Legislation putting a 3-year halt to new nursing home construction narrowly passed the House Tuesday. A similar bill died in the waning hours of last year’s session.
The bill would bar construction of new nursing homes for three years with only a few exceptions. Those include allowing construction in counties where nursing home occupancy rates are at least 90 percent, and allowing construction of small homes of no more than a hundred beds. If the bill is signed into law, projects currently in the works must have submitted plans to the state by March 1 to move forward.
Crawfordsville Republican Tim Brown, the bill’s sponsor, says the state’s existing nursing homes are far from full. And he says the funding structure, through Medicare reimbursement, makes building new homes a bad investment.
“The cost of all buildings, the cost of all beds are borne by the taxpayers of the state of Indiana," Brown said. "So when we have unfilled beds, we are all paying for them as taxpayers.”
Opponents argue the bill will cost jobs in both the nursing home and construction industries, arguing the measure interferes in the free market.
The bill now heads back to the Senate, which can concur to changes made by the House and send the legislation to the governor. If the Senate doesn’t agree, the bill goes to conference committee.