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As the 2026 Minnesota legislative session concludes, Capitol leaders are framing the outcome as a model of bipartisan compromise and fiscal discipline, pointing to a major bonding bill and an agreement to shore up the state’s healthcare safety net.
But from the perspective of the 76 counties of Greater Minnesota, the session told a very different story. Lawmakers did not deliver equity. Instead, they reinforced a geographic double standard, leaving rural and tribal systems to absorb a deepening crisis with little meaningful state support.
Related: Rural health care in Minnesota is at risk of becoming a medical wasteland
The clearest example is the final budget agreement’s historic $705 million rescue package for Hennepin County Medical Center (HCMC), including $205 million in immediate support and a $500 million reserve account through 2031. While HCMC plays an essential safety-net role, rural lawmakers allowed this massive package to pass without securing a parallel, enforceable commitment to protect the hospitals and clinics anchoring care across Greater Minnesota.
While the metro safety net was insulated, rural nonprofit hospitals were offered just $30 million to manage a crisis far larger in scale. In Minnesota, 23 rural hospitals are considered at risk of closure — nine by the end of this year. Against this backdrop, a $30 million stopgap is a token gesture that falls dangerously short of the actual threat.
From my vantage point on the Minnesota Human Services Performance Council and as a public member and tribal representative on various state Medicaid and MinnesotaCare boards, this legislative inaction is deeply alarming. The state chose delay and avoidance just as a major federal disruption was already taking shape under the One Big Beautiful Bill Act (HR 1).
The Minnesota Department of Human Services estimates these federal changes could cause more than 140,000 Minnesotans to lose health coverage. Yet the Legislature adjourned without providing an adequate response for the communities that will be hit first and hardest by these hidden structural shifts:
- An unfunded administrative burden: New federal requirements force frequent eligibility processing onto county and tribal governments, driving roughly $165 million a year in added local administrative costs. The state completely failed to provide a serious funding response.
- A punishing penalty structure: Tightened compliance rules without added staffing increase the risk of processing errors. Under federal law, exceeding a mere 3% error rate can trigger the loss of federal matching funds, leaving local governments and property taxpayers carrying the financial consequences.
- A coverage trap for working families: Annual recertification fundamentally makes sense because verified earnings information from the IRS and Social Security Administration is already reported directly to counties and tribes to verify eligibility. Even a six-month update schedule remains manageable. However, shifting toward monthly reporting creates a chaotic trap. Minor income fluctuations — like working a single extra hour one month and less the next — can strip a parent of Medical Assistance and trigger state penalties for being uninsured. This increases the odds that eligible people lose care for purely procedural reasons where residents already face workforce shortages and limited administrative support.
When a major metro hospital faces a financial emergency, the state creates a half-billion-dollar reserve. When rural hospitals face structural collapse, the response is a shrug. That is a deliberate policy choice about whose access to care counts.
Rural health systems are primary economic anchors, supporting $220 billion and one in 12 jobs nationally, and injecting $6.5 billion into Minnesota’s local economies. Every hospital dollar drives $2.30 in community business, meaning a closure triggers a devastating downward spiral for Main Street, schools, housing and tax bases. As a former House committee aide and rural mayor, I know exactly how fast a community collapses when a core institution fails.
The 2026 legislative session will be remembered for what it failed to defend. It found the political will to protect a well-connected urban institution, yet lacked the urgency to preserve the rural and Tribal healthcare systems sustaining Greater Minnesota.
Related: HCMC bailout fine print, the bonding bill, and a last push to police the immigration police: What the Minnesota Legislature accomplished in its final hours
Greater Minnesota cannot survive on symbolic support while local care disappears. If lawmakers will not return for corrective action, they must face the real-world consequences: longer emergency drives, fewer local services, and hollowed-out economies.
Rural and Tribal healthcare should not be treated as expendable. When election season arrives, voters must remember who stood up for them and who remained silent. If our current legislators — regardless of political party—cannot or will not fight for the survival of our local healthcare infrastructure, it is time for Greater Minnesota to replace them at the ballot box. Real accountability begins when we stop rewarding legislative failure with re-election.
Aaron Wittnebel, SME, represents rural and Tribal communities across Minnesota’s 76 counties on state boards overseeing Human Services, Medicaid, and MinnesotaCare. He is a public health advocate, a former mayor, and a former Minnesota House legislative aide. He is a member of the Red Lake Nation and resides in rural Becker County.