Order 2023
Order 2023
Order 2023
Department of State
Administrative Procedures Division
312 Rosa L. Parks Avenue
8th Floor, William R. Snodgrass Tower
Nashville, Tennessee 37243-1102
Phone: (615) 741-7008/Fax: (615) 741-4472
June 8, 2023
Enclosed is an Initial Order, including a Notice of Appeal Procedures, rendered in this case.
Enclosure(s)
BEFORE THE TENNESSEE HEALTH FACILITIES COMMISSION
v.
and
INITIAL ORDER
This contested case was heard de novo in Nashville, Tennessee, on December 5-9, 12, 15-
16, and 19-20, 2022, before Administrative Judge Claudia Padfield, assigned by the Tennessee
Secretary of State, Administrative Procedures Division (APD), to sit on behalf of the Tennessee
Health Facilities Commission. The hearing addressed the allegations contained in the NOTICE OF
HEARING filed on January 13, 2022, pertaining to the application for a certificate of need (“CON”)
filed by Vanderbilt University Medical Center d/b/a Vanderbilt Rutherford Hospital (“VRH”) on
October 1, 2021, which was approved by the Health Facilities Commission1 (“HFC”) on December
15, 2021. Petitioner, Saint Thomas Rutherford Hospital (“STRH”), was represented by attorneys
1Pursuant to Public Chapter 1119, the Tennessee Health Services and Development Agency was renamed as of July
1, 2022, to the Tennessee Health Facilities Commission. For consistency, the agency shall be referred to as the current
name regardless of when the agency’s action occurred.
Warren L. Gooch, John E. Winters, Betsy Beck, and Bryce E. Fitzgerald. Petitioner, TriStar
William Scales, Hilary Dennen, and Diamond Stewart. Petitioner, Williamson Medical Center
(“WMC”), was represented by attorneys William West, Lindsay Ray, and Abby Nix. General
represented by attorneys Dan H. Elrod, G. Brian Jackson, Travis Swearingen, and C.E. Hunter
Brush.
At the close of the hearing, multiple post-hearing deadlines were set for the filing of the
following: the hearing transcript, counter designations of depositions, objections to the counter
designations, redacted and condensed deposition transcripts, proposed findings of fact and
conclusions of law, and post-hearing briefs. As such, the RECORD closed on April 11, 2023.
Pursuant to TENN. CODE ANN. § 68-11-1610(d), the INITIAL ORDER must be entered by June 12,
2023.
Based on the review of the testimony, exhibits, and the entire record, it is determined that
Petitioner have met their burden of proof to show that the application for the certificate of need
does not mee the relevant statutory and regulatory requirements. According, VRH’s application
At the hearing, 25 witnesses provided live testimony. A video deposition of one witness
was submitted in lieu of live testimony by agreement of the parties. One hundred ninety-six
exhibits were entered into evidence. Six documents were marked for identification purposes only
as part of an offer of proof. Sixty-eight condensed and redacted deposition transcripts and four
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FINDINGS OF FACT
1. In 2020, VRH applied with HFC for a CON application (No. CN2004-012) to
establish a 48-bed full-service hospital in Murfreesboro, Rutherford County, Tennessee. The CON
application also included six neonatal intensive care unit (NICU) bassinets.
2020. Also considered by HFC, on that same date, was the CON application submitted by STRH
to open a community hospital, Saint Thomas Rutherford Westlawn Hospital. HFC considered
both CON applications simultaneously due to the nearly identical locations, overlapping services,
3. At the August 26, 2020, meeting, by a 4-2 vote, VRH’s CON application was
denied by HFC. At the same meeting, HFC approved the Saint Thomas Westlawn Hospital’s CON
application.
4. VRH timely appealed HFC’s denial of the application, which contested case was
assigned a case number of 25.00-203133J by the Administrative Procedures Division. Per the
on November 4, 2020, WMC, StoneCrest, and STRH, along with two other Saint Thomas
October 7, 2021. An ORDER OF NONSUIT AND DISMISSAL was issued by Administrative Judge
MOTION FOR COSTS and an ORDER DENYING INTERVENORS’ MOTION TO MODIFY AND EXTEND
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7. HFC filed a NOTICE OF PETITIONS FOR JUDICIAL REVIEW with APD on June 9, 2022.
A certified technical record was provided by APD on June 15, 2022. To date, no further filings
8. The Tennessee Health Services and Planning Act of 2021 became effective after
VRH’s first CON was denied. Among other changes, the CON requirement for a hospital to add
acute care beds to an existing facility was eliminated. Therefore, an existing hospital may add
such beds without having to show a need for the same beds. The policy provision of the statute
now requires that the establishment of healthcare facilities must promote access to necessary, high-
9. While the first appeal was pending, VRH submitted a second application for a CON
application (No. CN2109-026) on October 1, 2021. The second application was for a 42-bed
10. HFC considered the second application at the Commission meeting held on
December 15, 2021. At that same meeting, by a vote of 5-1, HFC approved VRH’s CON No.
CN2109-026.
Davidson County, Tennessee. VUMC’s main campus consists of Vanderbilt University Hospital,
Monroe Carell Jr. Children’s Hospital Vanderbilt (MCJCHV), Vanderbilt Psychiatric Hospital,
and Vanderbilt Stallworth Rehabilitation Hospital. VUMC’s main campus is a tertiary2 and
quaternary3 medical center with 1,175 licensed beds for the relevant period. VUMC also owns
2 Tertiary care is highly specialized medical care. Tertiary care is typically provided over an extended period of time.
It involves advanced and complex diagnostics, procedures, and treatments that are performed by medical personnel in
facilities with highly specialized equipment.
3 Quaternary care is an extension of tertiary care but is even more specialized.
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Vanderbilt Wilson County Hospital, Vanderbilt Bedford Hospital, and Vanderbilt Tullahoma-
Harton Hospital.
12. The proposed location for VUMC’s VRH CON No. CN2109-026 is at the southeast
intersection of Veterans Parkway and I-840, off I-24, on 80 acres of land. The site is approximately
six miles from the Williamson County/Rutherford County border on the west side of Rutherford
County. The proposed facility would be an acute care, community hospital and would include:
sits on eight acres. STRH is approximately six miles from VRH’s proposed location. At the time
of the hearing, STRH had 376 licensed beds. Due to the change in Tennessee’s CON law, STRH
does not need approval to add additional beds; at the time of the hearing, STRH was in the process
Tennessee, Saint Thomas Rutherford Westlawn. Westlawn is across the street and less than one
mile across Veterans Parkway from VRH’s proposed location. Both sites are at the same
intersection of I-840 and Veterans Parkway. Westlawn is a community hospital which has eight
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inpatient beds, eight emergency beds, outpatient services, imaging services, physician practices,
StoneCrest is located approximately 12 miles northwest of VRH’s proposed location off I-24. At
the time of the hearing, StoneCrest had 119 licensed beds, 115 of which were staffed.
Approximately 71% of StoneCrest’s patients come from Rutherford County. StoneCrest last
added beds in February 2020 when it added six intensive care unit beds. StoneCrest completed a
located approximately 20 miles from the proposed site of VRH. WMC is approximately two miles
from the Rutherford County/Williamson County border. WMC has 203 licensed beds, all of which
17. VUMC has greatly expanded its geographic reach by purchasing three preexisting
Middle Tennessee hospitals and also by establishing outpatient and walk-in clinics. VUMC
operates more than 800 outpatient clinics across Middle Tennessee in 180 locations. In Rutherford
County, VUMC operates retail health clinics in La Vergne, Smyrna, and Murfreesboro;
18. For pediatric services in Rutherford County, VUMC’s MCJCHV offers imaging,
urgent care facilities, subspecialty clinics, and a pediatric outpatient surgery center. The
4Westlawn opened on March 16, 2023. As stated above in the facts, this hospital’s CON application was approved
prior to the filing of the current appeal but is relevant to the current appeal to provide a complete and accurate overview
of hospital medical services in Rutherford County that had been approved at the time VRH filed the CON application
under consideration.
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nephrology, neurology, orthopedics and sports medicine, otolaryngology and audiology, plastic
surgery, pulmonology, rheumatology, and urology. The magnetic resonance imaging service area
19. VUMC’s Vanderbilt Wilson County Hospital has 245 licensed beds, 158 of which
are staffed. VUMC’s Vanderbilt Bedford Hospital has 49 licensed beds, 24 of which are staffed.
VUMC’s Vanderbilt Tullahoma-Harton Hospital has 135 licensed beds, 86 of which are staffed.
20. The occupancy rates of VUMC’s three existing community hospitals are between
21. VUMC, StoneCrest, STRH, and WMC all provide health care that meet appropriate
quality standards.
22. The proposed service area of VRH is Rutherford County. Approximately 75% of
23. Rutherford County has had and continues to have rapid population growth.
24. Despite the growth in population, Rutherford County residents have not had a
significant increase in the level of utilization of inpatient services. This is consistent with the
steady decline in length of hospitalization stays across the country and in Tennessee for general,
non-tertiary care.
25. The COVID-19 pandemic caused hospitals across Rutherford County and
throughout Tennessee to have occupancy rates that were skewed from typical years. The pandemic
also caused various spikes in hospital utilization. The data from 2020-2022 is challenging to
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analyze when looking at daily average census and hospital utilization rates. As such, the data from
26. The VRH CON application showed a surplus of 145 licensed beds in Rutherford
County. Since the filing of the application, a new community has opened, STRH has added and
is in the process of adding beds. Per the most recent data from the Tennessee Department of
27. STRH has treated emergency department patients in hallway beds. While not ideal,
evidence that any patient treated in a hallway bed at any of the facilities involved led to a lower
and intensive care unit diversion which means that STRH is not able to admit patients into the
hospital because there are no beds available. STRH has been unable to transfer adult patients to
VUMC’s main campus because VUMC was likewise on diversion. As such, area physicians have
29. STRH has an average inpatient occupancy rate of 80%. STRH has not enacted
30. At times, but especially during COVID-19 surges, all area hospitals have had to
board patients in the emergency departments due to lack of available bed capacity in other hospital
rooms. The wait time to transfer to an available inpatient bed in a hospital has varied greatly. The
longer holds (24 or more hours) are typically due to psychiatric patients who are waiting to be
obstetrics, neuroscience, and cardiology. STRH has a NICU and is expanding that unit from 16 to
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22 beds. STRH has increased the provided services to become a more of a tertiary referral center
NICU, cardiology, orthopedics, pulmonology, critical care, diabetes, and oncology. StoneCrest
also offers outpatient services such as imaging, physical therapy, emergency department services,
and advanced wound care. StoneCrest has a dedicated pediatric emergency room.
33. StoneCrest has an average inpatient occupancy rate of less than 60%. While on
34. WMC has a partnership with MCJCHV whereby the eight-bed pediatric emergency
department, eight-bed NICU, and 16-bed pediatric inpatient unit at WMC are staffed by Vanderbilt
physicians. WMC provides the nurses for the pediatric units. Due to lack of need, WMC has plans
35. WMC’s MCJCHV-run pediatric unit has an inpatient daily average census of two
patients. The various pediatric units at WMC are underutilized and have capacity to admit all
lower acuity pediatric patients from Rutherford County and adjacent counties.
36. VRH proposes to have six dedicated pediatric beds. This is a duplicative service to
what MCJCHV pediatricians already offer at WMC.5 VRH does not plan to offer a NICU, any
37. STRH provides pediatric inpatient services. STRH does not have a separate
pediatric unit. It has six pediatric beds with nurses who have pediatric advanced life support
training certifications. STRH has had pediatric trained respiratory therapists.6 STRH has an
5 Dr. Brent Rosser, a pediatrician at Murfreesboro Medical Clinic, reluctantly testified that the VRH facility would
not offer any pediatric services that are not available at WMC.
6 It was unclear from the testimony at the hearing whether STRH currently had pediatric trained respiratory therapists
on staff.
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average daily census of pediatric patients of one. STRH has not had enough inpatient pediatric
38. The volume of non-critical care population at VUMC’s MCJCHV has decreased
10-15% over the last five years. Most pediatric care is provided on an outpatient basis. Half of
MCHCHV’s subspecialties are offered in Rutherford County at the various locations as outlined
above. The length of stay for non-critical care pediatric patients has declined both locally and
nationally.
39. VRH projected a daily average census for its pediatric unit of two patients for the
40. In the CON application, VRH represented to HFC that the average length of stay
41. Per Dr. Margaret Rush, President of MCJCHV, the actual anticipated average
42. WMC is adding 15 emergency department beds due, in part, to an increase in the
need for mental health services and the inability to transfer those patients from the emergency
44. VRH proposes to offer the following services: general medical and surgical, cardiac
catheterization, laboratory, and imaging. All of these services are offered at STRH, WMC, and
Health Needs Assessment every three years to help justify their not-for-profit tax status. STRH
and VUMC published a joint Rutherford County Health Needs Assessment in 2019. The report is
based on data, interviews, and surveys. The top three needs in Rutherford County in 2019 were
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addressing affordable housing and homelessness; social factors including education levels,
unemployment, crime, etc.; and health promotion and wellness. The need for an additional
46. The cardiac catheterization CON criteria utilize a weighted formula to measure the
existing capacity of cardiac catheterization labs in the proposed service area. Per the weighted
formula as established in the guidelines, need is presumed to exist for additional cardiac
catheterization lab capacity if the average current utilization of all existing providers is greater
than 70%.
47. As one of its outpatient practices and clinics in Rutherford County, VUMC operates
Vanderbilt Heart Murfreesboro. This consists of four cardiologists and two advanced practice
nurse practitioners. Additionally, a heart failure physician, a heart failure nurse practitioner, an
electrophysiologist, and a lipid nurse practitioner rotate through the Vanderbilt Heart
Murfreesboro Clinic. VRH’s CON application includes a cardiac catheterization laboratory that
would allow these practitioners to provide services at their own facility rather than having to
48. VRH would be staffed and maintained by at least one cardiologist who has
49. Dr. Fayaz Malik, the Chair of the Department of Cardiology at STRH, provided
credible testimony that the practice of cardiology is changing due to emerging technology
involving cardiac computed tomography (CT). While some patients are now able to avoid the
more invasive procedure of a cardiac catheterization by having a cardiac CT performed, there are
some patients who will need to have a cardiac catheterization based on the results of the cardiac
CT.
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50. Using the most recent reliable data (obtained prior to the pandemic), STRH’s
cardiac catheterization capacity was over 90%. StoneCrest’s capacity was slightly less than 60%.
51. The cardiac catheterization capacity, per the weighted formula as established in the
State Health Plan, at STRH and StoneCrest is over the required capacity threshold of 70%.
52. VUMC’s cardiologists who practice in Rutherford County satisfy the minimum
53. Prices for services rendered at VRH would be based on the same community
hospital charge structure as the three county-adjacent community hospitals: Vanderbilt Bedford
54. VRH would accept Medicare and TennCare/Medicaid patients. VRH projected in
the CON application that 61% of its patients would be Medicare and Medicaid patients. This is
55. At least two of VUMC’s community hospitals have not generated revenues in
excess of their expenses. In 2021, Vanderbilt Bedford Hospital had a loss of $4,792,817;
56. VRH has a projected charity care rate of 5%. This is a slightly lower rate than other
area hospitals.
Tennessee. BCBST opposes the CON application due to unnecessary duplication of services that
58. VRH submitted a projected payor mix (the percentage of a facilities’ revenue from
private insurance versus self-paying patients versus public insurance programs such as Medicare
7 The record does not reflect the revenue compared to expenses of Vanderbilt Tullahoma-Harton Hospital.
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and Medicaid) in the CON application. The payor mix listed Humana and Wellcare as part of its
59. On December 1, 2022, before the hearing began, VUMC notified WellCare of
Tennessee that it would stop accepting Medicare Advantage Plans as of April 1, 2023. On
December 13, 2022, VUMC provided the same notice to Humana. The reason stated in the letters
for the termination of both agreements was that VUMC was no longer willing to accept the level
of losses associated with the plans. VUMC had demanded a 20% increase in payments for all
treatments which was rejected by the payors. In a press release to the public, VUMC asserted that
a higher reimbursement rate was necessary to pay for inflationary costs of personnel, supplies,
equipment, and medications. VUMC announced on March 14, 2023, that an agreement to continue
providing in-network care was reached with Humana. The increase in payments from Humana to
VUMC was not announced. No agreement with WellCare was announced or provided.
60. There is a nursing shortage both in Tennessee and across the country. The shortage
began before the outbreak of the COVID-19 pandemic and continues presently.
61. Due to staffing issues, hospitals have delayed services. Due to staffing issues,
hospitals have temporarily closed certain services. This has created accessibility issues. Some of
those delayed or closed services were due to staffing problems associated with the pandemic and
62. None of the involved healthcare hospitals caused the nursing shortage. The
involved healthcare hospitals have taken action to address the nursing shortage, such as offering
residency programs for nursing graduates, programs to allow existing staff to take a more advanced
clinical role, sponsorships of clinical workers to receive further education and more advanced
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63. Hospitals, including all of the parties in this case, have resorted to hiring traveling
or contract nurses in order to be adequately staffed. Traveling or contract nurses are paid at much
64. VUMC represented to HFC, during the December 15, 2021, meeting, that staffing
65. At the time of the hearing, VUMC had approximately 1,000 to 1,100 open nursing
66. VRH will require 114 nurses and 171 ancillary clinical personnel.
67. VUMC has paid hiring bonuses, student loan forgiveness, and moving expenses to
68. VUMC plans to staff VRH by having nurses transfer from other VUMC facilities
69. The additional costs of labor to hospitals cannot be immediately passed directly to
consumers due to the hospitals’ contracts with the insurance companies or government. As
indicative of the demands for a higher contract rate from VUMC to Humana and Wellcare, the
additional costs can be a basis for requesting a higher reimbursement rate from insurance
APPLICABLE LAW
2. STRH, StoneCrest, and WMC are healthcare institutions that are located within a
thirty-five-mile radius of the location of the action proposed. As such, the three entities had
authorization to file written objections to appeal the approval of VRH’s CON application. TENN.
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3. Without opposition from Petitioners or Respondent, VRH moved to intervene in
this case, which request was granted pursuant to TENN. CODE ANN. § 4-5-310 and TENN. COMP. R.
4. This contested case was presided over by the undersigned administrative law judge
sitting alone pursuant to TENN. CODE ANN. § 68-11-1610(c). As a proceeding convened by HFC,
this contested case was a de novo hearing. Big Fork Mining Company v. Tennessee Water Quality
Control Board, 602 S.W.2d. 515, 521 (TENN. CT. APP. 1981).
5. In a contested case hearing before HFC, Petitioners have the burden of proving, by
a preponderance of the evidence, that a CON application should be denied. TENN. COMP. R. &
REGS. 0720-13-.01(3).
granted unless the action proposed in the application is necessary to provide needed health care in
the area served, will provide health care that meets appropriate quality standards, and the effects
determinations, the commission shall use as guidelines the goals, objectives, criteria, and standards
adopted to guide the commission in issuing certificates of need. Until the commission adopts its
own criteria and standards by rule, those in the state health plan apply. Additional criteria for
7. The State Health Plan Certificate of Need Standards and Criteria sets forth the
consideration given for applicants seeking to establish acute care beds for a new facility. The
determination of need is established through a four step process “[u]sing utilization and patient
origin data from the Joint Annual Report of Hospitals and the most current populations projection
series from the Department of Health, both by county, … .” State Health Plan, 2017-2018 Edition,
p. 54. The need for hospital beds should be projected four years into the future. “New hospital
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beds can be approved in excess of the ‘need standard for a county’ if … [a]ll existing hospitals in
the proposed service area have an occupancy level greater than or equal to 80 percent for the most
8. To determine whether there is a need for acute care beds in a new facility, the State
Health Plan considers similar services in the service area, trends in occupancy and utilization, and
the likely impact of the proposed increase in acute care beds on existing providers. Consideration
is to be given to whether the increase in beds will result in unnecessary, costly duplication of
9. Other facts to consider when looking to add acute care beds are quality
underserved populations, access to serve equally all of the service area, adequate staffing,
assurance of resources, data requirements, quality control and monitoring, licensure and quality
10. The State Health Plan provides criteria relating to cardiac catheterization services.
State Health Plan, 2009 Edition, Appendix B. TENN. COMP. R. & REGS. 0720-11-.01(2)(h) (July
2022) provides the guidelines for evaluating quality standards for cardiac catheterization projects.
11. TENN. COMP. R. & REGS. 0720-11-.01 (July 2022) provides the general criteria that
HFC will consider when determining if an application for a certificate of need should be granted.
Specifically applicable to the current appeal are the criteria for need and competition/duplication
(1) Need. The health care needed in the area to be served may be evaluated upon the
following factors:
(a) The relationship of the proposal to any existing applicable plans;
(b) The population served by the proposal;
(c) The existing or certified services or institutions in the area;
(d) The reasonableness of the service area;
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(e) The special needs of the service area population, including the accessibility to
consumers, particularly women, racial and ethnic minorities, TennCare
participants, and low-income groups;
(f) Comparison of utilization/occupancy trends and services offered by other area
providers;
(g) The extent to which Medicare, Medicaid, TennCare, medically indigent, charity
care patients and low-income patients will be served by the project. In determining
whether this criteria is met, the Commission shall consider how the applicant has
assessed that providers of services which will operate in conjunction with the
project will also meet these needs.
…
(3) The effects attributed to competition or duplication would be positive for the
consumers. Whether the effects attributed to competition would be positive for the
consumers may be evaluated upon the following factors:
(a) Access to high quality, cost-effective healthcare services;
(b) The impact upon patient charges;
(c) Participation in TennCare, Medicare and other federal and state reimbursement
programs; participation in other insurance plans; and charity care;
(d) Whether the applicant commits to maintaining an actual payor mix that is
comparable to the pay mix projected in its CON application, particularly as it relates
to Medicare, TennCare/Medicaid, Charity Care, and the Medically Indigent; and
(e) The availability and accessibility of human resources required by the proposal,
including those required by existing providers.
12. The commission has the authority to revoke a certificate of need if “[t]he decision
to issue a certificate of need was based, in whole or in part, on information or data in the application
which was false, incorrect, or misleading, whether intentional or not.” TENN. CODE. ANN. § 68-
11-1617(3).
The CON process plays an important role in ensuring access, sustainability, and safety in
Tennessee’s healthcare system. This includes ensuring appropriate and necessary services and
facilities are available in communities across the state, and that patients are able to access those
services in a safe and affordable manner. The CON process recognizes the unique needs and
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The written transcript of oral testimony provided at a hearing does not fully convey the
evidence given or always provide a complete picture of the proof in a case.8 Ginna Felts is the
Vice President of Business Development at VUMC and prepared both of VRH’s CON
applications. Ms. Felts was unable to answer questions at the hearing that someone in her position
should be expected to know, often stating that she did not recall when asked questions about the
CON application or the process. In contrast, Ms. Felts provided one-word answers, such as “yes”,
“no”, or “sure”, when she was answering leading questions asked by VRH’s counsel. Ms. Felts
avoided answering questions directly if the answer would have been harmful to VRH. Ms. Felts’
demeanor while providing live testimony was incredulity at the need to answer questions that
would cast doubt on the CON application or VUMC. The veracity of Ms. Felts’ testimony is
A CON applicant must prove that the facility will provide health care that meets
appropriate quality standards. All four healthcare hospitals in this case offer health care at
appropriate quality standards. There was no testimony or evidence that VRH would not be
expected to offer the same quality of care at the proposed facility that is offered at other hospitals
owned by Intervenor. Petitioners have failed to prove by a preponderance of the evidence that the
CON application does not meet this portion of TENN. CODE ANN. § 68-11-1609(b).
8 “A stenographic transcript correct in every detail fails to reproduce tones of voice and hesitations of speech that often
make a sentence mean the reverse of what the words signify.” Broadcast Music v. Havana Madrid Restaurant Corp.,
175 F.2d 77, 80 (2d. Cir. 1949). “It is true that the carriage, behavior, bearing, manner and appearance of a witness –
in short, his ‘demeanor’ – is a part of the evidence.” Dyer v. MacDougall, 201 F. 2d, 265, 268-268 (2d. Cir. 1952).
“When credibility and weight to be given testimony are involved, considerable deference must be afforded to the trial
court when the trial judge had the opportunity to observe the witnesses’ demeanor and to hear in-court testimony.”
Hughes v. Metropolitan Government of Nashville and Davidson County, 340 S.W.3d 352, 360 (Tenn. 2011) (internal
citations omitted).
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VRH and Petitioner hired expert witnesses to support their respective cases. All experts
offered credible, well-reasoned testimony. The opinions reached, not surprisingly, by each expert
was to the advantage of the expert’s client. The experts used data and methodology to reach
conclusions that benefitted their respective clients and discounted data that would have led to a
different conclusion. While the testimony and opinions offered are not nullified in what was,
essentially, a battle of the experts, VRH’s experts relied upon information in forming their opinions
that was misleading or is no longer applicable to the case. For example, VRH’s experts relied
upon statistics from the COVID-19 pandemic period even though it has been established that those
figures do not accurately reflect general occupancy or utilization of healthcare services. VRH’s
expert witnesses did not consider the impact of the largest expansion in VUMC’s history - an
approximately $755 million expansion expected at the main, tertiary campus. A significant portion
of the justification for the need requirement in the CON application was the lack of available space
at the Davidson County facilities. As the expansion renders this argument moot, VRH’s experts’
In the CON application, VRH represented to HFC that the average length of stay for a
pediatric patient would be 4.6 days. This contrasts with the testimony of Dr. Margaret Rush,
President of MCJCHV, who provided credible testimony that the average length of stay at VRH
is expected to be 2 to 2.5 days. Dr. Rush was not consulted or involved in planning any portion of
the CON application. To the extent that VRH’s expert witnesses relied upon the inaccurate higher
utilization projections, the testimony and opinions formed based on the inaccurate projections are
discounted.
The majority of VRH’s anticipated patients will originate in Rutherford County. While
VRH would have to draw patients from other counties to be viable and sustainable, the projected
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Some Rutherford County residents choose to travel to VUMC’s tertiary campus to seek
inpatient treatment that could be received at a hospital in Rutherford County. Due to a variety of
factors such as convenience to tertiary services, if needed, or proximity to work, some Rutherford
County residents would continue to go to VUMC even if VRH were built. This has proven to be
true with the three community hospitals purchased by VUMC. For those Rutherford County
residents who choose to have Vanderbilt physicians as their healthcare providers, they may desire
to have a Vanderbilt-owned hospital six miles from STRH or 10 miles from StoneCrest. But VRH
has conflated desire and need. Vanderbilt has hospitals or units within another hospital in five of
the seven counties adjacent to Rutherford County – the various hospitals in downtown Nashville,
the pediatric units within WMC, Vanderbilt Tullahoma-Harton Hospital, Vanderbilt Wilson
County Hospital, and Vanderbilt Bedford Hospital. Excluding the Davidson County facilities, the
other VUMC hospitals or VUMC-managed hospital units all have ample capacity and do not
require travel into the tertiary facilities. While residents of Rutherford County may select VUMC
as their healthcare provider, the CON application process is focused on providing patients with
geographic access to care. Rutherford County residents have access to care and have a choice in
hospitals in their county. All Rutherford County residents have “reasonable access to health care”
as required in the State Health Plan. Having a third provider choice is not a criterion for approval
of a CON application.
The State Health plan gives special consideration to underserved geographic regions. VRH
does not seek to provide services to a region or underserved population group but rather to expand
the market wherein it can provide inpatient hospital care. VRH has argued that providing a special,
population. WMC, through its partnership with MCJCHV, offers all of VRH’s proposed pediatric
services, and even higher level of services, approximately two miles from the
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Williamson/Rutherford County line. Rutherford County pediatric patients have reasonable access
to services within the geographic area. Petitioners have proven by a preponderance of the evidence
that the approval of the CON application does not satisfy TENN. COMP. R. & REGS. 0720-11-
.01(1)(e). Additionally, WMC’s pediatric units are underutilized. A duplication of these services
in the geographic area is not positive for consumers. Petitioners have proven by a preponderance
of the evidence that, as to the pediatric services, that the CON application also fails to satisfy TENN.
VRH hired a private firm to coordinate signatures to support the VRH CON application.
As part of these efforts, VRH coordinated to have individuals submit affidavits in support of the
project. VRH offered these affidavits in its CON application, and testimony at the HFC
commission hearing, in support of its application. However, it does not appear that the public was
provided accurate information from VRH as to what the proposed hospital would entail. In support
of VRH, affidavits from community members spoke to being able to access non-routine or
specialty care at the proposed hospital. This sentiment is mistakenly repeated throughout the
affidavits by individuals who believe that the new hospital would relieve them of having to go to
a tertiary hospital to receive specialty care. As delineated above, VRH proposes to be a community
Rutherford County. To the contrary, the services would not be spread throughout Rutherford
County as VRH would be across the street from an existing hospital and emergency department at
Westlawn. All proposed medical services at VRH are also available at StoneCrest and STRH
information as to what VRH would offer. VRH coordinated with Murfreesboro Medical Clinic
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(MMC), a large physician group in Murfreesboro that rents office space to VUMC, to have MMC’s
physicians submit affidavits in support of the CON application. MMC physicians wrote in
affidavits of the addition to the community that could be offered through Vanderbilt’s “incredible
array of specialties.” While VUMC has many specialty clinics in the Rutherford County area,
VRH does not propose any specialties that are not available at the local area hospitals. Indeed, all
specialty hospitalizations would continue to be admitted at VUMC’s main tertiary campus – not
at VRH.
Many of the healthcare providers in Rutherford County who submitted affidavits in support
of VRH had a shocking lack of knowledge about what services are available to their patients
without having to refer patients to a hospital in downtown Nashville. Many physicians referenced
the need for having a second hospital in Rutherford County or that there was only one hospital that
served Rutherford County. However, there was already a second hospital, StoneCrest, in
Rutherford County when all of these physicians signed their affidavits. StoneCrest is a mere 10
miles down the interstate from the proposed location of VRH. Some of the physicians also
referenced the mistaken belief that there would be subspecialists and researchers at VRH. MMC
pediatricians incorrectly stated that all pediatric patients from Rutherford County and surrounding
counties must go to Nashville for any advanced pediatric care. Just twenty miles from the proposed
VRH location, all Rutherford County pediatric patients have access to Vanderbilt pediatricians and
inpatient care at WMC without having to travel to a tertiary hospital. If the level of pediatric
services cannot be provided at a community in-patient setting such as at WMC, VRH will not
The granting or denial of a CON application is not a popularity contest based on a number
of signatures or affidavits. While there is no evidence that VRH purposely provided false
information to individuals or physicians to elicit their support, VRH included affidavits in the CON
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application that were clearly based on false or misleading information. The evidence shows that
MMC wants to use its support of VRH not necessarily for the good of the public but, at least in
part, for its own gain. The evidence shows that MMC has offered support to VRH so that they can
“make demands. Get what we want from the beginning” as well as using support of the project to
“make St. Thomas nervous.” LATE-FILED EXHIBIT 59, at exhibit 18. MMC, a large, for-profit
healthcare provider, has offered its support in the current CON application as an ongoing effort to
pit one hospital provider against another to advance its own goals. The way the affidavits were
obtained, the inaccuracies contained therein, and the motive for submitting the affidavits renders
them unpersuasive in their attempt to support any of the criteria to approve a CON application.
A better indication of what is needed and desired in Rutherford County is the 2019
Community Health Needs Assessment. This report was not a result of a marketing tool by VRH
to solicit opinions to support its goals but rather an objective assessment across all aspects and
populations of Rutherford County as to what was needed. The need for an additional hospital was
The current CON law requires a new hospital to prove a need for additional hospital beds
using the acute care bed standards and criteria in the State Health Plan. Any existing hospital can
add acute care beds as budgets and space permit. It has been argued by VRH and HFC that the
acute care bed need formula is outdated and should not be followed. However, under the current
law and guidelines, it is required that VRH prove the beds are needed.
The Tennessee Legislature and HFC have decided to treat existing hospitals and entities
differently than those that wish to open a hospital. If HFC does not believe the acute care need
bed formula is accurate or applicable, HFC has the authority to change the State Health Plan. The
last change to the acute care bed need formula was in 2017-2018. The State Health Plan has been
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updated three times since the acute care bed need formula was put into place. This formula also
could have been changed when the CON law changed in 2021, but HFC chose not to do so. The
governing statute states the commission “shall use as guidelines the goals, objectives, criteria, and
standards adopted … . Until the commission adopts its own criteria and standards by rule, those
in the state health plan apply.” TENN. CODE ANN. § 68-11-1609(b) (emphasis added). While the
State Health Plan is a guideline and not law, it provides the only objective measurements by which
a CON application can be evaluated. The absence of the only applicable guideline would leave
the approval process completely subjective as to which measurements should be used to prove that
Despite the acute care bed need formula showing a surplus of hospital beds in Rutherford
County, STRH has continued to add hospital beds and anticipates opening even more in 2023.
STRH has made efforts to become a tertiary center rather than a community hospital and is making
the adjustments toward this goal. VUMC has begun construction on an approximately $755
million project that would add roughly 248 beds at its tertiary hospitals, none of which need to be
approved through the CON application process. This construction project – and the addition of a
large number of beds – were not mentioned in the CON application or at the HFC hearing even
though the project had been internally approved. While the plan has changed and will likely
continue to evolve, VRH did not mention the largest expansion in VUMC’s history to HFC. The
argument that a hospital is needed in Rutherford County to accommodate additional hospital space
Moreover, the suggestion that HFC was made aware of the expansion under the guise that
VRH informed HFC that it is always looking to expand or maximize its space is not flawed. VRH
presented to HFC that one aspect of satisfying the need requirement was to progressively transfer
non-tertiary Rutherford County patients away from the Davidson County campus in order to create
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more availability at the Nashville hospitals. Intervenor now argues that the expansion project is
not pertinent to the CON application, but it used the lack of available beds at its Nashville campus
as a justification for the CON application. To the extent that this information was relied upon
when the CON application was approved, the information was misleading or incorrect.
Petitioners have proven that all existing hospitals in the proposed service area do not have
an occupancy level greater than 80% to satisfy the exception to the need standard for Rutherford
County. Petitioners have proven by a preponderance of the evidence that the CON application
fails to satisfy the criterion for need under TENN. COMP. R. & REGS. 0720-11-.01(1)(f).
Adequate Staffing
A CON applicant must show, under the acute care need criteria, a plan for adequate
staffing. There are a finite number of trained nurses. At the time of the hearing, VUMC had over
1,000 open nursing positions across its numerous clinics and hospitals. When HFC considered the
CON application, VUMC had at least 500 budgeted unfilled nursing positions at its main campus,
yet VUMC falsely presented that staffing had not been a problem. Having a nurse transfer from
working at one of the downtown Nashville facilities to work at VRH does not “fill” the VRH
position as it then opens a position elsewhere. If approved, VUMC would need to fully staff VRH
in addition to the 248 hospital beds it is in the process of adding in Davidson County.
Marilyn Dubree, VUMC’s Executive Chief Nursing Officer, provided credible testimony9
as to the nursing shortages and challenges faced at VUMC over the course of her extensive career.
At the time of the hearing, Ms. Dubree estimated that VUMC had between 1,000 to 1,100 open
nursing positions. VUMC has offered signing bonuses as high as $25,000 to fill specialized
nursing positions. Ms. Dubree was not aware of any other hospital system that offered hiring
9Due to unavailability at the close of the hearing, the parties agreed to submit Ms. Dubree’s video deposition into the
RECORD.
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bonuses at that level. Based on Ms. Dubree’s credible testimony, the statements made by VUMC
personnel at the HFC hearing that VUMC’s main campus is fully staffed, and that staffing has not
been an overwhelming challenge, were false and/or misleading in order to gain approval of the
CON application.
The parties’ efforts to address the nursing shortage by helping to improve the availability
of nursing and clinical staff are commendable. While providing hiring bonuses, moving expenses,
and student loan forgiveness adds to the cost of a facility, these are costs that all healthcare
providers are having to pay. The addition of a fourth acute care community hospital in Rutherford
County does not alleviate these costs, it only exacerbates the need for additional nursing staff.
Historically, no CON application has been denied on the basis of staffing. If it is presumed that
every project can be fully staffed at the completion of the project without considering a full analysis
of the staffing situation, one must question why the criterion as to staffing is even a factor. While
one cannot predict the future of nursing, the current nursing crisis and large number of open
positions across all healthcare facilities, including VRH’s many facilities, demonstrate sufficient
evidence to prove that the lack of availability and accessibility of human resources required by the
proposed construction project, including those required by existing providers, will not be positive
for consumers. Petitioners have proven by a preponderance of the evidence that the CON
application fails to satisfy the staffing criterion under TENN. COMP. R. & REGS. 0720-11-.01(3)(e).
Other Guidelines
serve all patients in the proposed service area; documentation that it will provide the resources
necessary to properly support the applicable level of services; agreement to provide the
Department of Health and/or HFC with all reasonably requested information and statistical data,
identification for data reporting, quality improvement, and outcome and process monitoring
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system; and compliance with appropriate rules of the Department of Health as well as accreditation
with the Joint Commission. As these factors were not contested, Petitioners have failed to prove
The State Health Plan established extensive guidelines in 2009 for a CON application to
establish cardiac catheterization services. Since the current guidelines were established more than
13 years ago, new cardiac technology has been created that may reduce the demand for diagnostic
cardiac catheterizations. Much like the requirements established for the acute card bed need
formula, those guidelines could have been updated in the 10 more recent State Health Plans if the
appropriate bodies had chosen to do so, but they did not. It should be noted that VRH relies upon
these guidelines to prove the need for cardiac catheterization services, while simultaneously
arguing that the acute bed need formula in the guidelines should not be utilized. The applicable
data support the weighted formula in the guidelines. Petitioners have failed to prove by a
preponderance of the evidence that the CON application for cardiac catheterization criteria has not
VRH’s current CON application was filed after the CON application for the Westlawn
hospital was approved. VRH is proposed to be in virtually the identical location as Westlawn.
VRH’s proposal is for the same type of facility, though larger, than Westlawn. VRH would cover
the same service area as Westlawn thought it would extend into a larger area. Lastly, VRH would
provide overlapping services to Westlawn in that both would have an emergency department and
inpatient hospital services. The need for these identical services at the identical location in the
identical service area has not been established and have not been shown to be positive for
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consumers. Petitioners have proven by a preponderance of the evidence the criteria under TENN.
Consumer advantage does not just mean convenience. Hospitals are unique among other industries
as well as other aspects of the healthcare system. If an individual wants a car, hamburger, haircut,
or house built, that individual may go to any business to attempt to purchase that item or service,
and the business may demand a price for that service or item. If an agreed-upon price cannot be
reached, the individual may attempt to find that item or service elsewhere. Within the healthcare
system, this also applies to certain specialties such as plastic surgery, dermatological, or pediatrics.
A pediatrician may refuse to see a patient who cannot provide payment for the services rendered
or who is simply too difficult, in the pediatrician’s opinion, to work with. This is not the case with
a hospital. A hospital cannot turn away a patient who does not have the means to pay for the
service the patient needs or if the patient becomes difficult. Hospital services are not governed by
witness and healthcare management consultant, duplicative competition is not good for consumers.
Mr. Balsano agreed that a planning tenet for healthcare services has been not to duplicate services
unnecessarily. This has been a fundamental principle of the CON laws for the last 30 years. VRH,
however, presented an affidavit with its CON application from an individual who supports VRH
under the guise of the concept that “[t]he free market should be allowed to work.”10 Allowing
more hospitals into a given healthcare market simply for the sake of competition shows a lack of
VRH has positioned itself as a low-cost provider of health care. After submitting the CON
application and before the hearing began for one payor and during the hearing for the other payor,
10 EXHIBIT 1, at p. 244.
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Intervenor chose to terminate contracts with Medicare Advantage Plans providers Humana and
WellCare. VRH did not announce an adjustment to the projected payor mix or make HFC or the
tribunal aware of the decision to stop accepting these Medicare Advantage plans despite VUMC
asserting that the decision was made only after undertaking a careful analysis. While information
has been provided to show that the contract with Humana was resolved, no such information was
provided for WellCare. It is inevitable that healthcare providers and payors of care will have
contractual discussions. There is also no guarantee that any healthcare provider will continue to
accept every Medicare Advantage plan or any other payor. However, the validity of the data that
VRH used to support its argument that it can provide cost-effective health care is questionable.
The timing of the decision and the failure of VUMC to be forthcoming with its decision is
VRH has asserted it will be a participant in TennCare, Medicare, and other federal and
state reimbursement programs, similar to Intervenor’s other facilities. VRH has presented that its
payment model will be the same as VUMC’s three existing community hospitals. Those hospitals
have all lost money. According to Dr. Wright Pinson, the Deputy CEO and Chief Health System
Office for VUMC, a healthcare system cannot undertake to complete a project unless it is
financially feasible. It is not reasonable to believe that a new hospital will generate profits when
using the same payment structure as the three existing hospitals that have lost revenue. Presuming
a higher cost in order to be sustaining, VRH would likely be a more expensive healthcare option
than the current providers. A provider is not required to be the lowest cost provider in a market,
the evidence that the effects attributed to competition or duplication of services would not be
positive for consumers under TENN. COMP. R. & REGS. 0720-11-.01(3)(b), (c), and (d).
Page 29 of 31
With the change of the CON law that allows the addition of more beds once the originally
approved facility is completed, if approved, VRH could continue to expand on the 80-acre property
without any further requirement to prove need or advantage to the consumer. It is possible for
additional entries into the market of additional providers to result in services that outweigh the
demand. Healthcare providers must have a basic level of utilization of services to justify the
Children’s Hospital in Rutherford County, which STRH has stated it would support, but the
extremely low level of utilization does not currently justify the facility such that Intervenor did not
pursue the project. A new hospital has opened in Rutherford County that was approved and known
about prior to submission of the instant CON application. The impact of that hospital on creating
existing availability to in-patient care or access to services is not yet known. The impact of every
preexisting hospital being able to add hospital beds without regard for the need for those beds,
For the foregoing reasons, Petitioners have established by a preponderance of the evidence
that the application for a certificate of need, when taken as a whole, for a 42-bed community
hospital facility including the initiation of diagnostic and therapeutic cardiac catheterization
services does not meet the statutory definition of being necessary to provide needed health care in
the area to be served and that the effects attributed to competition or duplication would not be
positive for consumers. Additionally, HFC’s “decision to issue the certificate of need was based,
in whole or in part, on information or data in the application which was false, incorrect, or
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This INITIAL ORDER denying the application for a certificate of need is entered to protect
the public in the State of Tennessee, consistent with the purposes fairly intended by the policy and
It is so ORDERED.
This INITIAL ORDER entered and effective this the 8th day of June, 2023.
Filed in the Administrative Procedures Division, Office of the Secretary of State, this the
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IN THE MATTER OF: APD CASE No. 25.00-220022J
TRISTAR STONECREST MEDICAL CENTER,
SAINT THOMAS RUTHERFORD HOSPITAL,
AND WILLIAMSON MEDICAL CENTER V.
TENNESSEE HEALTH FACILITIES
COMMISSION AND VANDERBILT
UNIVERSITY MEDICAL CENTER D/B/A
VANDERBILT RUTHERFORD HOSPITAL
NOTICE OF APPEAL PROCEDURES
1. A Party Files a Petition for Reconsideration of the Initial Order: You may ask the Administrative Judge to
reconsider the decision by filing a Petition for Reconsideration with the Administrative Procedures Division (APD).
A Petition for Reconsideration should include your name and the above APD case number and should state the specific
reasons why you think the decision is incorrect. APD must receive your written Petition no later than 15 days after
entry of the Initial Order, which is no later than June 23, 2023. A new 15 day period for the filing of an appeal to the
COMMISSION (as set forth in paragraph (2), below) starts to run from the entry date of an order disposing of a
Petition for Reconsideration, or from the twentieth day after filing of the Petition if no order is issued. Filing
instructions are included at the end of this document.
The Administrative Judge has 20 days from receipt of your Petition to grant, deny, or take no action on your Petition
for Reconsideration. If the Petition is granted, you will be notified about further proceedings, and the timeline for
appealing (as discussed in paragraph (2), below) will be adjusted. If no action is taken within 20 days, the Petition is
deemed denied. As discussed below, if the Petition is denied, you may file an appeal. Such an Appeal must be
received by the APD no later than 15 days after the date of denial of the Petition. See TENN. CODE ANN. §§ 4-5-317
and 4-5-322.
2. A Party Files an Appeal of the Initial Order: You may appeal the decision to the COMMISSION by filing an
Appeal of the Initial Order with APD. An Appeal of the Initial Order should include your name and the above APD
case number, and state that you want to appeal the decision to the COMMISSION, along with the specific reasons for
your appeal. APD must receive your written Appeal no later than 15 days after the entry of the Initial Order, which
is no later than June 23, 2023. The filing of a Petition for Reconsideration is not required before appealing. See
TENN. CODE ANN. § 4-5-317.
3. The COMMISSION decides to Review the Initial Order: In addition, the COMMISSION may give written notice
of its intent to review the Initial Order, within 15 days after entry of the Initial Order.
If either of the actions set forth in paragraphs (2) or (3) above occurs prior to the Initial Order becoming a Final Order,
there is no Final Order until the COMMISSION renders a Final Order.
If none of the actions in paragraphs (1), (2), or (3) above are taken, then the Initial Order will become a Final Order.
In that event, YOU WILL NOT RECEIVE FURTHER NOTICE OF THE INITIAL ORDER BECOMING A
FINAL ORDER.
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IN THE MATTER OF: APD CASE No. 25.00-220022J
TRISTAR STONECREST MEDICAL CENTER,
SAINT THOMAS RUTHERFORD HOSPITAL,
AND WILLIAMSON MEDICAL CENTER V.
TENNESSEE HEALTH FACILITIES
COMMISSION AND VANDERBILT
UNIVERSITY MEDICAL CENTER D/B/A
VANDERBILT RUTHERFORD HOSPITAL
STAY
In addition, you may file a Petition, with APD, asking the Administrative Judge for a stay that will delay
the effectiveness of the Initial Order. A Petition For Stay must be received by APD within 7 days of the date of
entry of the Initial Order, which is no later than June 15, 2023. See TENN. CODE ANN. § 4-5-316. A reviewing
court also may order a stay of the Order upon appropriate terms. See TENN. CODE ANN. §§ 4-5-322 and 4-5-317.
When an Initial Order becomes a Final Order, a person who is aggrieved by a Final Order in a contested case may
seek judicial review of the Final Order by filing a Petition for Review “in the Chancery Court nearest to the place of
residence of the person contesting the agency action or alternatively, at the person’s discretion, in the chancery court
nearest to the place where the cause of action arose, or in the Chancery Court of Davidson County,” within 60 days
of the date the Initial Order becomes a Final Order. See TENN. CODE ANN. § 4-5-322. The filing of a Petition for
Reconsideration is not required before appealing. See TENN. CODE ANN. § 4-5-317.
FILING
Documents should be filed with the Administrative Procedures Division by email or fax:
Email: [email protected]
Fax: 615-741-4472
In the event you do not have access to email or fax, you may mail or deliver documents to:
Secretary of State
Administrative Procedures Division
William R. Snodgrass Tower
312 Rosa L. Parks Avenue, 8th Floor
Nashville, TN 37243-1102
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