Watchdog; Bill mandating more reporting from tax-exempt hospitals 'common sense'

Watchdog; Bill mandating more reporting from tax-exempt hospitals ‘common sense’

Spread the love

Thousands of hospitals subsidized by American taxpayers could face heightened fiscal scrutiny under new legislation heading to the U.S. House floor.

Currently, nonprofit hospitals must provide certain community benefits and charity care and disclose those to the IRS in order to maintain their tax-exempt status.

But reports allege that at least over a dozen major U.S. hospital systems abuse their tax-exempt status, with some currently providing minimal community benefits and hiking healthcare prices even as hospital leadership receive lavish salaries.

In an effort to help combat that, the Tax Exempt Hospital Transparency Act would expand reporting requirements for all nonprofit hospitals.

Vikas Saini, president of the Lown Institute, a nonpartisan healthcare system watchdog, called the bill “common sense, and long overdue.”

“There have been a lot of shortcomings in what we know about nonprofit hospitals and their behavior, and there have been a number of issues that have surfaced over the past several years,” Saini told The Center Square. “So there is a clear need for a lot more, and this bill is a major step forward in making these issues more transparent.”

Nonprofit hospitals make up about 58% of community hospitals across the U.S. as of 2026, according to the American Hospital Association.

Under the legislation, all 2,984 nonprofit hospitals must report the value of any financial assistance provided and the number of financial assistance applications received, granted, and denied during a taxable year. Hospital systems must also provide the CMS verification number for each facility.

“I don’t think there are any real onerous provisions that require major implementation changes or commitments of dollars. But it does require disclosure in a lot more detail,” Saini noted.

“This bill helps fix some blind spots, one of which, for example, is reporting at the facility level. These big systems that merge and combine 10, 20, 50 hospitals, their reporting now makes it very hard for anyone to really understand what their behavior is. And quite often, it ends up hiding poor-performing hospitals,” he added. “So I think this kind of transparency is welcome.”

For large nonprofit hospitals – those with more than 100 inpatient beds – the bill also requires reporting on how much they spent to address the top three priority health needs of their communities, as well as money spent on nonclinical programming and quality improvement.

Nonprofit hospitals that generate more than $100 million annually in net patient revenue must additionally disclose how much they spend on advertisements.

Notably, the bill imposes some of the first real transparency measures for nonprofit hospitals using the 340B drug pricing program.

High-revenue tax-exempt hospitals would have to report how many patients received outpatient drugs covered by the 340B discount, how much it cost the hospital to comply with 340B program requirements, and how much net revenue the hospital accrued from the 340B program.

The extra reporting requirements aim to uncover hospitals that take advantage of the 340B program by acquiring covered drugs at a discounted price but then charging low-income patients the regular price and pocketing the savings.

“That program was meant to help the poor and those who have poor access to medication. But the problem has been, once the bill was implemented, there’s really no sense of whether that’s actually happening the way it was intended,” Saini said.

“And if it’s all being spent in ways as the original legislation intended, great, no problem. But to the extent they’re using this almost as a windfall to sort of buttress other aspects of their operation, then I think the public deserves to know that.”

Several states have already implemented provisions even stronger than those in the Tax Exempt Hospital Transparency Act, such as imposing minimum spending levels on charity care and community benefits, and “the sky hasn’t fallen,” Saini noted.

“I think all nonprofit hospitals who are trying to do right by their community shouldn’t have a problem with it,” Saini said. “I think it is something that illustrates how they behave in the community, and I suspect that these issues have been festering for so long that there’s going to be strong bipartisan consensus around this…it doesn’t have any particularly onerous requirements beyond disclosure and transparency.”

House Ways and Means Committee Democrats, however, all voted against advancing the bill, echoing claims from the American Hospital Association that the additional reporting requirements would be too burdensome.

Committee Ranking Member Richard Neal, D-Mass., said the bill “piles on duplicative reporting requirements with no clear benefit.”

“I hear from my hospitals weekly about the strain they are under. The last thing they need is another unfunded reporting mandate,” Neal stated during the Wednesday bill markup.

As of 2024, the U.S. hospital sector was a $1.6 trillion industry, according to the most recent CMS data.

Leave a Comment





Latest News Stories

Trump tells small business owners tariffs 'aren't high enough'

Trump tells small business owners tariffs ‘aren’t high enough’

By Brett RowlandThe Center Square President Donald Trump told a group of small business owners Monday that tariffs should be higher, even as polling is mixed on the issue. "You...
Pennsylvania has the most Democrats in ‘Red to Blue’ campaign

Pennsylvania has the most Democrats in ‘Red to Blue’ campaign

By John ColeThe Center Square As Democrats ramp up their efforts to flip the U.S. House in November, four candidates from the Keystone State have been named to a program...
Trump hosts small business owners at White House, touting business-friendly policies

Trump hosts small business owners at White House, touting business-friendly policies

By Morgan SweeneyThe Center Square President Donald Trump enumerated a number of policies he said have created a favorable environment for small business growth while speaking to small business owners...
DeSantis signs new congressional map into law

DeSantis signs new congressional map into law

By Alan WootenThe Center Square Second-term Republican Gov. Ron DeSantis on Monday signed his redrawn congressional map into law. The Legislature gave passage last week. “Signed, sealed and delivered,” DeSantis...
South Carolinian facing charges for threatening Trump will stay jailed

South Carolinian facing charges for threatening Trump will stay jailed

By Alan WootenThe Center Square Army veteran Daniel Swain spoke only briefly in response to a federal magistrate judge on Monday and will have a detention hearing on Thursday. Swain,...
Iran testing fragile ceasefire, fires on Navy, commercial ships

Iran testing fragile ceasefire, fires on Navy, commercial ships

By Sarah Roderick-FitchThe Center Square Iran is testing the ceasefire as it fires at U.S. naval and commercial vessels within hours of the implementation of “Project Freedom.” U.S. Central Command...
Small businesses expected to feel pinch as diesel hits $6 a gallon

Small businesses expected to feel pinch as diesel hits $6 a gallon

By Jim Talamonti | The Center SquareThe Center Square (The Center Square) – An Illinois trucking industry leader says consumers and small businesses can expect to feel the pinch as...
GOP senators renew calls to nuke filibuster after voter ID bill languishes

GOP senators renew calls to nuke filibuster after voter ID bill languishes

By Thérèse BoudreauxThe Center Square With Congress juggling government funding, the farm bill, government surveillance reauthorization and more, a Republican election security bill has taken a backseat, much to the...
Illinois Quick Hits: Four charged in alleged pharmacy burglary conspiracy

Illinois Quick Hits: Four charged in alleged pharmacy burglary conspiracy

By Jim Talamonti | The Center SquareThe Center Square (The Center Square) – Four people from California are charged in connection with a conspiracy to burglarize pharmacies and distribute controlled...
LA City Council member seeks to allow noncitizens to vote

LA City Council member seeks to allow noncitizens to vote

By Chris WoodwardThe Center Square A Los Angeles City Council member has proposed allowing noncitizens to vote in local elections. Speaking on Friday at a Rules Committee meeting, Councilmember Hugo...
Chicago loses 2,100 restaurant jobs as industry fights mandated wage hikes

Chicago loses 2,100 restaurant jobs as industry fights mandated wage hikes

By Jim Talamonti | The Center SquareThe Center Square (The Center Square) – As Chicago’s efforts to phase out sub-minimum wages are proposed nationwide, a restaurant industry advocate says the...
State Senator, ‘angel parent’ want to let police to work with ICE

State Senator, ‘angel parent’ want to let police to work with ICE

By Sean Reed | The Center SquareThe Center Square (The Center Square) – As Democrat legislators have moved legislation to restrict U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement operations within Illinois, one...
U.S. Supreme Court temporarily allows mail-order abortion pills

U.S. Supreme Court temporarily allows mail-order abortion pills

By Andrew RiceThe Center Square The U.S. Supreme Court will temporarily allow women to obtain abortion pills through the mail, without visiting an in-person doctor. Justices on the court blocked...
U.S. Supreme Court declines to hear Washington COVID-19 speech case

U.S. Supreme Court declines to hear Washington COVID-19 speech case

By Andrew RiceThe Center Square The U.S. Supreme Court declined to hear a case over whether the government can discipline doctors for what they say publicly. The case, Stockton v....
'Project Freedom' begins, two ships safely transit Strait of Hormuz

‘Project Freedom’ begins, two ships safely transit Strait of Hormuz

By Sarah Roderick-FitchThe Center Square The United States launched “Project Freedom” Monday morning in an effort to safely escort commercial vessels through the Strait of Hormuz. President Donald Trump announced...