TBA Law Blog


Posted by: Julia Wilburn on Mar 5, 2024

The Certificate of Need Reform Working Group, made up of Republican Tennessee lawmakers, will file a bill this legislative session that will overhaul the current Certificate of Need Program (CON), according to a Feb. 26 email sent to 36 senators and representatives obtained by the Nashville Business Journal. The CON was established in 1972 by the federal government and is a permit for the establishment or modification of a health care institution, facility or service at a designated location, according to the Tennessee Department of Health. The bill will be aimed at eliminating the requirements for certain types of medical facilities and lightening restrictions for others, eliminating the CON requirements for freestanding emergency departments, intellectual and developmental disabilities (IDD) habitation facilities that are licensed by the Tennessee Department of IDD, burn units, neonatal intensive care units and organ transplant facilities. If the bill passes, the new requirements would go into effect on July 1, 2025, and new facilities would be required to receive accreditation within two years.