[Congressional Bills 119th Congress]
[From the U.S. Government Publishing Office]
[H. Res. 1207 Introduced in House (IH)]
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119th CONGRESS
2d Session
H. RES. 1207
Expressing support for protecting Americans from the harmful effects of
private equity.
_______________________________________________________________________
IN THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES
April 22, 2026
Mr. Khanna submitted the following resolution; which was referred to
the Committee on Financial Services
_______________________________________________________________________
RESOLUTION
Expressing support for protecting Americans from the harmful effects of
private equity.
Whereas this resolution may be cited as the ``Stop Private Equity Harms
Resolution'';
Whereas private equity firms and other large institutional investors are buying
up more and more of the services Americans rely on, including housing,
child care, healthcare, energy, and nursing homes;
Whereas private equity ownership of these services is driving up prices, cutting
quality, and leaving families with fewer choices;
Whereas, with housing, private equity firms are increasingly buying up single
family housing, manufactured housing, and mobile-home park land;
Whereas private equity and large institutional investors are buying up 1 in 5
single-family homes sold, including more than a quarter of lower-priced
homes, and profiting by raising rents;
Whereas the price of manufactured homes has more than doubled since 2018, with
private equity firms making up 23 percent of all purchases and owning
most manufactured home parks in the country;
Whereas, in child care, private equity-backed for-profit chains are growing in
size and political influence;
Whereas private equity controls four of the top five for-profit child care
chains and 10 to 12 percent of the total U.S. child care market;
Whereas, in 2021, the average annual cost of center-based infant care exceeded
$12,000 nationwide--with costs in some states reaching over $20,000;
Whereas, in healthcare, private equity is raising costs and reducing quality and
choice for patients, and leading to more debt and bankruptcies;
Whereas private equity owned approximately 30 percent of all for-profit
hospitals and medical practices involving tens of thousands of
physicians in 2024;
Whereas private equity-acquired hospitals have been found to increase prices by
7 to 16 percent while increasing profits by 27 percent;
Whereas physician practices acquired by private equity firms increase prices 4
to 20 percent;
Whereas, in 2023, over 20 percent of healthcare companies filing for
bankruptcy--and nearly all those rated at risk of default--were owned by
private equity;
Whereas private equity ownership has been linked to worse patient outcomes and
increased hospital-acquired adverse events such as falls and infections;
Whereas dentists affiliated with private equity almost doubled from 6.6 percent
in 2015 to 12.8 in 2021;
Whereas experts warn of unnecessary implants and overtreatment in private equity
owned dental practices;
Whereas, in energy, private equity firms are buying up electric utilities,
leaving American families with higher energy bills and less reliable
service;
Whereas private-equity owned electric utilities risk delayed maintenance and
reduced upgrades to cheaper, safer next-generation energy;
Whereas, in nursing homes, private equity acquisition led to 11 percent more
patient deaths, partly due to severe staffing cuts and under-qualified
hires;
Whereas residents in such facilities were 11.1 percent more likely to go to the
emergency room and 8.7 percent more likely to be hospitalized for
preventable causes;
Whereas Congress has introduced, but not passed, legislation to address these
harms from private equity;
Whereas H.R. 10028, introduced in the 118th Congress, would end large
institutional investors' ability to use taxpayer dollars to subsidize
their purchase of single-family residential homes;
Whereas H.R. 9901, introduced in the 118th Congress, would offer incentives to
child care providers to lower costs to $10 per day for families; raise
wages for child care workers to $24 an hour, offer stipends to stay-at-
home parents and other relatives providing care;
Whereas S.Res. 938, introduced in the 118th Congress, declares the Federal
Government has a duty to expand and strengthen the care economy and
proposes solutions to meet that obligation;
Whereas H.R. 1754, introduced in the 118th Congress, would require healthcare
corporations participating in Medicare to disclose private equity
interests and related financial information;
Whereas S. 4503, introduced in the 118th Congress, would establish criminal and
civil penalties for private equity firms that own a healthcare
organization and contribute to events that kill or injure patients;
Whereas H.R. 2530, introduced in the 118th Congress, would improve hospital
patient care and nurse retention by establishing minimum nurse-to-
patient staffing ratios;
Whereas H.R. 3332, introduced in the 117th Congress, would require the
Department of Housing and Urban Development to award grants to nonprofit
organizations, public housing agencies, and other entities to preserve
manufactured housing communities;
Whereas H.R. 3333, introduced in the 117th Congress, would require manufactured
housing communities to meet minimum consumer protections to qualify for
certain federally backed loans; and
Whereas it is the duty of the Federal Government to hold providers of essential
services accountable, strengthen oversight, and support alternatives to
private equity ownership so that Americans can access affordable,
reliable, and good quality services: Now, therefore, be it
Resolved, That the House of Representatives recognizes the need for
a comprehensive plan to protect Americans from the harmful effects of
private equity which--
(1) raises staffing, safety standards, and pay in
healthcare, child care, and nursing homes;
(2) ends the use of taxpayer dollars to help institutional
investors buy homes, and guarantees a right to legal counsel
for tenants facing eviction from private equity-owned housing;
(3) requires full transparency of private equity ownership
and strengthens antitrust and competition reviews;
(4) stops executives from using taxpayer dollars to
unreasonably enrich themselves; and
(5) supports alternatives to private equity--including
nonprofit, community-based, cooperative, and independent
providers--to put people over profits in these critical
sectors.
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