My 94 year mother is in an assisted living facility and I just got the bill for a shocking $700 per month increase starting May 1. This is a 19% increase. How can I argue with them? I know that they are doing more work taking temperatures and swabs of each resident daily I believe, delivering meals to each resident to prevent communal dining, but is this reasonable? Have their costs gone up 19%? Has anyone else had a similar experience? Maybe someone who works inside an assisted living facility?
I wish you good luck in your attempt to find out what the increase is about and I do hope you will keep the forum informed as to your findings.
I believe that it isn’t allowed now in NY and NJ.
I can tell you that crisis situations bring out the best in people and the worst in people. This happened in my city after a horrendous hurricane. After Hurricane Katrina rent and housing costs went up significantly.
Sadly, many of us lost our homes and all of their contents and greedy landlords and real estate owners took advantage to people needing homes and prices shot up in the city and the entire metro area, (burbs).
I hope that kindness will prevail during these awful times. As bad as a hurricane or other natural disasters are, this is worse. It is global!
We have seen wonderful acts of generosity and kindness. We have also seen stupidity and ignorance such as people deliberately disobeying regulations regarding the coronavirus. Very sad and selfish of these people to do.
Follow up with this. I would at least ask if you could delay the additional payment if it is out of your reach at this time. Again, I am sorry that you are dealing with this situation. Let us know if this is resolved to your satisfaction. We care.
Best wishes to you and your family. 💗
The monthly rate is quite moderate, even after the increase.
But more to the point, the OP has agreed no contract with the ALF. His mother has been in the care of this facility for three months, but for no doubt good reasons of his own he has chosen not to settle on it as a permanent, long term or even medium term placement for his mother.
You can be in a position where price increases are controlled by state law (in some states) and the terms of your contract.
Or, you can have the freedom to move your relative without notice to the ALF and suffer no financial penalty.
But you can't reasonably expect both.
I don't think it is the central issue, here, but the financial costs of the coronavirus - more specifically, responses to it - are incalculable. If the ALF's costs rise by only 19%* by the end of this next financial year I suspect they will be incredibly relieved.
*[They won't. Not a chance.]
1) Gather records of previous bills.
2) Simply request an itemized bill for the month (s) with the increase, including how you were notified of the increase.
3) Contact your State Attorney General's Office and file a complaint for price gouging. Keep extra copies & originals of all documents. Send copies.
4) At any opportunity, find out if others received Notices of the increase & how much. Are they only charging Self-pay or those with Private Long Term Care the huge increase. Are they charging Medicare? Medicaid?
5) Inform your local State Representatives! Even a personal letter to your Governor.
-- If they are one of the few who dragged their feet on requiring rigorous protections be put in place -- then it will be harder, but you could save lives. Also then the actions they took were pragmatic & needed, but technically optional.
6) Befriend a local or major news reporter. Develope a relationship of trust. You need to file charges and allow an investigation before it comes out in the press. But if you don't hear back in a reasonable time...people are down staffed & working from home. Go public!
It sounds like the extra charge is for basic daily/monthly rate. While they may have extra costs, like PPEs, they should have been using more of them already each Flu 😷 Season. Did they charge extra if a patient was immune comprised... because they should have used extra protection to protect that patient & prevent cross contamination.
Information is gold here! Is the total bill went up for specialized individual care, like extra resperitory therapy, that is allowed. Charging extra cause meals have to be delivered to the room due to CDC or State Requirements...not allowed!
Extra cleaning costs, not allowed! Besides with dining room closed, they are not sanitizing those tables daily.
If they are being price gouged by providers of PPEs or other essential supplies. Then it is their responsibility to file charges with the State Attorney General..not charge patients.
An analogy:
If someone stole there computers, wheelchairs, transfer equipment, and expensive PT equipment, then poured paint of urine on walls & floors it would be costly immediate expense. A criminal offence. A necessity of operations to clean, sanitize & replace immediately.
It would be a crisis for them. It would not be cause for raising standard rate of care!
Also, if they are only charging Self-pay patients for expenses provided to all, talk to an ACLU or private Attorney for Elderly Services. Ask them about pros & cons of going public. Best to have info from other families in any case!
Glad you brought this to everyone's attention! I pray your LO will be safe.
In my opinion, 19% increase is a lot. I looked it up for ur state and I see no law putting a cap on rent increases.
If it's a medicare/Medicaid facility, even if/when your relative is NOT on Medicaid/Medicare everyone who lives within a CMS (Medicare/Medicaid) facility is, technically protected by Federal laws.
Costs haven't risen during Covid19 protocols. In truth, costs have shifted,
ie: patients and residents are restricted from outside activities, which deleted transportation costs, which opened $$$$ for extra hand sanitizers. The cost of delivering meals to dining rooms is not much different than delivering meals to rooms.
Follow the directives to contact other families about costs, rent-increases, and look at the Assisted Living contract. Then contact the administrator or billing about the price increase.
Sidebar; We have an ongoing in-house scam to bill residents, for a communications package no matter if the resident utilizes the phone, TV or internet, etc. It's an all or nothing "package." Mentioned to emphasize that facilities are always 100% revenue driven places. The technical logistics is where the deception sits, hidden.
Excuses:
1.Your mother's costs increased due to re-classification. Medicare/Medicaid implemented a new payment system in October, which removed therapies as the determinant of monthly charges. (Re-classification did not increase costs, instead it dropped revenue.)
2. We just entered into the 3rd quarter, quarters have zero relevance.
3.COVID19 increased costs. Nope the infamous virus shifted costs, as mentioned previously.
Your Ohio local ombudsman might be helpful, also ... Unfortunately facilities are notorious for barely legal behaviors... When they violate laws ...their unethical responses = "the resident must have misunderstood."
Beneficiary & Family Centers Care Quality Improvement Organization (BFCC)
888-755-5580
If they can't help call 1-800- Medicare and ask for Inspector General.
Please share!
I am an RN and there is extra work involved. Some employees have been demanding an increase in pay. There may be extra things they are doing for social distancing - like having 2 dinner shifts instead of one. They may have hired more cleaning staff and certainly they are using more supplies like gloves and masks. ( or they should be.)
They should be quarantining their patients and changing routines with staff and patients.
If what they are doing is legal and necessary then they should be willing to provide you with a list of their extra expenses related to the covid-19 crisis to justify the added expense.
Good Luck, and stay healthy.
The assisted living facility should be able to show the justification of the price hike. If they can not get in contact with your state's Attorney General's office. They will crack down on the price gouging. Also reach out to your state's department of aging or health and human services. They may also be able to help.