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The Office of Developmental Programs (ODP) has shared ODPANN 25-080. The Temple University Harrisburg Certified Investigator Program and ODP will be facilitating Forums for Certified Investigators (CI) and others involved in the incident investigation process.

The next session date and time is Friday, September 12, 2025, from 10:00 am – 11:30 am. The topic will be “Death Investigation Discussion.”

Please view the announcement for registration details as well as information on how to submit questions for discussion.

The field of health and human services is shifting at a rapid pace, and it is vital for providers, advocates, and legal experts to remain up-to-date on policy as well as involved in the advocacy process. Among the over sixty workshops available, the RCPA 2025 Annual Conference Strive to Thrive will be holding several workshops tackling the federal landscape. Register today and join us at the Hershey Lodge September 9 – 12, 2025, to gain access to these informative workshops, which include:

  • National Outlook: The Turbulent Landscape of 2025/26
  • How To Survive a Payer Billing Audit — Straight From an Auditor’s Mouth
  • Expanding Revenue Beyond Medicaid: New Funding Strategies for I/DD Providers
  • Building Sustainable Community Advisory Councils for Impactful Legislative Advocacy

At a local level, the RCPA Conference is working with the Department of Human Services to bring information straight to attendees, with workshops such as:

  • State of the State
  • Office of Developmental Programs Policy Updates and Forecast for 2026
  • PA Navigate: Connecting Pennsylvanians to Needed Social Services
  • Updates and Discussion With the Office of Long-Term Living
  • Behavioral Health Treatment in Pennsylvania: Where We Are, Where We Are Going

Early bird registration rates end this Friday, August 8, so don’t delay in reserving your spot for these workshops and more! View our Registration Brochure for complete details of the conference schedule and speakers, and be sure to check the RCPA Conference website regularly for details and updates to the schedule, registration, and sponsors/exhibitors. Register today!

Opportunities for sponsorships and advertising are still available, but EXHIBIT BOOTHS ARE OFFICIALLY SOLD OUT! We are grateful to all our sponsors and exhibitors who help make the conference happen. If your organization is interested in sponsoring or advertising at our conference, all information is available in our Sponsor, Exhibit, and Advertise Brochure. Contact Carol Ferenz, Conference Coordinator, for more details.

Thank you to our Sponsors and Exhibitors! We are grateful for your support!

H.R. 1 created a $50 billion fund called the Rural Health Transformation program in an attempt to offset the losses that rural health providers will experience associated with the other devastating cuts to health care in the legislation.

Each state must complete a one-time application for the five-year program to be reviewed by CMS. Many aspects of the application are still undecided, including the submission period, due date, state entity that must submit the application, and the form of the application. The RHTP application must include a plan to describe how the state would use the funds to:

  • Improve access to hospitals and other providers for rural residents;
  • Improve health care outcomes of rural residents;
  • Prioritize the use of new and emerging technologies that emphasize prevention and chronic disease management;
  • Initiate, foster, and strengthen local and regional strategic partnerships between rural hospitals and other providers to promote quality improvement, increase financial stability, maximize economies of scale, and share best practices;
  • Recruit and retain clinicians,
  • Prioritize data and technology driven solutions that help rural providers furnish health care services as close to the patient’s home as possible;
  • Outline strategies to manage long-term financial solvency and operating models of rural hospitals; and
  • Identify specific causes that are driving standalone rural hospitals to close, convert, or reduce service lines.

The funds will be distributed between 2026 and 2030, allotting $10 billion each year. $25 billion of this fund will be allocated equally among all states with an approved application by CMS. Assuming that all fifty states are approved, each state will receive a minimum of $100 million per year for five years. The other $25 billion will be distributed to states with an approved application in an amount determined by CMS based upon the state’s rural population, proportion of healthcare facilities in rural areas, and the situation of hospitals that serve a high proportion of low-income patients.

The bill lists several allowable uses of the PHTP funds:

  • Promoting evidence-based, measurable interventions to improve prevention and chronic disease management;
  • Providing payments to health care providers for the provision of health care items or services as specified by CMS;
  • Promoting consumer-facing, technology-driven solutions for the prevention and management of chronic diseases;
  • Providing training and technical assistance for the development and adoption of technology-enables solutions that improve care delivery in rural hospitals, including remote monitoring, robotics, artificial intelligence, and other advanced technologies;
  • Recruiting and retaining clinical workforce talent to rural areas, with commitments to serve rural communities for a minimum of five years;
  • Providing technical assistance, software, and hardware for significant information technology advances designed to improve efficiency, enhance cybersecurity capability development, and improve patient health outcomes;
  • Assisting rural communities to right-size their healthcare delivery systems by identifying needed preventative, ambulatory, pre-hospital, emergency, acute inpatient care, outpatient care, and post-acute care service lines;
  • Supporting access to opioid use disorder treatment services, other substance use disorder treatment services, and mental health services;
  • Developing projects that support innovative models of care that include value-based care arrangements and alternative payment models as appropriate; and
  • Additional uses designed to promote sustainable access to high quality rural health care services, as determined by the Administrator.

RCPA will continue to share information on the program and applications as it becomes available. Contact Emma Sharp with any questions.

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The Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) finalized the fiscal year (FY) 2026 inpatient rehabilitation facility (IRF) payment rule and published it in today’s Federal Register.

The final rule is a fairly straightforward payment and coverage rule, similar to the April 2025 proposed rule. The payment and IRF Quality Reporting Program (IRF QRP) updates are outlined below.

Payment: CMS expects an aggregate increase of $340 million in payments to IRFs across the PPS. This reflects an increase of approximately 2.6% in estimated payments, including all relevant adjustments.

Quality Reporting Program (QRP):

  • CMS finalized the removal of two quality measures: (1) the COVID-19 Vaccination Coverage among Healthcare Personnel (HCP) measure, beginning with the FY 2026 IRF QRP, and (2) the COVID-19 Vaccine: Percent of Patients/Residents Who Are Up to Date measure, beginning with the FY 2028 IRF QRP. IRFs will continue to have the COVID-19 Vaccine: Percent of Patients/Residents Who Are Up to Date measure data collection item in the IRF-PAI until October 1, 2026, with CMS making the data collection voluntary and removing Q4 2025 data for this measure from the FY 2027 IRF QRP Compliance Determinations. CMS took similar action in other recently finalized payment rules. CMS also finalized their proposals to end the public display of these measures following the September 2025 Care Compare refresh.
  • CMS finalized the removal of four Standardized Patient Assessment Data Elements (SPADEs) under the Social Determinant of Health (SDOH) category with the FY 2028 IRF QRP, specifically: Living Situation (R0310), Food (R0320A and R0320B), and Utilities (R0330).
  • CMS finalized its procedural and review-focused changes to the IRF QRP reconsideration process. First, CMS will permit IRFs to request, and CMS to grant, an extension to file a request for reconsideration of a non-compliance determination if, during the 30-day period to request a reconsideration, the IRF was affected by an extraordinary circumstance beyond the control of the IRF (for example, a natural or man-made disaster). Second, CMS is finalizing its proposed updates to the bases on which CMS can grant a reconsideration request, providing that CMS will grant a timely request for reconsideration, and reverse an initial finding of non-compliance, only if CMS determines that the IRF was in full compliance with the IRF QRP requirements for the applicable program year.
  • CMS noted that it received extensive feedback on its Requests for Information (RFI) in four separate domains: (1) future measure concepts for the IRF QRP; (2) potential revisions to the IRF Patient Assessment Instrument (IRF-PAI); (3) potential revisions to the data submission deadlines for assessment data collected for the IRF QRP; and (4) advancing digital quality measurement in IRFs.

Requests for Information:
The rule included four dedicated Requests for Information (RFI) related to the IRF QRP and IRF-PAI. The final rule summarized the comments they received on these topics but did not offer any commentary on what CMS plans to do in future work in these areas.

The Office of Developmental Programs (ODP) has shared ODPANN 25-079. New live case study sessions for the Administrative Review (AR) course are now available at the following dates and times:

  • Monday, November 24, 2025, from 1:00 pm – 4:00 pm
  • Wednesday, February 11, 2026, from 9:00 am – 12:00 pm

Please send any questions regarding the AR course electronically. View the announcement for additional information and details.

The Office of Developmental Programs (ODP) has shared ODPANN 25-078. This communication provides information on new 2025 QM Certification class dates and registration information.

Registration opens August 5. Visit MyODP to register. Class dates are:

  • September 10 – 11
  • September 24 – 25
  • October 8 – 9
  • October 22 – 23
  • November 5 – 6
  • November 19 – 20
  • December 10 – 11

Please view the announcement for additional information and details.

The Office of Developmental Programs (ODP) has shared a reissued version of ODPANN 25-028. This announcement has been reissued to clarify the Office of Vocational Rehabilitation’s (OVR) Memo released on March 15, 2025, regarding the Order of Selection and the OVR waiting list for services impacts referral requirements and access to ODP-funded employment services. The name of the Individuals with a Non-Significant Disability (NSD) priority category. On July 1, 2025, the NSD category was renamed to Individual with a Disability (D). The change in the priority category name has not affected the relevant eligibility criteria for the D, formerly NSD, category.

Please view the announcement for updated information and details. Changes within the communication are in red.

Wednesday, August 13, 2025
10:00 am – 11:30 am
Register Here

This webinar is a continuation of the Performance-Based Contracting (PBC) for Supports Coordination Organizations (SCO) general information series. The webinar will provide details on specific performance standards for Performance-Based Contracting for SCOs. Each session will cover the required reporting, data source, data collection, and guidance for each performance standard. These sessions are each unique in content and build upon one another. SCO staff are encouraged to attend all four sessions. All sessions will be recorded and made available on MyODP.