To direct the Secretary of Education to carry out a grant program to support the integration of school-based health services into community schools, and for other purposes.
Summary
HR9513, a bill to authorize grants for integrating school-based health services into community schools, was introduced and referred to committees on 2026-06-29. It is an early-stage authorization bill with no funding amount specified, negligible near-term market impact. No real convergence signals were present in the data.
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Key Takeaways
- 1.HR9513 is an early-stage authorization bill with no appropriation and no identified funding amount; near-zero market impact.
- 2.Only 2 cosponsors and a single junior sponsor — extremely low legislative momentum.
- 3.No convergence with other signals; the bill stands alone with no supporting executive or procurement action.
Market Implications
No market implications. The bill is a routine authorization referral with zero near-term revenue impact on any public company. No real market data links to this event.
Full Analysis
HR9513, titled 'To direct the Secretary of Education to carry out a grant program to support the integration of school-based health services into community schools,' was introduced on 2026-06-29 and referred to the House Committee on Education and Workforce and the Committee on Energy and Commerce. The sponsor is Rep. Jesús G. 'Chuy' García (D-IL), a relatively junior member, with only two cosponsors. The bill is at the earliest legislative stage — referral — with no markups, hearings, or companion bill in the Senate. Based on action history, all four actions are limited to introduction and referral on the same day (2026-06-29), indicating no momentum.
The bill authorizes a grant program — it does NOT appropriate any specific dollar amount. Authorization bills set policy ceilings; actual spending requires a subsequent appropriations bill. Therefore, even if passed, the market impact depends on a separate appropriations process that may or may not fund the program. The grant mechanism directs the Secretary of Education to award competitive grants to state or local educational agencies to plan, operate, or expand school-based health services. No specific companies, contractors, or procurement pathways are named. The most plausible indirect beneficiaries are health insurers with large government plans (Medicaid, CHIP) and health-services companies, but at this stage the linkage is too weak for a high-confidence causal chain.
No convergence signals were available in the provided data for analysis. The bill is isolated, with no related legislation, procurement, or executive action connecting to another signal.
Impact is negligible. The bill is early-stage, authorization-only, narrow in scope, sponsored by a junior member, with minimal cosponsorship. The healthcare sector's $85B+ revenue companies (UNH, JNJ, LLY) would see <0.01% impact even if the bill eventually funded at a hypothetical $100M/year level.
Key Legislators
Connected Signals
Matched on shared policy language across AI analyses, with ticker & timing weight
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