Deals could bring back fired CEO
Over the three years leading up to the
Those agreements, called put options, were negotiated by Burkhart - personally, not as CEO of American Senior - with the
HHC officials said the put options are "a form of insurance" that allows them to sell their nursing homes for prearranged terms if they decide to get out of the nursing home business. One scenario that could cause HHC to pull the trigger would be the end of a
"We're going to have to figure out what we're going to do," Gutwein said, although he provided no specifics. "There are a lot of unknowns about
Sources with knowledge of the FBI's inquiries have said it is focused on whether Burkhart or anyone else at American Senior received kickbacks from vendors that provided products and services to the nursing homes American Senior operates. It is not clear if the FBI is also looking into the put agreements.
Burkhart, 51, had been CEO of American Senior since 2001, helping to build it from a money-losing, midsize nursing home company into the state's dominant nursing home operator. Its nursing homes and assisted-living facilities generated revenue last year of
HHC paid Burkhart's companies, which operate under the name Crusader Healthcare Services,
American Senior, holds puts on eight nursing homes, and the rest of HHC's 78 facilities have no put options.
If HHC exercised its put options, Burkhart could receive even more money. One agreement, which covers 34 nursing homes, would pay
New is a partner with Burkhart on two of the agreements, which cover 45 nursing homes. Two other agreements, covering 18 nursing homes, are held solely by Burkhart.
None of the agreements require Crusader to pay anything to acquire ownership of the facilities. In fact, the contracts promise to give Crusader all accounts receivable as well as title to the nursing homes' physical assets - but not its real estate.
The terms were made so attractive to Crusader because the most likely scenario under which HHC would transfer ownership would be if the nursing homes became ineligible for extra federal funding that is now enriching the entire nursing home industry in
The put option contracts are publicly available because HHC, which also operates
HHC cannot exercise its nursing home put options until
"Under the circumstances as they exist today, the prospect that we would exercise those puts is extremely low," Gutwein said.
The put options require that American Senior remain manager of the nursing homes at the time ownership transfers from HHC to Crusader. But it appears that Crusader could replace American Senior as manager after that point.
A spokeswoman for American Senior declined to discuss whether the company or its owners worried about being replaced as manager if Burkhart's Crusader became owner of the nursing homes.
"We believe it is unwise to address speculative questions; subsequently we have no comment:' American Senior spokeswoman
"For
Rationale for deals
Gutwein said the puts were intended primarily to encourage Burkhart and American Senior to keep operating the nursing homes well - both from quality and financial standpoints.
If they didn't, HHC could unload a struggling asset onto their shoulders.
HHC first negotiated put agreements in 2003 - when it acquired its first nursing homes from the Jackson family. At that time, the Jackson family itself held the put options on all 13 of the nursing, homes HHC bought.
That purchase was the first time an Indiana county-owned hospital acquired nursing homes completely removed from its main campuses for the purpose of leveraging extra payments available to government-owned health care facilities.
This arrangement generates extra money because of a wrinkle in the payment policies of the federal/state
Because the Indiana Medicaid program pays nursing homes at rates well below the maximum federal rate, called the "upper payment limit," the difference is quite substantial -
This program, called the UPL program because of the term "upper payment limit," has been extremely lucrative for both HHC and American Senior. From 2003 through 2014, HHC passed on more than
And HHC's cut of the extra federal money totaled
The arrangement's success has attracted a crowd. Around
That arrangement cost the federal government more than
It's not clear what percentage of the UPL money that HHC receives flows to American Senior. But HHC's management fees to American Senior are larger because the nursing homes' overall revenue is larger. HHC also pays above-market lease payments to the owners of the nursing homes' real estate.
For some facilities, that real estate is owned by the Jackson family.
It was the sale of some of that real estate in 2012 that created the opportunity for the put options involving Burkhart, Gutwein said. The Jackson family sold the real estate of 17 of its nursing homes to
Messages left for Omega officials were not returned. But
Omega "had an interest in having a management company that they had a lot of comfort in," Sellers said.
Gutwein and Sellers said they approached Burkhart - in his role as CEO of American Senior - about negotiating additional put options with American Senior. But, according to Gutwein, Burkhart said American Senior didn't want to add put options and wanted to get out of many of its existing ones.
"That is when Burkhart stepped in," Gutwein said.
Mackey, the attorney for Burkhart, said Burkhart did so because the Jackson family wanted out and because the other parties trusted him to keep the nursing homes operating well.
"The timing of the Jackson decision presented a problem," Mackey wrote in an email. He added, "
Windfall in jeopardy?
The negotiation of the put options was occurring at the same time the UPL program was exploding in
That growth sparked additional scrutiny of the program by the federal
"We understand in the health care business that there is constant evolution and change," said
HHC's Gutwein said he also expects health care financing to change and that the potential end of the UPL program was one risk factor - though not the biggest - that caused HHC to negotiate put options in the first place. But he denied HHC officials negotiated additional put options, beginning in 2012, because they feared the UPL program would end.
"We wanted [American Senior] and
Managed care is when the state hires private insurance companies to manage the medical care of
If applied in a broad way, such a managed care program would kill the UPL program; it generates federal matching funds only for per-day payments the state
However, that's not a foregone conclusion, Grubbs noted. He said many states have created managed care programs that pay a set fee for insurers to help
"Managed care is coming, but there are lots of kinds of managed care," Grubbs said. "The long-term-care companies fear that it's going to come in a way that does away with fee-for-service. And that's their biggest fear because of the UPL payment."
Escape clause
Since 2012, the
* Sixty-three nursing homes are under put options that would give ownership to companies controlled by
* Eight nursing homes are under put options that would give ownership to the Jackson family, which owns American Senior. The company fired Burkhart in September, three days after the FBI raided his home and American Senior's headquarters.
* HHC's remaining nursing homes have no put option.
* HHC paid Burkhart's entities
Sources:



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