HR-8209-119
Placed on the Union Calendar, Calendar No. 631.
Sponsored by Paul Tonko (D-NY)
What it does
This bill would amend the Public Health Service Act to reauthorize the school-based health centers (SBHC) grant program. It would replace the current open-ended "such sums as may be necessary" authorization for fiscal years 2022–2026 with a fixed appropriation of $55 million per year for fiscal years 2027 through 2031. The grants support health centers located in or near schools that provide medical, mental health, and other health services to students.
Who benefits
Students — particularly those in low-income, rural, and underserved communities — who rely on school-based health centers for primary care, mental health services, and preventive care. Schools and school districts that host or operate SBHCs. Healthcare providers and staff employed at SBHCs. Community health organizations that partner with or administer SBHC programs. Families without reliable access to private healthcare who depend on SBHCs as a primary point of care for their children.
Who is hurt
Taxpayers who bear the cost of the $55 million annual appropriation. Competing federal health programs that may face budget pressure if discretionary spending is constrained. States or localities that might otherwise fund similar services independently, as federal grants can reduce pressure to develop self-sustaining local programs. Private pediatric and primary care providers who may face reduced patient volume in areas where SBHCs operate.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that school-based health centers are a proven, cost-effective model for reaching children who would otherwise go without care — particularly in rural and low-income communities where pediatric providers are scarce. They contend that SBHCs reduce emergency room visits, improve chronic disease management, and address the youth mental health crisis by placing services where children already are. The bipartisan sponsorship of this bill reflects broad agreement that continuity of funding is essential to prevent disruption to centers already serving vulnerable students.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that setting a fixed $55 million annual authorization — rather than allowing appropriations to be determined through the normal budget process — locks in spending without adequate accountability for outcomes or cost-effectiveness across the roughly 3,000 SBHCs nationwide. They contend that healthcare delivery in schools raises ongoing concerns about parental notification, the appropriate scope of services provided to minors, and whether federal grants displace local and state responsibility for student health, creating long-term dependency on federal funding streams.