Lake County Record-Bee

Extend Medi-Cal benefits to undocument­ed adults

- Ly María Olena Nurazo and Sarah Nar

The Biden administra­tion’s current decisions will have dire consequenc­es for Americans who have borne the brunt of deaths, illness and economic hardship caused by the COVID-19 crisis.

For undocument­ed, uninsured immigrants, including millions of essential workers taking on disproport­ionate occupation­al risk of COVID exposure, these decisions will mean the difference between life and death.

But with no quick federal solution, it is up to states like California to step up and lead with an inclusive recovery plan for all.

California is home to 2.3 million undocument­ed immigrants who make up about 6% of the population and nearly 1 in 10 of the state’s workers. Undocument­ed California­ns generate $63 billion in government revenue and $263 billion toward the state’s formidable GDP every year through labor and taxes. They are overrepres­ented in jobs deemed “essential,” and wage theft and exploitati­on are unfortunat­e realities for many.

Unfortunat­ely, California Gov. Gavin Newsom’s state budget proposal is not adequately responsive to this demographi­c picture of our state. Our undocument­ed neighbors are deeply embedded in our economy, schools and communitie­s and the cultural fabric of our state — California­ns by every measure. That’s why we need bold legislatio­n like Senate Bill 56, introduced by state Sen. Maria Elena Durazo, and Assembly Bill 4, introduced by Assemblyme­mber Juan Arambula, a Democrat from Fresno, that ends the systematic exclusion of low-income undocument­ed adults from Medi-Cal, especially seniors.

Last year, Newsom included Medi-Cal for undocument­ed seniors in his proposed budget. But when the pandemic and ensuing economic downturn hit, Newsom withdrew his proposal, leaving a high-risk group — 65 and older — to fend for themselves without comprehens­ive health care.

The state set up temporary programs for the uninsured to access COVID-19 treatment, but this barely scratches the surface. For seniors, if they are infected with the virus, it may be too late. Undocument­ed seniors may have gone decades without a check-up and may have unknown chronic conditions and need preventati­ve treatment and medication for all of their health issues.

In a moment of reckoning with racial injustice and structural inequity, California has a clear choice. We can fix the systemic exclusions that brought us here, like making all California­ns eligible for Medi-Cal, or we can settle for temporary, surface-level policies that return us to the pre-pandemic status quo of glaring health and economic disparitie­s.

Comprehens­ive health insurance makes good public health sense in the face of a rapidly spreading virus. It makes us all safer and healthier.

Simultaneo­usly it protects against financial hardship. Medical debt is a leading cause of bankruptcy, and in a health care system dependent on insurance, trying to pay one’s medical bills and prescripti­on costs out-ofpocket is a recipe for financial ruin. Why should any elderly, low-income individual have to choose between an exorbitant bill for routine doctor visits and illnesses and money spent putting food on the table and weathering this recession?

California’s Legislatur­e and governor have taken some positive initial steps. They disbursed one-time cash assistance for workers hard hit by the pandemic who did not qualify for federal stimulus checks and unemployme­nt insurance due to immigratio­n status. The state also rectified the senseless exclusion of those who use an individual taxpayer identifica­tion number instead of a Social Security number to file taxes from eligibilit­y for the California Earned Income Tax Credit, a modest rebate for low-income tax filing households. This year, the governor and Legislatur­e worked together on a Golden State Stimulus that includes these same tax filers in a $600 state stimulus payment.

These policies are the beginnings of an equitable recovery. The governor’s focus on economic support amid layoffs and lost wages is critical. But with families unsure how to cover next month’s rent, groceries and other bills — especially undocument­ed and mixed-status families who are locked out of other assistance — much more is needed for survival.

SB 56 is a critical priority in 2021. While we await a federal fix for our broken immigratio­n system that bars so many from a pathway to status, inclusive state policies help move us closer to a true “California for All.”

State Sen. María Elena Durazo, a Democrat from Los Angeles, represents California Senate District 24, Senator. Durazo@sen.ca.gov. Sarah

Dar is the director of Health & Public Benefits Policy at the California Immigrant Policy Center, sdar@caimmigran­t.org. State Sen. Maria Elena Durazo has also written about recommenda­tions to help California’s economic recovery and to take action on climate.

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