AP
By Judy Lin
November 30, 2014
President
Barack Obama's executive order to spare some immigrants from
deportation has galvanized Democrats, immigration groups and health care
advocates in California to push for expanding
health coverage to a segment of the population that remains uninsured.
The
president's action excludes immigrants who came to the country
illegally from qualifying for federal health benefits. But California
has its own policy of providing health coverage with
state money to low-income immigrants with so-called "deferred action"
that allow them to avoid deportation. Immigrant and health care
advocates say that means Obama's executive order will enable hundreds of
thousands of low-income immigrants in California
to apply for Medi-Cal, California's version of Medicaid.
Anthony
Wright, executive director of Health Access California, said allowing
this expanded group of immigrants to participate in the Medicaid program
will enable people to get primary and
preventive care, "rather than just at the emergency room."
The
California Department of Health Care Services, however, has yet to
receive formal guidance. A state official said it's too early to tell
how the immigration program will impact the overall
Medi-Cal program, which is consuming an increasing share of state
funds.
Medi-Cal
is a health program for the poor paid for by the federal government and
the state. It has grown by about 3 million people in California under
federal health care reform and now covers
more than 11 million Californians, about 30 percent of the state's
population. The federal government is paying for the expansion, but the
state will eventually pay 10 percent of additional costs to cover
low-income adults, many of whom are childless.
The
state is expected to spend more than $17 billion of its own money on
the program this year, up 3.5 percent a year ago, according to the
Legislative Analyst's Office.
"We
are assessing what some of the potential impacts could be, but it would
be premature for us to comment until we have more specific information
available," said Norman Williams, a spokesman
for the Department of Health Care Services.
The
president's action has also emboldened a Democratic lawmaker to revive a
bill that would provide health coverage to all Californians, regardless
of their immigration status.
Sen.
Ricardo Lara, D-Bell Gardens, plans to reintroduce his Health4All bill
on Monday to open Medi-Cal to immigrants, as well as extending
subsidized health benefits in a new insurance marketplace
for those without legal status. The proposal, which previously carried a
cost as high as $1.3 billion a year, stalled in a legislative committee
last cycle and Republicans had criticized the cost of the expansion.
"The
president's action covers almost half of California's undocumented
population, but that still leaves over a million people with no access
to health care. We can do better. The bill will
cover those remaining uninsured that will not benefit from Obama's
action," Lara said.
According
to the Center for American Progress, a progressive think tank in
Washington, D.C., the president's action lifts the threat of deportation
to as many as 1.2 million immigrants living
illegally in California. There are an estimated 2.6 million people
living illegally in the state.
The issue of benefits for immigrants who are illegally in the United States is a sensitive one.
Joe
Guzzardi a spokesman for Californians for Population Stabilization, a
Santa Barbara, California-based group that advocates for lower
population, said the state is already more generous
toward immigrants than most states and adding health coverage may
attract more people to cross into California illegally.
"There
are millions of Californians who don't have health care insurance or
have to pay for their health care insurance out of their own pockets. So
it seems unfair to have legislation that
provides for people who came to the United States unlawfully to be
rewarded with a health care plan," Guzzardi said.
Gabrielle
Lessard, a health policy attorney with the National Immigration Law
Center in Los Angeles, said it will be months before immigrants can
apply for the program and fewer will apply
or qualify for Medi-Cal. She said it's also unlikely that immigrants
would overwhelm the Medi-Cal system because many would be able to get
health coverage through work or school.
For more information, go to: www.beverlyhillsimmigrationlaw.com
No comments:
Post a Comment