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You can search the entire site. or go to the recent opinions, or the chronological or subject indices. Kathryn Thomason v. State of Alaska, Department of Health and Social Services, Division of Senior and Disabilities Services (2/7/2025) sp-7741

Kathryn Thomason v. State of Alaska, Department of Health and Social Services, Division of Senior and Disabilities Services (2/7/2025) sp-7741

         Notice:  This opinion is subject to correction before publication in the PACIFIC REPORTER.   

         Readers are requested to bring errors to the attention of the Clerk of the Appellate Courts,  

         303 K Street, Anchorage, Alaska 99501, phone (907) 264-0608, fax (907) 264-0878, email  

         corrections@akcourts.gov.  

  

  

                   THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF ALASKA  

  



 KATHRYN THOMASON,                                        )      

                                                          )    Supreme Court No. S-18581  

                            Appellant,                    )      

                                                          )    Superior Court No. 3AN-21-06060 CI  

          v.                                              )      

                                                          )    O P I N I O N  

  STATE OF ALASKA, DEPARTMENT  )                                 

 OF HEALTH AND SOCIAL                                     )    No. 7741 - February 7, 2025  

  SERVICES, DIVISION OF SENIOR                            )  

 AND DISABILITIES SERVICES,                               )  

                                                          )  

                            Appellee.                     )  

                                                          )  

                    

                  Appeal from the Superior Court of the State of Alaska, Third  

                  Judicial District, Anchorage, Dani Crosby, Judge.  

  

                  Appearances:   Thomas A. Dosik,  Thomas A. Dosik LLC,  

                  Anchorage,  for  Appellant.    Paul  R.  Peterson,  Assistant  

                  Attorney   General,  and   Treg   Taylor,   Attorney   General,  

                  Juneau, for Appellee.  

  

                  Before:    Maassen,  Chief  Justice,  and  Carney,  Borghesan,  

                  Henderson, and Pate, Justices.  

                    

                  CARNEY, Justice.  

  



         INTRODUCTION  



                  A personal care assistant (PCA) in a Medicaid program was investigated  



for  submitting  inaccurate  records  of  services  she  provided.    After  an  investigation  



substantiated the allegations, a committee of employees in the agency overseeing the  


----------------------- Page 2-----------------------

program  determined that  she should be terminated  from the program.  The PCA was  



notified of the determination and  informed that  she could appeal to an administrative  



law  judge  (ALJ).    The  ALJ  recommended  that  the  agency  adopt  the  committee's  



determination, and the agency  did.  The PCA  appealed to the superior court,  which  



affirmed the agency's decision.  



                 The  PCA now  appeals raising a number of issues.   Because the agency  



complied with state  law, did not deprive the PCA of due process, and supported its  



conclusions   with   substantial   evidence,   we   affirm   the   superior   court 's   decision  



upholding the agency's termination of the PCA .  



        FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS  



        A.       Facts  



                 Kathryn  Thomason  has  cared  for her  stepson,  who  has  severe  medical  



needs, for many years.  In 2011 Thomason was employed by Hearts and Hands of Care  



as a PCA for him.  She was paid to provide care and "day habilitation" services through  



a federal Medicaid program administered through the Department of Health and Social  



Services.    Day  habilitation  services  provide  opportunities  to  develop,  retain,  and  



mitigate the regression of "self-help, socialization, and adaptive" skills needed to live  



                  1 

independently.    



                 In  2017  Hearts  and  Hands  reported  to  the  Department  that  they  were  



having  difficulty  coordinating  with  the  Thomason  family  regarding  care  and  were  



concerned  about  "exploitation"  of  Thomason's  stepson.    An  investigator  with  the  



Division  of  Senior  and  Disabilities  Services  referred  the  matter  to  the  Medicaid  



Program Integrity office.  The referral noted that some of the day habilitation activities  



she reported would have been impossible  because the places  Thomason  claimed  she  



had  taken  her  stepson  were  closed  or  too  far  apart  to  be  visited  during  the  times  



indicated.  The referral also noted that "the majority of" the day habilitation billing was  



                                                                                                             

        1       See 7 Alaska Administrative Code (AAC)  130.260(b)(3).  



                                                    -2-                                                7741  


----------------------- Page 3-----------------------

for activities that did not qualify because they were "errands for the household."  It also  



reported that Hearts and Hands workers "very rarely see [Thomason's stepson] outside  



of [the] car or doing any activity."  The matter was then referred to the Medicaid Fraud  



Control Unit.   



               In March and April 2018, an investigator  from the fraud unit monitored  



Thomason, including installing a camera on a utility pole opposite the family's home.   



The  investigator  reviewed  Thomason's  notes  of  day  habilitation  activities  with  her  



stepson  and collected video from places  Thomason  claimed to have taken him.   The  



investigator documented inaccuracies and impossibilities in the notes, as well as billings  



for times when Thomason was not providing day habilitation services.  The investigator  



pointed out, for example, that there were seven days that Thomason wrote that she took  



her stepson  to Fred Meyer  as day habilitation when she did not.    The investigator's  



report alleged that Thomason submitted over $3,800 in fraudulent billings to Medicaid  



during the investigation.  The investigator also interviewed Thomason with her attorney  



present in September 2018.   



               In November 2018 Thomason and her husband were charged with felony  



medical assistance fraud, and in February 2019 Thomason alone was indicted for felony  



medical   assistance   fraud.      Thomason's   husband        eventually   pled   guilty   to   a  



misdemeanor, and the charges against Thomason were dismissed.   



               The Department  issued a "Report of Investigation"  in September 2020.   



The report concluded that four allegations against Thomason had been substantiated :   



(1)  that  she  "submitted  timesheets  for  [personal  care  services]  . . .  not  provided  on  



multiple occasions between December 2017 and May 2018"; (2) that she "submitted  



services notes and timesheets for Day Habilitation services not provided in accordance  



with [conditions of participation] and regulations"; (3) that she "violated the terms of  



her Personal Care Assistant Agreement"; and (4) that she "failed to notify the personal  



care provider agency that she had been charged with a barrier crime."  The Department  



also determined that evidence supported imposing sanctions under 7 AAC 105.400.   



                                                -3-                                           7741  


----------------------- Page 4-----------------------

                 The  report  advised  that  an  investigation  review  team  and  a  sanctions  



committee had considered the factors required by regulation before imposing sanctions,  



and decided to sanction Thomason by terminating her from the program and issuing a  



                                       2 

public notice of the termination.   The report was mailed to Thomason on September 1,  



2020;  it  provided  that  the  sanctions  would  take  effect  on  September  30,  2020  and  



included appeal instructions.   



        B.      Agency Proceedings  



                 Thomason appealed to the Office of Administrative Hearings  (OAH) on  



September 11, 2020.   A hearing was held before an  ALJ  on October 9.    Thomason  



appeared at the telephonic hearing without an attorney; the Department was represented  



by  an  assistant  attorney  general.    Both  the  fraud  unit  and  Department  investigators  



testified, as did a member of the sanctions committee.   The Department's witnesses  



described  their  investigation  of  Thomason  and  the  deliberations  of  the  sanctions  



committee  in  reaching  its  decision  to  sanction  her  and  revoke  her  provider  status.   



Thomason did not testify or present witnesses, but she did submit a written argument.   



                 The ALJ issued a proposed decision upholding the agency's findings and  



sanctions  in early February 2021.   The ALJ noted  that  the  Department's evidence in  



support of its allegations was "clear, credible, and essentially ultimately undisputed by  



Ms. Thomason."  He agreed that the sanctions imposed were appropriate, and concluded  



that when "taking into account the entirety of the circumstances  . . . Ms. Thomason's  



violations  rose  to  a  sufficient  level  of  seriousness"  to  justify  termination  from  the  



program.   



                 The ALJ's proposed decision and information about how to appeal to the  



Department Commissioner were sent to Thomason on the same day.  Three weeks later  



                                                                                                             

        2       See 7 AAC  105.420(b)(1)-(8).  See also 7 AAC 105.410(a) (providing for  

13 possible sanctions ranging from requiring sanctioned individual to complete further  

training to terminating individual from program).  



                                                    -4-                                                7741  


----------------------- Page 5-----------------------

Thomason  submitted  a  "Proposal  for  Action  Following  Proposed  Decision"  that  



advocated for reversal of the agency decision or, at least, "additional OAH review and  



reconsideration."    On  March  22  the  Commissioner's  designee  adopted  the  ALJ's  



decision without modification.  Thomason appealed to the superior court.   



         C.       Court Proceedings  



                 Thomason, represented by counsel,  argued that the Department violated  



the Open Meetings Act by convening the sanctions committee behind closed doors, and  



violated the Administrative Procedures Act (APA) by failing to promulgate regulations  



governing the sanctions process.   She also argued that the Department denied her due  



process  because  it  deprived  her  of  property  and  liberty  interests  without  a  pre- 



deprivation hearing, and that it had not proved its allegations against her or shown that  



termination was an appropriate sanction.   



                 The  superior  court  held  oral  argument  in  June  and  issued  an  order  



affirming the agency's decision in November 2022.  The court found that Thomason's  



Open Meetings Act claims were untimely and that the APA did not apply because the  



sanction  procedures  were  interpretations   of  existing  regulations,  not  regulations  



themselves.    It  also  concluded  that  Thomason  had  no  property  interest  in  future  



reimbursements from the program, but reasoned that, even assuming she had a property  



interest in her status as a Medicaid provider, there was no deprivation of that status prior  



to her hearing before the ALJ and therefore no due process violation.  It also determined  



that  Thomason's  liberty  interest  in  her  reputation  was  not  implicated  in  the  case.   



Finally, it found that substantial evidence supported the agency's factual findings and  



Thomason's termination from the program as a sanction.   



                 Thomason appeals.  



  



  



  



  



                                                       -5-                                                   7741  


----------------------- Page 6-----------------------

         STANDARD OF REVIEW  



                 "When the superior court is acting as an intermediate court of appeal in an  



administrative   matter,   we   independently   review   the   merits   of   the   agency   or  



                                          3 

administrative board's decision."   



                 "When   reviewing   administrative   decisions   we   use   the               'substantial  



evidence' test for questions of fact and the 'reasonable basis ' test for questions of law  



                                     4 

involving agency expertise."    The substantial evidence test is satisfied when there is  



"such relevant evidence as a reasonable mind might accept as adequate to support [the  



                             5 

agency's] conclusion."   "We determine only whether such evidence exists and do not  



                                                                                                    6 

choose between competing inferences or evaluate the strength of the evidence."   



                 The   reasonable   basis   test   applies   to   the   Department's   exercise   of  



                                             7 

discretion  in  imposing  sanctions.     "When  reviewing  whether  an  administrative  



decision was reasonable, we ask  'whether there was a prejudicial abuse of discretion, '  



which we will find 'if the agency has not proceeded in the manner required by law, the  



order or decision is not supported by the findings, or the findings are not supported by  



                    8 

the evidence. ' "   



                                                                                                               

        3        Griswold  v.  Homer  City  Council,  310  P.3d  938,  940  (Alaska  2013)  

(quoting Shea v. State, Dep't of Admin., Div. of Ret. & Benefits, 267 P.3d 624, 630  

(Alaska 2011)).  

        4        Fantasies on 5th Ave., LLC v. Alcoholic Beverage Control Bd ., 446 P.3d  

360, 366 (Alaska 2019) (quoting Rollins v. State, Dep't of Pub. Safety, 312 P.3d 1091,  

1094 (Alaska 2013)).  

        5        French v. Alaska Oil & Gas Conservation Comm'n , 498 P.3d 1026, 1028  

(Alaska 2021) (alterations in original) (quoting Shea, 267 P.3d at 630).  

        6        Patrick v. Mun. of Anchorage, Anchorage Transp. Comm'n, 305 P.3d 292,  

297  (Alaska 2013)  (quoting Lopez v. Adm'r, Pub. Emps.' Ret. Sys. , 20 P.3d 568, 570  

(Alaska 2001)).  

        7        See Rollins,  312 P.3d at 1094  ("[T]he 'reasonable basis' test applies to  

questions of law involving agency expertise.").  

        8        Fantasies on 5th Ave., 446 P.3d at 367 (quoting AS 44.62.570(b)(3)).  



                                                     -6-                                                 7741  


----------------------- Page 7-----------------------

                "Whether there was a violation of due process is a question of law, which  



                         9 

we review de novo."   



        DISCUSSION  



                Thomason argues that the  Department violated  the Open Meetings Act  



and the APA, that it violated her due process rights by depriving her of property and  



liberty interests without a hearing, that the findings in support of its sanction decision  



were not supported by the evidence, and that the sanctions were unreasonable .   We  



agree with Thomason that the revocation of her Medicaid provider status implicates a  



liberty interest in her reputation, but conclude that she was provided due process .  We  



see no error in the balance of the superior court's decision, and we affirm its judgment  



upholding the Department's decision to terminate Thomason from the program.  



        A.      The Open Meetings Act Claim Is Untimely.  



                The  superior  court  concluded  that  the  Open  Meetings  Act  claim  was  



untimely because Thomason did not file a lawsuit within 180 days of being notified of  



the sanctions on September 1, 2020.  Thomason argues that she timely raised the claim  



because under the common law discovery rule, the limitations period did not begin to  



run  until  she  learned  about  the  sanctions  committee  meeting  and  the  committee's  



operations at the hearing before the ALJ on October 9, 2020.  She also argues that filing  



her appeal to OAH  equitably tolled the limitations period  for the Open Meetings Act  



claim.  The Department  argues that even if the claim did indeed accrue in October, it  



was still untimely.  We agree with the Department.  



                Alaska's Open Meetings Act provides that "[a] lawsuit to void an action  



taken in violation of this section must be filed in superior court within 180 days after  

the date of the action."10  Thomason did not appeal the ALJ's decision until April 27,  



2021 - more than 180 days after the committee notified her of the sanctions.  However,  



                                                                                                           

        9       Patrick, 305 P.3d at 297.  



        10      AS 44.62.310(f).  



                                                   -7-                                               7741  


----------------------- Page 8-----------------------

she argues the Open Meetings Act  is subject to the "discovery rule", which we have  

adopted.11    While  a  statute  of  limitations  generally begins  to run on  the date  that a  



claimant  suffers harm,12 under the discovery rule a cause of action accrues when the  



plaintiff has "information sufficient to alert a reasonable person to the fact that he has a  

potential cause of action."13  



                 We have previously recognized the rule's application to tort and contract  

cases where a cause of action is established by statute.14  In those cases we explained  



that  the  discovery  rule  may  apply  when  the  date  of  "accrual"  is  unclear  from  the  

statutory  text.15    If  an  element  of  a  particular  cause  of  action  is  not  immediately  



apparent, we have held that "the date when the plaintiff has information sufficient to  



alert a reasonable person to begin an inquiry to protect his rights" is the applicable date  

for determining when the statute of limitations begins to run.16  Under the discovery  



rule, Thomason argues her claim accrued when sanctions committee members testified  



to their activities at her ALJ hearing on October 9.   



                                                                                                              

        11       Christianson  v.  Conrad-Houston  Ins. ,  318  P.3d  390,  396-97  (Alaska  

2014).  

        12       See Arnoult v. Webster, 480 P.3d 592, 597 (Alaska 2020).  



        13       Christianson, 318 P.3d at 396-97  (quoting Preblich v. Zorea ,  996 P.2d  

730, 734 (Alaska 2000)).  

        14       See  Gefre  v.  Davis  Wright  Tremaine,  LLP,  306  P.3d  1264,  1275-77  

(Alaska 2013) (considering application of discovery rule to derivative shareholder suit  

brought under AS 09.10.053); see also Pedersen v. Zielski, 822 P.2d 903, 908 (Alaska  

1991)  (evaluating  discovery  rule  application  to  medical  malpractice  claim  under  

AS 09.10.070).  

        15       See e.g., AS 09.10.070 ("a person may not bring an action . . . unless the  

action is commenced within two years of the accrual of the cause of action."); see also  

AS 09.10.053 ("Unless the action is commenced within three years, a person may not  

bring an action upon a contract or liability.").  

        16       Christianson, 318 P.3d at 396 (quoting Preblich, 996 P.3d at 734).  



                                                    -8-                                                 7741  


----------------------- Page 9-----------------------

                 However,  the  Open  Meeting  Act's  unambiguous  definition  of  accrual  

undermines the application of the discovery rule to a claim brought under the Act.17  It  



requires a claimant file "[a] lawsuit to void an action taken in violation of this section  

. . . within 180 days after the date of the action."18  The text clearly provides that a claim  



accrues when "an action taken in violation of" the Act occurs.19  It is therefore unclear  



that the discovery rule should apply to a statutory cause of action with a clearly stated  



deadline.  



                 We  need  not  resolve  whether  the  discovery  rule  applies  to  an  Open  



Meetings Act claim, however.  Even if Thomason's claim accrued when she learned of  



the  sanctions  committee's  activities  through  the  testimony  at  the  ALJ  hearing  on  



October 9, it was still untimely because she did not appeal the ALJ's decision until 20  



days after the limitations period had run.   



                 Thomason argues that "regardless of the exact date the limitation period  



began to run," it was equitably tolled because her administrative appeal on September  



11, 2020 placed the Department on notice that  she was pursuing an alternate remedy.   



In order to equitably toll the statute of limitations a plaintiff must show "three elements:   



'(1) pursuit of the initial remedy must give defendant notice of plaintiff 's claim, (2)  



defendant's  ability  to  gather  evidence  must  not  be  prejudiced  by  the delay,  and  (3)  

plaintiff must act reasonably and in good faith.' "20  The superior court determined that  



                                                                                                                  

         17      See  Rotkiske  v.  Klemm,  589  U.S.  8,  13-14  (2019)  (declining  to  apply  

discovery rule to action brought under Fair Debt Collection Practices Act when statute  

"unambiguously set[] the date of the violation as the event that starts" the limitations  

period  because  "[t]o  do  so  is  not  a  construction  of  [the]  statute,  but,  in  effect,  an  

enlargement of it by the court.").  

         18      AS 44.62.310(f).  



         19      Id .  



         20      Kaiser v. Umialik Ins. , 108 P.3d 876, 881-82 (Alaska 2005) (quoting Fred  

Meyer of Alaska, Inc. v. Bailey , 100 P.3d 881, 886 (Alaska 2004), overruled on other  

  



                                                       -9-                                                  7741  


----------------------- Page 10-----------------------

equitable tolling did not apply because Thomason did not allege a violation of the Open  



Meetings Act in her administrative appeal and instead raised the issue for the first time  



in her January 2022 briefing to the superior court.   



                 Thomason  asserts  that  she  met  the  requirements  for  equitable  tolling  



because her administrative appeal placed the Department on notice that she was seeking  



relief, that the delay did not prejudice the Department's opportunity to gather evidence,  



and that she acted reasonably and in good faith.  But Thomason's "pursuit of the initial  



remedy" - the filing of her appeal with the superior court in April 2021 - did not give  



the  Department  notice  that  she  was  pursuing  relief  under  the  Open  Meetings  Act  



because  she did not  mention it  in that appeal.   Only in her January 2022 brief  to the  



superior  court  did  Thomason  first  argue  that  the  Department  violated  the  Open  



Meetings Act, well after the 180-day limitations period had expired.  The superior court  

did not err by finding that Thomason's Open Meetings Act claim was untimely.21  



        B.       The Department Complied With The APA.  



                 Thomason  also  argues  that  the  sanctions  committee  violated  Alaska's  

APA.22   She contends that the existence of the sanctions committee itself goes  so  far  



beyond statutory and regulatory  confines  that its  existence requires new regulations.   



She  also  argues that the  informal procedures  the committee used  are inadequate and  



need to be formally promulgated.  The Department responds that the sanction process  



is a lawful manner of carrying out existing regulations  and additional regulations are  



not required.  The superior court concluded that the APA did not apply; we agree.   



                                                                                                             



grounds by Buntin v. Schlumberger Tech. Corp. , 487 P.3d 595, 603-07 (Alaska 2021))  

(internal brackets omitted).  

        21       We  therefore  do  not  reach  her  argument  that  the  Open  Meetings  Act  

applied to the sanctions committee.   

        22       See AS 44.62.010-.950.  



                                                   -10-                                                7741  


----------------------- Page 11-----------------------

                 We begin with Thomason's argument that the Department was required  



to  promulgate  regulations  to  create  the  sanctions  committee.    She  argues  that  the  



superior  court  erred  by  finding  that  using  the  sanctions  committee  to  determine  



sanctions was just an "interpretation of how to implement the regulations as a whole."   



Thomason contends that the Department must promulgate regulations under the APA  



before  using  a  committee  to  decide  whether  and  what  sanctions  to  impose.    The  



Department  responds  that  the  sanctions  committee  was  a  "commonsense  way  of  

carrying  out"  the  existing  regulations  providing  for  sanctions,23  and  that  it  was  not  



required  to promulgate  new  regulations  to establish a process to decide and impose  



sanctions.   



                 "Although the definition of 'regulation' is broad, it does not encompass  

every routine, predictable interpretation of a statute by an agency."24  Drawing on the  



APA's  own definition  of regulation,25  we  first  consider whether an  agency's  action  



"implements,  interprets,  or  makes  specific  the  law  enforced  or  administered  by  the  

agency."26  We then consider whether the action "affects the public or is used by the  



                                                                                                              

        23       Exxon Mobil Corp. v. Dep't of Revenue, 488 P.3d 951, 956 (Alaska 2021)  

("Obvious, common sense interpretations of existing law are not regulations under the  

APA.");  see  7  AAC  105.400  (grounds  for  sanctioning  providers);  7  AAC  105.410  

(enumerating sanctions that may be imposed); 7 AAC 105.420(b) (enumerating factors  

to be considered in sanction decision).  

        24       Smart  v.  State,  Dep't  of  Health  &  Soc.  Servs.,  237  P.3d  1010,  1017  

(Alaska   2010)   (quoting   Alyeska   Pipeline   Serv.   Co.   v.   State,   Dep't   of   Env't  

Conservation, 145 P.3d 561, 573 (Alaska 2006)).  

        25       The APA defines a regulation as "every rule, regulation, order, or standard  

of general application  . . .  adopted by a state agency to implement, interpret, or make  

specific the law enforced or administered by it, or to govern its procedure, except one  

that relates only to the internal management of a state agency."  AS 44.62.640(3).  

        26       Chevron U.S.A., Inc. v. Dep't of Revenue, 387 P.3d 25, 36 (Alaska 2016)  

(quoting State, Dep't of Nat. Res. v. Nondalton Tribal Council, 268 P.3d 293, 300-01  

(Alaska 2012)).  



                                                   -11-                                                 7741  


----------------------- Page 12-----------------------

agency in dealing with the public."27  But recognizing that this definition could "result  



in  complete  ossification  of  the  regulatory  state,"  we  have  clarified  that  "obvious,  

commonsense  interpretation[s]  of  statutes"  are  not  regulations.28    And  we  have  



"explained that agency actions may not be 'commonsense interpretations' of existing  



laws (1) when the agency adds 'requirements of substance'  . . .  (2) when the agency  



interprets a statute in a way that is 'expansive or unforeseeable'; or (3) when the agency  

'alters its previous interpretation of a statute.' "29  



                 The   superior   court   concluded   that   the   Division's   actions   were   a  



commonsense  interpretation  "of  how  to  implement  the  [relevant]  regulations  as  a  



whole."  Thomason responds that even "extremely sensible procedure[s]" are still not  



"commonsense" if they are "expansive or unforeseeable."   Both parties cite Smart v.  

State,  Department  of  Health  and  Social  Services,30  in  which  we  concluded  that  a  



particular method used to calculate payments was a commonsense interpretation of the  

requirement  that  the  State  use  "statistically  valid  sampling  methodologies."31    We  



reasoned that the method chosen was a formula "appear[ing] in all statistics books,"  



that it imposed no new  substantive requirements,  and that  its use would not lead to a  



meaningful risk that the agency would vary its audit requirement "at whim" or be based  

on "improper influences."32  



                                                                                                                

         27      Id. (quoting Nondalton , 268 P.3d at 300-01).  



         28      Id. (quoting Alyeska Pipeline Serv. Co. , 145 P.3d at 573).  



         29      Chevron U.S.A., 387 P.3d at 36-37 (citing Alyeska Pipeline Serv. Co. , 145  

P.3d  at 573)  (quoting Alaska  Ctr.  for  the Env't.  v.  State, 80  P.3d  231,  244  (Alaska  

2003)).  

        30       237 P.3d 1010 (Alaska 2010).  



        31       Id. at 1017-18.  



        32       Id. at 1018.  



                                                    -12-                                                  7741  


----------------------- Page 13-----------------------

                 Whether   the   use   of   the   sanctions   committee   is   a   "commonsense  



interpretation"  of  the  relevant  law  is  a  closer  question  than  the  use  of  a  particular  

"statistically valid sampling methodolog[y]."33  We conclude that it is; the Department  



was  not  required  to  promulgate  regulations  before  creating  and  using  the  sanctions  



committee.  We reach this conclusion for several reasons.  First, the use of a committee  



adds no new substantive requirement to the existing regulations, which already outline  



42  grounds  for  sanctioning  providers,  13  sanctions  to  select  from,  and  8  factors  to  

consider before imposing sanctions.34  The committee selects from the options provided  



by the regulation to reach its decision.35   Second,  and as the Department  argues, it is  



commonsense  to  expect  that  investigations,  preparation  of  a  written  report,  and  a  



decisional meeting would be carried out through the use of a committee.  Finally, the  



fact that a group of employees would take on these tasks as a committee is neither  



unforeseeable  nor expansive  when the grounds for imposing sanctions,  the  types of  

sanctions, and factors to consider are specified by regulation.36  



                 Thomason  separately  argues  that  the  sanctions  committee  violates  the  



APA because its procedures "are not contained in properly promulgated regulations."   



She contends that the closed-door meetings are impermissible under existing regulation .   



The Department responds  that the regulations -  which list factors to be  considered,  



broadly permit "the department" to impose sanctions, and outline the right to an appeal  



                                                                                                                

        33       Id.   



        34       See 7 AAC 105.400-.420.  



        35       Cf. Chevron U.S.A., Inc. v. Dep't of Revenue, 387 P.3d 25, 38-39 (Alaska  

2016) (noting that "it is not uncommon for there to be multiple ways to read a given  

phrase in a statute without adding any additional substantive terms or requirements"  

and that formal rulemaking is not required where agency "did not add anything to the  

. . . [s]tatute that was not present in the statute's existing language").  

        36       See  id.  at  39  (finding  it  is  "foreseeable"  that  agency  would  use  its  

discretion to respond to new circumstances).  



                                                    -13-                                                  7741  


----------------------- Page 14-----------------------

-  are  sufficiently  detailed.    We  agree  that  the  Department  did  not  have  a  duty  to  



promulgate regulations regarding the sanctions committee's procedures.  



                 In Sisters of Providence v. Department of Health and Social Services, we  



rejected   an   argument   that   the   Department   "was   required   to   adopt   regulations  



establishing specific procedures" for how it would decide whether a given project was  

"substantially implement[ed]."37  We explained that such regulation would be required  



when a separate statute specifically imposed a "mandatory duty" to promulgate such  

standards and procedures.38  In the absence of an affirmative duty, we held that the "use  



of  [an] informal  . . .  procedure was reasonable and the lack of published procedural  

regulations did not invalidate [the agency's] . . . decision."39  



                 Thomason  does  not  point  to  any  statute  or  regulation  requiring  the  



Department to promulgate procedural regulations for the sanctions committee, and we  



see no such requirement.  In the absence of an affirmative duty to do so, the Department  



was  not  required  to  establish  formalized  procedures  for  the  sanctions  committee's  

operation.40  The superior court did not err by concluding the Department complied with  



the APA.  



         C.      Thomason Was Not Deprived Of Due Process.  



                 Thomason next argues that the Department violated her due process rights  



by depriving her of property and liberty interests without a pre-deprivation hearing.  She  



                                                                                                              

        37       648 P.2d 970, 977-78 (Alaska 1982).  



        38       Id.  at 977.  In Sisters of Providence we distinguished two cases in which  

we held an agency was required to promulgate procedural regulations :  Mukluk Freight  

Lines,  Inc.  v.  Nabors  Alaska  Drilling,  Inc. ,  516  P.2d  408  (Alaska  1973),  and  U.S.  

Smelting, Refining  & Mining Co. v. Loc.  Boundary Comm'n , 489 P.2d 140  (Alaska  

1971).  Existing law in both Mukluk and U.S. Smelting imposed an affirmative duty to  

promulgate a procedural regulation, whereas  no law imposed  that duty in  Sisters of  

Providence, 648 P.2d at 977.  

        39       Id. at 978.  



        40       Id. at 977-78.  



                                                    -14-                                                7741  


----------------------- Page 15-----------------------

also argues that the hearing she was provided was insufficient to provide due process  



because it was before an ALJ instead of the sanctions committee.   



                 1.      Thomason had a protected liberty interest in her reputation.  



                 The  superior  court  determined  that  Thomason  likely  had  a  property  



interest in her status as a Medicaid provider.  But it rejected Thomason 's argument that  



she was deprived of a liberty interest in her reputation because the termination of her  



provider status related to her professional performance, rather than her moral character.   



The court instead accepted the Department's assertion that the sanctions were unlikely  



to affect her employment prospects and "that reputation is not as important in the field  



of direct services."   



                 Thomason argues  that the court improperly relied on the  Department's  



unsupported claim that reputation did not matter in the field of direct services, and that  



it was error to find that she had no liberty interest in her reputation given the nature of  



the allegations against her and the fact she was being terminated from the program due  



to those allegations.    The Department  argues  that  the  allegations applied  only to her  



"professional responsibilities, not her personal character," because the Department did  



not "flatly call her a dishonest person" in its notice of termination, but left it "for others  



to decide whether these allegations point toward any general dishonesty."   



                 We  have  recognized  reputational   harm  implicating  constitutionally- 



protected  liberty  interests  in  a  number  of  contexts.    We  have  determined  these  



reputational  interests  are  infringed upon where a negative  government job evaluation  

"impugn[s]  [a  terminated  employee's]  honesty,  integrity,  or  morality."41    In  State,  



Department of Military and Veterans Affairs, Alaska National Guard v. Bowen, we held  



that a national guardsman's discharge for "misconduct" related to job responsibilities  



                                                                                                              

        41       Revelle v. Marston , 898 P.2d 917, 926 (Alaska 1995).  



                                                    -15-                                                7741  


----------------------- Page 16-----------------------

was  "sufficiently  stigmatizing  to  implicate  a  liberty  interest ."42    We  have  also  



recognized  that  dismissal  from  a  graduate  education  program  for  "unprofessional  



behavior" that "fell short of the standards for retention" would "sufficiently stigmatize[]  



a person's professional reputation in a chosen career field to constitute an infringement  

of  a  liberty  interest."43    And  in  McMillan  v.  Anchorage  Community  Hospital44  we  



observed  that  the  summary  termination  of  a  physician's  staff  privileges  based  on  



allegations that his "disruptive" and "abrasive" behavior affected the quality of patient  

care could create "a stigma of medical incompetence."45   The Ninth Circuit, too, has  



recognized   that   reputational   harm   can   implicate   a   liberty   interest   where   it   is  

accompanied by a tangible loss, such as the loss of a license.46  



                                                                                                                

         42      953 P.2d 888, 900-01 (Alaska 1998).  The Bowen  appellant was alleged  

to  have  "failed  to  timely  and  properly  respond  to  allegations  of  personal  financial  

irregularities" and to have mishandled a leave request.  Id. at 891-92.  We reasoned that  

"in  today's  sophisticated  marketplace,  it  is  reasonable  to  conclude  that  prospective  

employers understand the language and importance of [military discharge forms]."  Id .  

at 900-901.  

         43      Nickerson v. Univ. of Alaska Anchorage , 975 P.2d 46, 52 (Alaska 1999);  

see  also  Nichols  v.  Eckert,  504  P.2d  1359,  1364  (Alaska  1973)  (holding  for-cause  

dismissal  from  graduate  program  implicates  liberty  interest  because  it  can  have  

"adverse effect" on professional reputation).  

         44      646 P.2d 857, 864 (Alaska 1982).  



         45      Id.; see also Brandner v. Providence Health & Servs.- Washington, 394  

P.3d 581, 597 (Alaska 2017) (holding that hospital was required to give physician pre- 

termination hearing before terminating staff privilege for non-emergency reasons).  But  

see Ramsey v. City of Sand Point, 936 P.2d 126, 132-33 (Alaska 1997) (holding there  

was insufficient reputational harm to implicate liberty interest where police chief's at- 

will employment was terminated by city council following community accusations of  

excessive force).  

         46      See, e.g., Fikre v. Fed. Bureau of Investigation , 35 F.4th 762, 776 (9th Cir.  

2022) ("[A] plaintiff who has suffered reputational harm at the hands of the government  

may  assert  a  cognizable  liberty  interest  for  procedural  due  process  purposes  if  the  

plaintiff suffers stigma from governmental action plus alteration or extinguishment of  

  



                                                     -16-                                                 7741  


----------------------- Page 17-----------------------

                 Thomason's reputation was harmed by her termination from the Medicaid  



program, thereby implicating a protected liberty interest.  The Department determined  



her conduct warranted the loss of her status as a Medicaid provider, and took action to  



revoke that status.   Although the Department  argues  that it  did not  "flatly call her a  



dishonest person,"  one can infer that Thomason had committed some act or omission  

warranting      dismissal     from     a   position     of   trust.47     Termination       "impugn[ed]  



[Thomason's]  honesty,  integrity,  [and]  morality"  by  signaling  to  others  that  the  

Department terminated her from being a Medicaid provider for cause.48  We agree with  



Thomason that this reputational harm implicated her protected liberty interests.  



                 Thomason's  liberty  interest  thus  is  implicated  here  in  addition  to  her  



property  interest  in  her  provider  status.    We  next  consider  "whether  the  procedure  

afforded her was sufficient to meet due process dictates."49  



                 2.      Thomason received an adequate pre-deprivation hearing.  



                 Thomason  argues  that  her  procedural  due  process  rights  were  violated  



because  she  did  not  have  "the  opportunity  to  be  heard  by  the  decisionmaker  with  



discretion, before a decision  [was] made."   She argues that  ". . . due process requires  



                                                                                                              



'a right or status previously recognized by state law.' ") (quoting Humphries v. Cnty. of  

L.A., 554 F.3d 1170, 1185 (9th Cir. 2009) rev'd in part on other grounds, 562 U.S. 29  

(2010)).  

        47       See, e.g., Nichols , 504 P.2d at 1364.  We also address the superior court's  

conclusion  that  accusations  of  reporting  violations  that  "relate  to  [Thomason's]  

performance . . . as a Medicaid provider" "do not impose a stigma of moral turpitude".  

The circumstances that gave rise to this case exemplify the importance of character in  

the  field  of  direct  services -  Thomason  cares  for her  stepson who  is  disabled  and  

requires a high level of care.  We disagree with the assumption that a person's character  

is  irrelevant  in  an  occupation  whose  members  care  for  some  of  Alaska's  most  

vulnerable individuals.  

        48       Revelle v. Marston , 898 P.2d 917, 926 (Alaska 1995).  



        49       Patrick v. Mun. of Anchorage, Transp. Comm'n , 305 P.3d 292, 298-99  

(Alaska 2013).  



                                                    -17-                                                7741  


----------------------- Page 18-----------------------

[that]  the  Sanctions  Committee  [instead  of  the  ALJ]  hear  from  Ms.  Thomason."   



Thomason also argues the Department's procedures were insufficient because notice of  



her impending termination was sent to each Medicaid recipient she cared for, interested  



state  agencies,  and  other  entities  as  required  by  regulation  before  she  received  a  

hearing.50    The Department  asserts  that the hearing before  the  ALJ was sufficient  to  



preserve Thomason's due process rights.   



                 Both the United States and Alaska constitutions provide that "[n]o person  

shall  be deprived of  life,  liberty,  or property,  without due  process  of  law."51    "Due  



process requires that any action involving deprivation of life, liberty or property by  



adjudication must be preceded by notice and opportunity for hearing appropriate to the  

nature of the case,"52 but "does not require any specific type of hearing."53  We use the  



test  set  forth  by  the  United  States  Supreme  Court  in  Mathews  v.  Eldridge,54  which  



requires balancing three factors to determine whether due process was provided :  



                 First, the private interest that will be affected by the official  

                 action; second, the risk of an erroneous deprivation of such  

                 interest through the procedures used, and the probable value,  

                 if any, of additional or substitute procedural safeguards; and  

                 finally,  the  Government's  interest,  including  the  function  

                 involved and the fiscal and administrative burdens that the  



                                                                                                               

        50       Thomason also asserts, in a single sentence without citation to authority,  

that "this regulation is inherently unconstitutional."  An argument that is "contained in  

a single conclusory sentence, without citation to any authority" is inadequately briefed  

and we will not consider it.   Wagner v. Wagner, 218 P.3d 669, 678 (Alaska 2009).  

        51       Alaska Const. art. I, § 7; U.S. Const. amend. XIV, § 1.  



        52       Patrick, 305 P.3d at 299 (quoting Philip J. v. State, Dep't of Health & Soc.  

Servs., Off. of Child.'s Servs., 264 P.3d 842, 846 (Alaska 2011)).  

        53       Id.   



        54       See Native Vill. of Kwinhagak v. State, Dep't of Health & Soc. Servs., Off.  

of Child.'s Servs., 542 P.3d 1099, 1120 (Alaska 2020) (looking to Mathews v. Eldridge  

test to evaluate procedural due process  argument); see also Patrick, 305 P.3d at 299- 

301 (same).  



                                                    -18-                                                 7741  


----------------------- Page 19-----------------------

                 additional   or   substitute   procedural   requirement   would  

                 entail.[55]  



                 Thomason first argues that the hearing she received before the ALJ could  



not have satisfied due process because the ALJ was not the "actual decision maker[]."   



She  argues  that  due  process  demands  that  she  have  a  hearing  before  the  sanctions  



committee  as the final decisionmaker  -  but the cases she cites  do not support  this  

proposition.56    Rather  than  addressing  hearings  that  were  deficient  for  due  process  



purposes because presiding officers lacked discretion to render a determination in those  



cases,  the  cases  she  cites  involve  circumstances  where  parties  were  deprived  of  a  

protected interest before receiving any hearing at all,57 or lacked sufficient notice of an  



impending hearing affecting their protected interests.58   The discretion of those who  



preside over a hearing was not directly implicated in those cases.  



                 Thomason next argues that she did not receive a pre-deprivation hearing  



in this case because her reputation was damaged by the Department's September 1 letter  



stating that it would revoke her status as a Medicaid provider effective September 30.   



That letter was sent to her stepson, other individuals to whom Thomason provided care  



in the previous 12 months, and interested state agencies and professional organizations.   



Thomason  argues  that  the  letter's  negative  implications  as  to  her  reputation  are  as  



                                                                                                              

        55       Mathews v. Eldridge , 424 U.S. 319, 334-35 (1976).  



        56       Thomason cites Frontier Saloon, Inc. v. Alcoholic Beverage Control Bd. ,  

524 P.2d 657 (Alaska 1974); Brandner v. Providence Health & Servs.- Washington,  

394 P.3d 581  (Alaska 2017); and  City of Homer v. Campbell, 719 P.2d 683 (Alaska  

1986).  

        57       Frontier Saloon , 524 P.2d at 660 (rejecting argument that no hearing was  

required  because  Saloon  owner's  conviction  for  allowing  minor  on  premises  was  

sufficient to also adjudicate licensure termination based  on existence of conviction);  

Brandner, 394 P.3d at 588-90 (holding physician should have received hearing prior to  

summary revocation of surgical privileges).  

        58       City of Homer, 719 P.2d at 686 (affirming superior court finding that party  

lacked notice of hearing where deprivation occurred).  



                                                    -19-                                                7741  


----------------------- Page 20-----------------------

damaging  as  the  stigma  from  the  summary  revocation  of  hospital  privileges  in  

Brandner,59 or the discharge from the National Guard at issue in Bowen .60   



                 Thomason  analogizes  the  September  1  letter  from  the  Division  to  the  



summary loss of status in Brandner and Bowen, arguing that her reputation was harmed  



upon dissemination of that letter, which occurred prior to her October 9 hearing before  



the ALJ.    But there is a key distinction between Thomason's case and  the  cases she  



cites.  We determined the stigma had attached in those cases due to the implications  



flowing  from  the  actual  loss  in  status  and  the  stated  reasons  for  that  loss  -  not  

communications indicating that such a loss was to occur in the future.61  



                 Thomason also argues that she was deprived of the property interest in her  



Medicaid provider status as of September 30, based on the letter's indication that the  



sanction  would  come  into  effect  on  that  day.    She  argues  that  this  constituted  an  



additional  deprivation  before  a  hearing.    But  Thomason  appealed  the  sanction,  and  



controlling  regulations  therefore  stayed  the  revocation  of  her  status  until  the  ALJ's  

decision became final.62  The ALJ's decision was issued in February 2021, well after  



Thomason's hearing in October 2020.   



                                                                                                              

        59       Brandner  v.  Providence  Health  &  Servs.- Washington,  394  P.3d  581,  

589-90 (Alaska 2017).  

        60       State, Dep't of Mil. and Veterans Aff's, Alaska Nat'l Guard v. Bowen, 953  

P.2d 888, 900-01 (Alaska 1998).  

        61       See Bowen, 953 P.2d at 900-01; Brandner, 394 P.3d at 589-90.  The Ninth  

Circuit's requirements to show a party had suffered reputational harm implicating their  

due process rights bolster our recognition of this important distinction.  Though we do  

not today adopt its formulation, the Ninth Circuit requires plaintiff s to  show that they  

"suffer[ed] stigma from governmental action plus alteration or extinguishment" of a  

right or status recognized by state law.  Fikre v. Fed. Bureau of Investigation , 35 F.4th  

762, 776 (9th Cir. 2022).  

        62       See 7 AAC 105.440(b) ("The proposed sanction is effective 30 days after  

the date on the notice if the provider does not request an appeal . . . or 30 days after the  

date of the final administrative appeal decision upholding the proposed sanction.").  



                                                    -20-                                                7741  


----------------------- Page 21-----------------------

                 Because Thomason has protected interests in her Medicaid provider status  



and  in  her reputation,  she  was  "entitled  to some  form of hearing  appropriate  to  the  



circumstances  before  revocation,  absent  an  emergency  situation  or  a  public  safety  

concern requiring summary action."63   Although there is an  important  governmental  



interest in ensuring Medicaid beneficiaries receive the care to which they are entitled ,  



the record does not reflect that  Thomason posed an immediate threat  to her stepson.   



Some  level  of  review  was  therefore  necessary  before  the  Department  revoked  her  

provider status.64  



                 We conclude the procedures used by the Division were adequate to protect  



Thomason's rights.   On the one hand,  it is possible that conducting a full evidentiary  



hearing  prior  to  notifying  interested  individuals  that  a  Medicaid  provider  has  been  



sanctioned could prevent an erroneous deprivation of property or liberty interests.  On  



the  other  hand,  the  "probable  value"  of  conducting  such  a  hearing  is  small.    The  



sanctioning decision in this case was preceded by months of investigation, including an  



interview between Thomason and a Department investigator in September 2018.  And  



requiring a full evidentiary hearing prior to even notifying a Medicaid recipient that a  



PCA could no longer provide care would limit the Department's ability to ensure that  



recipients are being cared for.  



                 If a recipient were not informed of the possible need to seek another PCA  



before learning that  another PCA was necessary, the recipient could be left without a  



care provider.  A recipient surprised by a PCA's sudden unavailability might be unable  



to find friends or family to fill in until another PCA could begin to provide care.  Or a  



care  agency,  suddenly  informed  that  its  employee  could  no  longer  serve  as  a  PCA  



effective immediately, might be unable to ensure that PCA's clients' needs were met.   



                                                                                                              

        63       Patrick v. Mun. of Anchorage, Anchorage Transp. Comm'n , 305 P.3d 292,  

299 (Alaska 2013) (internal citations and emphasis omitted).  

        64       See id.  



                                                    -21-                                                7741  


----------------------- Page 22-----------------------

The State has a strong interest in ensuring that interested parties are informed of a given  



PCA's inability to work as a PCA beyond a certain date.  



                 Thomason's  case  is  akin  to  Patrick  v.  Municipality  of  Anchorage,  

Anchorage Transportation Commission .65  In Patrick, the plaintiff's chauffeur's license  



was revoked by the Anchorage Transportation Commission because it believed she had  



accumulated sufficient violations to be deemed  a "chronic violator"; Patrick disputed  



the factual basis of that conclusion,  and requested an administrative hearing before  a  

hearing officer.66  We concluded that she was afforded due process because she had the  



opportunity to rebut the evidence against her and present  evidence in support of her  



own  case  before  the  hearing  officer,  even  if  the  officer  was  not  a  member  of  the  

commission with final authority.67  Here Thomason had an OAH hearing before an ALJ  



at  which  she  was  able  to  present  her  own  evidence,  call  witnesses,  and  rebut  the  



evidence against her.  Because Thomason received  an adequate hearing in which she  



was able to represent her own interests before the revocation of her Medicaid provider  



status, we conclude the Department did not violate her due process rights.  



        D.       Substantial  Evidence   Supports  The  Department's  Findings  And  

                 Decision.  



                 Lastly  Thomason challenges the sufficiency of the evidence supporting  



the Department's  decision to impose sanctions on her and the propriety of imposing  



sanctions at all.  She argues first that the Department's findings were not supported by  



the evidence.  She next argues that the decision to terminate her status was not justified  



by the eight factors listed in the relevant regulation.  The superior court concluded that  



                                                                                                              

         65      305 P.3d 292 (Alaska 2013).  



         66      See id. at 295-96.  



         67      See id. at 299.  



                                                    -22-                                                7741  


----------------------- Page 23-----------------------

the administrative decision was supported by substantial evidence in the record.68   It  



also  concluded  that  termination  was  appropriate,  finding  that  the  testimony  at  trial  



"reflect[ed] that the committee considered each regulatory factor."   



                 We   review   factual   findings   in   an   administrative   appeal  under   the  



substantial evidence standard, which is satisfied when there is "such relevant evidence  

as a reasonable mind might accept as adequate to support [the agency's] conclusion."69   



"We  determine  only  whether  such  evidence  exists  and  do  not  choose  between  

competing  inferences  or  evaluate  the  strength  of  the  evidence."70    And  "[w]hen  



reviewing whether an administrative decision was reasonable we ask  'whether there  



was  a  prejudicial  abuse  of  discretion, '  which  we  will  find  'if  the  agency  has  not  



proceeded in the manner required by law, the order or decision is not supported by the  

findings, or the findings are not supported by the evidence.' "71  



                                                                                                             

        68       The Department determined that evidence existed to impose sanctions on  

Thomason on six  different  grounds under 7 AAC 105.400.    See  7 AAC 105.400(1)  

("presenting or causing to be presented for payment any false or  fraudulent claim for  

services or supplies"); (6) ("engaging in a course of conduct or performing an act the  

department  considers  deceptive  or  abusive  of  the  Medicaid  program   . . .");  (7)  

("breaching the terms of the Medicaid provider agreement or failure to comply with the  

terms of the provider certification on the Medicaid claims form"); (10) ("violating any  

provision of AS 47.07 or any regulation adopted under it"); (38) ("failing to perform an  

act that is within an individual's competence and training that is necessary to prevent  

harm or an increase in the risk of harm to a recipient"); and (41) ("failing to maintain  

for each recipient, as required under 7 AAC 105.230 or another provision of 7 AAC  

105-7 AAC 160, a contemporaneous and accurate record of the services provided").  

        69      French v. Alaska Oil & Gas Conservation Comm'n , 498 P.3d 1026, 1028  

(Alaska 2021) (alterations in original) (quoting Shea v. State, Dep't of Admin., Div. of  

Ret. & Benefits, 267 P.3d 624, 630 (Alaska 2011)).  

        70      Patrick, 305 P.3d at 297 (quoting Lopez v. Adm'r, Pub. Emps.' Ret. Sys. ,  

20 P.3d 568, 570 (Alaska 2001)).  

        71      Fantasies on 5th Ave., LLC v. Alcoholic Beverage Control Bd. , 446 P.3d  

360, 367 (Alaska 2019) (citing AS 44.62.750(b)(3)).  



                                                   -23-                                                7741  


----------------------- Page 24-----------------------

                 The  Department's  first  two  allegations  against  Thomason  are  that  she  



"submitted timesheets for  [personal care] services not provided on multiple occasions  



between December 2017 and May 2018" and "submitted services notes and timesheets  



for   Day   Habilitation   services   not   provided   in   accordance   with   [conditions   of  



participation] and regulations ."  Thomason does not deny that her timesheets may have  



been inaccurate; she instead argues that the Department failed to prove that "she did not  



provide  the  services  at  all."    But  the  Department  did  not  need  to  prove  Thomason  



provided no care at all - only that the records she submitted included timekeeping for  

care that was not actually provided, in violation of agency rules and regulations.72  The  



record contains substantial evidence, including Thomason's own concession, to support  



the conclusion that she submitted inaccurate records indicating that certain services had  



been provided when they were not.   



                 The Department's third allegation is that Thomason "violated the terms of  



her Personal Care Agreement" because she failed to report to the Department that she  



had  been  charged  with  a  felony,  as  required  by  that  agreement,  and  had  provided  



inaccurate billings.  Thomason does not deny that she failed to notify the Department  



of the pending felony charge, as required by her personal care agreement.   She argues  



instead that "[e]ven if she failed to do so, this was an inconsequential error at most"  



because the Department was already investigating her.  But 7 AAC 105.400 expressly  



provides  that  "[b]reaching  the  terms  of  the  Medicaid  provider  agreement"  is  a  

sanctionable offense.73  This finding is supported by substantial evidence.  



                 The Department's fourth allegation against Thomason is that  she "failed  



to notify the personal care provider agency that she had been charged with a barrier  



                                                                                                             

        72      See 7 AAC 105.400(7, 41).  



        73       7 AAC 105.400(7).  



                                                   -24-                                                7741  


----------------------- Page 25-----------------------

crime"  in violation of regulation.74    In her written argument  to the ALJ,  Thomason  



asserted she had informed Hearts and Hands that she had been charged with a barrier  



crime, but  a Department employee testified that Hearts and Hands was not informed.   



The ALJ ultimately found that Thomason did not notify Hearts and Hands.  "When we  



review  factual  findings  in  an  administrative   appeal  we  do  not  choose  between  

competing inferences or evaluate the strength of the evidence."75  Substantial evidence  



supported the ALJ's conclusion that Thomason failed to notify Hearts and Hands that  



she had been charged with a barrier crime.  



                 Thomason's   final   argument   is   that   the   sanctions   imposed   by   the  



Department were inappropriate.  She argues the sanctions committee did not "consider  



the sanctions in any meaningful manner."    We review this discretionary decision to  



impose sanctions  under the reasonable basis standard  and  ask "whether there was a  

prejudicial abuse of discretion ."76  



                 7  Alaska  Administrative  Code   105.420  requires  the  Department  to  

consider  eight  factors  in  selecting  which  sanction,  if  any,  to  impose.77    Thomason  



challenges the Department's weighing of these factors in making its sanctions decision.   



But the regulation requires that the enumerated factors be considered in the deliberative  



                                                                                                              

        74       See  7  AAC  125.120(g)(1).    That  provision  in  turn  references  7  AAC  

10.905, which lists barrier crimes, including Medical Assistance Fraud.    See  7 AAC  

10.905(c)(11).  

        75       Patrick, 305 P.3d at 297.  



        76       Fantasies on 5th Ave., 446 P.3d at 367.  See AS 44.62.570(b)(3).  



        77       See 7 AAC  105.420(b)(1)-(8).   These  factors are "(1) seriousness of the  

offense; (2) extent of violations; (3) history of prior violations; (4) prior imposition of  

sanctions; (5) prior provision of provider education; (6) provider willingness to obey  

program rules; (7) whether a lesser sanction will be sufficient to remedy the problem;  

and (8) actions taken or recommended by peer-review groups or licensing boards."  



                                                    -25-                                                7741  


----------------------- Page 26-----------------------

process, not that the factors be weighed in a particular manner.78  The record supports  



that the committee accounted for each factor in deciding to impose sanctions.  Although  



Thomason also  contends  that the  factual circumstances do not support the sanctions,  



that argument depends upon our agreement that there was not substantial evidence to  



support the Department's sanctioning decision.  But substantial evidence supported the  



findings  that  Thomason's  conduct  was  sanctionable.    We  therefore  agree  with  the  



superior court that substantial evidence  supported the Department's findings and that  



the sanctions were not unreasonable.  



       CONCLUSION  



               The superior court's decision is AFFIRMED.  



       78     Id.  ("The department will consider the following  factors in determining  

the sanction to be imposed . . . .").  



                                             -26-                                         7741  

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