A state senator whose 2001 legislation enabled the collection of medical debts from spouses of deceased patients is calling the practice “repulsive” and wants it to end in Minnesota.
Sen. John Marty, DFL-Roseville, said he has no idea how a bill he co-authored about child support also ended up specifying that Minnesotans are liable for the medical debts of spouses if they live together.
“It’s beyond me,” he said, “other than to say it’s something we ought to repeal.”
DFL lawmakers are trying to ban that practice as part of a broader package of protections for Minnesotans who get stuck with unaffordable medical debts. While providers could still pursue debts through the estates of deceased patients, they couldn’t pursue widowed spouses through collections activities, lawsuits or wage garnishment.
Collections directed at spouses only compound their grief, said Jessica Velasco of Worthington. Her father worked through the pandemic as a meatpacker until he died of COVID-19 complications in 2021. Her mother was pressed to pay $40,000 in bills for his care, she said.
“Now she was fully responsible for that,” Velasco said. “Not only had she lost the love of her life, but also the income of her spouse, making it extremely difficult to make ends meet.”
The House voted April 15 to remove spousal liability for medical debts, and Senate action is expected as well. Gov. Tim Walz and Attorney General Keith Ellison have endorsed the proposal.
Debt collection when patients die is particularly fraught for their survivors, but Minnesota hospital leaders called it a necessary burden. Care at the end of life is particularly expensive for hospitals that already face substantial charity care costs. Minnesota hospitals wrote off $476 million in bills they expected patients to pay in 2022.