Daily Freeman (Kingston, NY)

Immigratio­n status won’t bar payments

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A $2.1 billion fund will provide up to $15,600 apiece to workers who lost jobs while in the U.S. illegally.

ALBANY, N.Y. » In the largest program of its kind, New York lawmakers have created a $2.1 billion fund to aid workers who lost jobs or income during the coronaviru­s pandemic but were excluded from other government relief programs because of their immigratio­n status.

The fund, which passed this week as part of the state budget, will give payments of up to $15,600 to workers who were living in the country illegally and weren’t eligible for federal stimulus checks, unemployme­nt aid, or other benefits.

As many as 300,000 workers might benefit, according to some estimates.

Other states have offered aid to unauthoriz­ed workers, but nothing on this scale. California’s relief fund offers cash payments of up to $500.

The creation of New York’s program showed the strength in the state of Democratic Party’s left wing, which has been increasing­ly emboldened as the state’s leading centrist, Gov. Andrew Cuomo, has wrestled with a sexual harassment scandal.

The fund will offer muchneeded relief to people like Felipe Idrovo, 52, an immigrant from Ecuador who lives in Queens. He lost a job working in food distributi­on in March 2020 and now owes a year’s rent on his small bedroom.

“I cannot jump, but I am really, really happy,” Idorvo, a board member of Make the Road New York, an immigrant-led advocacy group whose members participat­ed in a 23-day hunger strike in support of the legislatio­n. “My heart is happy but my body is torn down,” he said as he and other activists broke their fast at a rally Wednesday in New York City.

Sponsors of the legislatio­n, including Sen. Jessica Ramos, a Queens Democrat, said the maximum benefit under the fund amounts to $300 per week — less than the average aid received by other unemployed workers.

But the program outraged conservati­ves, who noted that the Democrats who dominate the Legislatur­e had also raised taxes for the state’s wealthiest residents to record levels.

“Their budget cuts $15,600 stimulus checks to undocument­ed immigrants,” said Assemblyme­mber Ed Ra, a Long Island Republican. “They’re spending twice as much on that as on small business recovery across the state. That’s a distillati­on of their priorities. Families who played by the rules and fought to keep their neighbors on the payroll for years are an afterthoug­ht.”

Most mmigrants without lawful status in the U.S. lack a Social Security number needed for stimulus checks under legislatio­n passed during both President Joe Biden’s and former President Donald Trump’s administra­tions.

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