Rhode Island Medical Debt Relief Program has Forgiven $7 Million Since October

Rhode Island General Treasurer James J. Diossa has announced the forgiveness of $7 million in medical debt since a new program launched last fall. ‘I hope to wipe out even more debt soon,’ Diossa said Monday, March 3, 2025.
Rhode Island General Treasurer James J. Diossa has announced the forgiveness of $7 million in medical debt since a new program launched last fall. ‘I hope to wipe out even more debt soon,’ Diossa said Monday, March 3, 2025.
Michael Salerno/Rhode Island Current
Share
Rhode Island General Treasurer James J. Diossa has announced the forgiveness of $7 million in medical debt since a new program launched last fall. ‘I hope to wipe out even more debt soon,’ Diossa said Monday, March 3, 2025.
Rhode Island General Treasurer James J. Diossa has announced the forgiveness of $7 million in medical debt since a new program launched last fall. ‘I hope to wipe out even more debt soon,’ Diossa said Monday, March 3, 2025.
Michael Salerno/Rhode Island Current
Rhode Island Medical Debt Relief Program has Forgiven $7 Million Since October
Copy

About 3,000 Rhode Islanders have had $7 million in medical debt forgiven since the launch of a debt relief program last October, the state’s General Treasurer has announced.

“This program provides crucial relief to many who are burdened with medical debt, and I hope to wipe out even more debt soon,” said Rhode Island General Treasurer James A. Diossa in a statement Monday.

There’s no enrollment or application process for the program. The program administered by New York-based nonprofit Undue Medical Debt identifies, purchases and cancels the debts of eligible Rhode Islanders. Debts of $600 and up can be forgiven, and there’s no maximum amount, although debts must be equal to at least 5% of a person’s annual income. Any amount of debt can be forgiven for people earning less than 400% of the federal poverty level.

No action is needed on the consumer’s part. People whose debt is forgiven will receive a letter in the mail that identifies the amount erased. The treasurer’s office calls the forgiven debt a “no-strings-attached gift” that does not qualify as earned income. There’s no obligation for people to repay the debt.

Legislation in the 2024 session created the program. The Rhode Island General Assembly allocated $1 million for the program in the fiscal 2025 budget. About $50,000 of the $1 million allotment has been used so far, according to Diossa’s announcement. The program uses bulk-purchasing power to buy debt from health care providers and collection agencies at a discounted price. There are more than 20 city, county and state governments nationwide that offer such programs, including Connecticut.

The Rhode Island Treasury collaborates with the New York-based Undue Medical Debt to buy debt from providers like hospitals and physician groups as well as debt collectors.

About a third of the fiscal 2025 allotment, around $370,000, covers overhead for Undue Medical Debt. The nonprofit was founded by ex-debt collectors in 2014 and has helped forgive about $15 billion in medical debt across the country since then.

This story was originally published by the Rhode Island Current.

A decade after founding Providence’s Refugee Dream Center, Bah says refugees and asylum seekers face renewed anxiety amid ICE raids and policy shifts — but community partnerships continue to provide hope and stability
In his new PBS documentary The American Revolution, Burns revisits the fight for independence through a fresh lens — highlighting Rhode Island’s pivotal contributions and what history still teaches us today
The young sports editor for the Woonsocket Call witnessed Carlton Fisk’s epic 12th-inning home run that ended 4 hours and 1 minute of Game 6 World Series drama
The school enrolls a smaller proportion of Hispanic students than the district at large, which is 68% Hispanic
An after-action report calls the July fire one of the most complex in city history, credits first responders for their decisive efforts, and urges stricter fire codes for other high-risk facilities across Massachusetts
A conservative news site and GOP critics accuse Magaziner of hypocrisy for celebrating $39 million in Rhode Island defense projects included in a bill he opposed — but his campaign says he rejected it over anti-abortion provisions