April 5, 2011
On March 31, alongside related proposed regulations and guidelines from
several other federal regulatory agencies, the IRS issued Notice 2011-20 to
solicit public commentary on the application of current law to tax-exempt
organizations participating in the Medicare Shared Savings Program (MSSP)
through accountable care organizations (ACOs). Rather than proposing new
regulations, the IRS is soliciting comments from the public to assess the impact
of ACO participation on tax-exempt status, private benefit and unrelated
business income. In addition, the IRS is soliciting comments on whether
additional guidance is needed for other types of shared savings arrangements
with commercial payors (aside from the MSSP).
A few key observations can be made about the IRS' initial comments on ACOs:
- No Private Inurement or Benefit in Certain Situations. Due to CMS
oversight of the MSSP, participation in the MSSP through an ACO generally
would not result in prohibited inurement or impermissible private benefit
where:
- The terms of the tax-exempt organization's participation
(including its share of MSSP payments) are set forth in advance in
writing and negotiated at arm's length.
- CMS has accepted the ACO into the MSSP.
- The tax-exempt entity's share of economic benefits from the ACO
is proportional to the benefits or contributions provided to the ACO
by the tax-exempt entity. If the tax exempt entity receives an
ownership interest in the ACO, the amount of its capital
contributions must be proportional and equal in value to its
ownership interest and distributions must be made in proportion to
ownership interests.
- The tax-exempt entity's share of the ACO's losses doesn't exceed
its share of the economic benefits.
- All transactions among the tax-exempt entity and the ACO (or its
participants) must be fair market value.
- Unrelated Buisiness Income Tax. Absent any inurement or private
benefit, participation in an ACO would be substantially related to the
charitable purpose of "lessening the burdens of government," so long as the
ACO is satisfying CMS' participation requirements. This is due in part to
the fact that the MSSP was conceived as a way to help reduce governmental
costs (and increase quality) associated with the Medicare program. As a
result, ACO participation in the MSSP generally shouldn't generate UBIT for
its tax-exempt stakeholders.
- ACO Activities Unrelated to MSSP. The more difficult question
involves ACO's that conduct activities outside the context of the MSSP. The
IRS seems to indicate that some of these activities will not be related to
charitable activities (e.g., negotiating with private payors on behalf of
unrelated parties). Other activities, such as participating in shared
savings arrangements with Medicaid, could be determined to further or be
substantially related to a charitable purpose. In this Notice, the IRS does
not specifically identify which types of activities would or would not be
deemed to further charitable purposes. As a result, it is still unclear as
to which non-MSSP activities could result in threats to an organization's
tax exempt status or UBIT. The IRS is soliciting comments on this issue in
particular. They have asked that comments address the following: (1)
description of activities a tax-exempt entity might participate in through
an ACO; (2) the rationale whereby participation in non-MSSP activities might
further exempt purposes; (3) what criteria, requirements and safeguards
would ensure furtherance of exempt purposes (given the absence of the types
of safeguards that are present in MSSP, such as quality standards and
oversight and monitoring).
- Charitable Purposes. While the IRS did not identify which
activities would or would not be deemed to further charitable purposes, it
did cite two important precedents that have guided IRS positions in the
past. In Revenue Ruling 98-15, the IRS recognized that the activities of a
limited liability company (LLC) are considered to be the activities of a
nonprofit organization that is an owner of the LLC when evaluating whether
the nonprofit organization is operated exclusively for tax-exempt purposes
within the meaning of section 501(c)(3). Apparently, the IRS will review
ACOs in the same manner. Similarly, the IRS cited Revenue Ruling 2004-51 for
the proposition that the activities of an LLC treated as a partnership for
federal tax purposes will be attributed to a tax-exempt entity for the
purpose of determining whether the tax-exempt organization was engaged in an
unrelated trade or business. Since these two revenue rulings were cited in
the published Notice, it is a signal that the IRS may not be backing off of
its general approach to joint ventures in the ACO context.