Tenet to Battle Over Fort Mill, S.C. Hospital Rights in Court Again

The battle between Dallas-based Tenet Healthcare, Winston-Salem, N.C.-based Novant Health and Charlotte, N.C.-based Carolinas HealthCare System about who can build a hospital in Fort Mill, S.C., is heading back to court, according to a Charlotte Observer report.

Advertisement

The S.C. Department of Health and Environmental Control recently decided in a 3-2 vote not to review its decision, which awarded a certificate of need to Carolinas to develop a $77.5 million hospital in Fort Mill and left Tenet and Novant out of the picture, according to the report. Tenet currently operates Piedmont Medical Center in Rock Hill, S.C., and Novant operates Presbyterian Healthcare in Charlotte, N.C.

Tenet said it will appeal the decision, which it had previously done in the lower courts, and now the case will go to the S.C. Administrative Law Court, the report said. Novant did not say if it would appeal the decision.

The three systems have been battling for rights to develop a new facility in Fort Mill since 2004, when the state determined Fort Mill needed a 64-bed hospital. Tenet originally won the bid, but the other parties appealed.

Related Articles on the Proposed Fort Mill Hospital:

Tenet, Novant File Appeals Over Carolinas HealthCare’s Fort Mill Hospital
Carolinas HealthCare Gets CON Approval for New Hospital in Fort Mill, Beating Out Tenet and Novant
South Carolina Expected to Rule on Three Competing CON Applications in September

At the Becker's 11th Annual IT + Revenue Cycle Conference: The Future of AI & Digital Health, taking place September 14–17 in Chicago, healthcare executives and digital leaders from across the country will come together to explore how AI, interoperability, cybersecurity, and revenue cycle innovation are transforming care delivery, strengthening financial performance, and driving the next era of digital health. Apply for complimentary registration now.

Advertisement

Next Up in Leadership & Management

Advertisement

Comments are closed.