HR-2493-119
Received in the Senate. Read twice. Placed on Senate Legislative Calendar under General Orders. Calendar No. 377.
Sponsored by Earl Carter (R-GA)
What it does
This bill would reauthorize through FY2030 three existing grant programs administered by the Health Resources and Services Administration (HRSA): grants to expand healthcare service delivery in rural areas, grants to develop integrated healthcare networks among local rural providers, and grants to improve service quality at small rural healthcare providers. It would also require HRSA to ensure that funds for service expansion and network development are used to address the needs of underserved populations and to involve those populations in planning and implementation decisions.
Who benefits
Rural residents who currently lack adequate access to healthcare, particularly those in underserved populations such as low-income individuals, racial and ethnic minorities, and elderly or disabled people in rural communities. Small rural hospitals, clinics, and other healthcare providers that receive grant funding. Local health departments and nonprofit organizations that participate in integrated rural health networks. Healthcare workers employed by grant-funded rural providers. Indirectly, rural economies that depend on local healthcare infrastructure.
Who is hurt
Taxpayers who bear the cost of continued federal grant spending. Urban and suburban healthcare providers and communities that compete for limited HRSA discretionary funding. Applicants for other HRSA programs whose funding priority may be reduced if rural grants consume a larger share of the agency's budget. States or localities that may face administrative burdens in complying with the new underserved-population engagement requirements.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that rural Americans face a well-documented healthcare access crisis — rural hospitals have closed at an accelerating rate, with more than 140 closures since 2010, leaving millions without nearby emergency or primary care. They contend that these HRSA grant programs directly address that gap by funding providers who would otherwise be financially unviable, and that the new requirement to engage underserved populations ensures funds reach those with the greatest need rather than being absorbed by better-resourced rural institutions.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that reauthorizing these grants without structural changes extends a federal spending model that has not demonstrably reversed rural healthcare decline, as hospital closures have continued despite years of similar grant funding. They contend that the underserved-population engagement mandate adds administrative compliance costs that may divert resources away from direct patient care, and that states and local communities — not federal grant programs — are better positioned to identify and address their specific rural healthcare needs.