By Molly Castle Work | Special to the OBSERVER

California Attorney General Rob Bonta speaks during a news conference in July in Los Angeles. Bonta announced March 11 that he is throwing his weight behind legislation to bar medical debt from showing up on consumer credit reports.ย (Francine Orr/Los Angeles Times via Getty Images)

California Attorney General Rob Bonta announced Monday that he is throwing his weight behind legislation to bar medical debt from showing up on consumer credit reports, a Democratic-led effort to offer protection to patients squeezed by health care bills.

Bonta is a sponsor ofย Sen. Monique Limรณnโ€™s bill, which seeks to block health care providers, as well as any contracted collection agency, from sharing a patientโ€™s medical debt with credit reporting agencies. It would also prevent credit reporting agencies from accepting, storing, or sharing any information concerning medical debt. Medical debt isnโ€™t necessarily an accurate reflection of credit risk, and its inclusion in credit reports can depress credit scores and make it hard for people to get a job, rent an apartment, or secure a car loan.

โ€œThis is a broken part of our current system that needs to be fixed,โ€ Bonta, a Democrat, told California Healthline. โ€œThis is Californiaโ€™s opportunity, and we relish the ability to be up in front of key issues.โ€

If enacted, California would become the third state to remove medical bills from consumer credit reports, followingย Coloradoย andย New Yorkย in 2023.ย Minnesotaย has a proposal to do the same. Last year, the Biden administration announcedย plans to develop similar federal rulesย through the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, but they have yet to be released. And should former President Donald Trump return to the White House, he would have the prerogative to undo the rules.

Limรณn said itโ€™s important for the state to enshrine its own protections into law alongside the federal push. โ€œWe may be waiting for a very long time to see outcomes that California could potentially deliver in the next year,โ€ said the Santa Barbara Democrat.

Bonta said heโ€™s not sure what sort of opposition to the bill to expect, but he wonders if providers and collection agencies will be resistant.

Aย California Healthline analysisย found that credit reporting threats are the most common collection tactic used by hospitals to get patients to pay their bills. A hospital, for example, might be concerned that a credit score ban might make it more difficult to get patients to pay for medical care they have already received.

The three largest U.S. credit agencies โ€” Equifax, Experian, and TransUnion โ€” have said they would stop including some medical debt on credit reports as of 2022. Among the excluded debts are paid-off bills and those less than $500, but the agenciesโ€™ voluntary actions left out millions of patients with bigger medical bills on their credit reports.

Limรณn said she often hears from constituents about the impact medical debt has on their lives. Medical debt disproportionately affects low-income, Black, and Latino Californians, according to theย California Health Care Foundation.

And, increasingly, people with healthy incomes who often carry medical insurance are incurring medical debt. Aย KFF Health News-NPR investigationย found that about 100 million people across the country are saddled with medical debt, which has forced some to give up their homes, ration food, and take on extra work.

Though the legislation wouldnโ€™t forgive medical debt, Limรณn said she hopes it will encourage people to seek medical care when they need it.

โ€œYou hear so many people now that are concerned about getting medical care because they canโ€™t afford it and instead wait to get worse,โ€ Limรณn said. โ€œIf the bill passes, weโ€™ll see less fear and more people going to get medical care.โ€