Officials from Prime Health discuss deal for Roger Williams and Fatima hospitals with Rhode Island regulators

Centurion turned down in request for exclusivity

Roger Williams Medical Center in Providence
The Centurion Foundation won approval from state regulators last year to buy the hospitals, but it has struggled for months to close its financing.
File: Gretchen Ertl for The Public’s Radio
Share
Roger Williams Medical Center in Providence
The Centurion Foundation won approval from state regulators last year to buy the hospitals, but it has struggled for months to close its financing.
File: Gretchen Ertl for The Public’s Radio
Officials from Prime Health discuss deal for Roger Williams and Fatima hospitals with Rhode Island regulators
Copy

With a previously agreed-upon rescue plan for two financially troubled Rhode Island hospitals still in limbo, representatives for another buyer met with state regulators on Thursday.

At stake are Roger Williams Medical Center in Providence and Our Lady of Fatima Hospital in North Providence. Both have lost money for years. Other hospitals in Rhode Island and Massachusetts could be overwhelmed if they closed.

Officials with Prime Healthcare met Thursday with Rhode Island Attorney General Peter Neronha and counterparts from the state Department of Health, said Neronha spokesman Tim Rondeau.

California-based Prime operates 51 hospitals, including Landmark Medical Center in Woonsocket.

The Atlanta-based Centurion Foundation won approval from state regulators last year to buy the hospitals, but it has struggled for months to close its financing.

Rondeau said no agreement is in place between Prime and the hospitals’ current owner, Prospect Medical Holdings of California.

Meanwhile, the Centurion Foundation used a Nov. 14 letter to state officials to present two different and complex scenarios for closing its financing to acquire Roger Williams and Fatima.

In the letter to state officials, Centurion CEO Ben Mingle said the foundation is diligently pursuing both financing plans to try to close its financing as soon as possible.

In a Nov. 17 response to Mingle, Neronha wrote that if Centurion closes its financing and meets the state’s conditions, it will be able to complete its acquisition of the hospitals.

But Neronha said it’s unclear if Prospect Medical Holdings has agreed to part of Centurion’s financing plan: to fund ongoing losses through a previously established escrow account.

Prospect filed for bankruptcy in January. Due to ongoing losses at the Rhode Island hospitals, it went to court in October to ask that Roger Williams and Fatima close by Dec. 31 or be taken over by the state.

Neronha said the state cannot give Centurion the exclusivity it wants as it tries to complete its purchase of the hospitals. He said the foundation needs to decide which financing plan to pursue and if it chooses the second, to address the state’s concern about encumbering an escrow fund meant to help keep the hospitals operating.

Rhode Island’s senators say the Trump Justice Department bypassed a bipartisan process in appointing Charles ‘Chas’ Calenda, calling him unqualified for the top federal prosecutor role
‘I don’t have an additional $900 lying around in my family budget to pay for this’
Research from Salve Regina University shows many libraries across southern New England are dealing with employee burnout and high rates of turnover as they try to adapt to modern-day patron needs
For this year’s final episode of the Weekend 401, we have some New Year’s tips — from Deer Tick at the Uptown Theater, to the last Waterfire of the year, to the 30th annual ‘Moby-Dick’ marathon at the Whaling Museum. Plus: kick off the new year with an ice-cold splash at First Beach
The downtown landmark lit up again this holiday season, as its new owner hopes to reopen the building as art studios in early 2027
Seneca Falls, New York, may not have the only claims on the film