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Stevens Nursing And Rehabilitation Center Of Hallettsville

106 KAHN ST, Hallettsville, TX, 77964

Type
Nursing home
State-licensedCMS certified · CCN 675226

Federal Quality Data

Official records from CMS Care Compare — reported by the facility and audited by the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services. We present them unmodified. Refreshed March 2026.

Full report →

CMS Star Ratings

Overall4/5
Health inspections4/5
Staffing2/5
Quality measures4/5

Facility & Staffing

Ownership
Government - Hospital district · Chain: Wellsential Health
Certified beds
190 · avg 67 residents/day
Total nursing staff turnover
35.3%lower than most Texas nursing homesTexas avg: 51.5% · National avg: 46.4% · per CMS Care Compare
Administrators who left
0 departednear the Texas averageTexas avg: 0.6 · National avg: 0.5 · per CMS Care Compare

State licensing & capacity

License number
149801
Service type
Medicare/medicaid
Licensed capacity
190 beds
Bed type breakdown
84 Medicare-only · 106 Medicaid/Medicare
Current license effective
March 1, 2024
Current license expires
March 1, 2027
Initial license date
September 1, 1971

Texas HHS licensing registry · as of April 16, 2026

Ownership & operations

Licensee
Citizens Medical Center County Of Victoria (COUNTY)
Operator / manager
Regency Ihs Of Hallettsville, Llc
Administrator
Nehemias S Velasco Ii

Texas HHS licensing registry · as of April 16, 2026

About this community

Stevens Nursing and Rehabilitation Center of Hallettsville is a 190-bed Medicare- and Medicaid-certified nursing home in Hallettsville, TX, licensed to Citizens Medical Center County of Victoria and managed by Regency IHS of Hallettsville, LLC. CMS rates it 4 stars overall, with 4 stars on health inspections and quality measures — but 2 stars on staffing. Only 66 of its 190 beds are currently occupied. No fines have been issued and no abuse findings are on record.

Written from CMS Care Compare and state licensing records · last updated April 19, 2026

What the data says

CMS rates staffing here at 2 stars — a level shared by about 32% of Texas nursing homes. Residents receive roughly 196 minutes of nursing care per day, about 45 minutes less than at a 4-star-staffing facility in Texas. That gap is compounded by the resident mix: people here need more hands-on care than at a typical facility — sicker or less mobile on average — so the same nursing hours stretch thinner than the raw minutes suggest.

About 4 in 10 nursing staff left in the past year. That places turnover below the Texas 25th-percentile cutoff — better than roughly three-quarters of nursing homes in the state. For a long-stay resident, that means more continuity with the same caregivers over time.

The facility is operating at roughly 35% of its 190 licensed beds, with about 66 residents on a given day. That is well below typical occupancy for a facility this size.

Written from CMS Care Compare and state licensing records · last updated April 19, 2026

Questions to ask when you tour

  1. Why occupancy is this low

    With only about 66 residents in a 190-bed building, ask management what is driving that figure and whether staffing or programming has changed as a result.

  2. Staffing on nights and weekends

    Weekend nursing hours average 2.96 minutes per resident per day — lower than weekday figures — so ask specifically how many nurses and aides are on the floor on Saturday and Sunday nights.

  3. How Regency IHS manages day-to-day care

    The facility is county-owned but managed by Regency IHS of Hallettsville; ask how decisions about staffing levels and care protocols are divided between the two entities.

  4. Registered nurse presence each day

    Reported RN hours work out to about 18 minutes per resident per day — ask whether a registered nurse is on-site or on-call during overnight and weekend shifts.

  5. Resident Council activity

    A Resident Council is on record here but no Family Council; ask how often the Resident Council meets and how family members can raise concerns between visits.

  6. Plans for census growth

    At 35% occupancy, the facility has significant empty capacity; ask whether there are plans to admit more residents and how that would affect current staffing ratios.

Where this information comes from

  • License, capacity, ownership, administrator: Texas HHS licensing registry, snapshot as of April 16, 2026.
  • Star ratings, staffing, fines, deficiencies: CMS Care Compare, processed March 1, 2026.
  • Summary, insights, and tour questions: Written from the state licensing and CMS records above, last updated April 19, 2026.

Read our methodology for how this information is collected and verified.