Montana鈥檚 richest nonprofit hospitals receive millions of dollars in tax exemptions each year to operate as charities, but some fall short of other medical facilities in what they give back to their communities to get those breaks.
Overall, Montana鈥檚 nearly 50 nonprofit hospitals directed, on average, roughly 8% of their total annual expenses toward community benefits, such as covering the treatment costs of people who can鈥檛 afford care. That鈥檚 according to a KHN analysis of the hospitals鈥 IRS filings ending in 2019, which provide a snapshot of hospitals鈥 financial picture from before the pandemic. The national average as of 2018 was 10%, according to the .
Hospitals self-report how much they give in community benefits, and their reporting processes are opaque. Even so, KHN鈥檚 analysis found that some of Montana鈥檚 wealthiest hospitals were spending well below the state and national averages.
, the state鈥檚 largest provider, spent roughly 5% of its operating costs on community benefits, while in Helena and in Great Falls each reported less than 2%. By contrast, in Ronan reported 22%.
Federal law doesn鈥檛 dictate how much nonprofit hospitals must spend on such benefits, and the definition of what counts is vague. How nonprofits record their giving varies, and hospitals say that makes it an unfair measuring stick. However, it’s what hospitals themselves report to the IRS.
Montana nonprofit hospitals face little to no oversight of their community benefit spending 鈥 as is . That can allow nonprofit hospitals to act more like businesses than charities. Meanwhile, hospitals tend to be among the biggest economic engines in their communities, giving large salaries to their executives while Americans are stuck with in medical bills they can鈥檛 afford.
鈥淭here are millions of Americans that do not have health insurance, and they need health care,鈥 said , a health policy professor at Johns Hopkins University who studies hospital giving. 鈥淗ospitals are places that have been given tax advantages to help.鈥
Sued for Medical Debt at Benefis
Last year, Taruha Kirkaldie, 33, of Havre got a letter from a debt collector 鈥 she was being sued over a nearly $19,000 Benefis Health bill.
Kirkaldie didn鈥檛 have health insurance in 2018 when a cut on her hand turned into a serious staph infection. She needed to travel to Great Falls for intravenous antibiotics and surgery. She said a hospital staffer helped her apply for Medicaid, the federal-state insurance program for those with low incomes, but her family of five made about $50,000 a year, too much to qualify.
Kirkaldie recalled being told that she wouldn鈥檛 qualify for the hospital鈥檚 aid program either because she owned a home in Harlem, Montana, that wasn鈥檛 her primary residence.
Now Kirkaldie pays about $350 a month to pay off her hospital debt. 鈥淲e still live paycheck to paycheck,鈥 Kirkaldie said.
Benefis Health making $49.6 million more than it spent in 2019. Of the $21.5 million it put toward community benefits, $1.4 million went to financial aid. By contrast, Bozeman Deaconess Hospital, a smaller hospital, spent $4.8 million on its financial aid.
Still, Benefis spends more on community benefits than it gets in tax breaks, spokesperson Kaci Husted said. The biggest chunk, according to the IRS filing, was nearly $17 million the hospital absorbed to offer services such as palliative care. The hospital also spent roughly $106,000 for health professional education.
Husted said she couldn鈥檛 provide details about Kirkaldie鈥檚 case but added that all the hospital鈥檚 standard billing notices say patients can apply for financial assistance. She said its denial rate was low but didn鈥檛 provide specifics. Husted attributed the hospital鈥檚 limited financial aid to a lack of applications. 鈥淧erhaps, at times, people just don’t want to go through the work of completing the application,鈥 Husted said.
She said a big part of the hospital鈥檚 financial assistance effort is helping people sign up for public health coverage and that few need financial aid now that many patients qualify for Medicaid as a result of the expansion of the state鈥檚 program in 2016.
That doesn’t help people who don鈥檛 qualify, like Kirkaldie.
What Counts as a Community Benefit
Montana hospitals use local needs assessments to help them decide how to spend their community benefit money.
Billings鈥 regional assessments found residents needed better access to healthy foods. Melissa Henderson, a manager for , a community health coalition, said Billings Clinic, St. Vincent Healthcare and the local health department pay for its two full-time employees, who organize a farmers market and advocate for creating bike paths, among other things.
She said it鈥檚 powerful to have the area鈥檚 largest employers advocating for improvements like bike lanes even when no money is given.
鈥淲hat I see is the hospitals are really doing their best to have an impact on their community,鈥 Henderson said.
In the Billings Clinic tax documents that KHN examined, the hospital reported making $73.9 million above its operating costs from July 2018 through June 2019. In that report, the hospital said it doesn鈥檛 have the resources to address every community need, including the lack of transportation to health care facilities. However, it paid for rides to help patients who otherwise struggled to get to appointments . It stopped after it instead backed a successful initiative to increase taxes to bolster local transportation programs, among other services.
Mike Larson, executive director of Billings鈥 nonprofit Adult Resource Alliance, said he saw the need for medical rides increase after the hospital stopped picking up patients. Larson said that his ride program for older adults had trouble meeting demand, despite receiving some of the new tax proceeds, and that his biggest concern was whether the partnership with the city would have enough staffers and vehicles to keep up.
Larson said Billings Clinic鈥檚 business model causes it to act like a for-profit. 鈥淭hey’re very cautious in terms of how they approach community support,鈥 he said.
The clinic鈥檚 transportation service was difficult to offer, hospital spokesperson Zach Benoit said, because many patients needed special assistance such as mechanical lift systems to put wheelchairs into a vehicle. The hospital is considering getting an ambulance, but Benoit said that would be costly and require special staffing.
JJ Carmody, Billings Clinic’s director of reimbursement, said the health system spent more than $36 million in 2019 on community benefits, including $12.7 million on financial aid and $3.6 million on programs to train health professionals.
鈥淭hat’s significant, and I also believe that’s fair,鈥 Carmody said. 鈥淭hat’s a large portion of our profit that’s dedicated to community benefit.鈥
In 2019, Billings Clinic paid its Dr. Randall Gibb more than $1.2 million, according to the tax filing.
鈥榁ery Little Motivation to Change鈥
Hospitals, industry watchdogs and policymakers alike debate what should count as a charitable benefit. And when questioned, hospitals often point to different categories that change the picture of how they perform.
St. Peter鈥檚 Health reported spending $3.1 million on community benefits from July 2018 through June 2019. That鈥檚 compared with the estimated $10 million it received in tax exemptions in 2016, according to a state presented to lawmakers last year.
Nate Coburn, the hospital鈥檚 chief financial officer, said benefits would be much higher if the hospital counted services that bring in less money than they cost, such as running a behavioral health unit. The hospital used to count them: A 2016 tax document shows it spent more than $16 million on community benefits. Coburn said St. Peter鈥檚 is considering correcting its forms to add those numbers.

Montana leaders have known hospitals have a transparency problem. The state estimated hospitals combined had $146 million in tax exemptions in 2016. That鈥檚 money that didn鈥檛 go toward local tax bases that help fund schools and repair roads.
In exchange, the audit said, hospitals reported spending $257 million on community benefits. But that number came with a huge caveat: The audit found hospitals report benefits vaguely and inconsistently, making it hard to determine if they can justify their charity status.
Opaque hospital filings are an issue nationwide. Some states have created minimum community benefit standards, with . There, health systems rely on a formula that sets a minimum for how much charity care hospitals give. But such hard lines are rare.
鈥淭here’s really no enforcement, with very little motivation to change things,鈥 said Dr. , president of the Lown Institute health care think tank in Massachusetts.
, president of the Montana Hospital Association, said hospitals are working with his organization to come up with more consistent ways to count benefits and plan to share those results online next year. But, he added, tax reports don鈥檛 capture everything hospitals offer.
鈥淲e have hospitals that are still showing incredible outcomes in their quality, and that’s a benefit to the community,鈥 Rasmussen said. 鈥淚f we can avoid somebody being readmitted, if we can ensure that somebody can be discharged home, those are pieces that you can tell in the narrative of what you’re doing outside of what you might fill out.鈥
But hospital pricing experts, including Anderson, said the tax reports can paint hospitals in too good a light for accomplishing goals any business should have. One example, Anderson said, is counting the cost of staff training as a community benefit.
鈥淲almart trains their employees, for-profit hospitals train their employees, so it makes no sense to me why a nonprofit hospital should be able to call this 鈥榗ommunity benefit,鈥欌 Anderson said.
Montana policymakers have , doubting whether all hospitals pay their fair share. But little has changed.
The state audit recommended that lawmakers define how hospitals report their spending, but no such laws made it out of the legislative session this year. proposed by Republican state Sen. Bob Keenan would have required the state鈥檚 largest hospitals to jointly hand over $4.3 million for the state to decide how it’s spent on community benefits. Hospital lobbyists called the move a and argued it was the wrong time to burden the systems fighting the pandemic. The bill died in committee.
Many of Montana鈥檚 large hospitals did well financially after the state鈥檚 expansion of Medicaid, which now provides heavily subsidized health insurance to about 1 in 10 Montanans. And while hospitals have been strained while caring for covid patients, they have also received millions of dollars in federal relief. Nationally, many wealthy hospitals got richer during the pandemic.
The audit recommended the Montana Department of Public Health and Human Services define charity care and create a review process to ensure hospital policies match industry standards. Department spokesperson Jon Ebelt said that the pandemic delayed that work but that it plans to resume it in the coming months.
Saini, of the Lown Institute, said hospitals that are putting a lot toward community benefits have an interest in wanting more transparency 鈥 but they鈥檙e too busy caring for patients to lobby for change. So holding hospitals accountable will likely have to come from political pressure, he said.
鈥淚 don鈥檛 think all of it is just this data issue,鈥 Saini said. 鈥淭here are some hospitals that do more, full stop.鈥
Methodology
Hospitals have to report how much they spend to help their communities. But hospitals, industry watchdogs and politicians debate how useful the information is and what spending should count as community assistance.
Nonprofits must report financial information to the IRS each year using Form 990. For hospitals, that form includes a section on community benefit spending where they report the amount they spent on financial assistance for patients with low incomes through reduced or waived bills, broader efforts to improve community health, training and education for medical professionals, and research.
For this story, KHN collected those reports for hospitals across Montana and found the overall average that hospitals spent on community benefits as a percentage of their total expenses and then looked at hospitals whose spending was below average. This story relied on financial documents ending in 2019 to provide a snapshot of each hospital鈥檚 financial picture before the pandemic. Some hospitals鈥 documents cover different time periods 鈥 some reports are from July through June, while others are from January through December.
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