De Queen hospital set to face audit over its use of American Rescue Plan funds

The Sevier County Medical Center under construction. | Photo from https://www.seviercountymedical.com/about

Arkansas lawmakers greenlit a potential audit into a Southwest Arkansas hospital’s use of federal COVID-19 relief funds it received last year

By TESS VRBIN | Arkansas Advocate

Sevier County Medical Center received $6.25 million in American Rescue Plan Act funds in December 2022, shortly before the hospital opened. CEO Lori House told a legislative committee the hospital needed the funds in order to avoid “a lot more debt than we originally hoped for.”

The hospital had about $2 million on hand at the time but was set to pay almost all of it to the contractor that built the facility, said Greg Revels, the hospital board’s vice chairman. The additional $6.25 million was meant to pay for hospital equipment and furnishings.

State Sen. Jimmy Hickey, R-Texarkana, whose district includes Sevier County, said Thursday that he recently heard concerns from both constituents and other lawmakers that Sevier County Medical Center has been “delinquent” in paying some of the suppliers of the hospital’s construction materials.

Hickey also said the hospital board has told him the ARPA funds have been spent properly and in their entirety. House and Revels could not be reached for comment Thursday.

“I just knew that it was going to be prudent to make sure that all the ARPA funds were spent according to the way [the award] was passed out of the subcommittee, for medical equipment and whatever else,” Hickey said in an interview.

Lead Auditor Roger Norman of the nonpartisan Arkansas Legislative Audit shared Hickey’s request with the Legislative Joint Auditing Executive Committee on Thursday. The panel approved the request with no audible dissent, and the full Legislative Joint Auditing Committee will vote Friday on whether to authorize the audit.

Sevier County’s previous hospital in De Queen closed in 2019 when its out-of-state owner was charged with Medicaid fraud. Later in 2019, voters in the county approved a half-cent sales tax for a $24 million bond issue to pay for construction of a new hospital just north of De Queen.

The county remained without a hospital throughout the COVID-19 pandemic, and the two nearest hospitals were each about 35 miles away from De Queen, in neighboring Howard and Little River counties.

The ARPA funds Sevier County Medical Center received did not come from the $60 million that lawmakers set aside in August 2022 as emergency relief for struggling rural hospitals. Lawmakers have since distributed nearly $40 million to 10 rural hospitals, including $3.4 million to the hospital in Howard County.


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