- Docket No.
- 1:21-cv-5267
- District Court
- Georgia Northern
Goal
- Invalidate all or part of a federal regulation
- Stop the government from enforcing the statute or regulation
Issues
Litigation Content
Why this Matters
The plaintiffs argue that regulations to impose guardrails on the No Surprises Act’s arbitration process—a process used to resolve payment disputes for surprise out-of-network bills between payers and out-of-network health care providers—are invalid under the Administrative Procedure Act. If federal agencies cannot set reasonable guidelines for arbitrators, certain providers could be more likely to try to abuse this process to obtain higher payments, making the arbitration process more likely to become inflationary, and leading to higher health care costs and premiums.
Potential Impact
The inability to impose reasonable guardrails for the No Surprises Act’s arbitration process could lead to abuses of the process and higher health care costs and premiums.
News And Analysis (1)
17 Major Filings
- NOTICE of Voluntary Dismissal (Sep 13, 2022)
- ORDER Granting Motion to Stay (Jul 14, 2022)
- WITHDRAWAL of Motion for Prelim Inj (Jul 14, 2022)
- MOTION to Stay (Jul 13, 2022)
- MOTION to Stay (Jun 13, 2022)
- ORDER Granting Motion to Stay (Jun 13, 2022)
- ORDER Granting Motion to Stay (May 2, 2022)
- MOTION to Stay (Apr 28, 2022)
- ORDER Granting Motion to Stay (Mar 2, 2022)
- MOTION to Stay (Mar 1, 2022)
- ORDER Granting Consent Motion (Feb 25, 2022)
- CONSENT MOTION to Relieve Obligation to Answer Complaint (Feb 24, 2022)
- ORDER Granting Leave to File AMICUS Brief Emergency Department (Feb 9, 2022)
- AMICUS BRIEF Emergency Department Practice (Feb 4, 2022)
- MOTION for Prelim Injunction or SJ (Jan 28, 2022)
- STANDING ORDER (Jan 4, 2022)
- COMPLAINT (Dec 23, 2021)