Fla. Admin. Code Ann. R. 59A-35.062 - Proof of Financial Ability to Operate
(1) Proof of financial ability to operate
must be demonstrated for initial licensure and change of ownership
applications, by submitting AHCA Form 3100-0009, July 2009, Proof of Financial
Ability to Operate, incorporated herein by reference, and available online at:
http://ahca.myflorida.com/HQAlicensureforms, as provided under section
408.810(8),
F.S., for the following provider types:
(a)
Nursing Home Facilities, as specified in chapter 400, part II, F.S.;
(b) Assisted Living Facilities, as specified
in chapter 429, part I, F.S.;
(c)
Home Health Agencies, as specified in chapter 400, part III, F.S.;
(d) Hospices, as specified in chapter 400,
part IV, F.S.;
(e) Adult Day Care
Centers, as specified in chapter 429, part III, F.S.;
(f) Prescribed Pediatric Extended Care
Centers, as specified in chapter 400, part VI, F.S.;
(g) Home Medical Equipment Providers, as
specified in chapter 400, part VII, F.S.;
(h) Intermediate Care Facilities for the
Developmentally Disabled, as specified in chapter 400, part VIII,
F.S.;
(i) Health Care Clinics, as
specified in chapter 400, part X, F.S.; and,
(2) Proof of financial ability must be
demonstrated for initial licensure and change of ownership applications for
Nurse Registries, as specified in chapter 400, part III, F.S., by submitting
AHCA Form 3110-7004A, September 2009, Nurse Registry Proof of Financial Ability
to Operate, incorporated herein by reference, and available online at:
http://ahca.myflorida.com/HQAlicensureforms.
(3) Definitions. The following definitions
apply to this section for proof of financial ability to operate.
(a) "Assumptions" means the basis and
rationale used in the financial projections to estimate the number and type of
patients, the method of acquiring patients, the amount of resources needed to
serve patients, the method by which these resources will be acquired, the
method of recruiting and maintaining staff, the method of collecting revenue
and paying expenses, and the basis for anticipated salaries and employee
benefits.
(b) "Charity care" means
the term as defined in section
409.911, F.S.
(c) "Contingency funding" means a source of
funding available to the licensee or applicant to cover the cost of events not
considered in the financial projections, including, but not limited to, a drop
in patient volume, a delay in Medicare and/or Medicaid certification, major
repairs, purchase of capital equipment. The contingency fund will be a minimum
of one month's average operating expense over the first year of
operations.
(d) "Contractual
adjustments" means the difference in the established charges or rates of the
provider and the rates negotiated by Medicare, Medicaid, HMO/PPOs, and
Insurers.
(e) "Financial
instability" means the provider cannot meet its financial obligations. Evidence
such as the issuance of bad checks, an accumulation of delinquent bills, or
inability to meet current payroll needs shall constitute prima facie evidence
that the ownership of the provider lacks the financial ability to operate.
Evidence shall also include the Medicare or Medicaid program's indications or
determination of financial instability or fraudulent handling of government
funds by the provider.
(f)
"Financial projections" means the expected operating results of the applicant
as presented on AHCA Form 3100-0009, July 2009.
(g) "Full time equivalent" or "FTE" means a
measure of full-time employment of 40 hours per week (1FTE = 40 hours per week
or 2, 080 hours annually).
(h)
"Generally Accepted Accounting Principles" or "GAAP" means the term as defined
in rule 61H1-20.007, F.A.C., Department
of Business and Professional Regulation, Board of Accountancy.
(i) "Liquid assets" means assets of the
licensee or applicant that can easily and quickly be converted to cash such as
publicly traded stocks, bonds, certificates of deposit, and money market
accounts.
(j) "Net patient service
revenue" means patient service revenue minus deductions from revenue.
Deductions from revenue include contractual adjustments and charity
care.
(k) "Operating expense" means
total expenses incurred through the normal course of business.
(l) "Operating margin" means a measure of
profitability and is calculated as follows: ([Net Patient Service Revenue -
Operating Expenses] รท Net Patient Service Revenue) = Operating
Margin.
(m) "Patient service
revenue" means the total charge for a service provided.
(n) "Pre-opening costs" means the costs
necessary to begin operations including advertising, equipment purchases, legal
fees, accounting fees, consulting fees, pre-paid insurance, pre-paid rent,
licensure fees, deposits (rent, utilities), requirement, staffing, and
training.
(o) "Working capital"
means the cash needed to sustain operations until a positive cash flow is
achieved. (Largest cumulative cash need from Schedule 7 Line 21 of AHCA Form
3100-0009, July 2009).
(4)
All documents required under this section must be prepared in accordance with
generally accepted accounting principles. All documents required under this
section for Home Health Agencies, Home Medical Equipment Providers and Health
Care Clinics must be compiled and signed by a certified public
accountant.
(5) A pro forma balance
sheet, a pro forma cash flow statement and a pro forma income and expense
statement for the first 2 years of operation which provide evidence of having
sufficient assets, credit, and projected revenues to cover liabilities and
expenses must be included. An application for change of ownership may elect not
to complete the 2nd year of operations on AHCA Form 3100-0009, July 2009, if
all of the following apply:
(a) As of the date
of the application, the entity subject to the change of ownership has been
licensed for at least 5 consecutive years;
(b) The applicant's assets, credit, and
projected revenues meet or exceed projected liabilities and expenses by the end
of the first year;
(c) The largest
cumulative cash need on Schedule 7, Line 21 on AHCA Form 3100-0009, July 2009
occurs prior to month 12.
(6) The applicant shall have demonstrated
financial ability to operate if the applicant's assets, credit, and projected
revenues meet or exceed projected liabilities and expenses.
(7) An applicant for renewal of a license
shall not be required to provide proof of financial ability to operate, unless
the licensee or applicant has demonstrated financial instability. If an
applicant or licensee has shown signs of financial instability, as provided in
section 408.810(9),
F.S., at any time, the Agency may require the applicant or licensee to provide
proof of financial ability to operate by submission of:
(a) AHCA Form 3100-0009, July 2009, Proof of
Financial Ability Form, that includes a balance sheet and income and expense
statement for the next 2 years of operation which provide evidence of having
sufficient assets, credit, and projected revenues to cover liabilities and
expenses; and,
(b) Documentation of
correction of the financial instability, including but not limited to, evidence
of the payment of any bad checks, delinquent bills or liens. If complete
payment cannot be made, evidence must be submitted of partial payment along
with a plan for payment of any liens or delinquent bills. If the lien is with a
government agency or repayment is ordered by a federal or state court, an
accepted plan of repayment must be provided.
Notes
Rulemaking Authority 408.819 FS. Law Implemented 408.806, 408.810 FS.
New 7-14-10.
State regulations are updated quarterly; we currently have two versions available. Below is a comparison between our most recent version and the prior quarterly release. More comparison features will be added as we have more versions to compare.
No prior version found.