Backed by Threat of Clawbacks, Feds Wield Tight Grip on $50B Rural Health Fund
In Maine, state health officials hoped to steer a slice of $190 million in new federal rural health funding to shield hospitals and clinics from the fallout caused by cuts to federal health programs.
Their plan would have helped pay to treat low-income, uninsured patients.
But federal leaders overseeing the five-year, $50 billion Rural Health Transformation Program said no.
āIt was not our decision,ā said Lisa Letourneau, a senior adviser at Maineās health department.
Letourneau told an audience of healthcare providers, advocates, and community groups during a March webinar that the change was ādisappointing.ā
Maine isnāt alone in having to make changes to plans pitched to win a share of the Trump administration’s new rural health fund.
Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services Administrator Mehmet Oz when announcing the rural health program awards last year and said his agency would help states āturn their ideas into lasting improvements for rural families.ā
But state officials and healthcare leaders said itās also clear the agency wants to encourage specific policy changes and hold states accountable to the promises they made and rules they agreed to follow.
During the past six months, as states raced to meet the programās looming federal deadlines, CMS staffers worked with state health departments to make a flurry of changes, including scrapping some initiatives. The federal agency to rescind existing funding ā or reduce future awards ā if states donāt follow rules or meet their goals. āWe will take the money backā if states ādonāt abide by what they wrote, if they donāt do a good job,ā Oz said at an event this month in Washington, D.C.
Congressional Republicans created the Rural Health Transformation Program as a last-minute sweetener in their One Big Beautiful Bill Act last summer. The funding was intended to offset concerns about the anticipated in rural communities from the law, which is expected to reduce Medicaid spending by more than $900 billion over a decade.
On a call with reporters in December, Oz said āone of the smartest things the president and Congressā did when creating the program was to create a threat of āclawbacks,ā or taking money back if states donāt do what they promised in their applications.
Oz went on to describe how the clawback mechanism gives governors leverage to press their legislatures to adopt the Trump administrationās priorities, such as instituting the presidential fitness test in schools.
āThis gives you extra umph, a little bit of gusto to go after these issues,ā he said.
That message was received loudly and clearly in Tennessee. Michael Hendrix, policy director for the governorās office, said during a hearing that federal officials said the state āwould be more competitive for more funding through policy change.ā He said CMS also relayed that āsome share of this yearās funding, if policies are not implemented, might be clawed back.ā
The threat of rescinding funding has caused fear and confusion among health organization leaders, said Alan Morgan, CEO of the National Rural Health Association.
āWe’re worried that facilities and organizations won’t apply for the grant money because of the fears of the clawbacks,ā he said, adding that he would like the administration to clarify if federal officials could take back grant money that states have already awarded to rural health organizations.
While clawbacks are a ānecessary, important toolā to address misuse of funds and ensure the money goes toward helping rural communities, they are also āa dangerous tool,ā said Morgan, whose organization represents rural hospitals and clinics.
CMS did not respond to multiple requests for comment.
States must file progress reports . They then have to commit their first-year funding and Sept. 30, 2027, to spend it.
States are progressing at wildly different rates, with some still developing grant applications and others already distributing money, created by Morganās rural health association.
In late January, Iowa became . The tracker shows that most states have opened grant applications, but 11 others, including Wyoming, Maine, and Colorado, have yet to post any funding opportunities.
CMSā tight control over state programs is one reason for such disparity in progress.
Instead of typical grants, the rural health program uses cooperative agreements, which require a back-and-forth partnership, said Charlie Sagona, a grant specialist at Assel Grant Services, a consulting firm that helps organizations manage grants.
āYou are going to be working very, very closely with them; things will ebb and flow and change and move,ā said Sagona, who is helping several large hospital systems interested in winning some of the rural funding.
Kate Sapra, deputy director of CMSā Office of Rural Health Transformation, said at a May event that the agency has āmany avenues of oversight.ā Staffers are tracking applications for state funding and ālooking to see when contracts are executed,ā she said.
Sapra said the agency wants to āhave conversations with states before they get to the pointā of putting out something thatās not allowed. Itās āreally important to usā for the funding to reach rural providers, she added.
Sapra said her office has filled about half of 30 new slots for project officers. The officers and the states check in āat least twice a month, if not on a weekly basis.ā
Vermont Medicaid Director Jill Mazza Olson, who led her stateās rural health application, said the officers are āvery responsive.ā
Vermont is one of the states that had to ditch or tweak its plans. Olson said the state pulled its plan to increase housing for rural healthcare workers after federal officials said they would evaluate the proposal based on the agencyās guidelines for construction projects at healthcare facilities. Those rules allow only āminorā renovations to existing buildings or campuses.
In Colorado, state leaders changed grant eligibility rules after they āreceived feedbackā from CMS and healthcare providers, said Marc Williams, a spokesperson for the stateās Department of Health Care Policy and Financing.
Wyoming legislators and state officials spent months designing, discussing, and voting on a plan to invest most of its award into a perpetuity fund that could have generated $28.5 million for the state to spend every year, āforever,ā according to .
The state had to pull the idea because it āwas a degree too innovative for CMS to swallow,ā said Republican state Sen. Charles Scott, a veteran lawmaker and cattle rancher. āThis whole thing has been a bit of a disappointment to us in Wyoming.ā
Stefan Johansson, director of the stateās health department, said Wyomingās final spending plan wasnāt approved until mid- to late May. He said the department hopes to begin awarding money in late summer or early fall.
āMake no mistake ā it is a very compressed timeline,ā he said.
Across the country, Maine was forced to rework its plan to reimburse hospitals and clinics when they provide to certain uninsured patients.
Letourneau said during her March remarks that federal officials rejected this idea because “provider payments had to be more directly linked to a rural transformation kind of activity.ā
Lindsay Hammes, a spokesperson for Maineās health department, told Ńī¹óåś“«Ć½Ņīl Health News that funding will instead help providers transition to reimbursement models that arenāt based on how many patients they treat.
Reworked plans call for spending $28.5 million to support providers, Letourneau said in March.
“But there definitely will be more strings attached.ā
Ńī¹óåś“«Ć½Ņīl Health News correspondent Darius Tahir contributed to this report.