Tennessee House advances Certificate-of-Need reforms and related health measures
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Summary
Lawmakers passed a package of hospital and health‑care regulatory reforms that phases out CON review for certain facilities and procedures, adopts changes to licensure and payor-mix consideration, and carried amendments intended to protect rural providers; debate focused on timing, grandfathering and local impacts.
The House adopted a substantial certificate-of-need (CON) reform package (substitute to Senate Bill 1369) that phases removal of CON for specified services—with freestanding emergency departments and certain cardiac services slated to be removed earlier and acute-care hospitals removed by a later date (2030)—and contains grandfathering protections for specific facilities. Sponsors described the package as increasing access, competition and rural viability; questioners pressed for clarity about interactions with other bills and potential gaps in transition timing.
Key floor action: Representative Garrett led the bill and moved adoption of several committee amendments, including a major amendment (number 9) that set phase-out dates and included grandfathering language for a facility in Johnson City. After discussion about possible gaps between this measure and separate COPA or other legislation, the House adopted the amendment and ultimately recorded passage of the bill with an affirmative tally reported as 84–11–1 (ayes–nays–present). Supporters argued the changes will grow access and competition; critics warned about transition issues and the potential for a temporary accountability gap between policy changes.
Implementation: Sponsors said the reforms will require rule updates, agency coordination and monitoring to ensure continuity of care and that certain providers (e.g., methadone clinics) are not unintentionally covered by the early removal provisions. The bill includes statutory references to licensure considerations and payor-mix for rural acute-care hospitals. The House passed the package and it will move forward for the remaining procedural steps and executive consideration.

