Citizen Portal
Sign In

Lifetime Citizen Portal Access — AI Briefings, Alerts & Unlimited Follows

California outlines $233.6M rural health transformation plan; CMS requirements narrow use of $50M supports

Assembly Budget Subcommittee on Health · April 20, 2026

Loading...

AI-Generated Content: All content on this page was generated by AI to highlight key points from the meeting. For complete details and context, we recommend watching the full video. so we can fix them.

Summary

HCAI told the subcommittee California won $233.6 million to strengthen rural care through transformative payment models, workforce development and technology; CMS required limits on a $50 million provider payment component, and HCAI must obligate funds by Oct. 30, 2026.

HCAI presented the state’s Rural Health Transformation Program, funded by a federal HR1 award of $233.6 million for the first budget period. Scott Persman said the program centers on three integrated initiatives: transformative care models (hub‑and‑spoke networks, telehealth and care redesign), rural workforce development and technology and digital infrastructure.

Persman said CMS approved California’s revised plan and released $183.6 million after HCAI revised the $50 million component for transformative payments to ensure funds are used for transformation activities rather than general cash‑flow relief. As a result HCAI restructured that component and reduced the provider payment element to $35 million with tighter eligibility criteria to limit clawback risk.

HCAI noted CMS retains approval and review authority over grantee selections, grant agreements and posted materials and requires all federal funds be obligated by Oct. 30, 2026. HCAI described a phased rollout with rolling RFAs, technical assistance through a planned rural technical assistance center, a third‑party administrator to avoid bottlenecks, and partnerships with district hospitals and other intermediaries.

Assemblymembers asked whether distressed hospital loan recipients can apply — HCAI said eligible distressed hospitals may apply if they meet program definitions for rural applicants — and raised concerns about application capacity in understaffed rural agencies. HCAI said it will offer webinars and direct technical assistance to help applicants and will prioritize projects aligned with CMS‑approved transformation goals.

Several hospital groups and the University of California expressed support for the program design and asked for continued coordination on data exchange and workforce pipeline efforts.