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ksal.com: https://www.ksal.com/rural-hospitals-could-see-relief/

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GDELT news Β· original
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Saturday, May 23, 2026

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Department of Agriculture. Those loans would support construction and renovationand, in theory, free up funds from reduced debt costs, which could be funneled into care, workforce and operational expenses. Moran and U.S. Sen. Michael Bennet, D-Colorado, introduced the bill in the Senate in March.
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Rural Hospitals Could See Relief KSAL-AM FM 104.9 Y-93.7 KABI AM 1560 HOME News Local Archives National News Ag News Sports Sports Page Sports Audio Scoreboard & Schedules Royals Chiefs Wildcats Jayhawks Shockers Weather Forecast Local Closings Weatherology NWS Forecast NWS Radar Road Conditions Jobs Community Sheriff Bookings KSAL Lineup Graduation Announcements Calendar Education Obituaries Auctions Restaurant Inspections Most Wanted Listen Live KSAL-AM KYEZ KSAL-FM KABI Past Shows × Rural Hospitals Could See Relief By Anna Kaminski May 23, 2026 A coalition of federal lawmakers from Kansas introduced in the U.S. House this week a bipartisan bill that could offer interest-free loans to rural hospitals β€œhanging on by a thread.” U.S. Reps. Sharice Davids and Tracey Mann of Kansas and representatives from Alabama, Colorado, Hawaii, Michigan, Oregon and West Virginia co-sponsored the Rural Hospital Revitalization Act. Mann and Davids said rural hospitals need resources to continue serving patients and stay open. The bill could help rural hospitals build new facilities or renovate existing ones β€œso rural Americans don’t have to drive hours to see a health care professional,” Mann said in a statement. β€œEvery American deserves access to affordable, quality health care, no matter their ZIP code,” he said. Kansas has the highest number of rural hospitals at immediate risk of closure in the nation. An estimated 68 rural hospitals are at risk of closure and 30 face an immediate risk, according to an analysis by the Center for Healthcare Quality and Payment Reform. β€œRural hospitals are already hanging on by a thread,” Davids said in a Thursday news release, β€œand extreme Medicaid cuts are now forcing closures and leaving families with hours-long drives just to see a doctor.” The bill would offer eligible hospitals interest-free loans for up to 10 years through the U.S. Department of Agriculture. Those loans would support construction and renovationand, in theory, free up funds from reduced debt costs, which could be funneled into care, workforce and operational expenses. Moran and U.S. Sen. Michael Bennet, D-Colorado, introduced the bill in the Senate in March. At the time, Moran said in a news release that β€œrural hospitals are critical to the well-being of the communities they serve in Kansas and across the country.” Republicans, including Moran and Mann, approved Medicaid cuts in July that could result in Kansas hospitals losing up to $2.65 billion in federal and state Medicaid funding over the next decade. Also included in the legislation was a $50 billion rural health transformation fund, which promised to provide emergency assistance for rural hospitals facing closure. Kansas received $221 million from the fund in December, securing the sixth-largest sum among receiving states. Moran said the revitalization bill could foster long-term viability for rural hospitals and, in turn, rural communities. To qualify for the program under the bill, a h
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