Bill

Bill > S3012


NJ S3012

NJ S3012
Creates Health Care Cost Containment and Price Transparency Commission, Office of Healthcare Affordability and Transparency, and hospital price transparency regulations.


summary

Introduced
01/13/2026
In Committee
01/13/2026
Crossed Over
Passed
Dead

Introduced Session

2026-2027 Regular Session

Bill Summary

This bill establishes the Health Care Cost Containment and Price Transparency Commission (commission), the Office of Healthcare Affordability and Transparency (office), and hospital price transparency regulations. In doing so, the bill codifies various provisions found in executive orders regarding: the existing Office of Health Care Affordability and Transparency; the Health Care Affordability, Responsibility, and Transparency Program; and the Health Care Affordability Interagency Working Group. Under the bill, the purpose of the office is to provide support, staffing, infrastructure, and expertise to the commission, and to comprehensively address health care cost growth while also establishing data analytics and public reporting mechanisms to ensure healthcare affordability, informed policymaking, and access for future generations. The office is to establish guidelines for health care entities to submit necessary data for the yearly evaluation of total health care expenditures, their incremental growth, pricing information, pricing incremental growth, the formulation of the healthcare cost growth benchmark and the hospital price benchmark, and for publishing relevant data publicly. Under the bill, the purpose of the 18 member commission is to: monitor, analyze, and contain health care prices by identifying drivers of health care cost growth including hospital price growth; establishing and adopting a health care cost growth benchmark and a hospital price growth benchmark; identifying health care entities that exceed the benchmark or benchmarks; and addressing increases in excess of the benchmark or benchmarks through public transparency, opportunities for remediation, and other actions, including civil penalties. The commission is to set a cost growth benchmark for health care entities. The commission is to impose civil penalties, pursuant to the "Penalty Enforcement Law of 1999," P.L.1999, c.274 (C.2A:58-10 et seq.), on health care entities that either fail to respond to the commission's request to submit a corrective action plan or comply with the requirements of a corrective action plan. The bill provides that the Department of Health is to require hospitals to be in compliance with federal hospital price transparency requirements and provide a written warning notice to, or request a corrective action plan from, any hospital that is not in compliance with these federal requirements. A hospital is to be prohibited from attempting to collect a medical debt from a patient if the hospital is not, at the time of providing medical services to the patient, in compliance with the provisions of this bill. A hospital that fails to act in accordance with the provisions of this bill is to be liable to a civil penalty of $10 per day per hospital bed for each offense, pursuant to the "Penalty Enforcement Law of 1999," P.L.1999, c.274 (C.2A:58-10 et seq.).

AI Summary

This bill establishes the Health Care Cost Containment and Price Transparency Commission and the Office of Healthcare Affordability and Transparency to address rising healthcare costs and improve price transparency. The Office will support the Commission by collecting and analyzing data on healthcare expenditures and prices from various entities, including hospitals, and will make this information publicly available. The Commission, composed of 18 members with diverse expertise, will monitor, analyze, and work to contain healthcare prices by setting benchmarks for overall healthcare cost growth and hospital price growth, identifying entities that exceed these benchmarks, and implementing corrective actions, which can include civil penalties. The bill also mandates that hospitals comply with federal price transparency requirements, prohibiting them from collecting medical debt from patients if they are not in compliance, and imposes daily fines per bed for non-compliance. The Department of Health is tasked with overseeing hospital compliance and reporting on their adherence to these federal rules. The bill appropriates $5 million to fund these initiatives.

Committee Categories

Health and Social Services

Sponsors (10)

Last Action

Introduced in the Senate, Referred to Senate Health, Human Services and Senior Citizens Committee (on 01/13/2026)

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