With our free press under threat and federal funding for public media gone, your support matters more than ever. Help keep the LAist newsroom strong, become a monthly member or increase your support today.
A new California law will scrub most medical debt from credit reports
Californians’ credit reports will be safe from most medical debt in the coming year under a new law Gov. Gavin Newsom signed today.
Medical debt can hurt people’s credit scores and harm their chances of negotiating a loan or mortgage on favorable terms. The law will not forgive someone’s debt, but by keeping it off credit reports, it might provide some reassurance that Californians won’t suffer more financial repercussions because of a medical balance.
“No Californian should be unable to secure housing, a loan, or even a job because they accessed necessary medical care,” said Sen. Monique Limón, a Santa Barbara Democrat who authored the law. “With this new law, California is stepping up to protect consumers.”
Her legislation was backed by Attorney General Rob Bonta and consumer advocacy groups. Limon and supporters contended that medical debt should not be treated like other kinds of debt because people incur it through no fault of their own. Experts and consumer advocates say medical debt is also more prone to inaccuracies because of mistakes in billing or disputes with insurers.
“With ballooning out-of-pocket health care costs, we need a fair credit system that does not punish California’s patients for seeking health care when they need it,” said California Nurses Association President Michelle Gutierrez Vo in a written statement commending Newsom’s signature of the new law.
The law has a loophole that lawmakers created late in the legislative session — it will not apply to debt charged to so-called medical credit cards.
Bankers and lenders lobbied to exclude medical credit cards from this bill. They said medical credit cards can be used for non-urgent services, including gym memberships and cosmetic procedures. Instead the law will apply only to debt owed to a medical provider, such as a hospital or doctor’s office.
The federal government is moving forward with a similar rule to California’s, but the timing on that proposal is uncertain. Newsom’s signature allows California to move quicker with an implementation date of Jan. 1. With this signature, California joins other states, including New York and Connecticut, in barring medical debt from credit reports.
As medical debt increasingly burdens Americans, local and state governments are looking to provide some type of relief for residents. Other states, such as New York and New Jersey, have tapped into medical forgiveness programs. North Carolina is working with medical providers to negotiate incentives in exchange for debt relief.
In California’s most populous county, Los Angeles, this summer approved a pilot program to cancel $500 million worth of medical debt for 150,000 residents. Los Angeles officials estimate that residents are carrying $2.9 billion worth of medical debt.
Supported by the California Health Care Foundation (CHCF), which works to ensure that people have access to the care they need, when they need it, at a price they can afford. Visit www.chcf.org to learn more.
-
Government documents show Va Lecia Adams Kellum, who leads an agency that manages over $700 million in homeless services contracts each year, inked deals with the nonprofit where her husband is a senior staffer.
-
All of the proceeds from the sales, which were finalized before the fires, go into a new South Pasadena affordable housing fund.
-
‘It was just a regular morning’: Californians picked up in recent ICE raids include kids, volunteersJob seekers, dedicated community members, green card holders among those hit by deportations, according to interviews.
-
During the latest round of layoffs, the tiny team was among the hundreds let go. And though some parts of the educational program remain, educators across the country mourn what was lost.
-
Andrew Do pleaded guilty to felony bribery last year. The suspension is a step in the California State Bar's process leading to disbarment.
-
One month after the fires, many renters still can’t move back to their homes because their landlords won’t say when, or if, they plan to clean up toxic ash.