Darin LaHood

06/02/2026 | Press release | Distributed by Public on 06/02/2026 09:38

ICYMI: LaHood, Feenstra, Tokuda, and Schrier Introduce Legislation to Strengthen Rural Maternal Healthcare

Washington, D.C. - U.S. Representatives Darin LaHood (IL-16), Jill Tokuda (HI-02), and Kim Schrier (WA-08), and Randy Feenstra (IA-04) introduced the Rural Maternity Options for Medical Support (MOMS) Act of 2026 to strengthen and stabilize maternal healthcare in rural communities nationwide.


The bill would ensure that beds used exclusively for labor and delivery are not counted toward the 25-bed limit required for Critical Access Hospital (CAH) designation under Medicare. This change would help rural hospitals maintain labor and delivery services while preserving critical federal support.

"One of the most urgent challenges facing our rural communities is the diminishing access to maternal healthcare," said Rep. LaHood. "Expecting mothers deserve access to high-quality care regardless of where they live, which is why I was proud to join my colleagues in introducing the bipartisan Rural MOMs Act. This legislation supports our critical access hospitals by allowing them to continue to provide labor and delivery services without jeopardizing their inpatient room capacity. I will continue my work to advance policies that strengthen and support mothers, children, and families in our rural communities."

"Expecting mothers deserve access to high-quality, maternal healthcare, wherever they live," said Rep. Feenstra. "Representing one of the most rural districts in the country, I regularly hear from Iowa mothers who drive sometimes over an hour just to access maternal care. I am proud to lead this commonsense legislation to support rural mothers, strengthen access to maternal care, and help ensure the best outcomes in rural communities across the country."

"No family should have to worry about how far they are from a delivery room or whether their local hospital can keep its maternity ward open. That's why I am proud to join Rep. Feenstra on this effort to ensure expectant mothers in Hawai?i and across rural America can get the care they need closer to home," said Rep. Tokuda. "By removing outdated regulatory requirements that currently limit how Critical Access Hospitals provide labor and delivery services, the Rural MOMS Act addresses a major barrier that has forced too many rural hospitals to scale back or discontinue maternity care. This legislation is about more than capacity-it's about giving rural providers the flexibility they need to put the health and safety of families first.".


This legislation has received broad support from hospital associations across the country.

"I applaud Rep. LaHood's leadership and commitment to ensuring rural families have access to the high-quality maternity care they need close to home," said A.J. Wilhelmi, Illinois Health and Hospital Association President and CEO. "This commonsense legislation represents an important step toward strengthening access to essential maternal health services, supporting critical access hospitals, and improving outcomes for mothers and babies. By helping preserve care in the communities where families live and work, this measure will make a meaningful difference for rural Illinois and rural communities across the country."

"New and expecting moms deserve access to high-quality labor and delivery services," said Lisa Kidder Hrobsky, American Hospital Association's Senior Vice President for Advocacy and Political Affairs. "The Rural Maternity Options for Medical Support Act of 2026 strengthens access to maternal health services for mothers in rural areas by ensuring that higher volume critical access hospitals have labor and delivery beds available, even if their other patient beds are full. The AHA appreciates Rep. Feenstra's leadership to support critical access hospitals and families across the nation."

"The National Rural Health Association (NRHA) applauds the release of the Rural MOMS Act, led by Representatives Feenstra, LaHood, Tokuda, and Schrier," said Alan Morgan, CEO, NRHA. "This bill excludes beds used solely for labor and delivery services from counting towards critical access hospitals' 25-bed total, providing more opportunities for rural hospitals to provide obstetric services. As rural labor and delivery units are closing at alarming rates nationwide, this legislation will help retain and expand access to these services."

Full bill text can be found HERE.

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Darin LaHood published this content on June 02, 2026, and is solely responsible for the information contained herein. Distributed via Public Technologies (PUBT), unedited and unaltered, on June 02, 2026 at 15:38 UTC. If you believe the information included in the content is inaccurate or outdated and requires editing or removal, please contact us at [email protected]