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HB2747 • 2025

Relating to requiring certain health care entities to submit notice of material change transactions to the attorney general and the attorney general's authority to conduct certain related studies; imposing civil and administrative penalties.

Relating to requiring certain health care entities to submit notice of material change transactions to the attorney general and the attorney general's authority to conduct certain related studies; imposing civil and administrative penalties.

Passed Legislature

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

Sponsor
Frank
Last action
2025-05-10
Official status
05/10/2025 H Committee report sent to Calendars
Effective date
Not listed

Plain English Breakdown

Using official source text because the generated explanation was unavailable or could not be confirmed against the official bill text.

Relating to requiring certain health care entities to submit notice of material change transactions to the attorney general and the attorney general's authority to conduct certain related studies; imposing civil and administrative penalties.

Relating to requiring certain health care entities to submit notice of material change transactions to the attorney general and the attorney general's authority to conduct certain related studies; imposing civil and administrative penalties.

What This Bill Does

  • Relating to requiring certain health care entities to submit notice of material change transactions to the attorney general and the attorney general's authority to conduct certain related studies; imposing civil and administrative penalties.

Limits and Unknowns

  • This entry is temporarily using official source text because the generated explanation could not be confirmed against the official bill text during the last sync.

Bill History

  1. 2025-05-10 Texas Legislature Online

    Committee report sent to Calendars

  2. 2025-05-09 Texas Legislature Online

    Comte report filed with Committee Coordinator

  3. 2025-05-09 Texas Legislature Online

    Committee report distributed

  4. 2025-04-28 Texas Legislature Online

    Considered in public hearing

  5. 2025-04-28 Texas Legislature Online

    Committee substitute considered in committee

  6. 2025-04-28 Texas Legislature Online

    Reported favorably as substituted

  7. 2025-04-07 Texas Legislature Online

    Scheduled for public hearing on . . .

  8. 2025-04-07 Texas Legislature Online

    Considered in public hearing

  9. 2025-04-07 Texas Legislature Online

    Committee substitute considered in committee

  10. 2025-04-07 Texas Legislature Online

    Testimony taken/registration(s) recorded in committee

  11. 2025-04-07 Texas Legislature Online

    Left pending in committee

  12. 2025-03-18 Texas Legislature Online

    Read first time

  13. 2025-03-18 Texas Legislature Online

    Referred to Public Health

  14. 2025-02-12 Texas Legislature Online

    Filed

Official Summary Text

Relating to requiring certain health care entities to submit notice of material change transactions to the attorney general and the attorney general's authority to conduct certain related studies; imposing civil and administrative penalties.

Current Bill Text

Read the full stored bill text
89(R) HB 2747 - House Committee Report version - Bill Text

89R24435 SRA-F

By: Frank

H.B. No. 2747

Substitute the following for H.B. No. 2747:

By: VanDeaver

C.S.H.B. No. 2747

A BILL TO BE ENTITLED

AN ACT

relating to requiring certain health care entities to submit notice

of material change transactions to the attorney general and the

attorney general's authority to conduct certain related studies;

imposing civil and administrative penalties.

BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF TEXAS:

SECTION 1. Health care patients and consumers benefit when

there are robust markets for goods and services, in which providers

of coverage and care compete to offer higher quality care and better

prices. Consolidation in health care markets has reduced

competition and driven up prices. The purpose of this Act is to

promote competitive markets by strengthening the state's ability to

enforce laws and prevent anticompetitive behavior.

SECTION 2. Title 2, Business & Commerce Code, is amended by

adding Chapter 15A to read as follows:

CHAPTER 15A. MATERIAL CHANGE TRANSACTIONS INVOLVING HEALTH CARE

ENTITIES

SUBCHAPTER A. GENERAL PROVISIONS

Sec. 15A.0001. DEFINITIONS. In this chapter:

(1)

"Attorney general" and "person" have the meanings

assigned by Section 15.03.

(2)

"Health care entity" means a health care provider,

health care facility, provider organization, pharmacy benefit

manager, or health carrier that offers a health benefit plan in this

state.

(3)

"Health care facility" means the following

facilities licensed or otherwise authorized to provide health care

services in this state:

(A)

a hospital or other inpatient facility for

providing health care services;

(B)

a health system consisting of jointly owned

or managed health care entities;

(C)

a skilled nursing facility licensed under

Chapter 242, Health and Safety Code;

(D)

an ambulatory surgical center licensed under

Chapter 243, Health and Safety Code;

(E)

a freestanding emergency medical care

facility licensed under Chapter 254, Health and Safety Code;

(F)

a general residential operation licensed

under Chapter 42, Human Resources Code, that provides treatment

services;

(G) a diagnostic, laboratory, or imaging center;

(H)

an outpatient clinic licensed in this state

to provide health care services; or

(I)

a rehabilitation center or other therapeutic

center licensed in this state to provide health care services.

(4)

"Health care provider" means an individual

licensed or otherwise authorized to perform or provide health care

services in this state.

(5) "Health care services" means:

(A)

services provided for the care, prevention,

diagnosis, treatment, cure, or relief of a medical, dental, or

behavioral health condition, including:

(i)

inpatient, outpatient, habilitative,

rehabilitative, dental, palliative, therapeutic, supportive, home

health, or behavioral services provided by a health care entity;

(ii)

retail and specialty pharmacy

services, including drugs, devices, and medical supplies provided

by a pharmacy; and

(iii)

performance of functions to refer,

arrange, or coordinate health care services;

(B)

equipment used to provide services described

by Paragraph (A), including durable medical equipment and

diagnostic, infusion, and surgical devices; and

(C)

technology associated with the provision of

services and equipment described by Paragraphs (A) and (B),

including telehealth services, telemedicine medical services,

electronic health records, software, claims processors, and

utilization systems.

(6)

"Health carrier" has the meaning assigned by

Section 1507.002, Insurance Code.

(7)

"Management services organization" means an

organization or entity that contracts with a health care provider

or provider organization to perform management or administrative

services relating to, supporting, or facilitating the provision of

health care services.

(8)

"Material change transaction" means a transaction

that entails a material change to ownership, operations, or

governance structure of a legal entity.

(9)

"Pharmacy benefit manager" has the meaning

assigned by Section 4151.151, Insurance Code.

(10)

"Provider organization" means an incorporated or

unincorporated corporation, partnership, business trust,

association, or organized group of persons that is in the business

of health care service delivery or management and that represents

at least one health care provider in contracting with a health

carrier for the payment of health care services.

The term includes

a physician organization, physician-hospital organization,

independent practice association, provider network, accountable

care organization, management services organization, or other

organization that contracts with a health carrier for the payment

of health care services.

Sec.

15A.0002.

APPLICABILITY OF CHAPTER TO MATERIAL CHANGE

TRANSACTIONS; EXCEPTIONS.

(a)

This chapter applies only with

respect to the following material change transactions occurring in

this state, whether occurring as a single transaction or a series of

related transactions within a consecutive 12-month period:

(1)

a merger that includes one or more health care

entities;

(2)

a sale or other acquisition, including by lease,

transfer, exchange, option, receipt through conveyance, and

creation of a joint venture, of:

(A)

one or more health care entities, including

insolvent health care entities; or

(B)

a material amount of the assets or operations

relevant to the ownership or control of one or more health care

entities;

(3)

a contract or other arrangement, including an

association, partnership, or joint venture, that results in a

person acquiring direct or indirect control over all or a

substantial part of a health care entity's operations or

governance;

(4)

the formation of a partnership, joint venture,

accountable care organization, parent organization, or management

services organization for the purpose of administering contracts

with health carriers, third-party administrators, pharmacy benefit

managers, or health care providers;

(5)

the sale, purchase, lease, affiliation, or

transfer of control of a health care entity's board of directors or

other governing body; or

(6)

a real estate sale or lease agreement involving a

material amount of health care entity assets, if another party to

the sale or agreement is, or will be as a result of the sale or

agreement:

(A)

an affiliate of or affiliated with the health

care entity; or

(B)

directly or indirectly, in control of,

controlled by, or under common control with the health care entity.

(b)

This chapter does not apply to or with respect to the

following:

(1)

a clinical affiliation of health care entities

formed solely to collaborate on clinical trials;

(2) a graduate medical education program;

(3)

an offer of employment to, or the hiring of, not

more than one physician; or

(4)

a material change transaction in which the gross

annual revenue of the health care entity party to the transaction

with the largest gross annual revenue was less than $5 million in

the preceding year.

Sec.

15A.0003.

CONFIDENTIALITY OF CERTAIN INFORMATION. (a)

All documents and other information provided to the attorney

general under this chapter, including the notice required under

Section 15A.0051, are not public information under Chapter 552,

Government Code, and may not be released or made public on subpoena

or otherwise except as provided by this section.

(b)

The attorney general may release documents or

information:

(1)

with the consent of the entity that submitted the

information; or

(2)

to an expert or consultant under contract with the

attorney general solely for the purpose of conducting or aiding in

the creation of a study under Section 15A.0101, provided that the

expert or consultant is bound by the same confidentiality

requirements as the attorney general.

SUBCHAPTER B. NOTICE OF MATERIAL CHANGE TRANSACTIONS

Sec.

15A.0051.

REQUIRED NOTICE OF PROPOSED MATERIAL CHANGE

TRANSACTIONS. (a)

A health care entity shall submit written notice

to the attorney general of any material change transaction

involving the entity not later than the 90th day before the date the

change is to take effect.

(b)

The attorney general by rule shall prescribe the method

and form of the written notice required under this section.

Sec.

15A.0052.

CIVIL PENALTY; INJUNCTION.

(a)

A person who

violates Section 15A.0051 is liable to this state for a civil

penalty in an amount not to exceed $10,000 for each violation.

(b) The attorney general may bring an action to:

(1)

recover the civil penalty imposed by Subsection

(a); and

(2)

restrain or enjoin a person from violating Section

15A.0051.

(c)

The attorney general shall deposit a civil penalty

collected under this section in the state treasury to the credit of

the general revenue fund. Money deposited under this section may

only be appropriated to the attorney general for the purpose of

operating the attorney general's antitrust division.

SUBCHAPTER C. MARKET STUDIES

Sec.

15A.0101.

STUDIES ON HEALTH CARE MARKETS. (a)

The

attorney general may conduct studies on the following topics:

(1)

the conditions of a health care market in this

state or a region or political subdivision of this state,

including:

(A)

the degree of health care entity ownership or

other concentration, including horizontal and vertical

concentration and integration;

(B)

the strength of competitive forces on price

and quality of health care services; and

(C)

trends in the price, quality, and

availability of health care services; and

(2)

the impacts of completed material change

transactions on a market.

(b)

To conduct the studies required by this section, the

attorney general may request that the appropriate state agencies

having licensing or oversight authority over health care entities

issue a call for nonproprietary documents or other information from

health care and other entities involved in the health care market

that is necessary to determine market concentration. As soon as

practicable after a request is made by the attorney general under

this section, the agency shall make the call for information under

this section and forward relevant information the agency receives

in the response to the call to the attorney general.

(c)

Health care and other entities shall provide requested

information not later than the 30th day after the date of the call

described by Subsection (b).

Sec.

15A.0102.

ADMINISTRATIVE PENALTY. The attorney

general may assess an administrative penalty in an amount not to

exceed $1,000 against an entity that does not submit the requested

information in accordance with Section 15A.0101.

Each day a

violation continues is considered a separate violation for purposes

of imposing the administrative penalty under this section.

SECTION 3. This Act takes effect September 1, 2025.