Under Trump proposal, Minnesota immigrants might avoid medical care
Under the proposal, a legal immigrant could be denied a temporary visa or permanent residency through a green card if they use Medicaid, food stamps, low-income tax credits and a broad array of other state and federal social service programs. Even the use of such benefits by a child or a citizen spouse could jeopardize an immigrant's chances at permanent residency in
The proposal, which could become permanent this year, would be one of the most significant changes to immigration policy in decades and impact a broad swath of the nation's foreign-born population. Nearly half of noncitizens living in
If the proposal is enacted in its current form, those immigrant families would be forced to make an agonizing decision about whether to keep government-funded health coverage and risk being blocked from staying in the
The Dayton administration and representatives of
"If people decide to forgo well-child visits or receive needed immunizations because they withdraw from health care coverage, the entire state is put at risk for preventable disease outbreaks," Dayton wrote.
The plan comes as the Trump administration has taken an increasingly hard line against both illegal and legal immigration. The president and some conservative groups have argued that immigrants' use of public benefits is a threat to American prosperity and a drain on taxpayer-funded public benefits that should go to
"Noncitizens who receive public benefits are not self-sufficient and are relying on the
Reliance on government?
Under long-standing federal law, a noncitizen can be denied admission or permanent legal status if immigration authorities determine the person is likely to become a "public charge" -- that is, someone reliant on government programs. In the past, this determination was based on a narrow set of cash-based assistance programs and only applied to those who were deemed to be "primarily dependent on the government for subsistence."
The Trump administration's proposal, by contrast, would dramatically expand the criteria used to determine whether someone is likely to become a burden.
An immigrant could be deemed a "public charge" if that person -- or a dependent in the person's immediate family, including children -- receives any of a far broader array of government programs. The expanded list includes the
"The big fear is this will lead to parents not applying for [public] health and nutrition benefits," said
"It's a threat to the survivability of our community health centers that serve our neediest Minnesotans," he said.
Based on the proposed change, the percentage of noncitizens who could be classified as a "public charge," and risk jeopardizing their immigration status would grow from 3 percent to 47 percent, according to the
In contrast to the Trump administration's crackdown on illegal immigration at the border, the policy proposal would affect immigrants who live and work here legally and are eligible for public benefits. The proposed change would not apply to refugees and people going through the naturalization process, though it could jeopardize their ability to bring a family member from another country.
"It makes me so sad that I want to cry," Hurtado said. "The fear is already out there."
'Changes the whole equation'
Concerns about the "chilling effects" of stricter welfare measures are not new. After welfare reforms in 1996, participation rates in federal benefit programs fell sharply among refugees and
"This changes the whole equation in a dramatic way," said Fix. "It turns the [visa approval] system from a culture of 'Yes,' into a culture of 'Maybe' or 'No.' "
In March, the
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