patient care responsibility. Such recoupment shall be in addition to applicable penalties under sections twelve and twelve-b of this chapter. 19. Notwithstanding any law, rule or regulation to the contrary, the commissioner shall within amounts allocated pursuant to paragraph (hh) of subdivision one of section twenty-eight hundred seven-v of this article, make adjustments to the medical assistance rates of payment to residential health care facilities to assist certain financially disadvantaged nursing homes, in order to promote financial stability and quality improvement. Such adjustments shall be made pursuant to subdivision twenty-one of this section. 20. a. The commissioner shall timely develop and implement a standardized process for assessing the feasibility of capital mortgage re-financings, including a standard formula for determining the net cost benefit of re-financing, inclusive of all transaction and closing costs. On or before September first, two thousand three or thirty days after the commissioner makes the standard formula available to facilities, each residential health care facility established under this article and certified as a provider pursuant to title XIX of the federal social security act (Medicaid), except for those facilities established under the nursing home companies law or the hospital loan construction law, shall review its existing capital debt structure using the standard formula to evaluate whether or not a material cost benefit could be derived by re-financing its capital mortgage or mortgages, and shall forward the results of such review to the commissioner. The commissioner may request and such facilities shall submit descriptions of existing mortgage arrangements and debt service reserve funds as needed to implement paragraph b of this subdivision. Facilities established under the nursing home companies law or the hospital loan construction law shall submit to the dormitory authority, the housing finance agency and/or the state of New York mortgage agency such information as is required by such agency to evaluate potential re-financing of such capital mortgages. b. the commissioner shall review each facility's submission and make a written determination as to whether or not the facility should re-finance its capital mortgage or mortgages, and if so, for what amount, within sixty days of the date of the facility's submission based on the following parameters: (i) the mortgage re-financing must result in a present value cost benefit that "materially exceeds", as such term is defined by the commissioner, the amount of all transaction and closing costs associated with the re-financing, including any pre-payment penalties associated with the current mortgage or mortgages. The commissioner shall do such calculations in a manner consistent with comparable calculations in the state finance law; (ii) mortgages may be re-financed for a term greater than the remaining term of the existing debt within certain limits, if doing so would result in the present value cost benefit specified in subparagraph (i) of this paragraph; (iii) mortgages may be re-financed utilizing variable rate mortgage loans, if doing so would result in the present value cost benefit specified in subparagraph (i) of this paragraph. In such cases, for purposes of determining the reimbursable capital interest expense included in the capital cost component of rates of payment determined pursuant to this article, the average interest rate over the life of the re-financed mortgage shall not exceed the interest rate in effect on the previous mortgage debt immediately prior to the re-financing; (iv) not-for-profit and governmental residential health care facilities may utilize taxable mortgage loans to re-finance their existing debts, if doing so would result in the present value cost benefit specified in subparagraph (i) of this paragraph; (v) moneys contained in facility debt service reserve funds may be considered in the evaluation of amounts necessary to be re-financed, but only to the extent such moneys total more than the debt service reserves needed to establish the successor capital mortgage financing; (vi) in no event shall funded depreciation accounts, or building funds accumulated through donor-restricted contributions or unrestricted contributions, gifts, bequests, or legacies, be considered in the evaluation of amounts necessary to be re-financed; and (vii) notwithstanding any inconsistent provision of law or regulation to the contrary, the principal amount, including all transaction and closing costs and any pre-payment penalties associated with the previous mortgage or mortgages, that is thereby deemed necessary to be re-financed by the commissioner, as approved by the public authorities control board and the United States department of housing and urban development where appropriate, shall be considered the final, approved mortgage amount for capital cost reimbursement under the relevant provisions of this article. c. Notwithstanding any inconsistent provision of law or regulation to the contrary, the capital cost component of rates of payment for services provided for the period beginning October first, two thousand three or one hundred eighty days after the effective date of this subdivision, whichever is later, through March thirty-first, two thousand four for residential health care facilities established under this article and certified as providers pursuant to title XIX of the federal social security act (Medicaid), except for those facilities established under the nursing home companies law or the hospital loan construction law, that have been identified by the commissioner as refinancing candidates pursuant to paragraph b of this subdivision shall reflect capital interest costs equivalent to the lower of the prevailing market borrowing rates available on or about July first, two thousand three or ninety days after the effective date of this subdivision, whichever is later, for refinancing capital mortgages for their remaining term plus two hundred basis points, or the existing rate being paid by the facility on its capital mortgage or mortgages as of that date. The commissioner shall determine, in consultation with mortgage financing experts, the prevailing market borrowing rates available to not-for-profit and governmental residential health care facilities to re-finance capital mortgages on a tax-exempt fixed rate basis, and to proprietary residential health care facilities to re-finance capital mortgages on a tax-exempt fixed rate basis, and to proprietary residential health care facilities to re-finance capital mortgages on a taxable fixed rate basis, for this purpose. Exceptions to this policy shall be provided by the commissioner to each such facility that demonstrates, prior to October first, two thousand three or thirty days after receipt of the commissioner's written determination specified in paragraph (b) of this subdivision, whichever occurs later, that: (i) it has initiated or completed the process of re-financing the mortgage or mortgages in question, in which case the capital cost component of rates of payment shall be timely revised to reflect capital interest costs associated with a re-financed mortgage that conforms to the standards in paragraph (b) of this subdivision. For this purpose, a facility that has applied for approval by the commissioner, the state hospital review and planning council and/or the public health council to re-finance its existing mortgage debt as part of a larger project involving facility replacement, expansion, renovation or change of ownership is considered to have initiated the process of re-financing; or (ii) it can not re-finance its capital mortgage or mortgages to achieve the relevant present value cost benefit specified in subparagraphs (i) and (ii) of paragraph (b) of this subdivision due to a "lock out" or similar provision in its current mortgage agreement that prevents re-financing; due to some other type of genuine re-financing obstacle, such as an inability of the facility to obtain credit approval from a lender or mortgage insurer, or due to an intervening change in credit market conditions or other relevant circumstances, in which case the capital cost component of rates of payment shall continue to reflect capital interest costs associated with the existing mortgage or mortgages, together with reasonable costs incurred in connection with the facility's attempt to re-finance its existing mortgage debt. d. (i) Capital cost reimbursement for proprietary residential health care facilities. Any proprietary facility which otherwise would be entitled to residual reimbursement as provided under applicable regulation, may have the capital cost component of its rate recalculated by the department to take into account any capital improvements and/or renovations made to the facility's existing infrastructure for the purpose of converting beds to alternative long-term care uses or protecting the health and safety of patients, subject to the approval of the commissioner and all applicable certificate of need requirements. (ii) The department shall evaluate the adequacy of current capital cost reimbursement for voluntary residential health care facilities. e. Notwithstanding any other provision of law or regulation to the contrary, the commissioner shall adopt or amend on an emergency basis any regulation the commissioner determines necessary to implement any provision of this subdivision. 21. (a) Notwithstanding any inconsistent provision of law or regulation to the contrary, for the purposes specified in subdivision nineteen of this section, the commissioner shall adjust medical assistance rates of payment established pursuant to this article for services provided on and after October first, two thousand four through December thirty-first, two thousand four and annually thereafter for services provided on and after January first, two thousand five, to include a rate adjustment to assist qualifying facilities pursuant to this subdivision, provided, however, that public residential health care facilities shall not be eligible for rate adjustments pursuant to this subdivision for rate periods on and after April first, two thousand nine. (b) Eligibility for such rate adjustments shall be determined on the basis of each residential health care facility's operating margin over the most recent three-year period for which financial data are available from the RHCF-4 cost report or the institutional cost report. For purposes of the adjustments made for the period October first, two thousand four through December thirty-first, two thousand four, financial information for the calendar years two thousand through two thousand two shall be utilized. For each subsequent rate year, the financial data for the three-year period ending two years prior to the applicable rate year shall be utilized for this purpose. (c) Each facility's operating margin for the three-year period shall be calculated by subtracting total operating expenses for the three-year period from total operating revenues for the three-year period, and dividing the result by the total operating revenues for the three-year period, with the result expressed as a percentage. For hospital-based residential health care facilities for which an operating margin cannot be calculated on the basis of the submitted cost reports, the sponsoring hospital's overall three-year operating margin, as reported in the institutional cost report, shall be utilized for this purpose. All facilities with negative operating margins calculated in this way over the three-year period shall be arrayed into quartiles based on the magnitude of the operating margin. Any facility with a positive operating margin for the most recent three-year period, a negative operating margin that places the facility in the quartile of facilities with the smallest negative operating margins, a positive total margin in the most recent year of the three year period, or an average Medicaid utilization percentage of fifty percent or less during the most recent year of the three-year period shall be disqualified from receiving an adjustment pursuant to this subdivision, provided, however, that for rate periods on and after April first, two thousand nine, such disqualification: (i) shall not be applied solely on the basis of a facility's having a positive total margin in the most recent year of such three-year period; (ii) shall be extended to those facilities in the quartile of facilities with the second smallest negative operating margins; and (iii) shall also be extended to those facilities with an average Medicaid utilization percentage of less than seventy percent during the most recent year of the three-year period. (d) For each facility remaining after the exclusions made pursuant to paragraph (c) of this subdivision, the commissioner shall calculate the average annual operating loss for the three-year period by subtracting total operating expenses for the three-year period from total operating revenues for the three-year period, and dividing the result by three, provided, however, that for periods on and after April first, two thousand nine, the amount of such average annual operating loss shall be reduced by an amount equal to the amount received by such facility pursuant to subparagraph (ii) of paragraph (a) of subdivision two-b of this section. For this purpose, for hospital-based residential health care facilities for which the average annual operating loss cannot be calculated on the basis of the submitted cost reports, the sponsoring hospital's overall average annual operating loss for the three-year period shall be apportioned to the residential health care facility based on the proportion the residential health care facility's total revenues for the period bears to the total revenues reported by the sponsoring hospital, and such apportioned average annual operating loss shall then be reduced by an amount equal to the amount received by such facility pursuant to subparagraph (ii) of paragraph (a) of subdivision two-b of this section. (e) For periods prior to April first, two thousand nine, each such facility's qualifying operating loss shall be determined by multiplying the facility's average annual operating loss for the three-year period as calculated pursuant to paragraph (d) of this subdivision by the applicable percentage shown in the tables below for the quartile within which the facility's negative operating margin for the three-year period is assigned. i. For a facility located in a county with a total population of two hundred thousand or more as determined by the two thousand U.S. Census: First Quartile (lowest operating margins): 30 percent Second Quartile: 15 percent Third Quartile: 7.5 percent ii. For a facility located in a county with a total population of fewer than two hundred thousand as determined by the two thousand U.S. Census: First Quartile (lowest operating margins): 35 percent Second Quartile: 20 percent Third Quartile: 12.5 percent (f) The amount of any facility's financially disadvantaged residential health care facility distribution calculated in accordance with this subdivision shall be reduced by the facility's estimated rate year benefit of the two thousand one update to the regional input price adjustment factors authorized pursuant to former subdivision seventeen of this section as amended by section 24 of part C of chapter 58 of the laws of 2004, or as authorized by subdivision seventeen-a of this section, as added by section 56 of part C of chapter 58 of the laws of 2007, if any, provided, however, that such reduction shall not be applied with regard to rate periods on and after April first, two thousand nine. After all other adjustments to a facility's financially disadvantaged residential health care facility distribution have been made in accordance with this subdivision, the amount of each facility's distribution shall be limited to no more than four hundred thousand dollars during the period October first, two thousand four through December thirty-first, two thousand four and, on an annualized basis, for rate periods through March thirty-first, two thousand nine, and no more than one million dollars for the period April first, two thousand nine through December thirty-first, two thousand nine and for each annual rate period thereafter. (g) The adjustment made to each qualifying facility's medical assistance rate of payment determined pursuant to this article shall be calculated by dividing the facility's financially disadvantaged residential health care facility distribution calculated in accordance with this subdivision by the facility's total medical assistance patient days reported in the cost report submitted two years prior to the rate year, provided however, that such rate adjustments for the period October first, two thousand four through December thirty-first, two thousand four shall be calculated based on twenty-five percent of each facility's reported total medical assistance patient days as reported in the applicable two thousand two cost report. Such amounts shall not be reconciled to reflect changes in medical assistance utilization between the year two years prior to the rate year and the rate year. (h) The total amount of funds to be allocated and distributed as medical assistance for financially disadvantaged residential health care facility rate adjustments to eligible facilities for a rate period in accordance with this subdivision shall be thirty million dollars for the period October first, two thousand four through December thirty-first, two thousand four and thirty million dollars on an annualized basis for rate periods on and after January first, two thousand five through December thirty-first, two thousand eight and thirty million dollars on an annualized basis on and after January first, two thousand nine. The nonfederal share of such rate adjustments shall be paid by the state, with no local share, from allocations made pursuant to paragraph (hh) of subdivision one of section twenty-eight hundred seven-v of this article. In the event the statewide total of the annual rate adjustments determined pursuant to paragraph (g) of this subdivision varies from the amounts set forth in this paragraph, each qualifying facility's rate adjustment shall be proportionately increased or decreased such that the total of the annual rate adjustments made pursuant to this subdivision is equal to the amounts set forth in this paragraph on a statewide basis. (i) This subdivision shall be effective if, and as long as, federal financial participation is available for expenditures made for beneficiaries eligible for medical assistance under title XIX of the federal social security act for the rate adjustments determined in accordance with this subdivision. (j) For periods on and after April first, two thousand nine, residential health care facilities which are otherwise eligible for rate adjustments pursuant to this subdivision shall also, as a condition for receipt of such rate adjustments, submit to the commissioner a written restructuring plan that is acceptable to the commissioner and which is in accord with the following: (i) such an acceptable plan shall be submitted to the commissioner within sixty days of the facility's receipt of rate adjustments pursuant to this subdivision for a rate period subsequent to March thirty-first, two thousand eight, provided, however, that facilities which are allocated four hundred thousand dollars or less on an annualized basis shall be required to submit such plans within one hundred twenty days, and further provided that these periods may be extended by the commissioner by no more than thirty days, for good cause shown; and (ii) such plan shall provide a detailed description of the steps the facility will take to improve operational efficiency and align its expenditures with its revenues, and shall include a projected schedule of quantifiable benchmarks to be achieved in the implementation of the plan; and (iii) such plan shall require periodic reports to the commissioner, in accordance with a schedule acceptable to the commissioner, setting forth the progress the facility has made in implementing its plan; and (iv) such plan may include the facility's retention of a qualified chief restructuring officer to assist in the implementation of the plan, provided, however, that this requirement may be waived by the commissioner, for good cause shown, upon written application by the facility. (k) If a residential health care facility fails to submit an acceptable restructuring plan in accordance with the provisions of paragraph (j) of this subdivision, the facility shall, from that time forward, be precluded from receipt of all further rate adjustments made pursuant to this subdivision and shall be deemed ineligible from any future re-application for such adjustments. Further, if the commissioner determines that a facility has failed to make substantial progress in implementing its plan or in achieving the benchmarks set forth in such plan, then the commissioner may, upon thirty days notice to that facility, disqualify the facility from further participation in the rate adjustments authorized by this subdivision and the commissioner may require the facility to repay some or all of the previous rate adjustments. 22. Nursing home incentives for improved performance in patient care. Pursuant to such program, and within amounts as are appropriated therefor, the commissioner shall investigate adjusted quality indicators and quality measures including those defined by the federal centers for medicare and medicaid service (CMS) with respect to nursing home quality and quality benchmarks. The commissioner shall award rate enhancements to those residential health care facilities who demonstrate to the satisfaction of the commissioner, they can meet or exceed such defined quality measures. Such quality measures may include, but not be limited to, outcomes from state survey data, performance measures, and resident outcomes based upon Minimum Data Sets as defined by CMS. The commissioner shall consult with associations representing residential health care facilities and associations representing nursing home residents, and shall by July first, two thousand seven, adopt rules and regulations that incorporate payment incentives, related to such quality indicators and measures, including, but not limited to programs to improve patient care outcomes and performance outcomes. Such programs may include but not be limited to, clinician-centric electronic medical records implementation, automation of assessments and care plans, improved data collection, and the provision of accessible consumer information as well as patient satisfaction, into rates of payment. 22-a. Modifications. (a) Notwithstanding any inconsistent provision of law or regulation to the contrary, effective April first, two thousand six and thereafter, residential health care facility rates of payment determined pursuant to this section for payments made by governmental agencies shall not contain a payment factor for interest on current indebtedness if the residential health care facility cost report utilized to determine such payment factor also shows a withdrawal of equity, a transfer of assets, or a positive net income. (b) Notwithstanding any inconsistent provision of law or regulation to the contrary, for residential health care facility rates of payment determined pursuant to this article for services provided on and after April first, two thousand six, the annual cost report filed by each residential health care facility for two thousand five and for each year thereafter shall be examined and in the event the operating costs reported by each such facility in any such cost report is less than ninety percent of the operating costs reported in the cost report which is being utilized to set such facility's existing rates of payment trended to two thousand five and each year thereafter, then such rates of payment shall be recalculated utilizing the more recent reported operating cost data. (c) Notwithstanding any inconsistent provision of law or regulation to the contrary, effective on and after April first, two thousand six, for purposes of establishing rates of payment by governmental agencies for residential health care facilities licensed pursuant to this article, the operating component of the rate for any residential health care facility that did not or does not achieve ninety percent or greater occupancy for any year within five calendar years from the date of commencing operation, shall be recalculated utilizing the facility's most recently available reported allowable costs divided by patient days imputed at ninety percent occupancy. Such recalculated rates of payment shall be effective January first of the sixth calendar year following the date the facility commenced operations or April first, two thousand six, whichever is later. 23. Notwithstanding any inconsistent provision of law or regulation to the contrary: (a) (i) For adult day health care services provided by residential health care facilities, effective April first, two thousand seven and thereafter, the operating component of the rate of payment established pursuant to this article for an adult day health care program which has achieved an occupancy percentage of ninety percent or greater for a calendar year prior to April first, two thousand seven, shall be calculated utilizing allowable costs reported in the two thousand four, two thousand five, or two thousand six calendar year residential health care facility cost report filed by the sponsoring residential health care facility, whichever is the earliest of such calendar year cost reports in which the program has achieved an occupancy percentage of ninety percent or greater, except that programs receiving rates of payment based on allowable costs for a period prior to April first, two thousand seven shall continue to receive rates of payment based on such period. (ii) For such programs which achieved an occupancy percentage of ninety percent or greater prior to calendar year two thousand four, so long as approved capacity in that year is the same as in calendar year two thousand four, but which did not maintain occupancy of ninety percent or greater in calendar years two thousand four, two thousand five, or two thousand six, the operating component of the rate of payment established pursuant to this article shall be calculated utilizing allowable costs reported in the two thousand four calendar year cost report divided by visits imputed at ninety percent occupancy. (iii) For such programs which have not achieved an occupancy percentage of ninety percent or greater for a calendar year prior to April first, two thousand seven, the operating component of the rate of payment established pursuant to this article shall be calculated utilizing allowable costs reported in the first calendar year after two thousand six in which such a program achieves an occupancy percentage of ninety percent or greater effective January first of such calendar year except for calendar year two thousand seven, effective no earlier than April first of such year, provided, however, that effective January first, two thousand nine, for programs that have not achieved an occupancy percentage of ninety percent or greater for a calendar year prior to January first, two thousand nine, the operating component of the rate of payment established pursuant to this article shall be calculated utilizing allowable costs reported in the two thousand nine cost report filed by the sponsoring residential health care facility divided by visits imputed at actual or ninety percent occupancy, whichever is greater. This subparagraph shall also apply to programs which achieved an occupancy percentage of ninety percent or greater prior to calendar year two thousand four but in such year had an approved capacity that was not the same as in calendar year two thousand four. (b) For a residential health care facility approved to operate an adult day health care program on or after April first, two thousand seven, rates of payment for such programs shall be computed based upon annual budgeted allowable costs, as submitted by the residential health care facility, and total estimated annual visits by adult day health care registrants of not less than ninety percent of licensed occupancy, and in accordance with the following: (i) Each program shall be required to submit an individual budget. Multiple programs operated by the same residential health care facility shall submit a separate budget for each program. Multiple programs operated by the same residential health care facility shall have separate rates of payment. (ii) Rates developed based upon budgets shall remain in effect for no longer than two calendar years from the earlier of: (A) the date the program commences operations; or (B) the date the sponsoring residential health care facility submits a full calendar year residential health care facility cost report in which the program has achieved ninety percent or greater occupancy. If a sponsoring residential health care facility submits such a cost report within two years of the date the program commences operation, rates shall then be computed utilizing such cost report. (iii) If a program fails to achieve ninety percent or greater occupancy within two calendar years of the date of its commencing operations, rates shall be calculated utilizing allowable costs reported in such second calendar year residential health care facility's cost report for the applicable sponsoring residential health care facility divided by visits imputed at ninety percent occupancy. (c) Effective January first, two thousand eight, allowable costs shall not include the costs of transportation. (d) All rates of payment established pursuant to this subdivision are subject to the maximum daily rate provided by law. Such maximum daily rate of payment for adult day health care programs operated by residential health care facilities that undergo a change of ownership subsequent to nineteen hundred ninety shall be determined by utilizing the inpatient rate of payment of the prior operator as in effect on January first, nineteen hundred ninety. In the event a residential health care facility establishes an off-site adult day health care program outside the regional input price adjustment region in which it is located, the computation of the maximum daily rate of payment for such program shall utilize the weighted average of the inpatient rates of payments for residential health care facilities in the region in which the program is located, as in effect on January first, nineteen hundred ninety, in place of the sponsoring residential health care facility's inpatient rate of payment. (e) Notwithstanding any inconsistent provision of the state administrative procedure act or any other law or regulation to the contrary, the commissioner shall adopt or amend on an emergency basis any regulations the commissioner shall determine necessary to implement any provision of this subdivision. 24. Notwithstanding any other provisions of this section and any other law, rule or regulation to the contrary, for periods on and after July first, two thousand seven, the operating component of all rates of payment made by governmental agencies for services to individuals eligible for medical assistance pursuant to title eleven of article five of the social services law and provided by a residential health care facility with fewer than sixty beds which provides services primarily to neurologically impaired individuals and is located in a county with a population between two hundred ninety thousand and three hundred ten thousand shall be based solely on the methodology used to establish rates for facilities which provide extensive nursing, medical, psychological and counseling support services solely to children; provided, however, this subdivision shall not apply if the application would result in a lesser rate of payment than otherwise provided for under this section. Nothing in this subdivision shall be construed to limit the application to such facility of rate adjustments applied to other residential health care facilities.