Back to District of Columbia

B26-0754 • 2025

Health Professional Loan Repayment Emergency Amendment Act of 2026

Health Professional Loan Repayment Emergency Amendment Act of 2026

Education Healthcare Labor
Active

The official status still shows this bill as active or still awaiting another formal step.

Sponsor
at the request of the Mayor
Last action
2026-07-14
Official status
Under Council Review
Effective date
Not listed

Plain English Breakdown

The bill is currently under Council Review and has not yet been enacted; the effective date depends on Mayor approval.

Health Professional Loan Repayment Emergency Amendment Act of 2026

This emergency bill adds certified addiction counselors to a loan repayment program for health workers in Washington, D.C., and updates the maximum amounts they can receive based on their job type.

What This Bill Does

  • Adds certified addiction counselors to the list of professionals eligible for the Health Professional Loan Repayment Program.
  • Sets new maximum total debt repayment limits ranging from $45,000 to $200,000 depending on whether a worker is full-time or part-time and their specific medical specialty.
  • Clarifies that participants can receive up to 100% of their student loan debt if it falls within the set maximum amounts for their license type.
  • Replaces fixed yearly payment schedules with rules created by city officials, allowing annual payments based on available funding.
  • Gives the Mayor authority to raise these dollar limits each year using a measure called the consumer price index.

Who It Names or Affects

  • Certified addiction counselors in Washington, D.C. who want to join the loan repayment program.
  • Physicians and dentists working full-time or part-time under the existing Health Professional Loan Repayment Program.
  • Health professionals specializing in fields like psychiatry, oncology, or cardiology who practice in Ward 7 or Ward 8.

Terms To Know

Health Professional Loan Repayment Program
A city program that pays off student loans for health workers who agree to work in Washington, D.C. areas with a shortage of doctors or other care providers.
Consumer Price Index
A number used by the government to measure how much prices change over time; this bill uses it to adjust loan repayment limits for inflation.

Limits and Unknowns

  • The Chief Financial Officer states that current budget plans do not have enough money to fully fund this program starting in fiscal year 2027.
  • This is an emergency act, meaning it will only stay in effect for up to 90 days after the Mayor approves it unless extended by new laws.

Bill History

  1. 2026-07-14 Council of the District of Columbia LIMS

    Retained by the Council with comments from the Committee on Health

  2. 2026-07-09 Council of the District of Columbia LIMS

    B26-0754 Introduced by Chairman Mendelson at Office of the Secretary

Official Summary Text

Health Professional Loan Repayment Emergency Amendment Act of 2026

Current Bill Text

Read the full stored bill text
MURIEL BOWSER
MAYOR
July 9, 2026
The Honorable Phil Mendelson
Chairman
Council of the District of Columbia
John A. Wilson Building
1350 Pennsylvania Avenue, N.W., Suite 504
Washington, D.C. 20004
Dear Chairman Mendelson :
Please find attached the Health Professional Loan Repayment Amendment Act of 2026 for
enactment by the Council of the District of Columbia.
If enacted, the proposed legislation would amend the District of Columbia Health Professional
Recruitment Program Act of 2005, effective March 8, 2006 (D.C. Law 16-71; D.C. Official Code
§ 7-751.01 et seq.) to add certified addiction counselors to the definition of other health
professionals eligible to participate in the Health Professional Loan Repayment Program
(HPLRP). The proposed legislation also amends the Health Professional Recruitment Program
Act of 2005 to ensure DC Health can meet its contractual obligations for existing providers and
recruit new participants for the Program within funding limitations.
The proposed legislation clarifies that participants can have up to 100% of their total debt repaid
by the HPRLP, but not to exceed a specified amount based upon the health professional license
they hold. It also provides the Director of the Department of Health with the authority to modify
allocation procedures and total loan repayment amounts and based on available funding. This
legislation ensures that DC Health can effectively implement this program, which continues to
increase access to health care for District residents, especially those in Health Professional
Shortage Areas or Medically Underserved Areas.
I urge the Council to take prompt and favorable action on the enclosed legislation.
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
31
32
33
34
A BILL
-;a:;~~
Chairman Phil Mendelson
at the request of the Mayor
IN THE COUNCIL OF THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA
To amend , on an emergency basis, the District of Columbia Health Professional
Recruitment Program Act of 2005 to add certified addiction counselors as health
professionals eligible to participate in the Health Professional Loan Repayment
Program ("Program"), to increase the maximum loan repayment amounts under
the Program, to clarify that the m aximum loan repayment amounts are not
mandatory loan repayment amounts, and to replace the statutory annual
repayment schedule with a regulatory schedule.
BE IT ENACTED BY THE COUNCIL OF THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA,
That this act may be cited as the "Health Professional Loan Repayment Emergency
Amendment Act of 2026".
Sec. 2. The District of Columbia Health Professional Recruitment Program Act of
2005, effective March 8, 2006 (D.C. Law 16-71; D.C. Official Code§ 7-751.01 et seq.),
is amended as follows:
(a) Section 2(6) (D.C. Official Code § 7-751.01(6)) is amended by striking the
phrase "or physician assistants" and inserting the phrase "physician assistants, or certified
addiction counselors" in its place.
(b) Section 9 (D.C. Official Code § 7-751.08) is amended as follows:
(1) Subsection (a) is amended to read as follows:
"(a) Physicians and dentists who are full-time participants in the Program shall be
eligible to have up to 100% of their total debt, not to exceed $165,000, repaid by the
1

2
Program for up to 4 years of service. The maximum annual repayment amount for each 35
such participant shall be set forth in the contract between the participant and the Director 36
required by section 8.”. 37
(2) Subsection (a-1) is amended to read as follows: 38
“(a-1) Physicians who are full-time participants in the Program and who 39
specialize and practice in obstetrics and gynecology, psychiatry, or another medical 40
specialty identified by the Director or who sub-specialize and practice in oncology, 41
cardiology, neurology, infectious diseases, pulmonary diseases, nephrology, 42
endocrinology, podiatry, ophthalmology, or another medical sub-specialty identified by 43
the Director shall be eligible to have up to 100% of their total debt, not to exceed 44
$200,000, repaid by the Program for up to 4 years of service; provided, that the 45
participants practice in Ward 7 or 8 for the contractually required number of hours for 46
full-time service. The maximum annual loan repayment amount for each such participant 47
shall be set forth in the contract between the participant and the Director required by 48
section 8.”. 49
(3) Subsection (b) is amended to read as follows: 50
“(b) Other health professionals who are full-time participants in the Program shall 51
be eligible to have up to 100% of their total debt, not to exceed $90,000, repaid by the 52
Program for up to 4 years of service. The maximum annual loan repayment amount for 53
each such participant shall be set forth in the contract between the participant and the 54
Director required by section 8.”. 55
(4) Subsection (c) is repealed. 56
(5) Subsection (d) is amended to read as follows: 57

3
“(d) Physicians and dentists who are part-time participants in the Program shall be 58
eligible to have up to 100% of their total debt, not to exceed $82,000, repaid by the 59
Program for up to 4 years of service. The maximum annual loan repayment amount for 60
each such participant shall be set forth in the contract between the participant and the 61
Director required by section 8.”. 62
(6) Subsection (e) is amended to read as follows: 63
“(e) Physicians who are part-time participants in the Program and who specialize 64
and practice in obstetrics and gynecology, psychiatry, or another medical specialty 65
identified by the Director or who sub-specialize and practice in oncology, cardiology, 66
neurology, infectious diseases, pulmonary diseases, nephrology, endocrinology, podiatry, 67
ophthalmology, or another medical sub-specialty identified by the Director shall be 68
eligible to have up to 100% of their total debt, not to exceed $100,000, repaid by the 69
Program for up to 4 years of service; provided, that the participants practice in Ward 7 or 70
8 for the contractually required number of hours for part-time service. The maximum 71
annual loan repayment amount for each such participant shall be set forth in the contract 72
between the participant and the Director required by section 8.”. 73
(7) Subsection (f) is amended to read as follows: 74
“(f) Other health professionals who are part-time participants in the Program shall 75
be eligible to have up to 100% of their total debt, not to exceed $45,000, repaid by the 76
Program for up to 4 years of service. The maximum annual loan repayment amount for 77
each such participant shall be set forth in the contract between the participant and the 78
Director required by section 8.”. 79
(8) A new subsection (g) is added to read as follows: 80

4
“(g)(1) The Mayor may, by rule, annually increase the maximum total loan 81
repayment amounts set forth in this subsection by the annual percentage increase in the 82
consumer price index. 83
“(2) The Mayor shall, by rule, establish the maximum percentage and 84
maximum dollar amount of a participant’s total debt that may be repaid annually. The 85
maximum annual percentage shall not exceed 30% of the participant’s total debt and the 86
maximum dollar amount shall not exceed 30% of the applicable maximum total loan 87
repayment amount.”. 88
Sec. 3. Fiscal impact statement. 89
The Council adopts the fiscal impact statement of the Chief Financial Officer as 90
the fiscal impact statement required by section 4a of the General Legislative Procedures 91
Act of 1975, approved October 16, 2006 (120 Stat. 2038; D.C. Official Code § 1-92
301.47a). 93
Sec. 4. Effective date. 94
This act shall take effect following approval by the Mayor (or in the event of veto 95
by the Mayor, action by the Council to override the veto), and shall remain in effect for 96
no longer than 90 days, as provided for emergency acts of the Council of the District of 97
Columbia in section 412(a) of the District of Columbia Home Rule Act, approved 98
December 24, 1973 (87 Stat. 788; D.C. Official Code § 1-204.12(a)). 99
Government of the District of Columbia
Office of the Chief Financial Officer

Glen Lee
Chief Financial Officer

1350 Pennsylvania Avenue, NW, Suite 203, Washington, DC 20004 (202)727 -2476
www.cfo.dc.gov
MEMORANDUM

TO: The Honorable Phil Mendelson
Chairman, Council of the District of Columbia

FROM: Glen Lee
Chief Financial Officer

DATE: June 11, 2026

SUBJECT: Fiscal Impact Statement – Healthcare Facilities Amendment Act of 2026

REFERENCE: Draft Introduction as provided to the Office of Revenue Analysis on
May 6, 2026

Conclusion

Funds are not sufficient in the proposed revised fiscal year 2026 budget and proposed fiscal year
2027 through fiscal year 20 30 budget and financial plan to implement the bill. The Department of
Health (DC Heal th) requires $155,000 in fiscal year 2027 and $642,000 over the financial plan to
implement the bill.

Background

The bill makes several changes to the regulation and oversight of healthcare providers and facilities
in the District of Columbia. Specifically, the bill:

• Requires1 healthcare providers to report adverse events2 and cybersecurity incidents to DC
Health within 48 hours of their occurrence or discovery;

1 By amending Section 202 of the Medical Malpractice Amendment Act of 2006, effective March 14, 2007 (D.C.
Law 16-263; D.C. Official Code § 7-161 et seq.).
2 An adverse event is defined in the bill as a preventable event, occurrence, or situation occurring in or under
the purview of a healthcare provider that results in death or contributes to harm that includes physical,
emotional, or psychological harm that requires major intervention, or impairs the individual’s ability to
perform activities of daily living. The term shall include any other events established by the Mayor through
rulemaking.
The Honorable Phil Mendelson
FIS: “Healthcare Facilities Amendment Act of 2026,” Draft Introduction as provided to the Office of Revenue
Analysis on May 6, 2026
Page 2 of 3

• Requires3 healthcare providers to submit a root cause analysis and corrective action plan to
DC Health within 45 days of an adverse event;
• Requires4 DC Health to maintain a centralized system to collect and analyze adverse event
data, enabling improved patient safety monitoring and public health responses;
• Requires5 healthcare providers to actively participate with recognized patient safety
organizations and submit annual proof of participation;
• Classifies6 adverse event r eports and documents as confidential and protected from legal
discovery, unless court-ordered in a felony case or for regulatory agency use;
• Updates7 the healthcare facility licensure processes allows for periodic fee adjustments, and
imposes stricter penalties for non-compliance, including fines for violations that put patients
at risk;
• Allows8 new assisted living facilities to apply for provisional licenses;
• Updates9 staff training requirements for direct care workers in assisted living facilities
with broader District standards and update licensure and food safety compliance procedures;
• Clarifies10 what constitutes a change in control, ownership, or material change in healthcare
facility operations that triggers certificate of need requirements;
• Incorporates11 applicable federal requirements for participation and standards for health -
insurance and medical -assistance programs as minimum standards for the operation of
health care facilities and agencies in the District;
• Enhances12 the District’s ability to levy fines in a manner commensurate with the severity of
an established violation by a facility or agency that presents an immediate danger to the life
and safety of patients, residents, or clients; and
• Exempts13 healthcare facilities and agencies from certificate of clean hands requirements
during license renewals to prevent abrupt closures that would jeopardize the health and
safety of vulnerable patients and residents.

Financial Plan Impact

Funds are not sufficient in the proposed revised fiscal year 2026 budget and proposed fiscal year
2027 through fiscal year 2030 budget and financial plan to implement the bill. DC Health requires
$155,000 in fiscal year 2027 and $642,000 over the financial plan to implement the bill.

3 By amending Section 202 of the Medical Malpractice Amendment Act of 2006.
4 Id.
5 Id.
6 Id.
7 Id.
8 By amending The Assisted Living Residence Regulatory Act of 2000, effective June 24, 2000 (D.C. Law 13-
127; D.C. Official Code § 44-101.01 et seq.).
9 Id.
10 By amending The Health Services Planning Program Re-establishment Act of 1996, effective April 9, 1997
(D.C. Law 11-191; D.C. Official Code § 44-401 et seq.).
11 By amending The Health-Care and Community Residence Facility, Hospice and Home Care Licensure Act of
1983, effective February 24, 1984 (D.C. Law 5-48; D.C. Official Code § 44-501 et seq.).
12 Id.
13 By amending The Clean Hands Before Receiving a License or Permit Act of 1996 , effective May 11, 1996
(D.C. Law 11-118; D.C. Official Code § 47-2861 et seq.).
The Honorable Phil Mendelson
FIS: “Healthcare Facilities Amendment Act of 2026,” Draft Introduction as provided to the Office of Revenue
Analysis on May 6, 2026
Page 3 of 3

DC Health must hire one Nurse Specialist to conduct inspections that result from an increase in
adverse event reporting. DC Health requires additional investigative capacity to review adverse
event reports and assist with investigations. DC Health already maintains a centralized system to
catalog adverse event reports, so no additional resources are needed to procure one. The Nurse
Specialist salary and fringe benefit costs are $155,000 in fiscal year 2027 and $642,000 over the
financial plan. DC Health can implement the provisions in the bill that do not pertain to adverse event
reporting with existing resources.

Healthcare Facilities Amendment Act of 2026
Total Costs
FY 2027 FY 2028 FY 2029 FY 2030 Total
Salary(a) $125,970 $128,489 $131,059 $133,680 $519,199
Fringe(b) $28,847 $30,116 $31,440 $32,822 $123,225
Total $154,817 $158,605 $162,499 $166,502 $642,423

Table Notes:
(a) Assumes one Grade 11, Step 10 Nurse Specialist and a salary growth rate of two percent.
(b) Assumes fringe rate of 22.9 percent and a fringe growth rate of 2.35 percent.
1350 Pennsylvania Avenue, N.W., Suite 409, Washington, D.C. 20004
Phone (202) 262-6402 Email: adele.el-khouri@dc.gov

GOVERNMENT OF THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA
OFFICE OF THE ATTORNEY GENERAL

BRIAN L. SCHWALB PRIVILEGED AND CONFIDENTIAL
ATTORNEY GENERAL ATTORNEY-CLIENT COMMUNICATION

LEGAL COUNSEL DIVISION

MEMORANDUM

TO: Tomás Talamante
Director
Office of Policy and Legislative Affairs

FROM: Adele El-Khouri
Deputy Attorney General
Legal Counsel Division

DATE: April 7, 2026

SUBJECT: Legal Sufficiency Review of Draft Bill, the “Healthcare Facilities Amendment Act of
2026” (AE-26-216)
_____________________________________________________________________________________

This is to Certify that the Office of the Attorney General has reviewed the
above-referenced legislation and found it to be legally sufficient. If you have any questions in this
regard, please do not hesitate to call me at (202) 262-6402.

_________________________________
Adele El-Khouri