Five non-profit hospitals in Illinois withdrew applications for property tax exemptions, making them subject to property tax assessments, according to a News-Gazette report.
The five hospitals that withdrew their property tax requests were Carle Foundation Hospital in Urbana, St. Joseph Memorial Hospital in Murphysboro, Trinity Medical Center in Moline, OSF Holy Family Medical Center in Monmouth and Hillsboro Area Hospital in Hillsboro.
Last month, Gov. Pat Quinn lifted the moratorium on state reviews of non-profit hospital property tax exemptions after state and hospital officials were unable to reach an agreement on how much charity care a tax-exempt hospital should provide.
The five hospitals that withdrew their property tax requests were Carle Foundation Hospital in Urbana, St. Joseph Memorial Hospital in Murphysboro, Trinity Medical Center in Moline, OSF Holy Family Medical Center in Monmouth and Hillsboro Area Hospital in Hillsboro.
Last month, Gov. Pat Quinn lifted the moratorium on state reviews of non-profit hospital property tax exemptions after state and hospital officials were unable to reach an agreement on how much charity care a tax-exempt hospital should provide.
More Articles on Illinois Hospitals and Property Tax Exemptions:
Illinois to Resume Reviews of Non-Profit Hospitals' Tax-Exempt Statuses
Stalemate Persists Between Illinois, Non-Profit Hospitals Over Charity Care