New law will keep medical debt off credit reports

STATE HOUSE – Legislation sponsored by Rep. Mary Ann Shallcross Smith and Sen. Melissa A. Murray to protect Rhode Islanders from credit problems resulting from medical debts has been signed into law.

The legislation (2024-S 2709A), 2024-H 7103A), which Gov. Dan McKee signed June 24 following Assembly passage June 11, will prohibit debt collectors from reporting all medical debt to credit bureaus. It also sets rules for communication with consumers, false and misleading representation by debt collectors and a prohibition against collections during insurance appeals. The bill will take effect Jan. 1.

“Medical debt is a growing and persistent problem that so many of our friends and family consistently face,” said Representative Shallcross Smith (D-Dist. 46, Lincoln, Pawtucket). “Unlike other types of debt, where people spend beyond their means, medical debt occurs because people have the misfortune of getting sick. This bill looks to provide compassion and relief to Rhode Islanders by instituting common-sense reform.”

The consumer-protection bill was included in the Rhode Island HEALTH initiative (Holistic Enhancement and Access Legislation for Total Health) put forward by Senate leaders to improve health care access and affordability in Rhode Island.

“In a recent survey by healthcare.com, all living generations reported that medical debts had harmed their credit scores, with millennials reporting the highest incidence, at 52 percent. Medical debts have significant long-term financial consequences, preventing individuals from getting home loans or other credit they need and causing some to make harmful sacrifices such as not paying rent or utilities or buying food or medicine. The stress they cause can exacerbate a person’s health problems further,” said Senator Murray (D-Dist. 24, Woonsocket, North Smithfield). “This bill is a measure to prevent medical debt from sending Rhode Islanders into a financial downward spiral for something over which they had no control.”

Medical bills are among the top reasons underlying bankruptcy among Americans. A 2019 National Institute of Health study found that 66.5% of bankruptcy filers who responded indicated that medical expenses or problems contributed to their bankruptcy.

 

 

Israel and Hamas are accusing each other of violating the ceasefire. The Israeli military said Hamas carried out multiple attacks against its forces in Gaza Sunday morning. Israel responded with an airstrike and called the Hamas attack "a bold violation of the ceasefire." For its part, Hamas labeled the report "Israeli propaganda," and called on the U.S. to "stop repeating" Israel's "misleading narrative."        The agency that safeguards the U.S. nuclear stockpile is set to furlough most of its staff today because of the government shutdown. The National Nuclear Security Administration plans to send notices to 14-hundred employees, leaving 400 people to guard the stockpile. The agency was created in 2000 and this will be the first time it has furloughed workers during a shutdown.        President Trump is demanding Columbia stop production of illegal drugs. In a post on Truth Social on Sunday, Trump called Colombian President Gustavo Petro "an illegal drug dealer" who "strongly encourages the massive production of drugs." Trump went on to say if Petro doesn't take immediate action to halt it, the U.S. will do it for him. He added, "and it won't be done nicely."        The California Highway Patrol says an artillery shell prematurely detonated during a live-fire demonstration at Camp Pendleton Saturday, sending fragments onto a CHP vehicle and motorcycle assigned to Vice President JD Vance's protective detail. The incident happened during an event marking the 250th anniversary of the Marine Corps. No officers were injured.        Boeing is set to meet again today with the union representing more than three-thousand striking employees. The International Association of Machinists and Aerospace Workers says both sides have agreed to another meeting with federal mediators.        Black Phone 2 is number one at the weekend box office. The sequel to the 2022 horror film took in just under 27-million dollars, beating out Tron: Aries, which grossed just over ten-million.