HR-8201-119
Forwarded by Subcommittee to Full Committee by Voice Vote.
Sponsored by Susie Lee (D-NV)
What it does
This bill would amend the Public Health Service Act to reclassify behavioral health, mental health, and substance use disorder services from optional to required services at federally funded community health centers. It would also authorize $700 million per year from fiscal years 2027 through 2031 — a total of $3.5 billion — drawn from the ACA's Community Health Center Fund to help centers cover the cost of providing these newly mandated services.
Who benefits
Low-income and uninsured patients at community health centers who currently lack access to mental health or addiction treatment. Rural and underserved communities where community health centers are often the only available healthcare provider. People with substance use disorders who need integrated care. Mental health professionals and addiction counselors who would see increased demand for their services. Community health centers that receive the enhanced federal funding to expand their service offerings.
Who is hurt
Community health centers that currently lack the staff, facilities, or infrastructure to provide these services and may struggle to comply even with additional funding — particularly small or rural centers. Taxpayers who fund the $3.5 billion appropriation. Other programs that draw from the ACA's Community Health Center Fund, which could face reduced availability if the fund is not expanded to offset the new allocation. Existing patients at centers that must redirect resources toward building new behavioral health capacity, potentially affecting wait times for other services during the transition.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that mental health and substance use disorders are among the leading drivers of preventable death and disability in the United States, yet community health centers — which serve roughly 32 million patients annually, most of them low-income — are not currently required to offer these services. They contend that integrating behavioral health into primary care settings reduces emergency room visits, lowers overall healthcare costs, and reaches patients who would otherwise receive no treatment. The $700 million annual funding authorization, they argue, directly addresses the workforce and infrastructure barriers that have historically prevented centers from offering these services.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that imposing a new service mandate without guaranteeing sufficient funding creates an unfunded burden on community health centers, many of which already operate on thin margins — the $700 million authorization does not guarantee appropriation and may fall short of actual implementation costs across more than 1,400 federally qualified health center sites. They contend that workforce shortages in behavioral health are severe enough that a mandate cannot be met regardless of funding, and that redirecting money from the ACA's Community Health Center Fund may reduce resources available for existing primary care services that centers are already required to provide.