Bill
Bill > A2268
NJ A2268
NJ A2268Requires certain providers of substance or alcohol use disorder treatment, services, or supports to be assessed for conflicts of interest prior to receiving State funds, licensure, or certification.
summary
Introduced
01/13/2026
01/13/2026
In Committee
02/12/2026
02/12/2026
Crossed Over
Passed
Dead
Introduced Session
2026-2027 Regular Session
Bill Summary
This bill requires any department, agency, bureau, board, commission, authority, or other entity of the State, or of any county or municipality, that provides State funds to providers, or licenses or certifies any provider that accepts client referrals from a State-funded entity, to assess the provider for conflicts of interest that could impede the provider's ability to deliver treatment, services, or supports for substance or alcohol use disorder prior to the distribution of State funds or the approval of any applicable licensures or certifications. Under the bill, "provider" means a health care professional, facility, or program licensed or certified in the State, or applying for licensure or certification in the State, to provide substance use disorder or alcohol use disorder treatment, services, or supports. A conflict of interest assessment is required to include, at a minimum, a review of the following information submitted by the provider to the reviewing entity: 1) a financial statement itemizing annual revenues, expenditures, and profits; 2) a list of all board members, including each board member's profession and employer; 3) a list of all stakeholders, investors, owners, or any other individuals or entities that hold a financial interest in the provider; 4) a list of all stakeholders, investors, owners, or any other individuals or entities that hold a financial interest in the provider and that have a financial interest in a secondary entity and the name of the secondary entity; 5) a list of all staff members, indicating each member's title and job duties; and 6) a list of any staff members who hold outside employment, the name of the staff member's outside employer, and the staff member's responsibilities under that outside position. A reviewing entity is not required to administer a conflict of interest assessment on the same provider more frequently than once every 365 days, except as otherwise provided in subsection e. of the bill. If, upon review of the information submitted by the provider, the reviewing entity determines that a conflict of interest exists, the reviewing entity is to notify the provider, in writing, of the determination, along with: 1) a description of the conflict of interest and how the conflict can be remedied; and 2) a statement that the provider will be ineligible to receive State funds, or licensure or certification approval, from the reviewing entity, and that any application for State funds submitted to the reviewing entity will be held unless the provider remedies the conflict within 90 days. Upon receipt of documentation from the provider that the conflict of interest has been remedied, the reviewing entity is to immediately: 1) distribute to the provider any State funds that the provider is otherwise eligible to receive; 2) withdraw any hold placed on an application for State funds, as submitted by the provider, and process that application according to the existing eligibility guidelines for that application; and 3) provide any certification or licensure to the provider that the provider is otherwise eligible to receive. After the provider has remedied the identified conflict of interest, the reviewing entity will be required to reassess the provider for conflicts of interest twice in the next calendar year, once in the second calendar year, and once in the third calendar year.
AI Summary
This bill requires any state, county, or municipal entity that provides state funds to, or licenses or certifies, providers of substance or alcohol use disorder treatment, services, or supports to first assess these providers for conflicts of interest that could hinder their ability to deliver care. A "provider" is defined as any licensed or certified healthcare professional, facility, or program, or one seeking such status, that offers these services. The assessment, which doesn't need to happen more than once a year unless specified, involves reviewing financial statements, lists of board members, stakeholders, investors, owners, and staff, including any outside employment details. If a conflict of interest is found, the provider is notified in writing, informed of how to fix it, and given 90 days to do so, or they will be ineligible for state funds, licensure, or certification. Once a conflict is resolved, the provider receives their funds or approvals, and the reviewing entity will reassess them more frequently for a period. A "conflict of interest" is defined as any situation where an individual or entity's judgment could be improperly influenced by outside financial interests, but it does not include owning multiple treatment facilities. The bill also mandates that reviewing entities adopt necessary regulations and will take effect 180 days after being enacted.
Committee Categories
Health and Social Services
Sponsors (7)
Margie Donlon (D)*,
Cleopatra Tucker (D)*,
Michael Venezia (D)*,
Verlina Reynolds-Jackson (D),
Shanique Speight (D),
Sterley Stanley (D),
Anthony Verrelli (D),
Last Action
Reported and Referred to Assembly Health Infrastructure Committee (on 02/12/2026)
Official Document
bill text
bill summary
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bill summary
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bill summary
| Document Type | Source Location |
|---|---|
| State Bill Page | https://www.njleg.state.nj.us/bill-search/2026/A2268 |
| Analysis - Statement AOF 2/12/26 | https://pub.njleg.gov/Bills/2026/A2500/2268_S1.PDF |
| Analysis - Technical Review Of Prefiled Bill | https://pub.njleg.gov/Bills/2026/A2500/2268_T1.PDF |
| BillText | https://pub.njleg.gov/Bills/2026/A2500/2268_I1.HTM |
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