Senate approves phased rollback of certificate-of-need review; members debate rural access and market impacts
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After extensive floor debate, the Senate passed a package of amendments (SB 13 69 and related items) that removes several services from Tennessee’s certificate-of-need process effective 2030; supporters argued it spurs competition, opponents warned of market disruption and harm to safety-net providers.
The Tennessee Senate on Thursday adopted a series of amendments to a health-care package that will phase out parts of the state's certificate-of-need (CON) review process and move oversight functions in some cases to the attorney general.
Health and Welfare committee amendments removed acute-care hospitals, satellite emergency departments and cardiac catheterization from CON review effective July 1, 2030, while also preserving certain licensing and transition protections for existing providers. The amended package passed on third and final consideration with a recorded vote: Ayes 27, Nays 3.
Supporters, including Chairman Watson and Senator Crow, said the changes will encourage investment and modernize the market. "This is about bringing competition, ensuring our health-care systems serve patients, and using the AG to enforce pricing restrictions after COPA expiration," Senator Crow said on the floor, outlining a multi-year effort behind the compromise.
Opponents warned the repeal could harm rural hospitals and reduce access for low-income patients. Senator Oliver described past instances where unfettered competition "could flood the market" in urban areas and risked destabilizing facilities that serve indigent populations. Senator Yeager urged protections for hospitals that serve vulnerable communities.
One related bill (SB 2414) adopted in the session sets expiration dates for active Certificates of Public Advantage (COPA) and transfers pricing supervision to the attorney general after expiration, with pricing restrictions to remain until a new inpatient acute care hospital opens in the service area or five years elapse.
Senators emphasized negotiation with House counterparts to align effective dates and protect ongoing federal grant opportunities; Chairman Watson noted the 2030 date reflected interchamber agreement. The floor exchanges referenced local hospital histories and prior consolidations in eastern Tennessee as justification for accelerated competition in some regions, and asked for caution in urban markets.
Votes at a glance: SB 13 69 (as amended) — Passed (Ayes 27, Nays 3). SB 24 14 (COPA oversight amendment) — Passed (Ayes 33, Nays 0).
What’s next: The bills will proceed to enrollment and whatever conference or House concurrence steps are required; sponsors said implementation details and oversight arrangements will be handled administratively and through the attorney general's supervision provisions.
