Undocumented immigrants to get health care in Gavin Newsom’s California budget deal
Lawmakers want to use an "extraordinary" state budget surplus to expand health care options for undocumented people while stockpiling billions of dollars in reserves in anticipation of an economic downturn, according to documents the Legislature's Budget Conference Committee released.
The agreement marks the end of months of negotiations between Newsom and the Legislature. Lawmakers face a
The agreement includes funding to let undocumented young adults under age 26 enroll in
The expansion will take effect
The budget includes a fine on people who don't buy health insurance known as an individual mandate. The fines were initially implemented as part of the federal Affordable Care Act law known as Obamacare, but
Revenue from the mandate will fund insurance premium subsidies for middle income people. The budget agreement also includes an additional
Wright applauded the Legislature for securing additional funding for insurance subsidies, which the governor's office had initially resisted.
"While it's not all we sought, it will provide a real tangible difference for people, especially for those around and below poverty and for middle income families who don't get any help under the federal law," he said.
"For
Newsom in May proposed a
"The budget agreement we're finalizing tonight builds on the strong budget proposal of the governor, while adding significant legislative priorities," said Sen.
Newsom won't get the so-called water tax he proposed in January to pay for water system improvements for communities with unhealthy drinking water sources. But, lawmakers agreed to pay for the projects, anyway.
The compromise includes
"We are thrilled that the Legislature and
The budget agreement includes billions of dollars supplemental pension payments to ease financial pressure on
Newsom in January had proposed spending
The Legislative Analyst's Office in April referred the state's surplus as "extraordinary moment" that lawmakers could use to prepare for a recession. It urged more savings than Newsom recommended.
"I've been voting no or abstaining on a lot of spending opportunities," Sen.
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