Results 1 to 5 of 5
Like Tree2Likes

Thread: Limits Placed on Immigrants in Health Care Law

Thread Information

Users Browsing this Thread

There are currently 1 users browsing this thread. (0 members and 1 guests)

  1. #1
    Senior Member Ratbstard's Avatar
    Join Date
    Nov 2007
    Location
    New Alien City-(formerly New York City)
    Posts
    12,611

    Limits Placed on Immigrants in Health Care Law

    Limits Placed on Immigrants in Health Care Law

    nytimes.com
    By ROBERT PEAR
    Published: September 17, 2012


    Jennifer M. Ng’andu, a health policy specialist at the National Council of La Raza, and Ricardo E. Campos, 23, a student in Maryland, are dismayed at the White House’s decision on health care.

    WASHINGTON — The White House has ruled that young immigrants who will be allowed to stay in the United States as part of a new federal policy will not be eligible for health insurance coverage under President Obama’s health care overhaul.

    The decision — disclosed last month, to little notice — has infuriated many advocates for Hispanic Americans and immigrants. They say the restrictions are at odds with Mr. Obama’s recent praise of the young immigrants.

    In June, the president announced that hundreds of thousands of illegal immigrants who came to the United States as children, attended school here and met other requirements would be allowed to remain in the country without fear of deportation.

    Immigrants granted such relief would ordinarily meet the definition of “lawfully present” residents, making them eligible for government subsidies to buy private insurance, a central part of the new health care law. But the administration issued a rule in late August that specifically excluded the young immigrants from the definition of “lawfully present.”

    At the same time, in a letter to state health officials, the administration said that young immigrants granted a reprieve from deportation “shall not be eligible” for Medicaid or the Children’s Health Insurance Program. Administration officials said they viewed the immigration initiative and health coverage as separate matters.

    Kathleen Sebelius, the secretary of health and human services, said in the Federal Register that the reasons offered for the immigration initiative “do not pertain to eligibility for Medicaid,” the children’s health program or federal subsidies for buying private health insurance.

    Nick Papas, a White House spokesman, said the deferred-deportation policy “was never intended” to confer eligibility for federal health benefits. The White House describes that policy as “an exercise of prosecutorial discretion,” allowing law enforcement officers to focus on immigrants who pose a threat to national security or public safety. Administration officials declined to elaborate as to why beneficiaries of the new immigration policy were ineligible for coverage under the new health law.

    The move might help Mr. Obama avoid a heated political debate over whether the health law is benefiting illegal immigrants. The possibility of such benefits has drawn criticism from many Republicans, including Representative Joe Wilson of South Carolina, who shouted “You lie!” as Mr. Obama addressed the issue before a joint session of Congress in 2009.

    The restrictions on health coverage may also save money by limiting the number of people who receive health insurance wholly or partly from the federal government. Federal subsidies for insurance under the new health care law are expected to average $5,300 a year for each person subsidized in 2014, and the cost is expected to rise to $7,500 a person in 2022, the Congressional Budget Office says.

    Several immigration lawyers and health policy experts have criticized the restrictions, saying they will make it more difficult to achieve the goals of the health law and the immigration initiative, which Democrats consider two of Mr. Obama’s most significant achievements.

    Jennifer M. Ng’andu, a health policy specialist at the National Council of La Raza, a Hispanic rights group, said: “We do not understand why the administration decided to do this. It’s providing immigration relief to children and young adults so they can be fully integrated into society. At the same time, it’s shutting them out of the health care system so they cannot become productive members of society.”

    Ricardo E. Campos, 23, of Wheaton, Md., an illegal immigrant who came to the United States from El Salvador at the age of 12, applied for the deferred-enforcement program two weeks ago with help from a community organization, Casa de Maryland.

    He is attending a community college and said he desperately needs affordable health insurance. After doctors discovered that he had bone cancer, he underwent a 36-hour operation in 2009 and was in a wheelchair for a year.

    “I want to become a doctor, in internal medicine or oncology, so I can save lives just as my life was saved,” Mr. Campos said.

    “What if one day the cancer comes back and I don’t have health insurance? That’s scary.” (Just before his surgery, Mr. Campos got coverage through a state-sponsored plan with high premiums, after commercial insurers had turned him down.)

    Under the new federal health law, insurance subsidies are available not only to citizens, but also to low-income immigrants “lawfully present” in the United States. That group will still include green card holders and people granted asylum.

    The Pew Research Center estimates that up to 1.7 million unauthorized immigrants could eventually seek deferrals of deportation under the exercise of executive authority announced in June by Mr. Obama. Those immigrants will continue to be able to receive health insurance from employers, but many are likely to struggle to obtain coverage if they do not have a job that provides it.

    In the absence of a significant change in immigration law, young immigrants granted temporary relief from deportation have no clear path to green cards or citizenship.

    When he announced the new immigration policy in June, Mr. Obama hailed the patriotism and promise of young “dreamers” — illegal immigrants who could have gained legal status under a bill known as the Dream Act, which has been bottled up in Congress for 11 years. Mr. Obama said the young immigrants were Americans at heart and should be able to work legally and live openly in this country without fear of being expelled.

    Marielena Hincapié, the executive director of the National Immigration Law Center, an advocacy group for low-income immigrants, said: “We had been working closely with the administration, so we were quite surprised and shocked by the new restrictions on health coverage. This is a shortsighted, reactionary and bad public policy.”

    Republicans in Congress have criticized the deportation deferrals as a form of backdoor amnesty for immigrants who broke the law by entering the United States illegally or by overstaying visas. They say Mr. Obama does not have the legal authority to do what he did — a claim also made in a lawsuit by 10 immigration law enforcement officers who are challenging the policy in Federal District Court.

    The politics of the issue cut in several directions. The Gallup tracking poll shows Mr. Obama with a wide lead over his Republican opponent, Mitt Romney, among Hispanic voters. At the same time, administration officials have tried to avoid alienating swing voters who are concerned about illegal immigration, and they have emphasized steps taken to secure the borders.

    In the primary campaign, Mr. Romney said he would veto the Dream Act because it could create a magnet for illegal immigration. Ryan M. Williams, a spokesman for Mr. Romney, said Mr. Obama’s deferred-deportation policy had “ruined an effort in Congress to forge a bipartisan long-term solution” for illegal immigrants brought here as children.

    Some immigrants and their allies worry that the restrictions on federal health benefits could be used to justify similar actions by state officials. Gov. Jan Brewer of Arizona, a Republican, has issued an executive order denying driver’s licenses and public benefits to young immigrants who are granted relief from deportation.

    http://www.nytimes.com/2012/09/18/he...er=rss&emc=rss
    Join our efforts to Secure America's Borders and End Illegal Immigration by Joining ALIPAC's E-Mail Alerts network (CLICK HERE)

  2. #2
    Senior Member Kiara's Avatar
    Join Date
    Jan 2009
    Location
    Rhode Island
    Posts
    2,393
    “We do not understand why the administration decided to do this. It’s providing immigration relief to children and young adults so they can be fully integrated into society. At the same time, it’s shutting them out of the health care system so they cannot become productive members of society.”

    No matter how much we give them, it is never enough. They will stop at nothing less than a full amnesty.

  3. #3
    Senior Member southBronx's Avatar
    Join Date
    Jul 2010
    Posts
    4,758
    kiara
    that why he has to go . Obama don't care about us . he only care about the vote & the illegal immigrants
    & the hell with us
    No amnesty Or dream act

  4. #4
    Senior Member ReggieMay's Avatar
    Join Date
    Jan 2008
    Posts
    5,527
    They want a full amnesty plus benefits - free healthcare, no taxes, etc. Actually, illegals benefit from the healthcare law by being excempted from its requirement to purchase health insurance. Citizens are subject to penalties for not having insurance, while illegals get free healthcare at their local emergency room without the requirement to carry insurance.
    "A Nation of sheep will beget a government of Wolves" -Edward R. Murrow

    Join our efforts to Secure America's Borders and End Illegal Immigration by Joining ALIPAC's E-Mail Alerts network (CLICK HERE)

  5. #5
    Administrator Jean's Avatar
    Join Date
    May 2006
    Location
    California
    Posts
    65,443

    Health-Law Limits Cloud Democrats' Push for Hispanic Vote

    September 18, 2012, 6:08 p.m. ET
    By LOUISE RADNOFSKY
    The Wall Street Journal

    The Obama administration's decision not to give benefits under the health law to young illegal immigrants it is letting remain in the U.S. could complicate Democrats' efforts to pitch the law to Hispanic voters.

    In June, President Barack Obama said that he would sidestep Congress and allow young people brought to the U.S. as children to apply for work permits and be exempt from deportation proceedings.

    The Department of Health and Human Services issued rules last month that said the young people wouldn't be allowed to shop for insurance policies through newly established health exchanges or receive federal subsidies toward the cost of premiums starting in 2014. They are also not eligible to enroll in the federal-state Medicaid program for low-income Americans, the department has said. The rules were first reported by the New York Times on Tuesday.

    The move could make it harder for the Obama campaign to rally support from Hispanic voters, a constituency that Mr. Obama's re-election campaign is trying hard to persuade to turn out in large numbers in November. Democrats have focused on female and Hispanic voters in most of their efforts to promote the health law.

    Pollsters' studies have shown that those groups are open to feeling favorably toward the law, and the Obama administration, after hearing consumer-oriented messages about the law's benefits. Democratic campaigners, including the president, have been advised to rely on "trusted messengers," including community groups, to convey those arguments.

    But Latino community advocates say they have told the White House that they will struggle to do that in the wake of the latest decision.

    The health law passed in March 2010 excludes illegal immigrants from using the new exchanges to compare and buy insurance plans, and from applying for tax credits or subsidies to help pay for them. When the bill was moving through Congress, some Latino lawmakers complained about the fact that it prevented illegal immigrants from using their own money to buy private policies inside the exchanges. But the architects of the legislation wanted to neutralize political attacks from opponents.

    "It's very hard as advocates to hail the benefits of the Affordable Care Act for the Latino population when we already have to explain the exclusion for undocumented immigrants," said Sonal Ambegaokar, a health policy attorney for the National Immigration Law Center. "It not only confuses families or Latinos about whether they can get insurance, but it also sends a message that the law may not really work for you, and that's hard to overcome."

    Jennifer Ng'andu, deputy director of the National Council of La Raza's health policy project, said that the group had told the Obama administration that the decision "presents a confusing picture and a mixed message."

    "They're allowed to work, they're allowed to go to school, they're allowed to serve in the military, they are not allowed to purchase health coverage," she said.

    The young immigrants will be able to accept health coverage from employers, including the military, and may also be able to apply for student policies offered through universities.

    White House spokesman Nick Papas said that the administration had never intended for its immigration announcement to extend to federal assistance for health care.

    Some Democrats who support an immigration overhaul said they weren't surprised by the administration's decision because there had been a similar exclusion in a bill passed by the House in 2010 that would have given them a path to citizenship.

    The new immigration rules apply to people under age 30 who came to the U.S. under the age of 16, have been here for at least five years, haven't committed a major crime and have either a high-school degree, equivalency certificate or have served in the military. They are now eligible for a renewable two-year period of "deferred action," during which they won't be deported.

    Mr. Papas added that the administration saw the immigration change as a "temporary stopgap measure" and still wanted Congress to take action to overhaul the system. "These kids deserve to plan their lives in more than two-year increments," he said.

    Some employers have been pushing the administration to amend parts of the health law to take into account its impact on illegal immigrants.

    The Western Growers Association, a trade group of produce farmers in Arizona and California, has said that it is worried that many field workers will lose employer health insurance after the law takes full effect due to new requirements that ban the sale of insurance plans with annual or lifetime limits.

    They say that such plans, which the association sells through a trust, could become unaffordable for employers and the workers, and that since they won't have the option of purchasing insurance on their own, they will lose coverage entirely.

    "If they're not here legally and the employer can't afford to provide insurance, they can't go to the exchanges, so they're going to fall back on the cities and counties, and the emergency wards, the same way they did before," said Tom Nassif, head of the association.

    http://oneoldvet.com/

    Health-Law Limits on Immigrants Cloud Democrats' Hispanic Push - WSJ.com
    Support our FIGHT AGAINST illegal immigration & Amnesty by joining our E-mail Alerts at https://eepurl.com/cktGTn

Tags for this Thread

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
  •