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    Senior Member HAPPY2BME's Avatar
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    Little Financial Aid to States in Immigration Plan

    pewstates.org
    By Daniel C. Vock, Staff Writer
    7/18/2013


    A teacher instructs his students as they recite vowel sounds in an English class in Kansas City, Mo. Interest in English language classes could surge if Congress approves a new immigration law, but so far the federal legislation does not help states pay for any increased demand. (AP)

    The immigration overhaul passed by the U.S. Senate could put a big squeeze on the budgets of state and local governments.
    The proposal does not help states pay for costs incurred by required policy changes, including ramped up English classes and greater access to public hospitals and health clinics.

    “Potentially, we are going to create a financial catastrophe for states and localities,” said Sheri Steisel, senior federal affairs counsel and a human services expert at the National Conference of State Legislatures. “The states will end up with the cost and consequences of the federal decision-making, with very little resources to rely on to make up the difference.”

    The Senate drafted this year’s immigration bill after several bruising fights over federal spending. The result is a shortage of funding. Previous immigration packages included substantial money to help states pay for new costs. The last major rewrite of the country’s immigration laws in 1986, for example, doled out $4 billion. Even before adjusting for inflation, that is 80 times as much as the $50 million in this year’s Senate package.
    The $4 billion in the 1986 bill helped states defray costs for providing health care, English classes, public benefits and civics classes that were necessary as a result of the immigration overhaul. It enabled 3 million unauthorized immigrants to stay in the country legally.

    The $50 million in the current Senate bill would set up a pool for states to compete for money to help immigrants become citizens. The bill would also help states offset the cost of housing prisoners in the country illegally. But there is no large aid for states, even though the law could prompt up to 8 million people to apply for legal status.

    U.S. House Speaker John Boehner, an Ohio Republican, has said his chamber will not take up the Senate proposal. Instead, the House will work on separate bills, covering different aspects of an immigration overhaul. Some of those smaller bills could incur costs to states and localities by requiring them to screen all of their existing employees for legal status or by adding immigration duties to local police departments.

    An immigration overhaul could boost the economy and lead to the collection of more taxes, which would bring more money into state coffers. According to an estimate by the left-leaning Institute on Taxation and Economic Policy, states could take in as much as $2 billion more a year.
    The Senate bill could boost the economy as a whole, too. Regional Economic Models, Inc., a private research firm, predicts that three major components of the Senate plan would boost employment by 1.4 million jobs in the next five years. Numbers on the costs, though, are hard to come by. They would depend greatly on how immigrants would respond to changes in the law and on how much of the new costs states would pass on to schools, colleges and localities.

    Still, the Senate immigration bill would have financial consequences in many areas:

    English instruction

    Under the Senate plan, unauthorized immigrants would have to learn English to get a “green card” for lawful permanent residence. Randy Capps, a demographer with the Migration Policy Institute, says about half of unauthorized immigrants do not speak English well or at all.
    That means between 4 million and 5 million immigrants would need English instruction, which could strain community colleges or local schools that offer adult English classes. Right now, there are not enough classes even for legal immigrants who need to learn English to pass the U.S. citizenship test.

    “That demand is nowhere near being met. It’s only increasing even under the current law, and resources for English language instruction are declining due to state budget cuts and lack of federal assistance,” Capps said.

    Demand for English classes might not spike right away because people who are in the country illegally now would have to wait at least 10 years before they could get a green card, under the Senate proposal. Congress could decide to give states money to cover the costs later when demand increases.

    Health coverage

    NCSL, which supports the overall immigration effort, also worries that states and localities will eventually have to pay for medical care for immigrants. The reason has to do with both the Senate immigration plan and the Affordable Care Act, the health care law commonly called Obamacare.

    “It’s not just what is in the (immigration) bill, it is what is surrounding it,” said Marilina Sanz, associate legislative director for the National Association of Counties.

    Unauthorized immigrants do not qualify for Medicaid now, and they are also barred from getting federal subsidies to buy coverage through the health insurance exchanges at the heart of the ACA. Under the Senate proposal, the soonest that unauthorized immigrants would be eligible for those benefits is in 13 years for Medicaid and 10 years for the health exchanges.

    In the meantime, the federal government is cutting subsidies for hospitals that treat a high percentage of uninsured patients. The idea is that more people will get insurance under the ACA, so fewer patients will be uninsured.

    But low-income immigrants will have few options to buy health coverage. Half of the unauthorized immigrants with jobs work for companies with 25 or fewer employees, and companies that small do not have to provide health insurance to their employees under the new law.
    “We know they will have health care needs,” said NCSL’s Steisel. “And we know that, absent access to health care under an employer-sponsored health care, they are going to be coming to the emergency room.”

    State Medicaid systems help pick up the tab for those emergency room visits. States and localities also foot much of the bill for public hospitals or clinics, which could also see a surge of patients.

    Steven A. Camarota, director of research at the Center for Immigration Studies, a group that favors more restrictions on immigration, said parents in the country illegally may hesitate to enroll their U.S.-born children in Medicaid now, for fear of deportation. If that threat is gone, parents might be more willing to sign up their children for government programs, Camarota said.

    Jails


    State officials frequently complain that the federal government does not adequately reimburse states for housing criminals who are serving sentences before they are deported. Under the State Criminal Alien Assistance Program (SCAAP), the federal government is paying states only 18 percent of those costs, according to NCSL. The federal government picks up $240 million of the total cost of more than $1.3 billion, leaving states and localities to pay the rest.

    The Senate measure would nearly quadruple SCAAPS’s budget, to $950 million, but Congress would have to include the higher amounts in its appropriation bills.

    Still, the higher reimbursement rates in the Senate legislation are a bright spot for states.

    In-state tuition

    Fifteen states now let undocumented students pay in-state tuition, but more students in the remaining states would presumably qualify for the cheaper rates once they obtain permission to stay in the country legally.

    The Senate bill also would remove legal uncertainty over states’ ability to grant undocumented students in-state tuition by repealing a law that bars states from giving unauthorized immigrants “any postsecondary education benefit” not available to U.S. citizens.

    Dan Hurley, director of state relations and policy analysis at the American Association of State Colleges and Universities, said it is too early to tell what impact that would have on public universities. States could help cushion the blow to their colleges, but they could pass on the costs of in-state subsidies to the schools themselves, he said.


    http://www.pewstates.org/projects/st...an-85899491128
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  2. #2
    Senior Member HAPPY2BME's Avatar
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    Second surprise of the week! The Pew Charitable Trusts, staffed by people who are ideological advocates for mass immigration, conclude that the immigration Bill passed by the Senate would "be a financial catastrophe for states and localities".

    This conclusion -- congruent with independent studies including those of Rice University Professor of Economics Donald Huddle, business analyst Ed Rubenstein, and the Center for Immigration Studies -- is nevertheless a shock, coming from Pew.

    Also waking to their own interests are the leadership of black political groups who recognize that the influx foreign labor represented by Amnesty and more legal immigration would vastly harm minorities. It appears that Americans are coming together on determination that there shall be No Amnesty for Illegal Aliens!!!

    The Senate's Bill S. 744 has to fade away. And it will, so long as the House refuses to take up any immigration Bill in this congressional session.

    Join our FIGHT AGAINST illegal immigration & to secure US borders by joining our E-mail Alerts at http://eepurl.com/cktGTn

  3. #3
    Senior Member HAPPY2BME's Avatar
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    Last edited by Jean; 07-20-2013 at 02:21 PM.
    Join our FIGHT AGAINST illegal immigration & to secure US borders by joining our E-mail Alerts at http://eepurl.com/cktGTn

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