By Shefali Luthra
September 25, 2018
A proposed rule from
the White House would make it harder for legal immigrants to get green cards if they have received
certain kinds of public assistance — including Medicaid, food stamps and
housing subsidies. Green cards allow them to live and work permanently in the
United States.
“Those
seeking to immigrate to the United States must show they can support themselves
financially,” Homeland Security Secretary Kirstjen Nielsen said in a statement.
The
proposal, announced Saturday night, marks a new frontier in the
administration’s long-term effort to curb immigration, both legal and illegal.
It already has spurred intense criticism from Democrats, anti-poverty
activists, health care organizations and immigrants’ rights advocates, who call
its restrictions unprecedented.
“This
is a real deterrent to people getting basic services,” said John Baackes, the
CEO of L.A. Care Health Plan, which covers about 2 million Los Angeles County
residents on Medi-Cal, California’s version of the federal Medicaid program for
low-income residents.
About
170,000 of them are legal immigrants, Baackes said.
If
immigrants are so fearful that they don’t seek care, “eventually, if they get
sick, they are going to wind up in our emergency rooms as charity care,” he
added.
Baackes
vows to take legal action, and California Attorney General Xavier Becerra, who
frequently clashes with the White House, may also challenge the rule.
“The
message we have to give our members is that we will be aggressive at protecting
[their] access to these benefits,” Baackes said.
But
what effect would this proposal have?
It’s a
complicated question, touching upon vast government programs, with billions of
dollars at stake. While the implications aren’t all immediately clear, Kaiser
Health News breaks down some of the key elements.
1.
First Things First: What Is The White House
Proposing?
The
Trump administration wants to redefine a status known as “public charge” — a category used to
determine whether someone seeking permanent resident status is “likely to
become primarily dependent on the government for subsistence.”
In the
past, people have been at risk of being defined a “public charge” if they took
cash welfare — known as Temporary Assistance for Needy Families, or
Supplemental Security Income — or federal help paying for long-term care.
(Immigrants must be in the country legally for five years before being eligible
for TANF or SSI.)
And
that “public charge” designation could undermine their applications for
permanent residence.
The new
rule would expand the list to include some health insurance, food and housing
programs. Specifically, it would penalize green-card applicants for using
Medicaid, a federal-state health plan for low-income people. Penalties would
not apply for using Medicaid in certain emergencies or for some Medicaid
services provided through schools and disability programs.
Using
food stamps, Section 8 rental assistance and federal housing vouchers would
also count against applicants. Enrollment in a Medicare Part D program subsidy
to help low-income people buy prescription drugs would work against them, too.
The
proposal “is definitely a dramatic change from how public charge works today,”
said Kelly Whitener, an associate professor at Georgetown University’s Center
for Children and Families who specializes in pediatric health benefits and
managed-care systems.
A
leaked version of the rule from March suggested officials then were also
considering penalizing those who receive subsidies to buy health insurance on
the Affordable Care Act marketplaces. But that idea was not in the proposal
published this weekend. The marketplace subsidies are aimed at people at a
generally higher income bracket than the beneficiaries targeted in the Trump
plan, Whitener noted.
“They’re
really homing in on low-income immigrants,” she added.
Nielsen
said the proposed rule is “intended to promote immigrant self-sufficiency and
protect finite resources.”
2. Is This
As Unprecedented As Critics Say?
Yes.
Public
charge is an old idea. In the 1990s, lawmakers expanded it to consider explicitly
whether people had received cash-based welfare.
But
including programs like Medicaid and food stamps, which are much wider in
scope, is a significant change. It would more likely hit working people — the
majority of people on Medicaid are themselves employed, and almost 80 percent
live in families with at least one working member, according to data compiled by
the Kaiser Family Foundation. (Kaiser Health News is an editorially independent
program of the foundation.)
Children
who are American citizens but whose parents are immigrants could be more likely
to suffer repercussions, said some experts. When parents opt out of public assistance for
fear of their own legal status, their kids are less likely to be enrolled in
programs such as the Children’s Health Insurance Program, or CHIP, for which
they would qualify.
“Our
state’s child poverty rate is already the highest in the nation, and federal policies
like this will only hurt our most vulnerable populations even more,” said Cathy
Senderling-McDonald, deputy executive director of the County Welfare Directors
Association of California, which represents human services directors from the
state’s counties.
To be
clear, receiving public aid wouldn’t necessarily stop people from getting a
green card. But it would tilt the odds against them.
“Another
piece is the enormous discretion the administration will have under its
proposal in making judgments about who gets admitted to the country and who
gets a green card,” said Mark Greenberg, a senior fellow at the Migration
Policy Institute, which studies migration and refugee policies at local,
national and international levels. He is also a former Obama administration
official.
3. When
Will The Policy Shift Take Effect?
This is
an early step in the complex federal rule-making process. And a lot could still
change.
Once
the proposed rule appears in the Federal Register, a
60-day countdown starts, during which anyone can weigh in with comments.
A final
rule likely wouldn’t take effect until 2019.
And DHS
is still seeking input on some details. For instance, it hasn’t decided whether
CHIP would be counted as one of the “public charge” eligible programs.
In the
interim, people who had received public benefits before the rule took effect
would not be penalized for doing so.
4.
Already, Though, The Proposal Is Having
Effects.
DHS
estimates that 2.5 percent of eligible immigrants would drop out of public benefits programs
because of this change — which would tally about $1.5 billion worth of federal
money per year. But others expect a much larger impact.
“The
chilling effects will be vastly greater than the individuals directly
affected,” Greenberg said. “There’s considerable reason to believe that [the
White House estimate] may be a significant understatement.”
In the
proposed rule, DHS notes that the changes could result in “worse health
outcomes,” “increased use of emergency rooms,” “increased prevalence of
communicable diseases,” “increased rates of poverty” and other concerns.
Given
the complexity of these programs and the proposed rule — and the high stakes at
play — low-income immigrants would be much more likely to avoid public benefits
altogether, immigration experts said. Millions of immigrants are likely to be
affected directly or indirectly, according to the Center for Law and Social
Policy, a D.C.-based nonprofit organization.
That
could have stark health implications.
Take
free vaccines, for which children are often eligible and which would not be
subject to the public charge rule. Families afraid of jeopardizing a green card
could still be more likely to opt out of that service, Whitener said.
Already,
she added, there are reports of people declining federal assistance — even
though nothing has yet happened.
“The
fear factor cannot be underestimated,” she said.
5. Will
People Sue?
Legal
action is likely.
Officials
such as California’s Becerra are weighing legal challenges.
“The
Trump Administration’s proposal punishes hard-working immigrant families — even
targeting children who are citizens — for utilizing programs that provide basic
nutrition and healthcare. This is an assault on our families and our communities,”
Becerra said in a statement.
But
these actions depend on the final shape of the regulation, which could change
through the rule-making process.
“They
are likely to receive a very large number of sharply critical comments, and
there is no way to know what changes they might make as a result,” Greenberg
said.
Ana B. Ibarra of California Healthline contributed to this
report.
This story was produced by Kaiser Health
News, an editorially independent program of the Kaiser Family Foundation.
Shefali
Luthra: sluthra@kff.org,
@shefalil
https://californiahealthline.org/news/5-things-to-know-about-trumps-new-public-charge-immigration-proposal/?utm_campaign=CHL%3A%20Weekly%20Edition&utm_source=hs_email&utm_medium=email&utm_content=66289667&_hsenc=p2ANqtz-8bqBOFgG_vBHT3L_s6Y4lTuqWcmehv5TLCXnvhr9Wil_PjTfka5mUOmuvGr2lwrQ-7Y0yJLyEZ4DomtXOSGKpFqfGBqg&_hsmi=66289667
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