It Took More Than 15 Years for a South Carolina Hospital To Get Permission To Be Built
In much the same way that zoning laws are wielded by NIMBYs to block new development, Certificate-of-Need laws can be used to impose costly delays on building new medical facilities.

Construction finally began in May on a new hospital in Fort Mill, South Carolina, more than a decade and a half after state regulators determined that the area was in need of more medical services.
Without that long delay, residents of the fast-growing Charlotte suburb would have one less thing to worry about during the COVID-19 pandemic. The coronavirus has strained the capacity of hospitals across the country, but especially in Southern states—at one point during the recent "delta wave," more than 85 percent of hospital beds in South Carolina were filled—and put a spotlight on the availability of medical care in America, which has fewer hospital beds per capita than most other developed nations.
What happened in Fort Mill offers an explanation for why that's the case.
Before being able to break ground on a new hospital there, Piedmont Medical Center had to navigate the state's Certificate-of-Need (CON) process, which in this case required going all the way to the state Supreme Court to fend off a legal challenge from a competitor. All that to build a 100-bed facility that the South Carolina Department of Health and Environmental Control had determined, all the way back in 2004, was indeed needed in the region.
Unfortunately, "need" is not enough in many cases. Like how zoning laws and mandatory environmental reviews might be well-intentioned policies but are frequently wielded by "not in my backyard" (NIMBY) activists as a way to tangle new development in costly piles of red tape, the CON laws on the books in many states can be used by existing hospitals to delay or prevent new facilities from opening.
That's exactly what happened in Fort Mill. A hospital chain based in Charlotte challenged Piedmont Medical Center's plans for a new facility, then sued to block the state's decision to give Piedmont permission to build the hospital. The litigation cost thousands of dollars and delayed construction by several years. Researchers at the Americans for Prosperity Foundation, a free market think tank, argue that even the threat of such lengthy, expensive reviews ends up deterring investments that would otherwise take place.
"Politics and legal challenges from competitors—not public need of quality health facilities and services—are the key drivers of the CON process in South Carolina," conclude Kevin Schmidt and Thomas Kimbrell in a recently published report looking at CON laws in four states.
Unfortunately, CON laws are on the books in more than 30 states. Though they differ somewhat from place to place, the outcomes are the same everywhere: higher prices, reduced supply of medical care, and regulatory barriers for anyone who wants to change that. In South Carolina, for example, the two researchers found that 25 percent of CON applications during a recent three-year period were denied or withdrawn after being submitted. Those applications represented more than $450 million of investment in the state that never occurred because regulators got in the way.
As the report notes, even the president of the South Carolina Hospital Association, which opposes the elimination of CON laws in the state, told the state legislature that the lengthy and expensive CON process "does not serve the community."
Artificially limiting the supply of health care services can be a major issue when a pandemic or other emergency strikes, of course, but CON laws harm public health even without the help of a novel coronavirus. States with CON laws have higher mortality rates for patients with pneumonia, heart failure, and heart attacks, according to research published in 2016 by the Mercatus Center, a free market think tank that argues for repealing CON laws. Other studies show that CON laws contribute to health care shortages in rural areas because they force medical providers to focus on wealthier, more populated areas in order to make up for the added costs imposed by the CON process.
Unfortunately, these laws persist because of a combination of cronyism and inertia. Originally passed as part of a misguided effort to curb health care costs, CON laws actually caused costs to rise by reducing the supply of health care facilities in many places. In the late 1980s, Congress reversed an earlier mandate requiring states to pass them. Since the mid-2010s, the Federal Trade Commission and Department of Justice have been more forceful in suggesting that states do away with them. "CON laws raise considerable competitive concerns and generally do not appear to have achieved their intended benefits for health care consumers," the two agencies concluded in 2016.
The only thing that takes longer than getting permission to build a hospital in a state with strict CON laws, it seems, is getting those laws off the books.
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Took them that long to nurse this project through the regulatory process? Maybe they should have just doctored up the permits they needed.
To give the project a shot in the arm?
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If it waddles like cronyistic quackery, and quacks like cronyistic quackery, it probably IS cronyistic quackery!!!
And as we can see, cronyistic quackery isn't all that it's quacked up to be! Now ya REALLY quacked me off! Quack off, ya bunch of quacks!
They should perform an autopsy to see where things went wrong.
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Whoever made up the concept of Certificates of Need is certifiable.
It was probably some CON man!
Just for the record, Eric, 85% capacity is NOT "strained"; it is a normal operating level.
Indeed.
Last year we stopped all non-emergency hospital stays here in SC to make room for all the covid patients. Hospitals were laying people off right and left because there weren't enough customers coming in to pay salaries and keep the lights on, then the remaining staff were complaining about being overworked. Our papers kept saying that they were overrun with covid patients and that was the problem when the real problem was they weren't allowed to take in non-covid patients. Any hospital that isn't running at 85% capacity in normal times can't pay it's bills.
85% is close to ideal occupancy, depending on the unit and the time of day, but hospitals shouldn't need to meet this threshold to be profitable.
Empty beds don’t pay.
You can build more rooms, fill them with more beds, hire more staff. But if there’s no patients allowed by law, those beds don’t pay.
Same as a hotel.
That's enough time to fast track 15 vaccines!!
Or time for 36 rounds of booster shots.
Just more evidence that people seriously believe that central planning can avoid the wasteful duplication of services brought about by the competition of the free market. If we've already got a McDonalds in town, why shouldn't we ban Wendy's and Hardees and Burger King? Who needs more than one place to buy a burger?
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Back when commercials got it.
Christ, you're as old as I am...
I was already mentally saying, "Evening Wear! Very niceeee." when I saw your link.
It's even worse with healthcare because to get their dream of single payer universal coverage, they'd have to axe CON laws in the first place. Yet they don't mention that.
Someone pointed out that Mark Zuckerberg looks like Jen Psaki without a wig, now I can't unsee that.
I always thought of him as Napoleon Dynamite all grown up. *GOSH!*
NY Times:
I take it they propose "critical race thinking" instead?
Lol
Consume, obey, submit.
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Inbred hillbilly Republicans were elected to 6 of their 7 Districts. But I'll wager there is no shortage of prisons, insane asylums, SWAT gangs and asset forfeiture looting in Georgia. Voters get the governments they deserve.
Georgia? Fort Mill is in South Carolina. Near the border with North Carolina.
This is supposed to be a forum of reasonable comments about libertarian thought. Please refrain from injecting facts into the comments.
Thank you.
I live near South Carolina. He's not too far off the mark. They barely believe in roads, much less road signs, but still charge for them.
South Carolina roads are conspicuously horrible. I can testify to that.
Grandfather Hank's been watching too much CNN again. The nurse in the visiting room needs to switch the TV to Matlock or something.
It Took More Than 15 Years for a South Carolina Hospital To Get Permission To Be Built
This is why Musk's success with Space X is so mysterious to me. I'm used to everything crawling at a snails pace until every drop of grift and graft can be wrung out of them. Whether it's a new airliner, hospital project, military fighter, rail line, etc. I'm used to snail pace development.
It looks weird when things get run the way they are supposed be.
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What he said!
At this point in the delay, the building could downright dangerous. See the seriesLife After People to get an idea of how things break down without humans on the scene.
Or is that stock photography?
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Does your hospital us Certificates Of Need process to get in the way of bu8lding other hospitals? If so, Move, Bitch! Get Out the Way!
I specialize in essays on healthcare
medical assignment help
I think it should be said that Hospitalprovides patients with a wide range of services. It is important to underline that its healthcare services vary from business healthcare service to home healthcare services. In such a way, the hospital attempts to provide practically all patients with its healthcare services. It should be said that Hospital was traditionally oriented on the accessibility of its healthcare services, but, naturally, without the external support, the hospital could hardly afford the funding of its healthcare services and their delivery to patients. Moreover, Bridgeport Hospital was patient-centered and the well-being of patients was one of the major goals of the hospital.
The program "Eliza" did a better job of mashing words together into a semblance of a sentence than whatever generated this - and "Eliza" ran on 8-bit computers!
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It is of interest to note that here in Florida hospitals and outpatient facilities do not have to go through a certificate of need process.
Only hospice and facilities for the developmental delayed need a CON
If I am not mistaken if an existing hospital in Florida wants a NICU, trauma center or other specialty unit they do nee a CON.
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