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Subject: For Immediate Release - Medicare Ordered Not to Take
Back Payments
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE:
Federal Judge Orders Government Not to Collect Incorrect Payments
Sent to Medicare Beneficiaries
Contact:
Gill Deford, Center for Medicare Advocacy, Inc.
(860) 456-7790, gedeford@medicareadvocacy.org
Vicki Gottlich, Center for Medicare Advocacy, Inc.
(202) 216-0028, vgottlich@medicareadvocacy.org
On Wednesday, September 27, a federal judge
in Washington, D.C. issued a preliminary injunction prohibiting
the Medicare program from recovering Part D premium refunds mistakenly
sent out by the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services
(CMS) until the affected beneficiaries are given the opportunity
to seek a waiver of recovery. CMS sent out a letter in late August
demanding that the 230,000 beneficiaries who received the premium
refunds repay them by September 30, 2006. The letter did not
include a statement that the Medicare statute requires recovery
of incorrect payments such as these to be waived in specified
circumstances.
Acting on a lawsuit filed by Action Alliance of Senior Citizens
and Gray Panthers, Judge Henry H. Kennedy, Jr. ordered CMS to send
out a new letter informing the affected beneficiaries that they
have a right to request a waiver of recovery and that CMS must
refund any repayments that have been made, thus giving all 230,000
the chance to request a waiver. Gill Deford, an attorney with the
Center for Medicare Advocacy, Inc., which represented the plaintiffs,
said: "The judge did the right thing. The courts said 30 years
ago that beneficiaries have to be informed of their right to a
waiver when they receive an incorrect payment. The government just
compounded its original mistake when it didn't tell people of this
basic right."
The erroneous premium refunds were a result of a computer error
involving the new Part D prescription drug program. For 230,000
of the Part D enrollees who have their monthly premiums deducted
from their Social Security benefits, the amount of their monthly
premium was mistakenly sent to them in August. Claiming that the
Medicare waiver statute did not apply to mistaken Part D premium
refunds, CMS then demanded that the money, which averaged $215
per person, be returned. Center for Medicare Advocacy Executive
Director Judith Stein contacted CMS administrators, including Mark
McClellan, both in writing and by phone in order to request that
the right to a waiver be included in the original letter, but CMS
declined to take action on the concerns. The lawsuit followed.
Released by:
Center for Medicare Advocacy, Inc.
PO Box 350
Willimantic, CT 06250
mailto:mshepard@medicareadvocacy.org?subject=Press Release
(860) 456-7790
(860) 456-2614 (fax)
http://www.medicareadvocacy.org/
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