Hospital tax breaks will cost Illinois $10M a year

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Highly involved in crafting the deal and seeing it through was A.J. Wilhelmi, who left the Illinois Senate in February to take a leadership post with IHA, the hospital lobbying group. His name is still listed as a legislative sponsor of the bill that included the tax break.

“It’s good public policy to support the charitable activities of investor-owned hospitals. We want to encourage hospitals to continue to provide free and discounted care,” Wilhelmi said in support of the tax credit.

Wilhelmi told the AP that the hospital association estimated the tax break would cost “up to $15 million a year,” a number that was shared verbally during the negotiations but wasn’t divulged to the public.

“It was certainly discussed in those meetings,” Wilhelmi said. “Was this issue brought up in every session? I don’t think that’s the case.”

Although some insiders knew about the $15 million a year estimate from the hospital group, there was never a request for an official analysis of the impact on the state budget, according to the Illinois Department of Revenue.

There are 28 investor-owned hospitals in Illinois today, most owned by health systems that operate nationally like Nashville-based Vanguard Health Systems. Vanguard will reap an estimated $5.5 million annually because of the tax break, according to the AP analysis.

A spokesman for the Quinn administration confirmed that $15 million was the high end of the hospital association’s estimate. The figure was given without any documentation, said spokesman Mike Claffey.

The AP analysis was based on public records of property taxes and charity care. The law works like this: For-profit hospitals will be able to offset their Illinois income tax by the amount of their local property taxes, or the amount of free and discounted care they provide to the poor, whichever is less.

If that number is more than the hospital’s income tax liability — and for many hospitals it will be — the hospital will be able to sell all or part of their tax credit to other businesses, according to the Department of Revenue. Hospitals also will be allowed to carry forward any excess credit and apply it to their tax liability for five tax years.

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