96-5472. United States v. Vision Service Plan; Public Comments and United States' Response to Public Comments  

  • [Federal Register Volume 61, Number 47 (Friday, March 8, 1996)]
    [Notices]
    [Pages 9487-9498]
    From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
    [FR Doc No: 96-5472]
    
    
    
    =======================================================================
    -----------------------------------------------------------------------
    
    DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE
    
    Antitrust Division
    [Case No. 1:94CV02693]
    
    
    United States v. Vision Service Plan; Public Comments and United 
    States' Response to Public Comments
    
        Pursuant to the Antitrust Procedures and Penalties Act, 15 U.S.C. 
    16 (b)-(h), the United States publishes below the comments received on 
    the proposed Final Judgment in United States v. Vision Service Plan, 
    Case No. 1:94CV026923, United States District Court for the District of 
    Columbia, together with the response of the United States to the 
    comments.
        Copies of the response and the public comments are available on 
    request for inspection and copying in room 215 of the Antitrust 
    Division, U.S. Department of Justice, 325 7th Street, N.W., Washington, 
    D.C. 20004, and for inspection at the Office of the Clerk of the United 
    States District Court for the District of Columbia; 3rd Street and 
    Constitution Ave., NW.; room 1825; Washington, DC 20001.
    Rebecca P. Dick,
    Deputy Director of Operations, Antitrust Division.
    
    United States' Response to Public Comments
    
    I. Introduction
    
        Pursuant to the requirements of the Antitrust Procedures and 
    Penalties Act, (commonly referred to as the ``Tunney Act''), 15 U.S.C. 
    16 (b)-(h), the United States hereby responds to public comments 
    regarding the Final Judgment initially proposed as the basis for 
    settling this proceeding in the public interest. Since the comments 
    regarding the first proposed Final Judgment were submitted, the parties 
    have agreed to a superseding, proposed Revised Final Judgment, filed on 
    November 1, 1995, which reflects changes to a few provisions. After 
    careful consideration of the comments on the formerly proposed Final 
    Judgment, viewed in light of the proposed Revised Final Judgment, the 
    United States concludes that the Revised Final Judgment will provide an 
    effective and appropriate remedy for the antitrust violation alleged in 
    the Complaint. Once the public comments and this response have been 
    published in the Federal Register, pursuant to 15 U.S.C. 16(d), the 
    United States will request that the Court enter the Revised Final 
    Judgment.
    
    II. Procedural History
    
        On December 15, 194, the United States filed a Complaint alleging 
    that Vision Service Plan (``VSP''), in all or parts of the many states 
    in which it does business as a vision-care insurer, has entered into 
    agreements with its panel doctors that unreasonably restrain 
    competition by discouraging the doctors from discounting their fees for 
    vision-care services, in violation of Section 1 of the Sherman Act, 15 
    U.S.C. 1. Simultaneously with the filing of the Complaint, the United 
    States filed a proposed Final Judgment and a Stipulation signed by both 
    it and the defendant, agreeing to the entry of the Final Judgment 
    following compliance with the Tunney Act.
        Pursuant to the Tunney Act, on December 23, 1994, VSP filed the 
    required description of certain written and oral communications made on 
    its behalf; the United States filed a Competitive Impact Statement 
    (``CIS'') on January 13, 1995. A summary of the terms of the proposed 
    Final Judgment and the CIS and directions for the submission of written 
    comments were published in the Washington Post for seven consecutive 
    days, from January 22-28, 1995. The proposed Final Judgment and the CIS 
    were published in the Federal Register on January 26, 1995. 60 FR 5210-
    17 (1995). The 60-day period for public comments on the then proposed 
    Final Judgment began on January 27, 1995, and expired on March 27, 
    1995. Five comments were received.
        The United States filed the five comments with the Court on May 12, 
    1995, and was preparing to file its response to them when VSP raised 
    issues about the application of certain provisions of the then-proposed 
    Final Judgment to its operations. On June 23, 1995, the United States 
    advised the Court that the parties were considering whether those 
    issues warranted any modification to the proposed Final Judgment. 
    Reflecting the outcome of those negotiations are the parties' 
    Superseding Stipulation, the proposed Revised Final Judgment, and the 
    Revised CIS, filed on November 1, 1995. The latter two documents are 
    styled as ``Revised'' because they reflect changes made to a few of the 
    provisions of the proposed Final Judgment and to related portions of 
    the CIS. The Government agreed to these revisions to remedy certain 
    problems that VSP had experienced while operating under the terms of 
    the originally proposed Final Judgment, which, pursuant to Stipulation, 
    it had been doing since the proposed Final Judgment was filed.
        In a letter accompanying the superseding filings, the United States 
    informed the Court of its intent to provide public notice of the 
    proposed Revised Final Judgment and the Revised CIS in accordance with 
    the Tunney Act. Pursuant to the Act, under cover of a letter dated 
    November 27, 1995, the defendant filed the required description of 
    certain written and oral communications made on its behalf. A summary 
    of the terms of the proposed Revised Final Judgment and the Revised CIS 
    and directions for the submission of written comments were published in 
    the Washington Post for seven consecutive days, from November 12-18, 
    1995. The proposed Revised Final Judgment and the Revised CIS were 
    published in the Federal Register on November 13, 1995. 60 FR 57017-21 
    (1995). The 60-day period for public comments started on November 14, 
    1995, and expired on January 13, 1995. No comments on the proposed 
    Revised Final Judgment were received.
    
    III. Factual Background
    
        VSP contracts with businesses, government agencies, health-care 
    insurers, and other organizations to provide prepaid vision-care 
    insurance to 
    
    [[Page 9488]]
    employee groups and beneficiaries in 46 states and the District of 
    Columbia. In 1994, VSP covered about 15 million persons, and its 
    revenues totaled about $650 million. The United States sought 
    injunctive relief to remedy the anticompetitive consequences of a fee 
    non-discrimination clause in VSP's agreements with doctors in private 
    practice who have agreed to become VSP ``panel doctors'' and, 
    accordingly, provide vision care to patients covered by VSP.\1\ VSP 
    contracts with at least 17,000 such doctors--predominantly optometrists 
    and a relatively small number of ophtalmologists--across the nation. 
    The challenged clause is similar in substance to clauses commonly 
    called ``most-favored-nation'' (``MFN'') clauses. VSP's MFN clause 
    required each of its panel doctors to charge VSP no more than the 
    lowest price the doctor charged any non-VSP patient or insurance plan.
    
        \1\ Such service consist primarily of diagnostic services and 
    the dispensing of optical goods, such as corrective lenses and 
    frames.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        As a result of the MFN clause, a VSP-panel doctor could not charge 
    any non-VSP plan or patient less than VSP for equivalent services. If 
    the doctor wished to charge a non-VSP plan or patient less than he or 
    she had been charging VSP, the doctor would also have had to grant an 
    equal discount to VSP for all VSP-insured patients the doctor served. 
    In all or parts of many states in which VSP does business, it contracts 
    with a high percentage of local optometrists,\2\ and in these areas 
    most optometrists earn a significant part of their professional income 
    from VSP. For these doctors, the financial consequences of granting a 
    greater discount for services provided to all of their VSP patients 
    would be substantial, so they ceased or refrained from discounting 
    below VSP-payment levels to anyone. In addition to discouraging the 
    discounting of vision care services below VSP-payment levels, VSP's MFN 
    clause made it impossible for some competing vision-care plans to 
    obtain or retain sufficient panel doctors to serve their members at 
    competitive prices, thus limiting the amount of competition faced by 
    VSP from other plans.
    
        \2\ For example, in 1993 VSP reported that 98% of all 
    optometrists licensed in Nevada were VSP-panel doctors, and today in 
    California, VSP contracts with about 90% of optometrists in 
    independent private practice.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
    IV. Response to Public Comments
    
        All five of the comments address the originally proposed Final 
    Judgment. Some of the comments contend that Section V of that Judgment, 
    which expressly permits VSP to engage in certain activities, undermines 
    the prohibitions of the Judgment. Other comments urge that additional 
    relief be ordered for the conduct that was challenged. Finally, several 
    of the comments concern practices that the United States did not 
    challenge and that are not enjoined by the Judgment. The United States 
    has concluded that the Revised Final Judgment reasonably and 
    appropriately addresses the harm alleged in the Complaint. Therefore, 
    following publication of the comments and this response, pursuant to 
    the Tunney Act, and submission of the United States' certification of 
    compliance with the Act, the United States intends to urge this Court 
    to enter the proposed Revised Final Judgment based on the Court's 
    determination that that Judgment is in the public interest.
    A. Comments About the Permitted Activities
        Two comments from Alaska, Arizona, Hawaii, Nevada, New Mexico, 
    Oregon and Washington, (``the seven states'') and comments from 
    Northwest Administrators and First American Health Concepts question 
    Section V of the formerly proposed Final Judgment, which expressly 
    permitted VSP to collect from its panel doctors sufficient information 
    about the fees they charged non-VSP plans and patients to enable VSP to 
    calculate each doctor's modal or median fees, which were then to be 
    used by VSP in setting its own fees to panel doctors. The commenters 
    raised various concerns about these provisions.
        In their initial comment, the seven states reported that several of 
    them have been examining the competitive effects of various VSP 
    business practices in addition to the MFN clause. Although they 
    recognized that the proposed Final Judgment was ``an agreement between 
    the parties with no precedential effect,'' they nevertheless expressed 
    concern about ``a potential problem with the inclusion of certain 
    language in the [proposed Final Judgment] which could potentially 
    inhibit future law enforcement efforts by the states'' against possible 
    horizontal price-fixing by VSP. They feared that the provisions in 
    Section V permitting certain activities may be ``taken out of context 
    to support horizontal price-fixing activity, which is beyond the scope 
    of [this] * * * lawsuit.''
        It is well established, however, that ``a consent judgment, even 
    one entered at the behest of the Antitrust Division, does not immunize 
    the defendant from liability for actions, including those contemplated 
    by the decree, that violate the rights of nonparties.'' Broadcast 
    Music, Inc. v. Columbia Broadcasting System, Inc., 441 U.S. 1, 13 
    (1979). Therefore, nothing in the formerly proposed Final Judgment 
    would have precluded any of the states, or any other party, from 
    bringing future antitrust claims against VSP, whether based on a per se 
    or rule of reason analysis. Nor would any provision in the formerly 
    proposed Final Judgment have obstructed entry of full and appropriate 
    relief in a subsequent suit. These conclusions apply equally to the 
    proposed Revised Final Judgment.
        In their later comment, the states asserted directly that the 
    gathering by VSP of fee information and its setting of fees, in the 
    manner permitted by Section V of the formerly proposed Final Judgment, 
    would be per se violations of the Sherman Act when undertaken by a 
    provider-controlled plan. Even if VSP were controlled by optometrists, 
    as the states apparently believe they can prove, its setting of fees to 
    its panel doctors, as an activity related to the offering of a separate 
    and additional product--insurance--might in some circumstances be 
    analyzed under the rule of reason rather than the per se rule.\3\ See 
    generally id. at 19-24. Insurance plans such as VSP commonly establish 
    doctor panels to provide services to their insureds and set the fees 
    that the plan will pay the panel doctors for these services. VSP's fee-
    setting policies may be reasonably ancillary to its operation of a 
    vision-care insurance plan, and, if so, they would appear to be subject 
    to rule of reason analysis.
    
        \3\ Statements 6 and 8 of the Statements of Enforcement Policy 
    and Analytical Principles Relating to Health Care and Antitrust, 
    jointly issued by the Department of Justice and the Federal Trade 
    Commission in 1994 and cited by the states, do not address the 
    issuance of insurance, the activity at issue here.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        The seven states also asserted that permitting VSP to base its fees 
    on its panel doctors' modal or median prices to non-VSP plans for 
    patients risks the same anticompetitive harm that has resulted from 
    VSP's enforcement of its MFN clause. Two other commenters, Northwest 
    Administrators and First American Health Concepts, raised similar 
    arguments. Under the Revised Final Judgment, VSP will no longer 
    maintain the option, contained in the formerly proposed Final Judgment, 
    to calculate payments made to its panel doctors based on a doctor's 
    modal or median fees. Rather, under Section V of the Revised Final 
    Judgment, VSP will retain the option of calculating the fees that it 
    pays panel doctors based merely on their usual and customary fees 
    charged to private patients before any discounts are applied. The 
    proposed 
    
    [[Page 9489]]
    Revised Final Judgment's narrowing of VSP's permitted fee-calculation 
    options to a method based on a panel doctor's usual and customary fees, 
    defined as such fees before any discounts are applied, eliminates any 
    possibility that VSP's permitted fee-setting activity will inhibit 
    discounting.\4\
    
        \4\ Similarly, VSP's permitted use (under the formerly proposed 
    Final Judgment) of modal or median fee calculations as the basis for 
    its own fees, unlike VSP's enforcement of its MFN clause, should not 
    have discouraged doctors from discounting to non-VSP plans or 
    patients. A substantial percentage of vision-care patients are 
    uninsured, and for the most part, these are not the patients who are 
    able to obtain discounts in any amount. Thus, a VSP-panel doctor's 
    median or modal fee, even though calculated in part on fees charged 
    to other plans to which the doctor does offer a discount, would 
    likely have been well above the lowest fee charged by the doctor to 
    a non-VSP plan or patient. Under the formerly proposed Final 
    Judgment, discounting by a VSP-panel doctor to some non-VSP plans or 
    patents was, therefore, not likely to have significantly depressed 
    the doctor's income from VSP. Thus, this method of fee-setting by 
    VSP, unlike the MFN clause, should not have operated to deter 
    effective competition to VSP from other vision-care plans. Indeed, 
    the modification of this provision of the decree (the substitution 
    of a ``usual and customary'' for a ``median'' or ``modal'' basis 
    from which VSP may set its panel doctors' fees) arose from VSP's 
    practical difficulties in implementing a ``median'' or ``modal'' 
    methodology, rather than from competitive concerns.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        The commenters also objected to some of the practices permitted 
    under Section V of the formerly proposed Final Judgment on other 
    grounds. First American Health Concepts contended that the collection 
    of fee information would enable VSP to punish panel doctors if they 
    discount to or even participate in non-VSP plans. This claim, however, 
    ignores Sections IV (C) and (D) of the Final Judgment (and Revised 
    Final Judgment), which clearly prohibit such conduct.\5\ In any event, 
    the proposed Revised Final Judgment no longer permits VSP to obtain fee 
    information that reflects a panel doctor's discounting.
    
        \5\ Section IX of the Revised Final Judgment authorizes the 
    United States to investigate VSP's compliance with the Judgment at 
    any time upon reasonable notice. The United States may inspect and 
    copy VSP documents, interview VSP employees, and require VSP to 
    submit written reports under oath. Moreover, the Judgment, once 
    entered, is an injunction, violations of which are punishable by the 
    Court's contempt power.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        First American also contended that the information-collection 
    provision (Section V(A) of the formerly proposed Final Judgment) would 
    have enabled VSP to impose burdensome recordkeeping requirements on 
    doctors. But most doctors already keep, in the ordinary course of their 
    business, all of the information VSP would have been allowed to seek. 
    At any rate, Section V(A) of the proposed Revised Final Judgment 
    effectively reduces a panel doctor's potential fee-reporting 
    obligations to an annual submission of the doctor's usual and customary 
    fees for a retrospective period of up to 12 months. Such a requirement 
    entails no more than submission of the doctor's fee schedule(s) in 
    effect for the relevant period.
        As the preceding discussion shows, the theme of many of the 
    comments was that Section V of the formerly proposed Final Judgment 
    went too far in granting VSP leeway to continue to operate its business 
    despite the restrictions imposed by Section IV. Although the United 
    States believes that Section V of the formerly proposed Final Judgment 
    granted VSP nothing that compromised the remedy embodied in Section IV, 
    the proposed Revised Final Judgment's narrowing of VSP's permitted 
    activities substantially addresses most of the commenters' arguments. 
    Moreover, the United States fully intends to monitor VSP's practices 
    under the Revised Final Judgment and to seek enforcement or additional 
    relief if warranted. Should competitive problems again restrain 
    optometrists from discounting their fees for vision-care services to 
    plans competing with VSP or to others, the United States stands ready 
    to take all appropriate action.
    B. Comments Seeking Additional Relief for the Challenged Conduct
        Northwest Administrators urged that additional relief be obtained 
    in the then-proposed Final Judgment. Its comment applies equally to be 
    the Revised Final Judgment, which also does not provide for the 
    additional relief sought. Northwest Administrators wanted the formerly 
    proposed Final Judgment to require VSP to take affirmative steps to 
    encourage doctors to rejoin competing plans and to repay doctors the 
    difference between what VSP has paid them and what it would have paid 
    them in the absence of its MFN clause. Pursuant to the Stipulation 
    filed with the Complaint in this action, VSP has already provided all 
    of its panel doctors with an addendum to its Panel Doctor's Agreement 
    that expressly nullifies the MFN clause. In addition, the proposed 
    Revised Final Judgment would require VSP to give each panel doctor a 
    copy of the Judgment, which enjoins VSP from taking actions to deter 
    panel doctors from participating in non VSP plans. As to payments, it 
    is not the role of the United States to secure monetary damages for 
    private parties.
    C. Comments About Conduct Not Challenged in the Complaint
        The Optical Laboratories Association and First American Health 
    Concepts urged that the formerly proposed Final Judgment (and, by 
    extension, the Revised Final Judgment) be expanded to cover a variety 
    of conduct not challenged in the Complaint. Essentially, these 
    commenters disagreed with the United States' prosecutorial decision 
    about what conduct to challenge. As explained below, however, the 
    Tunney Act does not authorize the Court to reject the proposed Revised 
    Final Judgment on the ground that it does not enjoin conduct, allegedly 
    in violation of the antitrust laws, that was not challenged in the 
    Complaint. The scope of a governmental antitrust challenge is a matter 
    solely within the discretion of the United States and is beyond the 
    scope of the Court's Tunney Act review.
    
    V. The Legal Standard Governing the Court's Public Interest 
    Determination
    
        The Tunney Act directs the court to determine whether entry of the 
    proposed Judgment ``is in the public interest.'' 15 U.S.C. Sec. 16(e). 
    In making that determination, ``the court's function is not to 
    determine whether the resulting array of rights and liabilities is one 
    that will best serve society, but only to confirm that the resulting 
    settlement is within the reaches of the public interest.'' United 
    States v. Wester Elec. Co., 993 F.2d 1572, 1576 (D.C. Cir.), cert. 
    denied, 114 S. Ct. 487 (1993) (emphasis added, internal quotation and 
    citation omitted).\6\ Consequently, the Court should evaluate the 
    relief set forth in the proposed Revised Final Judgment in light of the 
    claims alleged in the Complaint and should enter the decree if it falls 
    within the government's ``rather broad discretion to settle with the 
    defendant within the reaches of the public interest.'' United States v. 
    Microsoft Corp., 56 F.3d 1448, 1461 (D.C. Cir. 1995). The Tunney Act 
    does not empower the Court to reject the remedies in the proposed 
    Decree based on the belief that ``other remedies were preferable.'' Id. 
    at 1460.
    
        \6\ The Western Electric decision concerned a consensual 
    modification of an existing antitrust decree. The Court of Appeals 
    assumed that the Tunney Act was applicable.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        The Court is not ``to make de novo determination of facts and 
    issues.'' Western Elec. 993 F.2d at 1577. Rather, ``[t]he balancing of 
    competing social and political interests affected by a proposed 
    antitrust decree must be left, in the first instance, to the discretion 
    of the Attorney General.'' Id. (internal quotation and citation omitted 
    throughout). In particular, the Court must defer to the Department's 
    assessment of like, competitive 
    
    [[Page 9490]]
    consequences, which it may reject ``only if it has exceptional 
    confidence that adverse antitrust consequences will result--perhaps 
    akin to the confidence that would justify a court in overturning the 
    predictive judgments of an administrative agency.''\7\ Id. Thus, the 
    Court may not reject a decree simply ``because a third party claims it 
    could be better treated.'' Microsoft, 56 F.3d at 1461 n.9.
    
        \7\ The Tunney Act does not give a court authority to impose 
    different terms on the parties. See, e.q., United States v. American 
    Tel. & Tel. Co., 552 F. Supp. 131, 153 n. 95 (D.D.C. 1982), aff'd 
    sub nom. Maryland v. United States, 460 U.S. 1001 (1983) Mem.); 
    accord H.R. Rep. No. 1463, 93d Cong., 2d Sess. 8 (1974). A court, of 
    course, can condition entry of a decree on the parties' agreement to 
    a different bargain, see, e.g., AT&T, 552 F. Supp. at 225, but if 
    the parties do not agree to such terms, the court's only choices are 
    to enter the decree the parties proposed or to leave the parties to 
    litigate.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        To a great extent it is the realities and uncertainties of 
    litigation that constrain the role of courts in Tunney Act proceedings. 
    See United States v. Gillette Co., 406 F. Supp. 713, 715-16 (D. Mass. 
    1975). As Judge Greene has observed,
    
        If courts acting under the Tunney Act disapproved proposed 
    consent decrees merely because they did not contain the exact relief 
    which the court would have imposed after a finding of liability, 
    defendants would have no incentive to consent to judgment and this 
    element of compromise would be destroyed. The consent decree would 
    thus as a practical matter be eliminated as an antritrust 
    enforcement tool, despite Congress' directive that it be preserved.
    
    United States v. American Tel. & Tel. Co., 552 F. Supp. 131, 151 
    (D.D.C. 1982), aff'd sub nom. Maryland v. United States, 460 U.S. 1001 
    (1983) (Mem.). Indeed, where, as here, the proposed consent decree 
    comes before the Court at the time the Complaint is filed, ``the 
    district judge must be even more deferential to the government's 
    predictions as to the effect of the proposed remedies * * *'' 
    Mircosoft, 56 F.3d at 1461.
        Moreover, the entry of a governmental antitrust decree forecloses 
    no private party from seeking and obtaining appropriate antitrust 
    remedies. Thus, VSP will remain liable for any illegal acts, and any 
    private party may challenge such conduct if and when appropriate. If 
    any of the commenting parties has a basis for suing VSP, they may do 
    so. The legal precedent discussed above holds that the scope of a 
    Tunney Act proceeding is limited to whether entry of this particular 
    proposed Consent Decree, agreed to by the parties as settlement of this 
    case, is in the public interest.
        Finally, the Tunney Act does not contemplate judicial reevaluation 
    of the wisdom of the government's determination of which violations to 
    allege in the Complaint. The government's decision not to bring a 
    particular case on the facts and law before it at a particular time, 
    like any other decision not to prosecute, ``involves a complicated 
    balancing of a number of factors which are peculiarly within [the 
    government's] expertise,'' such as ``whether [the government's] 
    resources are best spent on this violation or another, whether the 
    [government] is likely to succeed if it acts, whether the particular 
    enforcement action requested best fits the [government's] overall 
    policies, and, indeed, whether the [government] has enough resources to 
    undertake the action at all.'' Heckler v. Chaney, 470 U.S. 821, 831 
    (1985); See also Maryland v. United States, 460 U.S. 1001, 1106 (1983) 
    (Rehnquist, J., dissenting from summary affirmance). The Court may not 
    ``reach beyond the complaint to evaluate claims that the government did 
    not make and to inquire as to why they were not made.'' Microsoft, 56 
    F.3d at 1459 (emphasis added). Entry of the proposed Revised Final 
    Judgment will not prevent the government from investigating and 
    challenging, if appropriate, conduct not addressed in the current 
    action.
    
    VI. Conclusion
    
        The Tunney Act requires that public comments and this response be 
    published in the Federal Register. When that publication has been 
    accomplished, the United States will notify the Court and urge entry of 
    the proposed Revised Final Judgment based on the Court's determination 
    that the Judgment is in the public interest.
    
        Dated: February 16, 1996.
    
          Respectfully submitted,
    Steven Kramer,
    Richard S. Martin,
    U.S. Department of Justice, Antitrust Division, Bicentennial Building--
    Room 9420, 600 E Street NW., Washington, DC 20530, (202) 307-0997.
    January 19, 1995.
    Gail Kursh
    Chief Professional & Intellectual Property Section, Antitrust 
    Division, U.S. Department of Justice, 600 E. Street NW., Room 9300, 
    Washington, DC 20530.
    
        Dear Ms. Kursh: These comments are submitted regarding United 
    States of America vs. Vision Service Plan, case number 1:94CV02693.
        Northwest Administrators, Inc. (NW) is a third party 
    administrator which manages a vision care plan which competes with 
    Vision Service Plan in the Northwestern United States. Our vision 
    plan is known as the Northwest Benefit Network (NBN) vision care 
    plan. During the past several years, NBN has experienced the anti-
    competitive actions by VSP as described in the U.S. Justice 
    Department ``Complaint''. Eventually, we took our concerns to the 
    Washington State Attorney General, which has conducted its own 
    investigation.
        We are concerned that the proposed settlement will enable VSP to 
    continue to engage in anti-competitive activities, and we request 
    that your settlement be modified to include the following:
        1. VSP should be prohibited from asking participating panel 
    doctors for any information regarding fees accepted from other plans 
    or regarding participation in any other plan. By allowing this 
    activity, you permit them to identify doctors who they may wish to 
    punish for cooperating with competing plans. By allowing them to 
    collect fee information about their competitors, they will be in a 
    position to continue to use the information in restraint of trade 
    even if they don't do so under the authority of a ``most favored 
    nation'' contract clause.
        To support my concern, I am enclosing a copy of a letter from 
    VSP to its panel doctors in which VSP states, ``In the future, VSP's 
    payments will be based on the range of fees the doctor accepts, 
    rather than the lowest fee.'' The ``range'' of a doctor's fees, by 
    definition, includes the lowest and highest fees which the doctor 
    accepts. This is the type of information which VSP has misused in 
    the past.
        2. ``Permitted Activities'' described on page five of your Final 
    Judgment neutralize several of the activities described in 
    ``Prohibited Conduct'' on page four and five of your Final Judgment. 
    For example, VSP is prohibited from ``monitoring or auditing the 
    fees any VSP panel doctor charges any non-VSP patient or any non-VSP 
    plan; and communicating in any fashion with any VSP panel doctor 
    regarding the doctor's participation in any non-VSP plan or 
    regarding the doctor's fees charged to any non-VSP patient or to any 
    non-VSP plan.'' In the very next section, under ``Permitted 
    Activities'', VSP is allowed to collect fee information and to audit 
    fee information regarding doctors' charges to non-VSP patients. The 
    only way to insure that such information is not used for anti-
    competitive activities is to prohibit them from collecting or 
    possessing such information.
        3. VSP should be required to notify all doctors who withdrew 
    from competing plans that they will not in any way be penalized for 
    re-enrolling in other non-VSP plans. As currently written, your 
    ``Compliance Measures'' simply assist VSP in becoming more 
    monopolistic. To enhance competition and provide equitable relief, 
    competing plans which were damaged should be made whole. Due to 
    VSP's dominant market position, when forced to choose between 
    dropping their participation in VSP and dropping their participation 
    in non-VSP plans, providers almost always choose to drop their 
    participation in non-VSP plans. Your efforts should be to help non-
    VSP plans regain lost providers; not to help VSP to become bigger 
    and stronger. Non-VSP plans should be 
    
    [[Page 9491]]
    allowed to monitor the distribution of such notices to insure that all 
    affected providers receive proper notification.
        4. VSP should be required to repay all doctors who were 
    penalized for participating in other non-VSP plans. VSP should be 
    required to reimburse the difference in the amount they would have 
    paid and the reduced amount paid because the doctor was on a 
    competing plan which paid less than VSP.
        Finally, I would like to request clarification of Section X of 
    the Final Judgment which states that ``This Final Judgment shall 
    expire within five years from the date of its entry.'' Does that 
    mean that VSP can resurrect their ``Most Favored Nation'' activities 
    after five years?
        We would like to express our sincere gratitude to the Justice 
    Department for helping to level the playing field and for attempting 
    to restore a competitive market environment. We also appreciate your 
    consideration of our suggestions regarding the proposed settlement 
    with VSP.
    
          Sincerely,
    James H. Baker,
    Vice President.
    March 17, 1995.
    Gail Kursh,
    Chief, Professions & Intellectual Property Section, Department of 
    Justice, Antitrust Division, 600 E. Street NW., Room 9300, 
    Washington, DC 20530.
        Re: U.S. v. Vision Service Plan, USDC for District of Columbia, 
    Case No. 1:94CV02693
        Dear Sir/Madam: This comment on the proposed Final Judgment in 
    the above--entitled case is filed on behalf of the Optical 
    Laboratories Association, ``(OLA''), a trade association who address 
    is P.O. Box 2000, Merrifield, VA 22116-2000. Many of the members of 
    the Association have agreements with VSP as ``VSP contract 
    laboratories'' to ``perform opthalmic prescription work for VSP''.
        The thrust of this comment is that the proposed consent order 
    should be expanded to prohibit the MFN clause in VSP's contracts 
    with its contract laboratories.
        A vision service plan needs agreements with two sets of 
    providers: a panel of optometrists to perform refractions for the 
    plan members; and a panel of optical laboratories to perform 
    prescription work and provide completed devices--lenses and frames--
    to be delivered to the plan members. A plan which cannot secure the 
    services of adequate panels in each of these areas cannot be 
    competitive in the market place.
        The Department's Competitive Impact Statement adequately 
    describes conditions in the optical industry, and provides 
    justification for the proposed consent order. However, it does not 
    go far enough. The word ``laboratory'' could be substituted for the 
    word ``optometrist'' wherever the latter word appears in the 
    Statement to describe the reluctance of contract laboratories to 
    give discounts to plans that compete with VSP. This means that the 
    market can be made competitive for other vision service plans only 
    if the laboratories can be freed from enforcement of VSP's MFN 
    clause.
        Attached is a copy of VSP's ``Laboratory Agreement''. Paragraph 
    ``J'' refers to prices and provides that--``these prices . . . 
    reflect discounts which are greater than Laboratory gives to any 
    non-VSP customer.'' Paragraph ``H'' provides that--``Laboratory 
    agrees not to sell . . . any vision care group plan . . .'' There 
    can be no doubt that the agreement is designed to lock the 
    laboratory into a non-competitive position.
        Also attached is a copy of a typical letter received by a 
    contract laboratory after VSP had audited its prices. There is no 
    question that VSP enforces its MFN clause.
        In view of the above, it is submitted that in order to assure 
    competitive conditions in the market for vision care plans, VSP must 
    be enjoined from enforcing a MFN clause in any Laboratory Agreement.
    
          Respectfully submitted,
    
    Optical Laboratories Association, by:
    Joseph S. Gill,
    
    VSP Laboratory Agreement
    
        The undersigned optical laboratory, hereinafter referred to as 
    ``Laboratory,'' hereby agrees to perform ophthalmic prescription 
    work for VISION SERVICE PLAN, hereinafter referred to as ``VSP,'' as 
    a ``VSP contract laboratory.''
        A. Term. This contract shall be effective upon the date of 
    acceptance by VSP and shall remain in full force and effect until 
    terminated by either party hereto giving the other fifteen (15) days 
    prior written notice of intent to terminate. Laboratory agrees to 
    complete and deliver any prescription orders already in process on 
    the date of termination of this contract, and VSP agrees to pay for 
    these prescriptions at the contract prices listed herein. Laboratory 
    agrees that VSP will exercise its sole discretion in determining 
    that laboratories with which it will contract and that VSP reserves 
    the right to cancel this contract and remove Laboratory's name from 
    its approved list, subject only to the fifteen (15) day notice 
    provided for hereinabove.
        B. Laboratory Representations. Laboratory agrees and represents 
    that:
        (1) It adheres to applicable ANSI Z-80 Standards.
        (2) It conducts a complete wholesale optical service, serving 
    all optometrists and ophthalmologists without discrimination as to 
    race, color or creed.
        (3) It has surfacing and finishing capabilities in-house or 
    through the parent company (a lab by the same name) which is located 
    within the same region.
        (4) It is not owned, in whole or in part, by any person 
    practicing as an optometrist, ophthalmologist or dispensing optician 
    or by any person owning any part of a dispensary or retail outlet.
        (5) It has listed below all persons having an ownership interest 
    in Laboratory.
        (6) It will notify VSP immediately of any change in ownership of 
    laboratory.
        (7) It understands and agrees that this contract is not 
    assignable and becomes invalid if the Laboratory changes ownership, 
    name, or address.
        (8) It agrees to adhere to and be bound by all policies and 
    procedures of VSP.
        (9) It agrees to notify VSP of any price changes by sending its 
    revised price lists to the VSP Contract Laboratory Department within 
    thirty (30) days of the effective new prices.
        C. Audits and Inspections. Laboratory agrees that 
    representatives of VSP may visit Laboratory at any reasonable time 
    during normal business hours for the purpose of inspecting 
    Laboratory's facilities, stock, and fabrication operations, and to 
    audit any records. Laboratory will allow VSP representatives to 
    analyze pricing and discount information by reviewing wholesale 
    invoices and statements selected from Laboratory's files. Laboratory 
    will provide VSP all wholesale prescription price lists used for any 
    and all Laboratory customers, including buying groups. Pricing 
    information shall be held in strictest confidence by VSP, and shall 
    be utilized solely for VSP's internal purposes. Pricing information 
    will not be disseminated to any other laboratory or third party.
        D. Name Use. Laboratory agrees not to sue the name ``Vision 
    Service Plan, ``VSP,'' the VSP logo, or any variation of any of them 
    without having first obtained the express written consent of VSP and 
    agrees that using either the name of servicemarks of VSP for any 
    purpose without the express written consent of VSP is a violation of 
    state and federal law and will result in immediate termination of 
    this contract.
        E. Financial Incentives. Laboratory agrees not to offer or 
    provide any discounts, gifts, premiums, or other financial 
    inducements to VSP member doctors to attract VSP prescriptions. 
    Laboratory agrees not to include the VSP volume when determining a 
    VSP member doctor's volume discount on private prescriptions.
        F. Insurance. Laboratory agrees to provide and maintain general 
    and product liability insurance in a minimum amount of $1,000,000 
    per occurrence and to have VSP named as an additional insured on the 
    general and product liability policies.
        G. Cooperation. Laboratory agrees not to take any actions 
    demonstrating any unwilliness or inability to work cooperatively for 
    the best interest of VSP, its doctors, subscribers or subscriber 
    groups.
        H. Competition. Laboratory agrees not to sell or offer to sell, 
    directly or indirectly (including through any partnership, 
    association or corporation in which Laboratory owns more than 10% of 
    outstanding shares), any vision care group plan except safety 
    eyewear programs.
        I. Redos. Laboratory shall honor lab and doctor redos for at 
    least six (6) months from the date of completion of the original Rx. 
    Lab redos shall be remade until correct at no charge, and the VSP 
    member doctor will be the final judge of quality. A doctor redo 
    shall be remade at no additional charge. Laboratory agrees that the 
    contract prices paid for original Rxs cover the costs of doctor 
    redos.
        J. Prices. Laboratory agrees to perform VSP prescription work 
    for the prices listed below. These prices include all materials and 
    labor involved in supplying finished and mounted prescription lenses 
    to VSP member doctors and reflect discounts which are greater than 
    Laboratory gives to any non-VSP customer.
    
    All single Vision Lenses................................     $__________
    
    [[Page 9492]]
                                                                            
    All bifocal Lenses......................................     $__________
    All Other Prescriptions Including Trifocal, Lenticular,                 
     Double Seg., Etc.......................................     $__________
    Laboratory will supply frames for VSP prescriptions at                  
     the catalog price on the date the prescription is                      
     completed less:                                                  15%   
                                                                 $__________
                                                                            
    
    
    
        Laboratory agrees there will be no service charge to VSP or the 
    doctor for supplying any frame normally available to Laboratory's 
    customers. The price for each category of prescription lenses 
    includes all types of lenses within that category, and is the total 
    price, except for times on the VSP Lab Options List. Laboratory 
    agrees not to charge the VSP member doctor directly unless 
    authorized by VSP. Laboratory agrees not to refuse any VSP 
    prescription because of its cost. Laboratory agree to at all times 
    give VSP prescriptions the same priority as non-VSP prescriptions. 
    Laboratory understands and agrees that some prescriptions within 
    each of these categories are more expensive than others, and these 
    prices cover all prescriptions. Laboratory agrees not to divulge any 
    of these prices to any other party.
        K. Laboratory Ownership. The following are the only persons who 
    have an ownership interest in the Laboratory:
    
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                  Percentage
                          Name of owner(s)                            of    
                                                                  ownership 
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
    [None Listed]                                                           
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
    Vision Service Plan, Contract Laboratory Program, 333 Quality Drive, 
    Rancho Cordova, CA 95670-7989, (910) 851-5000 (800) 852-7609, 
    Telefax (916) 851-4866
    
        Enclosed is a new laboratory contract for your completion. 
    Please carefully review this new contract. Among other changes, note 
    the following.
        * The minimum general and product liability insurance coverage 
    has increased to $1,000,000 per occurrence. In addition, VSP is to 
    be named as an additional insured on the policies.
        * When we last surveyed all contract laboratories on their 
    current liability limits, it was evident that most labs already 
    realized the necessity of higher liability coverage. We found that 
    85% of our contract labs carried at least $1,000,000 coverage.
        Please forward a Certificate of Insurance reflecting the minimum 
    of $1,000,000 general and product liability, as well as showing VSP 
    as an additional insured.
        * The laboratory agrees not to sell any competing vision care 
    group plan. Safety eyewear programs may continue to be sold by 
    contract laboratories.
        * As a result of increased communications between VSP and 
    contract labs, a paragraph titled ``Confidential Information'' has 
    been added. This will help ensure confidentiality of any information 
    exchanged.
        * The laboratory's bid prices must reflect competitive pricing 
    for VSP.
        A recent price audit was conducted on your laboratory prices. 
    The audit utilizes the frequency of options, different lens 
    prescriptions and styles, and miscellaneous add-on items, and then 
    compares the amount VSP pays against your laboratory's private 
    pricing.
        VSP has found through this audit process that VSP is not 
    receiving a discount off maximum discounted private prices. As a 
    remedy to this situation, we ask that you submit a new bid to 
    continue as a VSP Contract Laboratory.
        Your cooperation on returning the completed contract with new 
    bid prices and Certificate of Insurance by (____________________) is 
    appreciated. If you have any questions, please call me.
    
        Sincerely,
    Teri M. Lew,
    Contract Laboratory Program Administrator.
    
    TML/td
    Enclosures
    
    March 28, 1995.
    Gail Kursh,
    Chief, Professional and Intellectual Property Section, Antitrust 
    Division, United States Department of Justice, 600 W. Street NW., 
    Room 9300, Washington, D.C. 20530
    
    Re: United States v. Vision Service Plan, Case Number 1:94CV02693
    
        Dear Ms. Kursh: The undersigned states offer the following 
    comments in the matter of United States v. Vision Service Plan. We 
    are pleased that you have attempted to address some of the problems 
    raised by VSP's practices and applaud your enforcement efforts. 
    However, on behalf of the chief antitrust enforcement officers of 
    our respective states we would like to point out a potential problem 
    with the inclusion of language in the Consent Decree which could 
    potentially inhibit any future enforcement efforts by the states. 
    Although we recognize that the proposed Consent Decree is merely an 
    agreement between the parties with no precedential effect, we 
    nevertheless feel that the Decree could be improved to more 
    adequately address the public interest in this matter.
        As you are aware, Vision Service Plan (VSP) is based in 
    California and does business throughout the western United States. 
    As your investigation revealed, many states have been impacted by 
    VSP's activities. Consequently, for some time now several states 
    have been examining VSP's practices and their effects on consumers 
    in our region. The scope of our review is somewhat broader than the 
    DOJ investigation, focusing on other issues in addition to the most 
    favored nation clause.
        Our purpose in submitting comments is to raise our concern that 
    the Consent Decree as proposed might be interpreted as a court-
    sanctioned seal of approval for the activities which have been 
    specifically identified in Section V of the Decree. That section 
    permits, inter alia, the defendant to continue to gather fee 
    information from participating doctors. The fees gathered are then 
    permitted to be used as part of a determination of median or modal 
    fees, which are in turn used to set reimbursement rates. Although 
    this activity has been permitted in the context of responding to 
    your concerns about misuse of most favored national clauses, we are 
    concerned that it will be taken out of context to support horizontal 
    price-fixing activity, which is beyond the scope of activity 
    addressed in your lawsuit. It would be disturbing to see such a 
    result.
        We suggest that our concern would be eliminated if Section V is 
    simply moved to the Stipulation between the parties, rather than 
    made a part of the court's order. Alternative by, language should be 
    inserted which makes it clear that the permitted activities are 
    permitted only insofar as they are not part of action which would be 
    otherwise illegal, such as horizontal price-fixing. Either solution 
    would address our concern by clarifying the scope of the Consent 
    Decree, yet would not affect the substance of your settlement with 
    VSP.
        Thank you for your consideration. Please feel free to contact us 
    if you have any questions.
    
            Very truly yours,
    Tina E. Kondo,
    Brian Dew,
    Assistant Attorneys General, State of Washington.
    Daveed Schwartz,
    Assistant Attorney General, State of Alaska.
    Kenneth S. Countryman,
    Assistant Attorney General, State of Arizona.
    Michael T. Lee,
    Deputy Attorney General, State of Hawaii.
    Marty Howard,
    Deputy Attorney General, State of Nevada.
    Susan G. White,
    Assistant Attorney General, State of New Mexico.
    Andy Aubertine,
    Assistant Attorney General, State of Oregon.
    
    April 21, 1995.
    Ms. Anne Bingaman,
    Assistant Attorney General, Antitrust Division, U.S. Department of 
    Justice, 600 E. Street N.W., Washington, D.C. 20530
    
    Re: United States v. Vision Service Plan, Case No. 1:94CV026993 TPJ
    
        Dear Ms. Bingaman: Pursuant to conversations with the Department 
    of Justice (the Department), the undersigned states submit this 
    Additional Comment in the matter of United States v. Vision Service 
    Plan. We are concerned that entry of the proposed Final Judgment, as 
    drafted, would not be in the public interest. Entry of the decree 
    would give VSP a court order which arguably allows it to engage in 
    activity which the Ninth Circuit, the Department and the Federal 
    Trade Commission (FTC) consider to be per se illegal. Although the 
    decree contains prohibitions against certain activities associated 
    with most favored nation clauses, Section V can be interpreted as 
    overruling them and allows VSP to engage in many of these 
    activities. Although we applaud the Department's recognition that 
    VSP's business practices have severe and significant anticompetitive 
    effects and support the Department's efforts to address the problem, 
    we fear that the proposed Final Judgment will create more problems 
    than it 
    
    [[Page 9493]]
    will solve. Accordingly, we object to entry of the proposed Final 
    Judgment.
    
    I
    
    Section V May Allow VSP to Engage in Activities That Would 
    Otherwise be per se Illegal
    
        In Hahn v. Oregon Physicians' Service, 868 F.2d 1022 (9th Cir. 
    1988), the Ninth Circuit held that a provider-controlled plan which 
    collected fee information and set reimbursement rates and maximum 
    fee caps for other providers could be construed as a horizontal 
    price fixing conspiracy, and thus per se illegal. Moreover, the 
    Department and the FTC, in jointly prepared guidelines declare that 
    activities such as information gathering and fee setting by 
    provider-controlled plans is per se illegal.
    
    A. Provider Control
    
        VSP is a provider-controlled plan. Historically, all of its 
    directors have been doctors. Its mission ``is to put . . . dollars 
    into optometric bank accounts.'' \1\ Currently, twelve of its 
    thirteen directors are doctors. Each of these twelve director-
    doctors is also a VSP panel doctor. Under these panel doctors' 
    direction, VSP collects information about the fees charged by all 
    panel doctors. The director-doctors are ultimately responsible for 
    using this information to set fee reimbursement rates and maximum 
    fee caps for their fellow doctors. Each of these activities: 
    information gathering and fee setting, is per se illegal when 
    engaged in by a provider-controlled plan.\2\
    
        \1\ ``The mission of our corporation as stated by the founders, 
    reaffirmed by the present board, and by all of the leaders in 
    between, is to put patients into our panel doctors' offices and 
    dollars into optometric bank accounts.'' February 12, 1987 Speech by 
    VSP's President, John O'Donnell, p. 8. Exhibit 62 to Declaration of 
    Jeffrey M. Shohet in Support of Plaintiffs' Motion for Partial 
    Summary Judgment in Allstate Optical Services, Inc. v. California 
    Vision Service, Docket No. C87-20572WAI, U.S. District Court, 
    Southern District of California.
        \2\ A ``safe harbor'' exists where a provider-controlled plan 
    shares substantial financial risk through capitation or withholding 
    of at least 20%. Statement 8 of The Department of Justice and 
    Federal Trade Commission Statements of Enforcement Policy and 
    Analytical Principles Relating to Health Care and Antitrust. VSP, 
    however, does not use capitation and only withholds a maximum of 2%. 
    Accordingly, VSP does not qualify for the safe harbor.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
    B. Information Gathering
    
        A number of provisions in Section V arguably would allow VSP to 
    engage in illegal information gathering. Section V(A) of the 
    proposed Final Judgment would allow VSP to collect fee information 
    from panel doctors in order to determine doctors' median or modal 
    fees. The median fee is defined as ``the fee below and above which 
    there are an equal number of fees,'' and the modal fee is defined as 
    the fee charged most frequently to non-VSP patients. Either 
    measurement requires knowledge of every fee charged by a doctor 
    during the preceding year. Accordingly, this section would allow 
    VSP's doctor-controlled board to collect information about all fees 
    charged by fellow member doctors during the preceding year and use 
    this information to set fee reimbursement rates and maximum fee 
    caps.
        The Department and the FTC explicitly condemn this activity. 
    ``If an exchange among competing providers of price or cost 
    information results in an agreement among competitors as to the 
    prices for health care services . . . that agreement will be 
    considered unlawful per se.'' Statement of Department of Justice and 
    Federal Trade Commission Enforcement Policy on Provider 
    Participation in Exchanges of Price and Cost Information, BNA 
    Antitrust Trade and Regulation Reporter, Sep. 29, 1994, p. S-14.
    
    C. Fee Setting
    
        A number of provisions in Section V arguably would allow VSP to 
    engage in illegal fee setting. Section V(B) would allow VSP to 
    calculate the fees it pays to panel doctors on the basis of median 
    or modal fees. Section V(D) would allow VSP to devise a fee system 
    for new panel members based on average fees. Section V(E) would 
    allow VSP to maintain the current fee reimbursements and maximum fee 
    caps it has already set. Taken together, these sections seem to 
    allow VSP's doctor-controlled board to continue to set fee 
    reimbursement rates and maximum fee caps as long as they do not base 
    them on the lowest fees charged by panel doctors. The fact that 
    providers are setting fees for fellow providers, however, should be 
    more of a concern than the statistic used to set the fee.\3\
    
        \3\ As the Department points out at p. 7 of the Competitive 
    Impact Statement, one of the effects of VSP's practices is that fees 
    for vision care services are 30% higher in areas where VSP is 
    dominant. The Department implies that VSP currently bases its fees 
    on the lowest fees accepted by its doctors. By encouraging VSP to 
    set fees based on any amount other than the lowest fees, however, 
    costs for vision care services are likely to rise even higher.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        The Department notes that Section V would allow VSP to use a fee 
    schedule, which is ``an approach used by other vision care insurance 
    plans.'' Competitive Impact Statement, p. 12. VSP is not like other 
    vision care insurance plans. It is controlled by doctors. ``Even if 
    a fee schedule is therefore desirable, it is not necessary that the 
    doctors do the price fixing.'' Arizona v. Maricopa County Medical 
    Society, 457 U.S. 332, 352 (1982).
        15 U.S.C.A. Sec. 16(e) (1995) requires that the proposed Final 
    Judgment be in the public interest. If the proposed Final Judgment 
    is entered, it will give to VSP, a collection of doctors the 
    government contends have already acted anticompetitively, a court 
    order which arguably allows further behavior the Ninth Circuit, the 
    Department and the FTC all consider per se illegal. This behavior 
    will most likely result in even higher vision care costs in areas 
    where VSP is dominant. Because of Section V, the proposed Final 
    Judgment not only fails to remedy the anticompetitive effects of 
    VSP's actions, it arguably makes them worse. Entry of such a consent 
    judgment can not be in the public interest.
    
    II
    
    Section V Compromises the Decree's Ability to Terminate Alleged 
    Violations
    
        The proposed Final Judgment, as drafted, also fails the public 
    interest test because it does not terminate the alleged violations. 
    The complaint alleges that one of the ``agreements'' between VSP and 
    panel doctors that has raised prices for vision care services is the 
    most favored nation (MFN) clause. The complaint also alleges that 
    the MFN clause creates disincentives to discounting. Although 
    Section IV of the proposed Final Judgment purports to prohibit 
    various activities associated with the MFN clause, section V 
    overrules these restrictions and explicitly permits VSP to engage in 
    many of these activities. Because of section V, the decree also 
    fails to remove the disincentives to discounting.
    
    A. MFN Activities
    
        Section IV of the proposed Final Judgment attempts to prevent 
    illegal conduct regarding most favored nation clauses. Although 
    Sections IV(E) and IV(F) would prohibit VSP from monitoring, 
    auditing or communicating with any panel doctor about the fees the 
    doctor charges any non-VSP patient or plan, Section V(C) allows VSP 
    to audit any of its doctors and Section V(A), as discussed above, 
    allows VSP to collect (monitor and communicate) information on each 
    fee charged by a doctor to a non-VSP patient or plan. Section IV(B) 
    would prohibit VSP from linking panel doctor payments to fees 
    charged by the doctor to non-VSP patients or plans. Section V(B), 
    however, allows VSP to calculate payments to doctors on median or 
    modal fees which are, by definition, calculated exclusively on fees 
    paid to non-VSP patients or plans. Finally, whereas Section IV(C) 
    would prohibit VSP from differentiating payments to doctors who 
    charge lower fees to non-VSP patients or plans, Section V(E) allows 
    VSP to maintain current fees which, because of most favored nation 
    enforcement, already differentiate.
    
    B. Discounting Disincentives
    
        Use of modal or median fees in place of the lowest fee fails to 
    remove disincentives to discounting. For example, the median fee, 
    ``the fee below and above which there are an equal number of fees,'' 
    is potentially lowered anytime a provider discounts his fee to a 
    non-VSP patient or plan. Providers are still unlikely to risk 
    reducing the amounts they receive from VSP, which constitutes a 
    significant portion of many practices, by accepting anything less 
    than their VSP fees.\4\
    
        \4\ Perhaps most significantly, the proposed Final judgment 
    fails to address what is arguably the strongest disincentive to 
    discounting. Many optometrists feel that VSP is ``optometry's 
    plan.'' They see discounting or membership on a competitor's panel 
    as forms of disloyalty. The decree thus would leave intact the most 
    significant disincentive to discounting.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        Section V thus not only facilitates price fixing, it also 
    compromises the proposed Final Judgment's attempts to prohibit MFN 
    activities and remove disincentives to discounting. Moreover, by 
    allowing VSP to maintain the current fees which are the result of 
    years of VSP's misuse of most favored 
    
    [[Page 9494]]
    nation clauses, the proposed Final Judgment fails to remedy a specific 
    practice alleged in the Complaint. It would not be in the public 
    interest to simply tell VSP to ``sin no more'' without also 
    addressing the unfair advantage it has already gained.\5\
    
        \5\ It is unclear why the proposed Final Judgment in this case 
    differs so significantly from the proposed Final Judgment in the 
    Department's recent Arizona Delta Dental case. The complaint in the 
    Delta Dental case, like the VSP case, included allegations of misuse 
    of most favored nations clauses. The decree in Delta Dental does not 
    contain a section of permitted activities. There is no apparent 
    difference in the Complaints that would explain the presence of 
    Section V in this case.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
    III. Conclusion
    
        Nothing is alleged in the VSP complaint which would necessitate 
    the inclusion of Section V. This section arguably would allow VSP to 
    engage in conduct that would otherwise be illegal. Section V also 
    reduces the safeguards of Section IV to nothing more than an 
    illusion. For these reasons we object to entry of the proposed Final 
    Judgment in this matter.
        Respectfully Submitted this 21st day of April, 1995.
        Very truly yours,
    Tina E. Kondo,
    Brian L. Dew,
    Assistant Attorneys General, State of Washington.
    Bruce M. Botelho,
    Attorney General.
    Daveed A. Schwartz,
    Assistant Attorney General, State of Alaska.
    Kenneth S. Countryman,
    Assistant Attorney General, State of Arizona.
    Michael T. Lee,
    Deputy Attorney General, State of Hawaii.
    Marty Howard,
    Deputy Attorney General, State of Nevada.
    Susan G. White,
    Assistant Attorney General, State of New Mexico.
    Andrew E. Aubertine,
    Assistant Attorney General, State of Oregon.
        United States of America, Plaintiff, vs. Vision Service Plan, 
    Defendant.
    
    [No. CV 94-2693 TPJ]
    
    Comment of First American Health Concepts, Inc.
    
        Pursuant to the Antitrust Procedures and Penalties Act, 15 
    U.S.C. Sec. 16(b), First American Health Concepts, Inc., (``FAHC''), 
    an interested person, submits to the Department of Justice for 
    filing with the United States District Court for the District of 
    Columbia and publication in the Federal Register its written Comment 
    on the Final Judgment proposed by the parties to this action. This 
    Comment is supported by the attached Memorandum of Points and 
    Authorities and all Exhibits hereto.\1\
    
        \1\ FAHC incorporates at Exhibits A and B the letters dated 
    October 10, 1994 and October 17, 1994, and all exhibits thereto, 
    submitted to the Department of Justice by Daniel F. Gruender.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        Respectfully Submitted this 29th day of March, 1995.
    
        Shimmel Hill, Bishop & Gruender, P.C.
    Daniel F. Gruender,
    Michael V. Perry,
    Glenn B. Hotchkiss,
    3700 North 24th Street, Phoenix, Arizona 85016, Attorneys for First 
    American Health, Concepts, Inc.
    
    Memorandum of Points and Authorities
    
    I. Introduction
    
        FAHC is an Arizona corporation formed in 1981 and a competitor 
    of the Defendant, Vision Service Plan (``VSP''), in the market for 
    pre-paid vision care services. Both FAHC and VSP offer their 
    enrolled members eye examinations and eyeware (eyeglasses and 
    contact lenses) through a network of affiliated service providers, 
    primarily optometrists and opticians.
        FAHC incorporates the factual recitations contained in the 
    Competitive Impact Statement Sections I and II filed in this action.
        FAHC opposes the proposed Final Judgment for the following 
    reasons. As explained in Sec. II(B) below, mere elimination of the 
    Most Favored Nations (``MFN'') provision by name from the VSP Panel 
    Doctor Agreement does not remedy VSP's anti-competitive practice of 
    penalizing panel doctors for accepting lower fees from competing 
    plans because Sec. V(B) of the proposed Final Judgment permits VSP 
    to continue calculating the fees it will pay its panel doctors in 
    relation to what those doctors accept from non-VSP patients. As 
    explained in Sec. II(C) below, the proposed Final Judgment is 
    deficient because it does not even address, let along prohibit, 
    VSP's illegal tying/exclusive dealing arrangement between a VSP 
    panel doctor's membership on a VSP panel and then purchase of 
    eyeglasses from a VSP-controlled sources.
        For all these reasons, and as further explained in Sec. II(D), 
    FAHC respectfully suggests that the proposed Final Judgment be 
    modified in the following respects:
        (1) VSP should be prohibited from calculating the fees it will 
    pay its panel doctors based directly or indirectly on the fees those 
    doctors charge to non-VSP patients;
        (2) VSP should be prohibited from requiring VSP panel doctors to 
    maintain or produce any information relating to the fees those 
    doctors charge to non-VSP patients, and also should be prohibited 
    from auditing VSP panel doctors' records to discover such 
    information; and
        (3) VSP should be prohibited from tying the VSP membership of 
    its panel doctors to the purchase of vision products manufactured by 
    VSP-owned or controlled sources or requiring that VSP panel doctors 
    obtain vision products only from VSP-controlled sources.
    
    II. Analysis
    
    A. Introduction
    
        The Tunney Act requires that before entering the proposed Final 
    Judgment, this Court must first determine that entry of the Final 
    Judgment is in the public interest. 15 U.S.C. Sec. 16(e). As stated 
    in United States v. Airline Tariff Pub. Co., 836 F.Supp. 9, 11 
    (D.D.C. 1993):
        Courts have developed a two-pronged public interest inquiry. 
    First, courts inquire as to whether the proposed relief effectively 
    will foreclose the possibility that antitrust violations will occur 
    or recur * * *. Second, courts consider whether the relief impinges 
    upon other public policies. (citations omitted)
        In making the public interest determination, the Court must 
    evaluate whether the proposed Final Judgment provides a valid 
    antitrust remedy by ``pry[ing] open to competition a market that has 
    been closed by [VSP's] illegal restraints.'' International Salt Co. 
    v. United States, 332 U.S. 392, 401 (1947). See also United States 
    v. Microsoft, 159 F.R.D. 318, 331 (D.D.C. 1995). Stated another way, 
    in assessing whether a proposed consent judgment passes muster, the 
    Court must determine that it (a) rectifies the behavior the 
    government perceives to be a current antitrust violation, and (b) 
    does not allow the settling defendant to engage in similar anti-
    competitive behavior. Airline Tariff, supra, at 12-13. The Court 
    must independently review the proposed Final Judgment using the 
    above analysis, and may not merely rubber stamp it. Microsoft, 
    supra, at 329. Finally, in making the public interest determination, 
    this Court is not restricted to the allegations of DOJ's Complaint, 
    and instead, may look beyond the four corners of the Complaint to 
    all relevant conduct and circumstances. Microsoft, supra, at 331. 
    For the reasons set forth below, the proposed Final Judgment does 
    not serve the public interest and should be rejected.
    
    B. The Proposed Final Judgment Is Deficient Because It Allows VSP To 
    Demand From Its Panel Doctors Information Regarding Fees Charged Non-
    VSP Patients And To Continue Calculating The Fees It Pays Its Panel 
    Doctors In Relation To What Those Doctors Charge Non-VSP Patients.
    
        On the simplest level, DOJ Claims that the proposed Final 
    Judgment will eliminate VSP's anti-competitive practices and open 
    the vision services industry to an unparalleled degree of 
    competition. The proposed Final Judgment will bring about this 
    result, DOJ says, because it renders the MFN provision in the VSP 
    Panel Doctor's Agreement null and void. The vice in that MFN 
    provision (and what presumably led DOJ to sue VSP in the first 
    place) is that it allows VSP to calculate the fees it will pay its 
    panel doctors in relation to the fees those same doctors charge non-
    VSP patients and non-VSP plans. DOJ knows that VSP has a history of 
    cutting providers' rates under the guise of the MFN alleging the 
    provider is accepting lower fees from another competitor even when 
    that allegation is incorrect or the fees involved are not 
    comparable. Based on this evidence, there is no reason to expect VSP 
    will not do the same with any other formula permitted. Based on what 
    DOJ knows, it should, as it did in the case of Delta Dental, 
    prohibit VSP access to any fee information of providers for others 
    than its own patients and not put its imprimatur on any fee setting 
    mechanism.
    
    [[Page 9495]]
    
        An additional problem with the proposed Final Judgment is that 
    while it prohibits VSP from enforcing the MFN provision, it 
    expressly allows VSP to continue its anti-competitive practice of 
    setting its fees in relation to the fees charged by its competitors.
        Part of the problem with the permitted Section V is it is based 
    on the erroneous assumption that non-VSP fees will be for the 
    identical or comparable level of service and product as VSP's. In 
    fact, some providers use composite rates, one price for any exam, 
    whether limited, intermediate or comprehensive, and the same type of 
    lens and glasses while this is not in fact the case with VSP. 
    Accordingly, efforts to construct ``median'' or ``modal'' fees are 
    meaningless because it involves a comparison of dissimilar services 
    or products.
        There is no doubt but that the proposed Final Judgment allows 
    VSP to disguise and continue its anti-competitive comparative fee-
    setting policy. Section IV of the proposed Final Judgment prohibits 
    VSP from maintaining or enforcing the MFN and from linking payments 
    made by VSP to its panel doctors to the fees charged by those 
    doctors to any non-VSP patient or plan. However, the entirety of 
    Sec. IV is qualified by the clause ``[e]xcept as permitted in 
    Section V.'' Section V permits VSP to ``calculate the fees that it 
    pays to a VSP panel doctor for services rendered to VSP patients 
    based on either the panel doctor's modal or median fee. * * *.'' 
    Sec. V(B). In turn, ``modal fee' and ``median fee'' are both defined 
    in terms of ``the fee(s) charged * * * for each service rendered to 
    non-VSP patients * * *.'' Sec. II(F) & (G) (emphasis added). In 
    short, Section V expressly authorizes VSP to continue some vaguely 
    defined comparative fee-setting policy which resulted in this 
    lawsuit and which Section IV purports to prohibit.
        DOJ tacitly concedes that the proposed Final Judgment will not 
    prohibit VSP from basing its payments on the fees paid by its 
    competitors:
        Though Section V does not allow VSP routinely to base its 
    payments on the lowest fee charged by its panel doctors to any non-
    VSP plan or patient--as VSP has done through its MFN clause--Section 
    V does permit VSP to base its payments to panel doctors on their 
    median or modal fees charged to non-VSP plans and patients, two 
    measures of usual and customary fees that are not linked directly to 
    the lowest fee charged.
    
    Impact Statement at 13 (emphasis added). Apparently, DOJ's position 
    is that VSP may base its payments to its panel doctors on the fees 
    those doctors receive from non-VSP patients or plans so long as VSP 
    does not do so routinely or directly.
        The fallacy in DOJ's reasoning is obvious. If the fee-setting 
    mechanism embodied in the MFN provision is the competitive evil DOJ 
    says it is,\2\ then the policy must be prohibited whether it is 
    implemented routinely or sporadically, directly or indirectly. 
    Otherwise, VSP is free to do indirectly what it is prohibited from 
    doing directly, in which case the very idea that competition will 
    increase and consumers will benefit is laughable.
    
        \2\ In its Complaint, DOJ states that the MFN provision/
    comparative fee policy: 1) unreasonably restrains competition among 
    vision service care insurance plans; 2) results in higher prices for 
    vision care services for non-VSP patients; and 3) deprives consumers 
    of vision care services of the benefits of free and open 
    competition. See Complaint at Sec. 18(a)-(c). FAHC agrees, which is 
    why it files this Comment to see that this anti-competitive practice 
    is stopped rather than reformulated.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        DOJ's only response is to suggest that in light of the fact that 
    many patients have no vision coverage at all, the VSP panel doctor's 
    median or modal (i.e., non-VSP) fee is not likely to be the doctor's 
    lowest fee. Impact Statement at 13. This argument also misses the 
    mark. The point is not that the median or modal fee will be a given 
    doctor's lowest fee, but rather, that it will be a lower fee than 
    the previously determined VSP fee. In that event, VSP can (and 
    undoubtedly will) lower its fee to the lower level, the VSP panel 
    doctor will suffer financially due to his membership in a competing 
    plan, and the doctor's financial incentive will be to drop his 
    membership in the competing plan to the detriment of that plan which 
    reduces the competitor's ability to be an effective competitor which 
    results in higher costs to the consumer. This is exactly the anti-
    competitive chain of events of which DOJ complains in its Complaint. 
    See Complaint at Paras. 9-11.
        DOJ's inadequate remedy also presents a significant obstacle to 
    a doctor's decision to join another panel in addition to VSP. Under 
    Sec. V(A) of the proposed Final Judgment, VSP can compel a panel 
    doctor to provide on an annual basis information sufficient to 
    determine that doctor's modal and median fee. The modal fee is 
    defined as the doctor's most frequently charged fee to non-VSP 
    patients or for non-VSP covered services, while the median fee is 
    defined as the doctor's fee below and above which there are an equal 
    number of fees charged to non-VSP patients or for non-VSP covered 
    services. Proposed Final Judgment at Sec. II(F) & (G).
        DOJ's modal/median fee scheme will require doctors to carry an 
    enormous record-keeping burden in order to comply with VSP's 
    requirements. Each doctor who participates in both a VSP panel and a 
    competing panel will have to maintain (and produce at least 
    annually), and probably compile and compute from, extensive records 
    regarding each non-VSP patient and the fees charged to each non-VSP 
    patient. The cost of this type of record-keeping could well be 
    prohibitive. The failure to comply with the record-keeping 
    requirement could be even worse because the proposed Final Judgment 
    also permits VSP to impose unspecified penalties on doctors who 
    misrepresent their fees or the frequency with which they charge 
    those fees.\3\ Proposed Final Judgment at Sec. V(F). Rather than go 
    through all that red tape and risk unspecified reductions and 
    potential penalties and costs, providers will stay off of other 
    panels just as they have under the MFN by whatever name it has been 
    called.
    
        \3\ The proposed Final Judgment does not define the term 
    ``misrepresent'' as that term is utilized in Sec. V(F). Therefore, a 
    doctor who inadvertently fails to keep accurate records of all non-
    VSP patient charges might be accused of misrepresenting his non-VSP 
    fees.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        When faced with this Hobson's choice (between the cost of 
    compliance and penalties for non-compliance), the only way for a 
    doctor to escape the record-keeping burden and potential risks, 
    expenses and uncertainties of ``modals'' and ``medians'' as well as 
    penalties, is to drop his membership in a competing panel or simply 
    not join if the fees are not the same as VSP. That is what most 
    plans that have resisted VSP's MFN enforcement tactics have been 
    forced to do, namely raise their rates to those provided by VSP. In 
    other words, if a doctor chooses to join a VSP panel, and only a VSP 
    panel, the onerous record-keeping requirements of Sec. V(A) do not 
    apply to him because he is not providing services to any non-VSP 
    patients.\4\ Again, the clear incentive is for the doctor to drop 
    his membership in a competing plan and provide services only through 
    VSP, and the end result is a corresponding diminution in the number 
    of doctors available to competing plans such as FAHC or other non-
    VSP plans and programs, and, of course, less competition for VSP who 
    is growing by leaps and bounds.\6\
    
        \4\ Of course, to the extent that a doctor provides services to 
    a non-VSP patient who is not affiliated with a competing plan, the 
    record-keeping requirements would, in theory, still apply. However, 
    it is doubtful that VSP would enforce the requirements where a 
    competing plan is not involved.
        \5\ See Exhibit C and Exhibit D.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        If DOJ is serious about increasing competition in the vision 
    services industry by providing incentives for providers to join more 
    than one vision services plan (or at least by removing the 
    disincentives to doing so), that goal can be accomplished only by 
    prohibiting VSP, as the Justice Department required of a similar 
    plan using a MFN clause and fee setting mechanism in the dental 
    industry, from setting the fees it will pay its panel doctors in 
    comparison to the lower fees those doctors accept from competing 
    plans.\6\ DOJ does not explain why it prohibited Delta Dental from 
    doing what it permits VSP to do. Any lesser remedy leaves VSP's 
    litigation-inducing, anti-competitive practice intact.
    
        \6\ See Delta Dental Consent Judgment and Competitive Impact 
    Statement in case of Delta Dental. Exhibits E and F.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
    C. The Proposed Final Judgment Is Deficient Because It Fails to Even 
    Address the Tying/Exclusive Dealing Arrangement Between Membership on a 
    VSP Panel and the Lenses VSP Panel Doctors Must Dispense.
    
    1. Introduction
    
        In addition to the defects discussed above, the proposed Final 
    Judgment fails to serve the public interest because it does not even 
    address a VSP-imposed requirement which is either a tying 
    arrangement or an exclusive dealing arrangement. Specifically, the 
    VSP Member Doctor's Procedure Manual (the ``Manual'') requires that 
    VSP panel doctors must obtain lenses to be dispensed to patients 
    only from VSP-approved 
    
    [[Page 9496]]
    laboratories.\7\ This requirement should be (but is not) prohibited by 
    the proposed Final Judgment.
    
        \7\ Under the heading ``Ophthalmic Laboratories,'' the Manual 
    states ``VSP doctors must use one of the VSP contract laboratories 
    listed in the Laboratory Section of this Manual.'' Manual at G-1. 
    The Manual also states ``VSP POLICY DOES NOT ALLOW THE PANEL DOCTOR 
    TO FABRICATE AND/OR SUPPLY LENSES OUT OF HIS OWN OFFICE STOCK. ALL 
    TINTING MUST BE DONE BY THE VSP CONTRACT LAB THAT SUPPLIED THE 
    LENSES.'' Manual at G-1 (capitalization in original).
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
    2. Tying Arrangement
    
        A tying arrangement is ``an agreement by a party to sell one 
    product but only on the condition that the buyer also purchases a 
    different (or tied) product, or at least agrees that he will not 
    purchase that product from any other supplier.'' Northern Pacific 
    Railway Co. v. United States, 356 U.S. 1, 5-6 (1958) Not all tying 
    arrangements violate the antitrust laws. A tying arrangement will 
    violate Sec. 1 of the Sherman Act if the seller has ``appreciable 
    economic power'' in the tying product market and if the arrangement 
    affects a substantial volume of commerce in the tied market. Eastman 
    Kodak Co. v. Image Technical Services, Inc., 119 L.Ed.2d 265, 280 
    (1992). According to the Supreme Court, ``the essential 
    characteristic of an invalid tying arrangement lies in the seller's 
    exploitation of its control over the tying product to force the 
    buyer into the purchase of a tied product that the buyer either did 
    not want at all, or might have preferred to purchase elsewhere on 
    different terms.'' Jefferson Parish Hospital District No. 2 v. Hyde, 
    466 U.S. 2, 12 (1984).
        The elements of an invalid tying arrangement are: (1) Two 
    separate products or services, (2) the tying of the sale of one 
    product or service to the purchase of another product or service, 
    (3) sufficient market power in the tying product to restrain trade 
    in the market for the tied product, and (4) a not insubstantial 
    amount of interstate commerce in the tied product. Virtual 
    Maintenance, Inc. v. Prime Computer, Inc., 11 F.3d 660, 664 n.6 (6th 
    Cir. 1993). Tying arrangements which satisfy all four elements 
    violate Sec. 1 of the Sherman Act and Sec. 3 of the Clayton Act.\8\
    
        \8\ Clayton Act Sec. 3 is implicated only if both the tying 
    product and the tied product are ``commodities,'' i.e., durable 
    goods. Waldo v. North American Van Lines, Inc., 669 F.Supp. 722, 727 
    (W.D. Pa. 1987). If either product is a service, only Sherman Act 
    Sec. 1 is implicated. Id.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
    a. Separate Tying and Tied Products Or Services
    
        By definition, the tying product must be separate from the tied 
    product. Otherwise, there is really only one product, and there can 
    be no tying arrangement. In determining whether one or two products 
    are involved, courts focus on the character of the demand for the 
    two products. Jefferson Parish, supra, at 19. Thus, there must be a 
    demand for the tied product separate from the tying product 
    sufficient to identify a distinct market for the tied product. Id. 
    at 21-22. Although the products must be separate, a tying 
    arrangement may exist between two functionally related but separate 
    products. See, e.g., Jefferson Parish, supra at 22-24 (hospital 
    services and anesthesiological services held to be two 
    distinguishable services for tying arrangement purposes).
        There is no doubt that a doctor's membership on a VSP panel\9\ 
    and the lenses that doctor dispenses to patients are sufficiently 
    distinct so as to constitute two separate products for tying 
    arrangement purposes. But for the tying arrangement, VSP panel 
    doctors would be free to acquire lenses for their VSP patients from 
    sources not affiliated with VSP, or even to make the lenses 
    themselves. These alternative sources for eyeglass lenses 
    conclusively demonstrate that VSP panel membership and the lenses to 
    be dispensed to patients are two separate ``products'' for tying 
    arrangement purposes.
    
        \9\ The tying ``product'' is really the patient referrals which 
    flow from membership on a VSP panel. It is this source of referrals 
    which optometrists wish to purchase, and which induces them to join 
    the VSP panel. For purposes of convenience, however, this Comment 
    will refer to the tying product simply as VSP panel membership.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
    b. Tying of Sale of One Product To Purchase of Another Product
    
        The fact of a tie may be established either by reliance on a 
    contract term, or by showing that defendant coerced the purchaser 
    into accepting the tied product. Waldo, supra, at 727. In this case, 
    the tie is beyond dispute because the Manual expressly requires VSP 
    panel doctors to acquire lenses only from VSP-approved sources. See 
    footnote 5, supra. In turn, the requirements of the Manual are 
    incorporated by reference in the Panel Doctor's Agreement.\10\
    
        \10\ The VSP Panel Doctor's Agreement states ``THE DOCTOR AGREES 
    to adhere to [VSP] policies and procedures as set forth in the panel 
    doctors' manual * * * .'' Panel Doctor's Agreement at para.4.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
    c. Market Power To Restrain Trade in the Market for the Tied Product
    
        The requisite market power may in inferred from a dominant 
    market share without a showing of actual restraint on competition in 
    the relevant market. Eastman Kodak, supra, at 282; Jefferson Parish, 
    supra, at 17-18. In the event of dominant market share, the tie is 
    per se illegal, and is not subject to a rule of reason analysis of 
    actual market conditions. Jefferson Parish, supra, at 13-15.
        VSP enjoys a dominant market share in California, other Western 
    states, and quite probably, in most of the states in which it does 
    business. FAHC is not able to more specifically identify VSP's share 
    of the relevant market(s) because DOJ has avoided raising this issue 
    in either its Complaint or Impact Statement. The proposed Final 
    Judgment also is silent on VSP's market share. This lack of crucial 
    information is reason enough to reject the proposed Final Judgment. 
    See Microsoft, supra, at 332-33 (rejecting proposed decree in part 
    because parties had failed to provide court with sufficient 
    information to make the public interest determination).
        With respect to the market share component of an illegal tying 
    arrangement, FAHC asks this Court to take judicial notice of VSP's 
    dominant market share in California. FAHC also respectfully suggests 
    that DOJ and VSP should be required to come forward with evidence of 
    VSP's market share in the relevant market(s) so as to provide this 
    Court with adequate information to analyze VSP's anti-competitive 
    practices, including the tying arrangement.
    
    d. Substantial Interstate Commerce
    
        The last element of a tying arrangement is that more than an 
    insubstantial amount of interest commerce must be affected by the 
    tie. As the Supreme Court noted in Jefferson Parish, ``if only a 
    single purchaser were `forced' with respect to the purchase of a 
    tied item, the resultant impact on competition would not be 
    sufficient to warrant the concern of antitrust law.'' Id. at 16. 
    However, from a dollar volume perspective, the requirement is easily 
    reached. See, e.g., United States v. Loew's, 371 U.S. 38 (1962) 
    ($60,800 sufficient).
        VSP operates on a nationwide basis. Impact Statement at 2. VSP 
    plans cover more than 15 million people. Id. VSP revenues in 1994 
    alone exceeded $650 million. Id. These facts clearly establish that 
    VSP's anti-competitive practices affect a substantial amount of 
    interstate commerce.
        VSP's requirement that its panel doctors dispense only lenses 
    obtained from VSP-approved sources as a condition of VSP panel 
    membership is a classic tying arrangement which the proposed Final 
    Judgment completely ignores. The proposed Final Judgment should be 
    modified to prohibit this blatant anti-competitive practice. At the 
    very least, this Court should require DOJ and VSP to explain why 
    this practice does not violate the antitrust laws or should not be 
    prohibited.\11\
    
        \11\ Specifically, Sherman Act Sec. 1 and Clayton Act Sec. 3.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
    3. Exclusive Dealing Arrangement
    
        VSP's lens requirement also constitutes an exclusive dealing 
    arrangement \12\ in that it requires VSP panel doctors to obtain 
    lenses only from VSP-controlled sources. Unlike tying arrangements, 
    exclusive dealing arrangements are subject to review under a rule of 
    reason analysis. Jefferson Parish, supra, at 44-45 (O'Connor, J., 
    concurring) (citing Tampa Electric Co. v. Nashville Coal Co., 365 
    U.S. 320, 333-35 (1961)). The relevant inquiry is whether the 
    restraint in question promotes or suppresses competition. National 
    Society of Professional Engineers v. United States, 435 U.S. 679, 
    691 (1978). Tampa Electric sets forth a three-part test for 
    determining the reasonableness of the restraint: (1) A determination 
    of the line of commerce involved, (2) a determination of the area of 
    effective competition, and (3) a determination of whether 
    competition has been foreclosed in a substantial share of the 
    
    [[Page 9497]]
    relevant market. Tampa Electric, supra, at 327-29.
    
        \12\ In her concurrence in Jefferson Parish, Justice O'Connor 
    noted that tying arrangements and exclusive dealing arrangements are 
    similar in nature. Id. at 33, 44-45. Therefore, she separately 
    analyzed the contract for anesthesiological services at issue in 
    that case as both a tying arrangement and an exclusive dealing 
    arrangement. Id. FAHC takes the same approach here with respect the 
    VSP lens requirement.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        The line of commerce determination simply involves identifying 
    the type of goods or services involved in the particular restraint. 
    Tampa Electric, supra, at 327. In this case, VSP's exclusive dealing 
    arrangement with its panel doctors relates specifically to eyeglass 
    lenses.
        The area of effective competition determination is a function of 
    the market in which the seller operates, and the market to which the 
    purchaser can turn to obtain alternate supplies. Id. at 327. Here, 
    the ``seller'' is VSP (through the labs it approves and controls) 
    and the ``purchasers'' are the panel doctors. Because VSP operates 
    on a national basis, and its panel doctors are located nationwide, 
    the area of effective competition is the entire country.\13\
    
        \13\ For purposes of examining the reasonableness of the VSP-
    imposed restraint on lenses, this broad definition of the relevant 
    geographic market actually favors VSP. Despite this broad market 
    definition, however, the restraint is still unreasonable.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        Finally, the Court must determine whether the restraint 
    forecloses a substantial share of competition in the relevant 
    market. Id. at 328-29. By any standard, the amount of competition 
    foreclosed is substantial. VSP typically controls as much as 98% of 
    the total number of optometrists in a given market,\14\ and more 
    than 17,000 doctors in all. Impact Statement at 3. VSP's share of 
    the pre-paid vision care services market is as high as 75% in some 
    states such as California.\15\ Finally, the VSP-controlled portion 
    of its panel doctors' income is ``substantial.'' Complaint at 
    para.9.
    
        \14\ The figure provided is for the state of Nevada in 1993. 
    Again, DOJ has not provided relevant data for the relevant 
    market(s). This information is critical to the Court's public 
    interest determination. See Microsoft, supra.
        \15\ Again, FAHC provides information to the best of its 
    ability, given its status as a competitor of VSP. DOJ has the 
    authority to compel VSP to disclose this information, and may have 
    done so, but the Complaint, Impact Statement, and proposed Final 
    Judgment contain no information concerning VSP's share of the 
    relevant market(s).
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        Thus, VSP, through its control over the vast majority of doctors 
    and pre-paid vision care patients, is able to dictate the source of 
    a substantial percentage of eyeglass lenses purchased in this 
    country. Every pair of lenses purchased from a VSP-controlled source 
    pursuant to the lens requirement forecloses all other lens suppliers 
    from the market. The foreclosure of a substantial percentage of the 
    lens market is obvious.
        VSP's lens requirement is an illegal exclusive dealing 
    requirement which violates both Sec. 1 of the Sherman Act and Sec. 3 
    of the Clayton Act. The proposed Final Judgment must be modified to 
    prohibit this anti-competitive practice.
    
    D. The Proposed Final Judgment Should Be Modified To Remedy All of 
    VSP's a Anti-Competitive Practices
    
        Where a proposed consent decree provides an ineffective remedy--
    one which does not pry open the relevant market to competition--a 
    court can and should modify or reject the decree. See, e.g., 
    Microsoft, supra, at 333-34. Where the proposed decree does not 
    address anti-competitive practices, particularly those it prohibited 
    in the similar circumstances in the dental industry, the reviewing 
    court cannot shut its eyes to the obvious. Id. at 334.
        The proposed Final Judgment provides an ineffective remedy 
    because: (1) It expressly allows VSP to continue setting its fees in 
    comparison to its competitors, thereby allowing VSP the benefit of 
    the MFN provision even while purporting to prohibit enforcement of 
    that provision, and (2) it fails to even address the VSP lens 
    requirement which is an illegal tying arrangement and/or exclusive 
    dealing arrangement which has the anti-competitive effect of 
    extending VSP's dominance in the pre-paid vision care market to the 
    market for vision products.
        As earlier noted, the inadequate remedy set forth in the 
    proposed final Judgment is especially disappointing given that just 
    this past December, DOJ tackled the health care industry's use of 
    most favored nations clauses in United States v. Delta Dental Plan 
    of Arizona, Inc. \16\ That case arose out of a nearly identical most 
    favored nations clause contained in the standard agreement defendant 
    forced on its participating dentists. There, as here, the effect of 
    the clause was to lower participating dentists' ``usual and 
    customary fee'' to the lowest fee charged to any other person or 
    plan.
    
        \16\ Case No. CIV 94-1793 PHX PGR.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        While the violations in the Delta Dental case and this one are 
    nearly identical, the final judgments are not. The Delta Dental 
    judgment, which is attached hereto as Exhibit E, completely 
    prohibits the defendant from maintaining or enforcing an MFN 
    provision, demanding information about competing plans or those 
    plans' customers, auditing plan providers with respect to fees 
    charged to competing plans or other persons, communicating with plan 
    providers about such fees, or taking any action directly or 
    indirectly to force plan providers to refrain from participating in 
    other plans or offering discount fees to competing plans or those 
    plans customers. See Exhibit E at Sec. IV. Unlike the proposed Final 
    Judgment, the Delta Dental judgment does not allow the defendant to 
    continue the same anti-competitive practices previously carried out 
    through the MFN. In other words, there is no subsequent section, 
    like the proposed Final Judgment's Sec. V, which guts the injunctive 
    provisions of the judgment. FAHC respectfully submits that the 
    proposed Final Judgment should be modified to tailor its injunctive 
    provisions to the injunctive provisions of the Delta Dental 
    judgment, and to delete Sec. V in its entirety.
        In addition, the proposed Final Judgment should be modified to 
    prohibit VSP's other anti-competitive practices. Specifically, VSP 
    should be prohibited from tying membership on its panels to the use 
    of vision products under the control of VSP, or from requiring its 
    panel doctors to purchase or obtain any vision products exclusively 
    from sources controlled by VSP.
        The compliance measure requirement on page 7 of the Judgment 
    which only requires VSP to send copies of the Final Judgment to 
    ``former'' VSP providers whom VSP ``should reasonably know have 
    resigned because of the MFN clause'' is too vague and ambiguous to 
    be enforced. VSP knows which providers it sent letters to in seeking 
    to enforce the terms of the MFN. Those are the people who need to 
    know VSP's anti-competitive activities are prohibited. A copy of the 
    Judgment should be sent to each of those providers who are still 
    licensed by the states in which they practice. VSP can probably say 
    they do not know why a provider resigned unless he specifically 
    provided them with a reason. Besides, it only refers to providers 
    who resigned from VSP, not former VSP providers who resigned from 
    other panels because of VSP's illegal conduct. Few, if any, 
    providers resigned from VSP as a result of VSP's efforts to enforce 
    the MFN or VSP would not have been so enthusiastic in enforcing it.
    
    III. Conclusion
    
        VSP is the Microsoft of the pre-paid vision care industry. It 
    enjoys the dominant position in the industry. It regularly employs 
    anti-competitive practices to erect barriers to entry by its 
    competitors. It continues to take all means necessary to deter 
    licensed vision care providers from participating in competing 
    plans. In these ways, VSP maintains its dominant market position at 
    the expense of its competitors and vision care consumers, and in 
    violation of this country's antitrust laws.
        The proposed Final Judgment does virtually nothing to curb VSP's 
    anti-competitive behavior. In fact, the proposed Final Judgment 
    sanctions VSP's conduct by expressing permitting it. Any person with 
    even a passing familiarity with antitrust law would be hard pressed 
    to conceive of a less effective mechanism to stop VSP's anti-
    competitive practices.
        Therefore, VSP opposes entry of the proposed Final Judgment for 
    all the reasons set forth in this Comment, and requests that the 
    proposed Final Judgment be modified as requested in Sec. II(D). 
    Anything less is not in the public interest.
        Respectfully Submitted this 29th day of March, 1995.
    
        Shimmel, Hill, Bishop & Gruender, P.C.
    Daniel F. Gruender,
    Michael V. Perry,
    Glenn B. Hotchkiss,
    3700 North 24th Street, Phoenix, Arizona 85016, Attorneys for First 
    American Health Concepts, Inc.
    
    Notice of Errata
    
        In its Comment on the proposed Final Judgment in this matter, 
    First American Health Concepts, Inc. (``FAHC'') concluded by stating 
    ``VSP opposes entry of the proposed Final Judgment for all the 
    reasons set forth in this Comment, and requests that the proposed 
    Final Judgment be modified as requested in Sec. II(D).'' Comment at 
    21. The above-quoted language should read ``FAHC opposes entry of 
    the proposed Final Judgment for all the reasons set forth in this 
    Comment, and requests that the proposed Final Judgment be modified 
    as requested in Sec. II(D).''
    
    [[Page 9498]]
    
        Respectfully Submitted this 6th day of April, 1995.
    
        Shimmel, Hill, Bishop & Gruender, P.C.
    Daniel F. Gruender,
    Michael V. Perry,
    Glenn B. Hotchkiss,
    3700 North 24th Street, Phoenix, Arizona 85016, Attorneys for First 
    American Health Concepts, Inc.
    [FR Doc. 96-5472 Filed 3-7-96; 8:45 am]
    BILLING CODE 4410-01-M
    
    

Document Information

Published:
03/08/1996
Department:
Antitrust Division
Entry Type:
Notice
Document Number:
96-5472
Pages:
9487-9498 (12 pages)
Docket Numbers:
Case No. 1:94CV02693
PDF File:
96-5472.pdf