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SB00125 • 2026

AN ACT REQUIRING NURSING HOMES TO ANNUALLY REPORT CERTAIN OWNERSHIP INFORMATION REGARDING INVESTMENT ENTITIES, ACQUIRE, IF FEASIBLE, A SURETY BOND OR A SIMILAR FORM OF SECURITY IN AN AMOUNT EQUAL TO NINETY DAYS OF OPERATING COSTS, MAINTAIN FULL GOVERNANCE CONTROL AND AUTHORITY OVER NURSING HOME ASSETS AND ACTIVITIES AND ANNUALLY ATTEST THAT NO INVESTMENT ENTITY HAS CONTROL OVER NURSING HOME RESIDENT HEALTH, SAFETY OR CARE.

AN ACT REQUIRING NURSING HOMES TO ANNUALLY REPORT CERTAIN OWNERSHIP INFORMATION REGARDING INVESTMENT ENTITIES, ACQUIRE, IF FEASIBLE, A SURETY BOND OR A SIMILAR FORM OF SECURITY IN AN AMOUNT EQUAL TO NINETY DAYS OF OPERATING COSTS, MAINTAIN FULL GOVERNANCE CONTROL AND AUTHORITY OVER NURSING HOME ASSETS AND ACTIVITIES AND ANNUALLY ATTEST THAT NO INVESTMENT ENTITY HAS CONTROL OVER NURSING HOME RESIDENT HEALTH, SAFETY OR CARE.

Passed Legislature

This bill passed both chambers and reached final enrollment, even if later executive action is not shown here.

Sponsor
Aging Committee
Last action
2026-06-04
Official status
Signed by the Governor
Effective date
Not listed

Plain English Breakdown

The official text provided is truncated at the end of Section 2. It mentions an evaluation regarding prohibiting sales or transfers but cuts off before stating what happens after that review.

New Rules for Nursing Homes with Investment Owners

This law requires nursing homes owned by investment groups to report ownership details annually, get a security bond if available and affordable, keep full control over operations, and promise that investors do not manage resident care.

What This Bill Does

  • Requires nursing homes with at least five percent ownership by an investment entity to send annual reports listing the names of owners, officers, financial statements, and details about loans or financing.
  • Asks the state to find a way for these nursing homes to buy a bond or security equal to ninety days of operating costs if it is financially possible.
  • Requires qualifying nursing homes to show proof of this bond when applying for or renewing their license starting July 1, 2028.
  • Mandates that the entity holding the nursing home license keeps full control over all assets and activities like clinical care, money management, and hiring staff starting February 1, 2028.
  • Orders nursing homes to submit a yearly statement confirming that no investment group controls resident health, safety, or care.

Who It Names or Affects

  • Nursing homes with an agreement to provide state benefits (Title XIX) where an investment entity owns five percent or more.
  • Investment entities such as companies collecting capital to buy nursing homes or real estate investment trusts.
  • The Commissioner of Social Services and the Department of Public Health, who will review reports and enforce penalties.

Terms To Know

investment entity
A company that collects money from investors to buy ownership shares in a nursing home or a real estate investment trust.
surety bond
A financial guarantee, like insurance, paid by the nursing home to cover costs if it closes suddenly or faces financial trouble.
beneficial ownership interest
The actual percentage of a company that an investor owns and controls, even if they do not hold the title directly.

Limits and Unknowns

  • The requirement to buy a security bond only applies if the state finds such bonds are available and financially feasible for nursing homes.
  • Nursing homes can apply for a one-year waiver from keeping full governance control, but they must prove it will help resident care or stability.

Bill History

  1. 2026-06-04 Connecticut General Assembly

    Signed by the Governor

  2. 2026-05-26 Connecticut General Assembly

    Transmitted to the Secretary of State

  3. 2026-05-26 Connecticut General Assembly

    Transmitted by Secretary of the State to Governor

  4. 2026-05-19 LCO

    Public Act 26-103

  5. 2026-05-06 Connecticut General Assembly

    House Adopted Senate Amendment Schedule A

  6. 2026-05-06 Connecticut General Assembly

    House Adopted Senate Amendment Schedule B

  7. 2026-05-06 Connecticut General Assembly

    House Passed as Amended by Senate Amendment Schedule A,B

  8. 2026-05-06 Connecticut General Assembly

    In Concurrence

  9. 2026-05-04 Connecticut General Assembly

    Senate Adopted Senate Amendment Schedule B 5843

  10. 2026-05-04 Connecticut General Assembly

    Senate Passed as Amended by Senate Amendment Schedule A,B

  11. 2026-05-04 Connecticut General Assembly

    Transmitted Pursuant To Joint Rule 17

  12. 2026-05-04 Connecticut General Assembly

    Favorable Report, Tabled for the Calendar, House

  13. 2026-05-04 Connecticut General Assembly

    House Calendar Number 562

  14. 2026-04-30 APP

    Joint Favorable

  15. 2026-04-30 LCO

    Filed with Legislative Commissioners' Office

  16. 2026-04-30 LCO

    Reported Out of Legislative Commissioners' Office

  17. 2026-04-30 Connecticut General Assembly

    No New File by Committee on Appropriations

  18. 2026-04-30 Connecticut General Assembly

    Favorable Report, Tabled for the Calendar, Senate

  19. 2026-04-28 Connecticut General Assembly

    Senate Adopted Senate Amendment Schedule A 5011

  20. 2026-04-28 Connecticut General Assembly

    Referred by Senate to Committee on Appropriations

  21. 2026-04-28 Connecticut General Assembly

    Immediate Transmittal

  22. 2026-04-20 LCO

    Reported Out of Legislative Commissioners' Office

  23. 2026-04-20 Connecticut General Assembly

    No New File by Committee on Judiciary

  24. 2026-04-20 Connecticut General Assembly

    Favorable Report, Tabled for the Calendar, Senate

  25. 2026-04-17 JUD

    Joint Favorable

  26. 2026-04-17 LCO

    Filed with Legislative Commissioners' Office

  27. 2026-04-15 Connecticut General Assembly

    Referred by Senate to Committee on Judiciary

  28. 2026-04-15 Connecticut General Assembly

    Immediate Transmittal

  29. 2026-03-19 LCO

    Reported Out of Legislative Commissioners' Office

  30. 2026-03-19 Connecticut General Assembly

    Favorable Report, Tabled for the Calendar, Senate

  31. 2026-03-19 Connecticut General Assembly

    Senate Calendar Number 69

  32. 2026-03-19 LCO

    File Number 69

  33. 2026-03-13 LCO

    Referred to Office of Legislative Research and Office of Fiscal Analysis 03/18/26 5:00 PM

  34. 2026-03-05 AGE

    Joint Favorable

  35. 2026-03-05 LCO

    Filed with Legislative Commissioners' Office

  36. 2026-02-13 Connecticut General Assembly

    Public Hearing 02/19

  37. 2026-02-11 Connecticut General Assembly

    Referred to Joint Committee on Aging

Official Summary Text

To restrict private equity ownership of nursing homes.

Current Bill Text

Read the full stored bill text
Substitute Senate Bill No. 125

Public Act No. 26-103

AN ACT REQUIRING NURSING HOMES TO ANNUALLY REPORT
CERTAIN OWNERSHIP INFORMATION REGARDING INVESTMENT
ENTITIES, ACQUIRE, IF FEASIBLE, A SURETY BOND OR A
SIMILAR FORM OF SECURITY IN AN AMOUNT EQUAL TO NINETY
DAYS OF OPERATING COSTS, MAINTAIN FULL GOVERNANCE
CONTROL AND AUTHORITY OVER NURSING HOME ASSETS AND
ACTIVITIES AND ANNUALLY ATTEST THAT NO INVESTMENT
ENTITY HAS CONTROL OVER NURSING HOME RESIDENT
HEALTH, SAFETY OR CARE.
Be it enacted by the Senate and House of Representatives in General
Assembly convened:

Section 1. (NEW) (Effective October 1, 2026) (a) As used in this section,
(1) "nursing home" means a nursing home, as defined in section 19a-490
of the general statutes, that has a provider agreement with the state to
provide services to recipients of benefits obtained through Title XIX of
the Soci al Security Amendments of 1965; and (2) "investment entity"
means (A) any entity that collects capital investments from individuals
or entities and purchases, as a parent company or through another
entity that the entity completely or partially owns or controls, a direct
or indirect ownership share of a nursing home, or (B) a real estate
investment trust, as defined in 26 USC 856, as amended from time to
time.
(b) Not later than February 15, 2027, and annually thereafter, each
nursing home shall provide the Commissioner of Social Services with
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Public Act No. 26-103 2 of 5

the following information: (1) T he name and business address of all
investment entities with a beneficial ownership interest of five per cent
or more in the nursing home and a statement of whether such
investment entity is an individual, partnership, corporation or other
legal entity; (2) the names of the officers, directors, trustees or managing
and general partners of any such investment entity and the number of
shares owned or ownership percentage of the investment entity held by
each partner; (3) if suc h investment entity is a corporation that is
incorporated in another state, a certificate of good standing from the
Secretary of the State of the state of incorporation; (4) the audited and
certified financial statements of the investment entity , if applicable,
including, but not limited to, (A) a balance sheet as of the end of the
most recent fiscal year, (B) income statements for the most recent fiscal
year, (C) a cash flow statement from the most recent fiscal year, and (D)
an estimate of financing expenses, legal expenses, land costs, marketing
costs and other similar costs that the investment entity expects to incur
or become obligated to pay within one year of acquisition of the nursing
home; (5) a description of any mortgage loan or other financing used for
the initial acquisition or construction of the nursing home, subsequent
refinancing of any s uch debt, and any subsequent financing of
additional debt incurred, including, but not limited to, the terms and
costs of any such mortgage loan or other fin ancing; (6) a copy of the
purchase agreement for the nursing home and any agreement providing
for the transfer of ownership interests in the nursing home, including,
but not limited to, the real estate agreement, asset agreement, stock
agreement or other similar agreement ; and (7) any documentation
regarding escrow or contingency accounts.
(c) The Commissioner of Social Services may impose a civil penalty
of one thousand dollars per day on any nursing home that fails to
provide any information required pursuant to subsection (b) of this
section not later than thirty days after the date such information is due,
provided the commissioner provides written notice to the nursing home
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Public Act No. 26-103 3 of 5

of its failure to provide such information not later than fourteen days
after the date such information is due. A nursing home may request a
fair hearing on the assessment of any such civil penalty as an aggrieved
person pursuant to section 17b-60 of the general statutes.
(d) (1) The Commissioner of Social Services shall identify any security
instruments, including, but not limited to, surety bonds, escrow
accounts or insurance -related products, that may be available to a
nursing home to guarantee ninety days of such nursin g home's
operating costs payable to the state in the event that such nursing home
enters a receivership, initiates an emergency closure or experiences
imminent financial distress. Not later than January 1, 2028, the
commissioner shall communicate to nursin g homes any security
instruments identified pursuant to the provisions of this subdivision in
a form and manner prescribed by the commissioner. The provisions of
this subsection shall not apply if the commissioner fails to identify any
such security instruments, or determines that such security instruments
are not financially feasible.
(2) On and after July 1, 2028, each nursing home subject to a beneficial
ownership interest of an investment entity of five per cent or more shall,
at the time of application for or renewal of a nursing home license,
demonstrate to the satisfaction of the Commissioner of Social Services
that the nursing home has secured a surety bond or similar form of
security in favor of the state in an amount equal to ninety days of
operating costs for the nursing home and that such bond or similar form
of security shall remain in effect for the duration of the initial license
term and any renewal term.
(3) On and after July 1, 2028, each nursing home subject to a beneficial
ownership interest of an investment entity of five per cent or more shall,
at the time of application for or renewal of a nursing home license,
submit to the Department of Public Health a copy of the surety bond or
similar form of security required under subdivision (2) of this
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Public Act No. 26-103 4 of 5

subsection.
(e) On and after February 1, 2028, each entity holding a nursing
home's license shall maintain full governance control and authority over
such nursing home's assets and activities, including, but not limited to,
all clinical, operational, managerial, finan cial and human resources
matters.
(f) Not later than February 1, 2028, and annually thereafter, each
nursing home shall submit to the Commissioner of Public Health, in a
form and manner prescribed by the commissioner, an attestation that no
investment entity has control over nursing home resident health, safety
or care.
(g) Notwithstanding the provisions of subsection (e) of this section, if
a nursing home anticipates that it will not be able to comply with the
provisions of said subsection, the nursing home may, not later than six
months before becoming subject to the pr ovisions of said subsection,
apply to the Commissioner of Social Services, in a form and manner
prescribed by the commissioner, for a one -year waiver from the
provisions of said subsection. The commissioner may request any
information or documentation deem ed necessary to assess any such
application and place any terms or conditions deemed necessary by the
commissioner in granting any such waiver. The commissioner shall not
grant a waiver pursuant to the provisions of this subsection unless the
commissioner determines that the granting of such waiver will benefit
resident care, maintain access to resident care or improve operational
stability.
(h) The Commissioner of Public Health may impose a civil penalty of
up to two thousand dollars per violation on any nursing home that fails
to provide an attestation required under subsection (f) of this section.
(i) A nursing home shall, not later than ten business days after receipt
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Public Act No. 26-103 5 of 5

of an order from the commissioner imposing a civil penalty under
subsection (h) of this section, submit a request in writing to the
Department of Public Health for a hearing to contest the order. If the
nursing home fails to submit such a request not later than ten business
days after such receipt, the order shall be deemed a final order of the
department, effective upon the expiration of such ten business days.
After receipt of a timely request for a hearing, the department shall set
the matter down for a hearing as a contested case in accordance with the
provisions of chapter 54 of the general statutes.
Sec. 2. (Effective from passage) The Commissioner of Social Services, in
consultation with the Commissioner of Public Health, shall review and
evaluate the (1) nursing home disclosures provided in accordance with
the provisions of section 1 of this act, (2) quality of care at nursing homes
that are subject to a beneficial ownership interest of an investment entity
compared to the quality of care at nursing homes under other
ownership structures, and (3) implications of p rohibiting a person or
entity who acq uires ownership of real property on which a licensed
nursing home operates from selling, transferring or otherwise
conveying such property within five years of such acquisition without
written approval from the Commissioner of Public Health. Not later
than February 15, 2028, the Commissioner of Social Services shall report
the results of such review, in accordance with the provisions of section
11-4a of the general statutes, to the joint standing committees of the
General Assembly having cognizance of matte rs relating to human
services, public health, appropriations and the budgets of state agencies,
and aging.