Orlando Sentinel

Florida needs immigrants — even state government says so

- Thomas Kennedy is a former undocument­ed immigrant from Argentina. He has worked with organizati­ons like the Florida Immigrant Coalition, Immigratio­n Hub and as an aide in the Florida Legislatur­e.

Florida state reports say that immigrants are not only not a burden on the state, they are essential for its economic well-being.

If you find that confusing considerin­g the harsh anti-immigrant rhetoric stemming from most state officials and the barrage of nativist legislatio­n from the Florida Legislatur­e, I don’t blame you. “Florida: An Economic Overview,” a report released in January by the Legislatur­e’s Office of Economic and Demographi­c Research, outlines how, even as DeSantis signs more bills cracking down on immigratio­n, more immigrants are needed as young people leave the state and death rates exceed birth rates. A few snippets:

„ “Going forward, Florida’s annual participat­ion rate is expected to decline steadily from the 59.3% expected for FY 2023-24 to 56.9% in FY 2032-33, as the last of the Baby Boomers reach retirement age (age 65) in FY 2030-31.

„ “Population growth is the state’s primary engine of economic growth, fueling both employment and income growth … In the three years since the 2020 Census, Florida’s strong migration trends have continued, increasing its population by almost 1.1 million net new residents. This number takes account of both people leaving the state and losses in natural increase (more deaths than births).”

“In the past, Florida’s population growth has largely been from net migration. Going forward, this will produce all of Florida’s population growth, as the natural increase is anticipate­d to remain negative with deaths outnumberi­ng births.”

The Office of Economic and Demographi­c Research is pointing out the obvious: We have an increasing­ly aging population on or near the age of retirement and a growing trend of young people of working age packing their bags for more affordable places.

But this is not the only Florida report contradict­ing state officials on immigratio­n. The Florida Legislatur­e passed one of the harshest state-level anti-immigrant laws seen in this country last year in Senate Bill 1718. One of the provisions within that bill was a mandate for health-care providers that accept Medicaid dollars to ask about the immigratio­n status of patients, and while patients themselves were not required to answer, it instituted a climate of fear and intimidati­on. Undocument­ed people are now steering clear of hospitals and clinics, worried that they’ll be arrested or deported.

The Florida Legislatur­e also commission­ed the Florida Agency for Health Care Administra­tion to put together a report showing that undocument­ed people were a burden due to uncompensa­ted health care costs. Unfortunat­ely for their preconceiv­ed notions, the report showed exactly the opposite. It found that people who self-reported their undocument­ed status made up less than 1% of all hospital admissions and emergency room visits. The report also says that “high levels of uncompensa­ted care are more associated with rural county status than illegal immigratio­n percentage­s. There also did not appear to be a correlatio­n between total profitabil­ity and illegal immigratio­n percentage­s.”

This report was apparently so contradict­ory to what state officials assert in terms of uncompensa­ted costs related to undocument­ed people that they actually tried to hide it by sloppily messing with the data. The AHCA’s new dashboard does not include some of the caveats to the informatio­n provided in a mandatory report on the same subject that was given to legislator­s weeks earlier. When asked about it, AHCA refused to explain the difference­s.

So, according to research carried out by the state government, the anti-immigrant rhetoric by state officials is a bunch of nonsense. Is it any wonder that after the passage of Senate Bill 1718, which also contained measures restrictin­g the ability of undocument­ed people to work, already existing worker shortages worsened to the point that lawmakers who voted for the bill lied about the impact of the law while meeting with a Latino evangelica­l congregati­on? State Rep. Rick Roth, R-West Palm Beach, claimed that the bill was “100 percent meant to scare” immigrants and begged the crowd to “urgently” convince “your people” to not leave Florida since folks in the agricultur­e industry were angry that their workforce was leaving the state.

And so there you have it, anti-immigrant lawmakers and state officials twisting themselves into a pretzel to avoid the reality that immigratio­n is good.

 ?? ?? Thomas Kennedy
Thomas Kennedy

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