EDITORIAL | Westside Gazette
By Bobby R. Henry, Sr.
Even in a Legislature where outcomes are often predictable, last week proved that public pressure still matters.
A bill moving quietly through Tallahassee — House Bill 1047 and its Senate companion Senate Bill 1122 sought to allow Broward County’s two public hospital districts to enter broad joint ventures and operate with immunity from traditional antitrust protections. Though the bill was temporarily postponed (“TP’d”) and did not pass this session, the conversation it sparked is far from over.
And while it did not advance this year, we remain concerned that such legislation, if reintroduced would not be beneficial to communities of color.
What Was at Stake
The proposal would have affected the North Broward Hospital District (Broward Health) and the South Broward Hospital District (Memorial Healthcare System). These are not private corporations. They are special taxing districts with the power to levy property taxes, issue bonds, and exercise eminent domain.
Under the direction of Shane Strum, leadership argued that collaboration would mean better access, more efficiency, and shorter wait times. But the language of the bill was broad, only three paragraphs and would have allowed consolidation power and exemption from certain antitrust constraints.
In communities like ours, antitrust protections are not abstract legal technicalities. They are safeguards against price gouging, controlling behavior, and reduced access.
When public entities funded by taxpayers seek immunity from oversight, the public deserves more than a promise, they deserve a vote.
Why Transparency Matters
According to public reporting, a significant majority of Broward voters were unaware that such a sweeping structural change was even being considered. Many opposed moving forward without voter approval or full public hearings.
Leading voices raised concerns, including State Representative Kelly Skidmore, who argued that any major restructuring should be debated openly and decided with transparency.
Even within the Senate committee, hesitation emerged. Senator Shevrin Jones expressed concerns about consumer protections. Senator Barbara Sharief made clear she would not support circumventing antitrust laws.
Ultimately, the bill sponsor, Joe Gruters, acknowledged there was significant pushback. Without sufficient votes, the bill was postponed and effectively stalled.
That did not happen by accident. It happened because questions were asked.
Why Communities of Color Must Pay Attention
Hospital consolidation across the country has often led to:
- Higher insurance premiums
- Fewer provider choices
- Longer wait times
- Reduced access to specialized care
- Greater financial strain on working-class families
Communities of color are disproportionately impacted when health systems consolidate power without accountability. Historically, when decisions are made “in the dark,” Black and Brown communities are the last to benefit and the first to bear the cost.
Public hospital districts exist to serve the public, not to shield themselves from oversight.
When taxpayer-funded institutions seek broader authority without voter input, that should concern every resident, especially those whose communities already experience health disparities.
This Session Is Over — But The Conversation Is Not
The bill was described as “a heavy lift.” It did not advance this year. But legislation can return in future sessions, often revised and rebranded.
We must remain engaged.
Health care decisions are not just policy matters; they are life-and-death issues. They affect mothers in labor, seniors on fixed incomes, children in emergency rooms, and families fighting chronic illness.
If collaboration truly benefits the people, then let it withstand public scrutiny.
If reform is necessary, let the voters decide.
Broward taxpayers deserve transparency.
They deserve accountability.
And communities of color deserve protection and not promises.
The defeat of this bill is not the end of the story. It is a reminder that vigilance works.
And vigilance must continue.

