Kentucky
Kentucky Basketball Roster Tracker: Welcome to the family, Otega Oweh
Mark Pope continues to grind away in the transfer portal. The new Kentucky head coach has added a fifth piece to his roster for the 2024-25 season.
On Saturday, Oklahoma transfer Otega Oweh announced through Instagram his commitment to the Wildcats. He joins San Diego State transfer Lamont Butler, Drexel transfer Amari Williams, former BYU signee Collin Chandler, and four-star high school senior Travis Perry as players locked in for the upcoming season.
Oweh was in Lexington on Thursday for a visit and wasted little time committing to Kentucky.
Nicknamed “Otega-Tron”, the Wildcats have picked up another unbelievable defender. There won’t be many guards next season in college basketball that can defend the perimeter like the 6-foot-2, 215-pound rising junior.
“We used to call him ‘Otega-Tron’ because he was like a Transformer for us,” Rob Brown, who is the program director for Team Final (Oweh’s AAU team), told KSR. “Whatever we needed him to do, he did. If we needed him to defend bigs, defend wings, defend guards, he did it. … He defends a lot of positions.”
Oweh took visits to Kentucky, Texas A&M, and Oregon. In the end, it came down to the ‘Cats and Ducks. He averaged 11.4 points, 3.8 rebounds, one assist, and 1.5 steals in 24.9 minutes per outing last season with the Sooners.
GONE (GRADUATED/NBA DRAFT): Antonio Reeves, Tre Mitchell, Justin Edwards, Rob Dillingham, Reed Sheppard
TRANSFER PORTAL: Adou Thiero*, Aaron Bradshaw (Ohio State), Joey Hart (Ball State), Zvonimir Ivisic (Arkansas), DJ Wagner, Jordan Burks, Ugonna Onyenso
* Also testing NBA Draft waters
IMPORTANT DATES
- April 27: NBA Early Entry Eligibility Deadline (11:59 p.m. ET)
- May 1: Transfer Portal Closes
- May 12: NBA Draft Lottery
- May 13-19: NBA Combine
- May 29: NCAA early entrant withdrawal deadline (11:59 pm ET)
- June 16: NBA Draft Early Entry Entrant Withdrawal Deadline (5 p.m. ET)
- June 26: NBA Draft 2024 First Round
- June 27: NBA Draft 2024 Second Round
Want more Kentucky Basketball roster intel? Join the KSR Club for access to bonus content and KSBoard, KSR’s message board, to chat with fellow Cats fans and get exclusive scoop.
UPDATES
April 27: Otega Oweh, you are a Wildcat
- Committed to Kentucky over Oregon after visiting Lexington earlier in the week.
- Nicknamed “Otega-Tron” for his ability to transform into whatever kind of defender his team needed.
- The fifth player on board for Kentucky’s 2024-25 roster.
April 27: Andrej Stojakovic commits to California
- With a final three of Kentucky, North Carolina, and California, the West Coast native elected to stay close to home, choosing the Golden Bears.
- A visit to Kentucky was reportedly in the works, but Stojakovic committed to California before he could make it to Lexington.
April 26: Lamont Butler commits to Kentucky
- Another significant defensive piece for Mark Pope going into year one. Along with Williams, UK has five conference Defensive Player of the Year awards between them.
- A trip to Las Vegas from Pope and Co. sealed the deal.
- One year of eligibility remains for the point guard.
April 25: Saint Mary’s transfer Aidan Mahaney arrives in Lexington
- Posted picture on Instagram Story outside of Rupp Arena on Friday night.
- 6-foot-3 guard has taken a recent visit to Creighton and was at Virginia on April 22.
- Averaged 13.9 points, 2.6 rebounds, and 2.6 assists in 33.3 minutes per game for Saint Mary’s this past season, starting all 34 games.
- A two-time First Team All-WCC performer.
April 25: Miami’s Wooga Poplar added to contact list
- 6-foot-5 guard averaged 13.1 points, 4.8 rebounds, and 2.8 assists in 31.1 minutes this past season.
- Reported by Dushawn London of 247Sports.
- St. John’s, Kansas, Villanova, Temple, Ole Miss, Florida State, and Arizona State have also reached out.
April 25: Wake Forest forward Andrew Carr joins this weekend’s visitors
- According to Travis Branham of 247Sports, the 6-foot-11 Carr is “expected” to be at Kentucky this weekend.
- Averaged 13.5 points, 6.8 rebounds, 1.5 assists, and 1.5 blocks in 32.5 minutes per outing for the Deamon Deacons in 2023-24. Started all 35 games played.
- Visited Texas Tech earlier this week, will head to Villanova after UK visit.
April 25: Kentucky cracks Top 3 for Stanford’s Andrej Stojakovic
- 6-foot-7 rising sophomore wing down to California, North Carolina, and Kentucky.
- Was finalizing a visit to Lexington for this weekend, per On3’s Joe Tipton.
- Averaged 7.8 points and 3.4 rebounds in 22.3 minutes per contest. He shot 40.9 percent from the floor, 32.7 percent from deep, and 52.8 percent from the line.
- Son of longtime NBA veteran and three-time All-Star Peja Stojakovic.
April 25: Utah’s Deivon Smith reportedly visiting this weekend
- According to Travis Branham of 247Sports, Smith is expected to be in Lexington this weekend for an official visit.
- The 6-foot point guard averaged 13.3 points, 6.3 rebounds, and 7.1 assists in 29.5 minutes per game.
- Smith started his college career at Mississippi State (2020-21) before transferring to Georgia Tech for two seasons (2021-23) and then to Utah last season.
- Posted five triple-doubles in 2023-24.
April 23: BYU’s Jaxson Robinson declares for draft
- Big 12 Sixth Man of the Year this past season after posting per-game averages of 14.2 points, 2.5 rebounds, and 1.3 assists in 26.4 minutes per game.
- Long believed to be a possible Kentucky target if he entered the transfer portal, but focusing on the NBA Draft for now.
- Has until May 11 to enter his name into the portal.
April 23: Kentucky reaches out to Duke’s TJ Power
- Played sparingly as a freshman last season, averaging just 2.1 points and 0.7 rebounds in seven minutes per outing across 26 appearances.
- Arkansas, Michigan, BYU, Wake Forest, Southern California, Miami (FL), Notre Dame, West Virginia, Boston College, and Iowa have also reached.
- Third Duke transfer contacted by Kentucky (Sean Stewart, Jeremy Roach – Baylor).
April 23: Utah State’s Great Osobor locks in 4 visits
- Osobor, who shares the same agent as Amari Williams, locked in an official visit with Kentucky for April 29-31.
- Also visiting Louisville (May 1-3), Texas Tech (May 4-6), and Washington (May 7-9).
- Mountain West Player of the Year in 2023-24 with averages of 17.7 points, nine rebounds, 2.8 assists, 1.4 blocks, and 1.3 steals in 33.6 minutes per contest.
April 22: Kentucky contacts Minnesota’s Elijah Hawkins
- 5-foot-11 point guard averaged 9.5 points and 7.5 assists per game in 2023-24, tied for the most in the Big Ten.
- Last year he shot 37.6% from three and scored in double figures 18 times on a Minnesota team that finished with 19 wins.
- Started college career at Howard for two seasons.
April 22: Collin Chandler signs with Kentucky, Travis Perry reaffirms commitment
- Chandler committed to Kentucky on April 16 but was not announced as signed until almost a week later. The former BYU signee is officially a Wildcat.
- The same day, Perry confirmed that he would join Kentucky for the 2024-25 season.
April 21: Amari Williams is a Wildcat
- Defense was not a strength of Mark Pope’s teams at BYU. Defense is what his first significant transfer portal addition does best. Williams was a three-time CAA Defensive Player of the Year for Drexel.
- Williams picked Kentucky over Mississippi State.
- The 6-foot-10 big man made the decision after officially visiting Lexington this weekend.
April 20: Kentucky contacts Duke’s Sean Stewart
- Kentucky joins Kansas State, Indiana, Arkansas, USC, Florida State, Cincinnati, Georgetown, Arizona State, Miami, Michigan, Ohio State, Baylor, Texas A&M, Tennessee, Vanderbilt, Cal, Stanford, South Carolina, Washington, Howard, UCSB and Harvard to express interest
- Was the No. 12 overall prospect in the 2023 recruiting cycle
- The 6-9 freshman out of Windermere, Florida averaged 2.6 points and 3.2 rebounds in just 8.4 minutes per game this season for the Blue Devils
April 20: Drexel star Amari Williams begins official visit to Lexington
- The 6-10, 265-pound forward will make the trip to Lexington from April 20-22
- Kentucky is a finalist, joining St. John’s and Mississippi State
- Mark Pope met with Williams on Thursday
April 19: Jordan Burks enters the transfer portal
- Averaged 1.9 points and 1.7 rebounds in 7.2 minutes per outing as a freshman
- Was a three-star recruit in high school out of Overtime Elite
- The 6-8 forward only saw at least 10 minutes in seven of his 20 games played
April 19: Adou Thiero cuts list to five, includes Kentucky
- Previously entering the portal on March 28, the 6-8 forward is now considering Kentucky, North Carolina, Pitt, Indiana and Arkansas
April 19: Kentucky makes final six for Villanova’s TJ Bamba
April 19: Tennessee transfer Jonas Aidoo hears from the Wildcats
April 18: Reed Sheppard declares or the NBA Draft
- The star guard is the No. 7 overall prospect in ESPN’s list of best available draft prospects
- He has decided to forgo the remainder of his college eligibility
- “I’m going all-in,” Sheppard told ESPN. “The opportunity I have is great. I’ve gotten really good feedback showing where I can be in the draft. I had an unbelievable year at Kentucky. It was such a fun year. It’s not easy leaving the fans and the school I dreamed of playing at. I need to do what’s best for me, and that’s heading to the NBA.”
April 18: BYU’s Aly Khalifa commits to Louisville over Kentucky
- The 6-11, 270-pound center out of Alexandria, Egypt announced three finalists on Sunday: Kentucky, Louisville and BYU
- Khalifa averaged 5.7 points, 4.0 assists and 3.7 rebounds in 19.4 minutes per game on 38.6/31.5/62.1 shooting splits
- Originally entered portal on April 12 with a ‘do not contact’ tag, visited Louisville this week
- He will be redshirting in 2023-24 while rehabbing a knee injury
April 18: Kentucky reaches out to Texas Tech’s Pop Isaacs
April 18: Former McDonald’s All-American Brandon Garrison plans visit to Lexington
April 17: Kentucky “will be involved” for Duke’s Jeremy Roach
- Roach has appeared in 130 games throughout his career at Duke, including 108 starts. He was a team captain as a junior and senior.
- He averaged 14 points, 3.3 assists, 2.5 rebounds, and 1.1 steals in 32.7 minutes per outing this season on 46.8/42.9/84.4 splits
- Jeff Goodman reports Baylor is the favorite to land his commitment
April 17: Belmont’s Cade Tyson hears from Mark Pope
- One of the top shooters in the portal
- Averaged 16.2 PPG, 5.9 RPG, 1.6 APG on 49.3% FG, 46.5% 3PT this year
- Tyson previously heard from Kentucky’s staff under John Calipari
April 16: Utah State’s Great Osobor contacted by Kentucky
- On3’s Joe Tipton reports that Osobor has been in contact with the Wildcats
- Checks in at 6-foot-8, 250 pounds. Averaged 17.7 points, 9.0 rebounds, and 2.8 assists per game in 2023-24
- Was tabbed the Mountain West Player of the Year this past season
April 16: Oklahoma’s Otega Oweh hears from Pope
- Pope reached out to Oweh this week, according to KSR+’s Jacob Polacheck
- The 6-foot-4, 210-pound combo guard averaged 11.4 points and 3.8 rebounds, playing in 32 games for Oklahoma as a sophomore in 2023-24
- He started in 28 games and averaged 24.8 minutes per contest
- Oweh is set to visit Oregon on April 19 and Texas A&M on April 23
April 16: Kentucky contacts Dayton transfer Koby Brea
- Pope reaches out to Brea on Tuesday evening, the combo guard tells Jacob Polacheck of KSR+.
- 6-foot-5, 175-pound combo guard who averaged 11.1 points and 3.8 rebounds in 33 games as a junior in 2023-24.
- Started four games while averaging 29.1 minutes per outing. Shot 49.8 percent from deep on 201 attempts this past season.
- Also heard from the likes of Kansas, UConn, Duke, Indiana, Arkansas, Louisville, and many more.
April 16: Pope reaches out to Stanford’s Andrej Stojakovic
- The son of former NBA All-Star Peja Stojakovic has heard from Kentucky, he told KSR+’s Jacob Polacheck
- Stojakovic averaged 7.8 points and 3.4 rebounds per game while shooting 40.9% from the field and 32.7% from three as a freshman at Stanford
- He is currently scheduled to visit Cal this weekend
April 16: Collin Chandler commits to Kentucky
- The 6-4 scorer is rated as the No. 34 overall prospect and No. 6 combo guard in the final 2022 On3 Player Rankings
- Chandler spent two years on mission ahead of his college basketball debut in 2024-25
- 2022 Utah Gatorade Player of the Year, averaged 21.7 points, 4.3 rebounds, 2.8 assists and 1.7 steals as a senior in high school
- Committed to BYU over Arizona, Gonzaga, Oregon, Stanford and Utah, among others
April 15: Ugonna Onyenso declares for the NBA Draft
- “I’m ready to go to the next level,” Onyenso told ESPN’s Jonathan Givony. “I’m not thinking about coming back to play college basketball. I’m 100% focused on the NBA.”
- Onyenso averaged 3.6 points, 4.8 rebounds and 2.8 blocks in 19 minutes per contest this past season
- The 7-foot center is the No. 47 overall prospect in ESPN’s list of best available draft prospects
- He signed with an agent, but did not officially shut the door for a return to college, despite making it clear he has no interest in coming back to school
April 15: Zvonimir Ivisic transfers to Arkansas
- “I made the lifetime decision to come to college for a few reasons,” Ivisic announced. “Main one’s to win a national championship and go to the NBA. Monumental part of that decision was Coach Cal, and no one does both of those at the same time than him. That’s why I am excited to announce that I am committing to Coach Cal and the Arkansas Razorbacks!”
- Ivisic racked up 15 total appearances in Lexington, averaging 5.5 points, 3.3 rebounds and 1.3 blocks per game while shooting 57.7% from the field and 37.5% from three.
April 15: Aaron Bradshaw commits to Ohio State
- Bradshaw took an official visit to Columbus over the weekend and announced his commitment to open the week on Monday.
- The former top-five recruit was the first portal entry for the Wildcats to commit elsewhere
- He originally entered the transfer portal on April 8 while also testing the draft waters
- The 7-foot-1 freshman averaged 4.9 points and 3.3 rebounds per game this season while shooting 57.6% from the field.
April 15: DJ Wagner enters transfer portal
- The 6-foot-3 former five-star recruit averaged 9.9 points, 3.3 assists, and 1.9 rebounds in 25.8 minutes per game for Kentucky this past season
- 247Sports’ Travis Branham says Wagner will consider a return to Kentucky and meet with Mark Pope while also considering entering the 2024 NBA Draft
April 15: Northern Illinois transfer David Coit hears from the Wildcats
- Kentucky joins TCU, Louisville, Utah, Washington State and Oregon State as schools to reach out, according to The Portal Report
- Averaged 20.8 points, 3.4 assists and 3.2 rebounds per game
- 40.7% FG, 33.7% 3PT, 88.5% FT
April 14: Kentucky schedules visit with Drexel transfer Amari Williams
- Williams is a three-time CAA Defensive Player of the Year and a First Team All-CAA member in 2023-24
- He averaged 12.2 points, 7.8 rebounds, 1.9 assists, and 1.8 blocks in 22.9 minutes per game as a senior, shooting 51.7% from the field and 65.5% at the line
- He is considered the 18th-best available player in the On3 Industry Transfer Portal Rankings and will have one year of eligibility remaining as a graduate transfer
April 14: Kentucky reaches out to Oklahoma State transfer Javon Small
- Kansas, Miami, Indiana, Texas and Louisville are other schools with mutual interest, sources tell KSR
- Averaged 15.1 PPG, 4.7 RPG, and 4.1 APG, shooting 44% overall last season
- Set to take official visit to Miami this week
April 12: BYU’s Jaxson Robinson becomes name to know for Kentucky
- The 6-7 guard averaged a team-high 14.2 points, 2.5 rebounds, and 1.3 assists in 26.4 minutes per outing.
- He shot 42.6 percent from the field, 35.4 percent from deep (6.9 attempts per game), and 90.8 percent from the free throw line.
- KSR has learned Robinson is a potential portal addition with Kentucky seen as the likely destination should he enter, following Pope to Lexington
April 9: Rob Dillingham enters the NBA Draft, forgoes remaining eligibility
- Dillingham’s time in Lexington comes to a close with a season average of 15.2 points, 3.9 assists and 2.9 rebounds per game while shooting 47.5% from the field and 44.4% from three.
- He is currently the No. 4 overall prospect in ESPN’s list of best-available players in the 2024 draft
April 8: Joey Hart enters the transfer portal
- The 6-5 sharpshooter out of Linton, IN plans to transfer as a redshirt freshman after playing just ten minutes in his debut season as a Wildcat.
- He scored three points in Lexington — a made 3-pointer in Kentucky’s win over Marshall back on November 24.
April 4: Justin Edwards enters the NBA Draft
- The former five-star wing becomes the first player to forgo his time at Kentucky and enter the NBA Draft
- He is currently rated as the No. 30 overall prospect in ESPN’s list of best available players in the draft pool, good for third on the team behind Rob Dillingham and Reed Sheppard
March 28: Adou Thiero enters transfer portal, will test NBA Draft Waters
Kentucky
Certificate-of-Need Laws in Kentucky: Current Status and Opportunities for Evidence-Based Reforms
Executive Summary
Certificate of need (CON) laws artificially restrict the supply of health care services, causing shortages, reducing quality, and increasing prices by stifling competition. These laws require health care providers to obtain state approval before initiating certain projects. CON regulations were intended to decrease health care costs by preventing the unnecessary duplication of medical services and ensuring equitable access to care. While these policies were well-intentioned, the evidence overwhelmingly indicates that CON laws have not achieved their goals.
Informed by decades of research and practical experience, many states are rolling back their CON laws or repealing them altogether. Yet, despite the growing recognition that these laws are counterproductive, Kentucky retains some of the country’s most restrictive CON rules.
This policy brief describes Kentucky’s health care challenges, examines its current CON laws, summarizes relevant empirical research, and discusses evidence-based CON reforms that would improve access and competition in Kentucky’s health care system.
Kentucky’s Health Care Landscape: Shortages, Affordability Challenges, and Infrastructure Needs
While health insurance coverage in the commonwealth has reached historic highs over the past decade, Kentuckians still struggle to receive timely, high-quality care. Shortages of critical health care providers, exacerbated by CON laws that make it costly to expand services, have lengthened wait times for routine appointments and forced patients to drive long distances for specialty care. Low levels of competition in the health-care sector have also led existing providers to raise prices, exacerbating access problems for people with low incomes.
Educate your inbox. Get the Bluegrass Institute’s once-weekly policy update.
Sign Up
These shortages are such a critical problem—and not just in Kentucky—that the federal government has labeled and studied them. Health professional shortage areas (HPSAs) are areas that lack the health care infrastructure to provide adequate services to the local population. Of Kentucky’s 120 counties, 114 are classified as primary care HPSAs and 115 are classified as mental health HPSAs. Shortages are particularly common in rural counties. Kentucky needs more than 420 additional primary care and mental health professionals to resolve these shortages. Figure 1 shows Kentucky’s HSPAs.
Making care inaccessible does not reduce Medicaid spending. Kentucky’s Medicaid budget is one of the fastest-growing components of state spending, with these dollars often spent on expensive, late-stage interventions in traditional hospital settings rather than less-costly preventive and earlier-stage care. Without a regulatory environment that encourages primary care clinics and lower-cost surgical centers to open, Kentuckians will continue to face a health care system that is difficult to access, expensive for both patients and taxpayers, and increasingly unable to meet the needs of an aging population.
On average, states with CON programs have 8% higher premature mortality than states without these regulations. Premature mortality quantifies the gap between a person’s age at death and their life expectancy. As such, it reflects early deaths from causes such as unmanaged chronic diseases, certain infectious diseases, and drug overdoses that could have been prevented through better access to health services and supports. On this measure, Kentucky ranks seventh worst in the United States.
There are many real-world examples of Kentucky’s CON laws undermining access to care. Here are three that illustrate the laws’ care-denying consequences.
In 2017, a pair of Nepali immigrants attempted to open a home health agency in Louisville to provide services to Nepali-speaking residents who could not find services in their native language. The entrepreneurs’ CON application was opposed by one of Kentucky’s largest providers of home health care. Because Louisville’s existing supply of home care services already met the state’s standard of “need” based purely on number of patients, state officials rejected the CON application. The importance of customized services to accommodate language-specific communities had not been contemplated in the state health plan, so officials deemed this critical aspect of the project irrelevant in deciding whether to grant a CON.
In 2019, an effort to obtain a CON to build a $24 million ambulatory surgical center in Fort Mitchell was derailed after more than two years of litigation initiated by a rival hospital system. This action, which deprived about 170,000 residents of the surrounding Kenton County of additional outpatient surgical options, was taken despite the fact that Kentucky, on a population-adjusted basis, has less than half as many ambulatory surgical centers as the U.S. average.
In 2022, Kentucky denied a CON application by UofL Health to convert 33 acute care beds into 33 adult psychiatric beds, despite the hearing officer acknowledging that the arbitrary formulas used to determine community need were likely flawed.
These incidents reveal how well-intentioned regulations can be manipulated to serve corporate interests rather than advance the common good.
Certificate-of-Need (CON) Laws in Kentucky
Kentucky’s CON laws constitute one of the most extensive regulatory gatekeeping systems in the nation. They cover 19 specific types of facilities, from hospitals and psychiatric facilities to highly specialized facilities like kidney disease centers, hospices, and even home health agencies (see table 1).
Depending on the proposed project’s capital expenditure, CON application fees can reach $25,000. In addition, Kentucky’s CON process is so bureaucratic and convoluted that applicants often find it necessary to partner with expensive law firms specializing in CON law.
A recent analysis examined every CON application submitted in Kentucky from 2019 to mid-2023. During that time, 98 complete applications underwent substantive (formal) review, of which 71% were approved. However, incumbent providers are given broad latitude to challenge CON applications from potential competitors or to demand additional hearings to delay entry. When would-be competitors opposed the CON application, the approval rate plummeted to 43% and the average time to reach a final decision nearly doubled, from 5.4 months for unopposed applications to 10.2 months for opposed applications. Still more applications were likely never submitted due to the costly and time-consuming process.
Further, Kentucky does not merely require CON approval to open a new health care facility. Existing providers must obtain a new CON for a wide variety of activities, including capital expenditures that exceed certain thresholds, substantially increasing bed capacity or health services, acquiring major medical equipment, or altering a location designated on a previous CON.
Figure 3 compares Kentucky’s CON restrictions to those in its seven bordering states. Kentucky’s score of 100 out of 100 indicates CON barriers in every category measured. Only two bordering states received the same maximum score for CON stringency. By contrast, Indiana and Ohio have eliminated most of their CON regulations and received the lowest (best) scores.
How CON Laws Affect Patients’ Access to Health Care
Research consistently concludes that CON laws restrict supply and protect existing providers. It offers little evidence that CON laws expand access. Rather, states that repealed hospital CON laws saw an increase in hospital facilities of approximately 3.8% in rural areas and 3.9% in urban areas over the ensuing two decades. This pattern is consistent with stronger competition and broader choices for patients.
Research also suggests that CON laws can be consequential in high-need areas such as behavioral health. CON restrictions on substance use disorder treatment facilities are associated with higher emergency department use and worse health outcomes for vulnerable populations. Other work finds that substance abuse CON laws impact how treatment facilities structure payment, including reduced acceptance of private insurance, which may shape who can access care.
In Kentucky, behavioral health capacity remains a central policy concern. The state has about 70 residential substance use disorder treatment beds per 100,000 residents, one of the highest rates in the country and well above the national average, highlighting the scale of treatment demand and infrastructure in the state. This translates to roughly 3 to 4 treatment beds in a community of 5,000 residents, emphasizing both the importance of treatment infrastructure and the challenges small rural areas face in maintaining access to care. While this reflects substantial treatment capacity, policymakers continue to debate whether existing regulatory structures, including CON requirements, help maintain this capacity or instead limit how quickly providers can expand services when demand increases.
How CON Laws Affect Health Care Quality
Another longstanding claim is that CON laws improve health care quality by preventing “excess capacity” and concentrating services in high-volume facilities, The argument is that when providers perform certain procedures more frequently, they gain experience and achieve better patient outcomes, so limiting the number of providers may help ensure that services are delivered by higher volume facilities. However, the empirical evidence offers little support for this argument.
Analyses comparing hospitals in CON and non-CON states find that several mortality measures are worse in CON states. The 30-day mortality rate for heart failure is about 0.2 percentage points higher, meaning that for every 1,000 heart-failure patients discharged from the hospital, an additional two die in CON states. For pneumonia patients, the 30- day mortality rate is approximately 0.38 percentage points higher in CON states, implying four additional deaths per 1,000 discharges.
Mortality among surgical inpatients with serious treatable complications is also higher in CON states, averaging about six more deaths per 1,000 discharges. In short, the research does not show consistent quality improvements attributable to CON regulations, and in some cases it suggests the opposite.
How CON Laws Affect Health System Capacity and Costs
During the COVID pandemic, states with bed-specific CON requirements experienced higher hospital bed utilization rates and were more likely to operate near or at full capacity, suggesting tighter supply conditions. Separate research finds that in states with high hospital bed utilization, temporary CON reforms during the pandemic were associated with reductions of approximately 20 COVID-19 deaths and 30 deaths from natural causes per 100,000 residents, along with roughly 3 fewer deaths per 100,000 from other respiratory-related conditions requiring similar hospital resources. Kentucky issued temporary emergency orders that eased certain regulatory requirements to expand hospital capacity in response to surging demand.
These temporary waivers highlight that existing regulatory requirements can limit flexibility during sudden surges in demand and may require emergency intervention to allow providers to expand capacity quickly. More broadly, the literature concludes that CON laws have not reliably reduced health care spending and may instead limit competition without delivering clear cost savings.
How CON Laws Affect Cost-Shifting and Rural Hospital Stability
Many states, including Kentucky, face hospital closures that have significant community impact. CON supporters argue that limiting entry helps protect small rural hospitals from competition that may threaten already thin operating margins and reduce their ability to sustain essential services. The concern is that if new providers enter the market and concentrate on higher-margin services, rural hospitals may struggle to operate profitably.
A frequent concern among policymakers is that repealing CON laws may encourage new entrants to focus on the most profitable service lines, such as cardiac, orthopedic, or imaging services, while leaving full-service hospitals responsible for treating uninsured patients and providing less profitable services such as emergency or trauma care. Under this view, CON laws help preserve hospitals’ ability to cross-subsidize uncompensated care and to maintain broader service offerings.
However, empirical evidence on whether CON laws effectively prevent cost shifting or strengthen financial stability is mixed, and the broader literature does not clearly demonstrate that these regulations reliably protect access to care for vulnerable populations. Empirical research also does not consistently support the claim that CON laws improve rural access or stability. Evidence from states that repealed CON laws shows increases in the number of hospitals in both rural and urban areas, suggesting that entry restrictions may not be necessary to preserve rural facilities.
Evidence-Based Reforms to Kentucky’s CON Laws
Kentucky’s CON laws represent barriers to entry that prioritize the protection of incumbent businesses over patient access and market innovation. The commonwealth has an opportunity to modernize Kentucky’s approach while preserving appropriate health and safety oversight. The reforms below would ensure the state’s health system can expand and respond when and where patients need care. Many of these changes have been successfully implemented in other states. None of these reforms requires an immediate, full repeal of Kentucky’s CON program.
1. Raise project review thresholds.
Kentucky should reserve intensive CON reviews for high-dollar projects most likely to affect regional capacity planning and public spending. Raising the capital expenditure and major medical equipment expenditure thresholds that trigger CON review would reduce red tape for routine expansions, renovations, and upgrades that can improve access and reduce wait times—especially in underserved communities.
2. Streamline the review, hearing, and appeal process.
Clear guidance, accessible advisory opinions, and firm timelines for review would reduce administrative burdens and encourage investment. When providers do not know how rules will be applied—or fear that projects will be stalled in extended hearings or appeals— many choose not to proceed. Improving predictability and transparency can help restore confidence in the process.
3. Prevent conflicts of interest in the CON review process.
Reforms should limit who can trigger hearings and prolong proceedings. Instead of allowing existing providers to formally oppose new applicants, decisions should be based on clear evidence and consistent rules that focus on the needs of patients and communities rather than protecting the market share of existing providers.
4. Exempt high-need services from CON regulations.
Exempting mental health and substance use treatment services from CON regulations would help ease Kentucky’s persistent shortages in psychiatric hospital care and chemical dependency programs. Similarly, exempting rural providers from CON review would help direct investment to underserved communities. Kentucky has already taken an important step in this direction by easing CON restrictions on birth centers.
5. Eliminate CON laws for lower-cost alternatives to hospital care.
Kentucky should eliminate CON requirements for services that are unlikely to be overused and that frequently provide lower-cost alternatives to hospital care. This includes ambulatory surgical centers, dialysis centers, home health agencies, hospice care, and other specialized treatments. Access to these services is already constrained by insurance oversight and medical standards, making additional entry barriers unnecessary.
6. Codify emergency flexibility.
Introduce greater CON flexibility to improve health system resilience during public health emergencies. Kentucky’s ad hoc CON policy changes during the pandemic allowed providers to expand services and capacity more rapidly than usual but also created significant uncertainty for providers. Establishing a statutory automatic suspension of CON requirements during declared public health emergencies would help ensure that providers can scale capacity quickly when it is needed most.
Conclusion
Kentucky’s CON laws are among the most restrictive in the nation and have reduced access to vital health care services. The real impact of these laws is not just inconvenience or increased costs, but a lower quality of life for Kentuckians.
A large body of evidence indicates that straightforward reforms to Kentucky’s CON laws would yield tangible benefits for patients. Modest, incremental changes can reduce the power of entrenched interests, empower entrepreneurship, attract investment to the health care sector, and better align Kentucky’s health care regulations with the current needs of its population—all while maintaining safety oversight.
Liam Sigaud is a Research Analyst with the Knee Regulatory Research Center working within the fields of health and labor economics.
Edgar Orozco is a third-year Ph.D. student in economics at West Virginia University concentrating in health and urban economics.
Kentucky
WATCH: Rep. Thomas Massie’s full concession speech after defeat in Kentucky GOP primary
Ed Gallrein won Republican nomination for U.S. House in Kentucky’s 4th Congressional District, beating incumbent Rep. Thomas Massie on Tuesday. Trump handpicked Gallrein after Massie broke with him over issues including the release of the Jeffrey Epstein files.
Watch Massie’s full concession speech in the video player above.
In announcing that he conceded defeat to Gallrein, Massie also made a jab at his opponent over the millions of dollars poured in to the race by pro-Israel groups to try to defeat the incumbent.
WATCH: After Massie defeat, Trump says it ‘doesn’t work out well’ when GOP members vote against him
“I would have come out sooner, but I had to call my opponent and concede and it took a while to find Ed Gallrein in Tel Aviv,” Massie told the crowd.
Massie has voted against U.S. aid to Israel and faced accusations of antisemitism. He has denied the charges, arguing that he is generally against all foreign aid.
The race drew in millions of dollars against Massie from pro-Israel interest groups, including from the Republican Jewish Coalition Victory Fund.
The Kentucky congressman claimed in his speech after his defeat that young voters were still on his side.
“People that want somebody that will go along to get along, I’ve never heard of that strategy but that seems to be what the voters want,” Massie said. “But not the young voters.”
The crowd was still energetic despite Massie’s loss, and started a chant of “No more wars!” that the congressman joined in on. Massie’s speech meandered through different topics and touched on other politicians before another chant started of “America First!”
“We stirred up something. There is a yearning in this country for someone who will vote for principles over party,” Massie said.
A free press is a cornerstone of a healthy democracy.
Support trusted journalism and civil dialogue.
Kentucky
Thomas Massie ousted in Kentucky and San Diego victims identified: Morning Rundown
Rep. Thomas Massie’s loss in Kentucky solidifies Trump’s influence over the Republican Party. Relatives mourn the victims of the deadly mosque shooting in San Diego. And an American doctor with Ebola is evacuated to Germany for treatment.
Here’s what to know today.
Trump notches GOP primary wins, but midterm questions remain
President Donald Trump scored his biggest win yet in his mission to eliminate political enemies within his own party, as former Navy SEAL Ed Gallrein won the Republican primary in Kentucky’s 4th Congressional District over Rep. Thomas Massie. Gallrein, Trump’s chosen candidate, won 54% of the vote, aided by an extraordinary ad blitz fueled largely by pro-Trump and pro-Israeli groups.
In successfully ousting Massie — who opposed the president on key issues — Trump continues to prove that he can not only influence GOP voters but also attack Republicans who have opposed him without feeling like there are significant negative consequences.
But Trump did not outright win everything he touched. In Georgia’s race for governor, Trump-backed Lt. Gov. Burt Jones and billionaire Rick Jackson are headed to a runoff for the Republican nomination. (The winner of the runoff will face Democratic candidate and former Atlanta Mayor Keisha Lance Bottoms.)
Despite the wins, it’s unclear how Trump’s GOP primary dominance will play out in the midterm general election. His low approval ratings and the war with Iran may raise red flags among voters who supported the president’s “America First” agenda. And his surprise endorsement of Texas state Attorney General Ken Paxton a week before the runoff against longtime Sen. John Cornyn has some wondering if the president should’ve kept quiet.
Read the full story here.
More election results:
- Democrats picked candidates for four key districts in Pennsylvania in the party’s battle for the House.
- Pennsylvania Gov. Josh Shapiro and state Treasurer Stacy Garrity will face off in the race for governor. The result wasn’t unexpected, but the outcome of the race could have a big impact nationwide.
- Rep. Andy Barr won the Republican primary in the race for retiring Sen. Mitch McConnell’s seat in Kentucky.
- Rep. Mike Collins and former football coach Derek Dooley are heading to a Senate Republican primary runoff in Georgia, vying to take on Democratic Sen. Jon Ossoff.
- Sen. Tommy Tuberville won the Republican primary for governor of Alabama, making him the clear favorite to win the general election.
- In the race to succeed Tuberville, Rep. Barry Moore advanced to a Senate primary runoff, and two rivals are battling for the second spot.
- State Sen. Christine Drazan won the Republican nomination for governor of Oregon, setting up a rematch against Democratic Gov. Tina Kotek.
More politics news:
- The Senate voted to advance a resolution to end the war in Iran after GOP Sen. Bill Cassidy flipped his vote to “yes.”
- Months before a $1.8 billion “anti-weaponization” fund was announced, a Trump administration official told a GOP ally that big payouts were coming for Jan. 6 defendants.
- The DOJ said the federal government won’t take legal action against Trump, his family members and companies as part of Trump’s settlement agreement with the IRS.
Steve Kornacki answers your questions live today
At 2 p.m. ET, NBC News’ chief data analyst will take questions from subscribers in a livestreamed Q&A. Ask Steve anything — go deeper into Tuesday’s election results, delve into burning questions about the midterms or learn more about his career and life in front of the Kornacki Cam. Submit your question here.
San Diego mosque shooting victims identified as investigators probe writings
A day after two gunmen killed three people at a San Diego mosque, loved ones remembered the victims as important pillars of the community while investigators looked into the suspects’ possible writings, filled with extremist material.
The victims were identified as: Security guard Amin Abdullah, whose daughter called him her best friend and said he was so dedicated to his job that he would skip lunch to stay on duty. Mansour Kaziha, a community leader who managed the mosque store for nearly 40 years. Imam Taha Hassane said he was the mosque’s handyman, cook, caretaker and storekeeper. “He was everything,” Hassane said. And Nadir Award, who rushed to protect the school when he heard the shooting and is being remembered for his generosity and presence in the community. More about the victims.
Meanwhile, investigators are trying to authenticate a document posted online that purportedly details the motivations of the gunmen. The 75-page document has sections apparently written by Caleb Vazquez, 18, and Cain Clark, 17, and includes material that espouses anti-Islamic, antisemitic and anti-LGBTQ views and promotes white supremacist ideology. More about the documents.
American doctor with Ebola evacuated to Germany
The American surgeon who contracted Ebola in Congo was barely able to stand on his own as he departed the country to be flown to Germany for treatment, according to two leaders of the Christian missionary group where he worked.
Dr. Peter Stafford “looked really tired and really sick,” said Dr. Scott Myhre, the East and Central Africa area director for the group, called Serge.
Stafford’s wife, Rebekah Stafford, is also a doctor and treated the same patient thought to have infected Stafford. She and the couple’s four young children remain in Congo, where they are being monitored.
How Stafford is thought to have contracted the virus.
There are now more than 600 suspected cases and 139 suspected deaths from the virus, the head of the World Health Organization said today.
Read All About It
- A U.S. indictment of former Cuban President Raúl Castro, 94, is expected in Miami.
- Meta is expected to announce today a company reorganization that includes moving 7,000 employees into roles focused on AI and layoffs affecting 10% of the company, a source said.
- The NAACP launched a campaign calling on Black student-athletes to boycott Southern colleges after a Supreme Court decision that weakened the Voting Rights Act.
- A Minnesota woman paid $99,000 to an insurance company to generate retirement income for life. Then, the company collapsed.
- Tens of thousands of people flocked to the streets of North London late Tuesday after soccer club Arsenal clinched its first English Premier League title in 22 years.
Staff Pick: Amid prospect of ICE at World Cup games, vendors weigh their livelihoods against safety
The upcoming World Cup will bring some of soccer’s biggest stars to the U.S., but at the site of one of the stadiums hosting multiple games, a sense of unease is palpable. This story from breaking news reporter Marlene Lenthang examines the feelings of Latino vendors in and around SoFi Stadium in Inglewood amid the possibility of ICE agents working games — a gamble between their safety and a potentially lucrative payday.
The Los Angeles region was rocked last year by sprawling immigration raids targeting day laborers and factory workers. While the glitz and glamor of soccer’s most prestigious competition coming to town has generated excitement in some quarters, Marlene’s interviews with vendors highlights the worry that continues to linger for others. — Rudy Chinchilla, breaking news editor
NBC Select: Online Shopping, Simplified
On the hunt for a good work bag that’s roomy and sleek? This backpack has almost 23,000 five-star ratings and is currently 40% off. Plus, one of our favorite K-beauty brands just launched a new serum that’s fragrance-free, lightweight and won’t clog your pores.
Sign up to The Selection newsletter for hands-on product reviews, expert shopping tips and a look at the best deals and sales each week.
-
Business2 minutes agoAirbnb to add grocery delivery and car rentals ahead of World Cup
-
Entertainment8 minutes agoNo time for a ‘Mandalorian’ rewatch before getting your ‘Grogu’ on? We got you covered
-
Lifestyle14 minutes agoFed up with L.A.’s housing market, renters are turning to savvy apartment scouts for help
-
Politics20 minutes agoColumn: Obama’s strong terms curbed Iran. Trump struggles to secure even a weak deal
-
Science27 minutes agoFeds declare Eaton fire was a cleanup success. Their testing shows otherwise
-
Sports32 minutes agoHigh school baseball: City Section playoff scores and updated schedule
-
World44 minutes agoMerz’s plan of ‘associate membership’ for Ukraine gets mixed reviews
-
News1 hour agoThe Girls: “If it was your daughter” : Embedded


