The Rhode Island Senate on Friday approved legislation introduced by Senate Finance Committee Chairman Louis P. DiPalma that would create a commission to study establishing a statewide healthcare plan for public school teachers.
DiPalma, D-Middletown, Little Compton, Newport and Tiverton, said the state’s teacher recruitment and retention problems are harming students, families and communities, and that a district’s healthcare plan is a significant factor in whether teachers join or stay in a district.
“This commission will examine the pros and cons of establishing a statewide teacher healthcare plan with the hope of strengthening Rhode Island’s teacher ranks by eliminating the variability of different healthcare plans across the state,” he said.
The bill (2026-S 2789) would create an 11-member special legislative commission to study and recommend whether to create such a plan.
The commission would analyze the current structure of teacher health insurance in Rhode Island, including costs, benefits and administrative arrangements across districts; best practices and models from other states; potential cost savings and efficiencies, including effects on state and municipal budgets; and the plan’s effects on healthcare access, quality and affordability.
It would also examine implications for collective bargaining rights and existing agreements; the effect of premiums, out-of-pocket costs and coverage quality on recruitment and retention; the financial and operational implications for municipalities; and any statutory or constitutional changes that might be required to implement a statewide plan.
DiPalma said teacher health coverage in the state is currently negotiated and administered district by district, resulting in disparities in coverage, cost-sharing and access to care across municipalities. A statewide plan, he said, may offer a chance to leverage economies of scale, standardize baseline benefits, promote equity among educators and provide more predictability in budgeting.
“On the surface, this appears to be a way to combat the teacher shortage crisis in the most cost-effective way for the taxpayers,” he said.
The bill now heads to the House, where Rep. Mary Ann Shallcross Smith, D-Lincoln, has introduced a version of the legislation (2026-H 7974).

