Senate approves bill letting hospitals invest up to half of nonoperating funds
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The senate passed SB 10 19 on third reading, allowing hospitals to invest up to 50% of funds not required for operations; sponsor said the change should help hospitals earn higher returns. Vote recorded as 29–0.
Senate Bill 10 19 cleared the senate on third reading after its sponsor, the Senator from Dallas, told colleagues the bill allows hospitals to invest up to 50% of funds that are not required for operations so they can "earn better returns on their investments," which the sponsor said would "help our hospitals out."
The sponsor described the measure as a technical change to investment limits for hospital reserve or nonoperating funds; there was no recorded floor debate and no amendments offered during the session transcript. The secretary read the roll as required for final passage and the senator chair declared the bill passed after the recorded tally of 29 in favor and no dissent.
Floor remarks focused on the bill’s intent to permit greater flexibility in hospital portfolio management; the transcript did not include committee fiscal notes or detailed budget projections on the floor. The journal shows titling and perfecting motions were carried.
Following final passage, the bill will proceed through the standard enrollment steps; the transcript does not specify implementation rules, effective date, or reporting requirements.
