A Tucson nonprofit that provides behavioral-health care and substance-abuse treatment will close its doors this week due to mounting financial pressures, the companyâs CEO said.
Pasadera Behavioral Health Network will transfer all of its services â and many of its employees â to Mesa-based Community Bridges Inc., and other providers. Patients shouldnât see any interruption in their services, said Chuck Burbank, Pasaderaâs CEO.
âItâs a situation weâre trying to make the best of,â he said. âIâm very proud of the fact that weâve had a very successful transition of our services.â
Pasaderaâs closure was the result of various fiscal challenges, including a legal battle with the city of South Tucson and reductions in reimbursements from insurer Cenpatico Integrated Care, Burbank said.
Cenpatico administers Medicaid funding for Southern Arizonaâs public behavioral-health-care system, contracting with providers like Pasadera and Community Bridges. Since its contract period began in October, Cenpatico has brought in nearly $6.4 million in net profit, its March 31 financial statement says.
Cenpatico is a for-profit subsidiary of publicly traded Centene Corp., based in St. Louis. Centene is the nationâs largest Medicaid managed-care organization after its $6 billion acquisition of insurer Health Net, according to Forbes.
Cenpatico decided last year to stop funding Pasaderaâs crisis center on Dodge Boulevard, which made up one-fifth of the nonprofitâs business, Burbank said. Pasadera tried unsuccessfully to reinvent it as an outpatient center but couldnât generate enough business. Most outpatient clients were transferred to Yuma-based Community Health Associates, another provider that contracts heavily with Cenpatico.
Then, earlier this year, Cenpatico asked Community Bridges to bring its crisis response services into Pima County, which would have cut into even more of Pasaderaâs business, Burbank said.
Cenpatico spokeswoman Maribel Barrios-Quezada said in an email that Cenpatico âbelieves in the concept of voice and choice for our members.
âAccordingly, Cenpatico IC is pleased to build upon partnerships with existing providers, as well as continually introducing new providers into our network,â she wrote.
She didnât specifically address questions about the reasons for Pasaderaâs closure.
SOUTH TUCSON DISPUTE
Pasadera, which served 10,000 to 15,000 clients per year, was already experiencing financial problems related to a legal dispute with the city of South Tucson over a drug treatment center it intended to open.
Pasadera attorneys argued that, before the agency purchased and renovated the property at 2700 S. Eighth Ave., city leaders OKâd the agencyâs plan to offer residential services there. The reversal left Pasadera stretched thin, unable to fully use its facility or close its other residential facilities.
Pasadera would have needed an extraordinary turnaround to survive in the competitive landscape under Cenpatico, said Bob Mohelnitzky, a Pasadera board member.
âI compared it to jumping off a cliff with the idea that youâll build an airplane on the way down,â he said. âWe didnât get the plane built.â
Some Cenpatico policies made even tougher for Pasadera, said Clarke Romans, executive director of the National Alliance on Mental Illness, or NAMI, in Southern Arizona.
Unlike how the system worked under Pima Countyâs previous regional behavioral-health agency, Cenpatico does not allow its contracted agencies to subcontract with other providers for services â would-be subcontractors must contract directly with Cenpatico, Romans said. That means other Tucson agencies couldnât direct client flow to Pasadera to help it compete with new providers here, he said.
Romans said that, during monthly meetings with providers, Cenpatico officials have told agency leaders, âWeâre not responsible for your businessâs viability. Hereâs the criteria â meet it or not.â
But Cenpatico has sway over whether providers survive or struggle, he said. For example, NurseWise â which, like Cenpatico, is a subsidiary of Centene â now handles the regionâs 24-hour mental-health crisis phone line, which directs patients to services, Romans said.
âIf theyâre able to direct business away from you, itâs a little bit of a disingenuous comment,â he said. âThey hold all the cards because they hold all the contracts.â
MOUNTING PRESSURES
Pasadera wasnât always able to meet production quotas set by Cenpatico, resulting in the loss of a monthâs reimbursements this winter.
Cenpatico gives providers monthly upfront âblock paymentsâ based on how much agencies expect to bill for their services. Cenpatico CEO Terry Stevens said in February that agencies that didnât bill for at least 75 percent of their monthly allocation wouldnât get their block payment for a month.
This summer, Cenpatico retroactively cut Pasaderaâs contract by one-third during widespread contract reductions, based on whether agencies were meeting billing expectations. The Star reported on those cuts in June.
Burbank said Community Health Associates and Community Bridges were eager to hire Pasadera staffers who are losing their jobs. Of Pasaderaâs 300 employees, about 90 percent have found work with one of the two agencies, he said.
Pasadera was created in 2013 by the merger of two longtime behavioral-health care nonprofits: Southern Arizona Mental Health Corp., or SAMHC, and Compass Behavioral Health Care.
Compass, previously known as Gateway, was âtruly one of the founding organizations of the local behavioral-health system,â said Tom Donovan, CEO of Cope Community Services, which also contracts with Cenpatico. âSeeing this fine organization go out of business is sad and a tremendous loss to the community.â
AMBITIOUS GOALS
In October, Cenpatico took over the $612 million contract with the stateâs Medicaid program, AHCCCS, to administer behavioral-health care coverage for low-income Southern Arizonans. Under a new âintegratedâ care model, patients with serious mental illness also get their physical-health care covered by Cenpatico, one of three regional behavioral-health authorities â or RBHAs â that contract with the state.
Cenpatico has handled contracts for the Arizona Health Care Cost Containment System since 2005. Since its arrival in the eight-county Southern Arizona region, behavioral-health providers have struggled to meet the insurerâs financial standards and stringent reporting requirements. Cenpatico replaced the Tucson-based nonprofit Community Partnership of Southern Arizona, which had been Pima Countyâs regional behavioral-health agency for 20 years.
Romans, of the National Alliance on Mental Illness Southern Arizona, said at first he was inspired by Cenpaticoâs ambitious goals to improve health for people with mental illness. But he now worries those goals arenât realistic with so many providers struggling.
âWith all the slicing and dicing, Iâm not seeing exactly how these goals are going to be achieved,â he said.
PROVIDERS HURTING
At least two other behavioral-health agencies in Arizona dramatically reduced services after Cenpatico entered their market, including The Excel Group in Yuma and Benson-based Southeastern Arizona Behavioral Health Services, known as SEABHS.
After Cenpatico won the Southeastern Arizona RHRA contract in 2010, SEABHS went from receiving $35 million from former RBHA Community Partnership of Southern Arizona to about $7.9 million from Cenpatico, its 990 tax reports show.
Cenpatico brought in providers from other parts of the state who cut into SEABHSâ market share, a move that coincided with state reductions in behavioral-health funding, the Star reported in a 2011 story. The agency had other problems as well: The Starâs 2011 story noted questionable financial practices such as purchasing expensive cars for some officials and a $150,000 personal loan to the then-CEO.
Between 2010 and 2011, SEABHSâ workforce dropped by 60 percent, from 435 to 170. The agency did not respond to requests for comment or for its current employment level.
The Excel Group held the RBHA contract for Yuma and La Paz counties until 2005, when Cenpatico took it over and Excel became one of its subcontracted providers. Excel relied on Cenpatico for 75 percent of its funding â about $14 million annually â when in 2009, Cenpatico opted not to renew the agencyâs contract, the Yuma Sun reported.
At the time, the agency employed 500 people and served about 3,000 patients. Soon after, Excel cut its workforce and stopped providing behavioral-health care, instead focusing on employment services and housing for people with mental illness.
Sen. Dave Bradley, D-Tucson, said heâs heard concerns about Cenpatico from a number of mid-level staff at Tucson behavioral-health agencies.
Pasaderaâs closure âhas sent some fear through the system,â said Bradley, who has worked in behavioral health for 20 years. He plans to bring up his constituentsâ concerns during a planned September meeting between state legislators and Cenpatico officials. Cenpatico extended the invitation to meet, he said.
Cenpatico will soon be renegotiating its one-year contracts with its providers. Last year, providers had to decide whether to sign the contracts before they got any details on reimbursement rates, Romans said. Most providers had little choice but to sign if they wanted to maintain the bulk of their business, he said.
âItâs either take a gamble, or youâre out,â he said. âCenpatico has the financial power and business relationships to pretty much replace anybody here. Cenpatico is perfectly capable of putting much bigger entities out of business, by just not contracting with them.â



