Why We Can't Have Nice Things: Permission Slips for Innovation
Part Two: How Certificate of Need laws limit access to health care, and why those rules can be so difficult to dislodge.

Dr. Jay Singleton remembers the moment when he realized that Certificate of Need laws were serious business.
"He stood up and stared at me and hit his hands on the table," Singleton recalls. "And he said, 'well, we're going to fight you on this.'"
As we explained in last week's episode of Why We Can't Have Nice Things, Singleton has been trying to open a new cataract surgical center in New Bern, North Carolina. He'd met with the CEO of the local hospital as a friendly gesture. What he got was the promise of a protracted legal fight.
Earlier this year, Singleton's case made it to the North Carolina Supreme Court—though he is still likely a long way away from having a final resolution. Meanwhile, his patients continue to face higher costs: Singleton says that a surgery that would cost $1,800 at his clinic instead costs about $6,000 at the hospital up the road.
Joshua Windham, the Institute for Justice attorney who is litigating Singleton's case, says the problem lies with North Carolina's Certificate of Need (CON) law, which gives government regulators—rather than patients or consumers—the power to decide what services are needed.
"They're really permission slip requirements for innovators," says Windham. "The government can't possibly know these things in advance, in part because people's perceptions of their own needs will change, but also because the facts of reality will change."
In some places, those roadblocks to innovation in health care are starting to fall. Also on this week's episode, we'll follow up on Katie Chubb's efforts to open a new birth center in Georgia—something she'll now be able to do after the state legislature passed and Gov. Brian Kemp signed a major CON reform earlier this year.
"It's definitely propelled me forward and made me realize that even the smallest person in somewhere remote as Augusta can start some changes," says Chubb.
Further reading for this week's episode:
"New Georgia Law Allows Birthing Centers To Open Without Needing Permission From Nearby Hospitals," by Eric Boehm, Reason
"North Carolinians Are Being Conned by Certificate of Need Laws," by Christina Smith, Citizens Against Government Waste
"The Powerful Council Overseeing North Carolina's Health Care," by Jeanette Doran, Carolina Journal
"Kemp Signs Major Reforms to CON Law," by Dave Williams, Capital Beat News Service
"The Con of Certificate of Need Laws," by Veronique de Rugy, Mercatus Center
Written by Eric Boehm; produced and edited by Hunt Beaty; fact-checking by Anthony Wallace.
- Producer: Hunt Beaty
Editor's Note: As of February 29, 2024, commenting privileges on reason.com posts are limited to Reason Plus subscribers. Past commenters are grandfathered in for a temporary period. Subscribe here to preserve your ability to comment. Your Reason Plus subscription also gives you an ad-free version of reason.com, along with full access to the digital edition and archives of Reason magazine. We request that comments be civil and on-topic. We do not moderate or assume any responsibility for comments, which are owned by the readers who post them. Comments do not represent the views of reason.com or Reason Foundation. We reserve the right to delete any comment and ban commenters for any reason at any time. Comments may only be edited within 5 minutes of posting. Report abuses.
Please
to post comments
Fuck Kamala Harris
Not with your dick.
Was thinking it should be Rachel Levine’s dick.
Everyone else has
Thanks.
I just threw up my breakfast.
I wasn't doing anything with it anyway.
Could we ALSO require Certificates Of Need for lies about illegal sub-humans eating our pets... About the NEED to Hang Mike Pence, exceute General Milley, threaten the lives of judges (and their familes and pets) when judges hear cases about Dear Leader, and the NEED to Worshit The Chosen One of The Rethugglican Church? PLEASE?!?!?!
"execute General Milley"... I miss spell check!
Here was what my longtime Usenet ally, Christopher Charles Morton, wrote.
https://forum.pafoa.org/showthread.php?t=379970&p=4515565#post4515565
If Milley won't be punished for TREASON, why should he be punished for telling the truth?
The UCMJ has simply ceased to exist by way of its blatantly arbitrary, discriminatory and partisan application.
The "leadership" of the U.S. military has forfeited all respect, and the destruction of respect for military law was merely collateral damage.
As long as Milly's not stretching a rope, the UCMJ is an utter nullity.
Hey bohem, perhaps you should stop supporting the uniparty that puts those laws in. Oh wait you a globalist socialist shill. Fuck you
"Why We Can't Have Nice Things: Permission Slips for Innovation."
Next up: Government permission slips required for exhaling.
Poor-quality lights often consume excessive energy or offer subpar illumination. This is where Ledex stands out. A key reason I chose Irish company Ledex led panel ceiling lights https://ledex.ie/collections/led-panels is its commitment to energy-efficient products. The led panel ceiling lights incorporate cutting-edge LED technology, significantly lowering energy consumption compared to traditional lighting systems like fluorescent or halogen. Even with the lights running for extended periods, my energy bills have not increased—this was a huge plus for me.
The pursuit of space exploration continues to drive human innovation and foster collaboration between private companies and space agencies. These partnerships are making significant strides in our journey beyond Earth, enhancing our technological capabilities and inspiring a vision of a shared future in space https://orbitaltoday.com/2024/09/09/iceye-and-aon-extend-natural-disaster-data-agreement/ This collective effort not only pushes the boundaries of what is possible but also unites us in a common goal of exploring the cosmos.