Regulators Approve Nonprofit’s Purchase of Two R.I. Hospitals From Private Equity Firm

A CharterCARE spokesperson said the company expects to finalize the sale of Roger Williams Medical Center and Our Lady of Fatima Hospital to the Centurion Foundation in January 2025

Roger Williams Medical Center in Providence is one of two community hospitals CharterCARE Health Partners wants to sell to the Centurion Foundation.
Roger Williams Medical Center in Providence is one of two community hospitals CharterCARE Health Partners wants to sell to the Centurion Foundation.
Jeremy Bernfeld/The Public’s Radio
Share
Roger Williams Medical Center in Providence is one of two community hospitals CharterCARE Health Partners wants to sell to the Centurion Foundation.
Roger Williams Medical Center in Providence is one of two community hospitals CharterCARE Health Partners wants to sell to the Centurion Foundation.
Jeremy Bernfeld/The Public’s Radio
Regulators Approve Nonprofit’s Purchase of Two R.I. Hospitals From Private Equity Firm
Copy

After a yearslong review process, state health regulators have granted final approval to the proposed sale of Roger Williams Medical Center and Our Lady of Fatima Hospital, opening the door for a nonprofit to take over ownership of the struggling Rhode Island hospitals from a for-profit private equity firm.

Otis Brown, a spokesman for the hospitals’ current operator CharterCARE, a subsidiary of Prospect Medical Holdings, said the group expects to finalize the sale in January 2025.

The buyer, a Georgia-based nonprofit called the Centurion Foundation, plans to pay for the hospitals with borrowed money raised through tax-exempt bonds. A quasi-public state agency that is facilitating the issuance of those bonds, the Rhode Island Health and Educational Building Corporation, is still vetting the financial viability of the transaction.

Executive Director Dylan Zelazo said his agency’s final review is unlikely to be done in time for its monthly board meeting on Dec. 11.

This story was reported by The Public’s Radio. You can read the entire story here.

Can you name five women artists? That’s the question posed by Erin L. McCutcheon, as part of a course she teaches as assistant professor of Arts of the Americas at the University of Rhode Island
The hospital filed a lawsuit in March
The investigation previously covered activities at the Warren Alpert Medical School and is now expanded to the entire university from the period of Oct. 7, 2023 to the present
After years of debate, Rhode Island lawmakers unveil competing bottle bills aiming to boost recycling and cut litter — but retailers remain wary and questions linger over logistics
Mayor Smiley unveils an ambitious roadmap to reclaim Providence schools from state control, but state education officials say the plan lacks clarity and collaboration
Backed by youth advocacy groups, a new bill would mandate ethnic studies in all public RI high schools by 2026, aiming to reflect the diverse histories of the state’s student population
The news comes a few days after the Rhode Island School of Design announced the State Department had revoked one of its international student’s visas
The Rhode Island nonprofit is determined to keep going despite the funding crisis caused by the dismantling of USAID