Santa Fe New Mexican

Receiving help and losing status

Rule change could mean getting aid hurts chances for green card

- By Deepti Hajela and Colleen Long

WNEW YORK hen she was struggling financiall­y this past year, Laura Peniche traveled all over Denver to get free food from churches to feed her three young children. She was too scared to apply for government food assistance.

When she was offered a chance a few weeks ago to get a reduced-rent apartment through a city program, she turned it down. Instead, she stretches her budget to pay several hundred dollars a month more to rent somewhere else.

It was all because of rumors she heard that immigrants seeking green cards would be rejected if they had ever used government aid programs.

Now the Trump administra­tion has proposed a rule change that would codify some of those rumors, and immigrants and their advocates are scrambling to figure out what it means if it takes effect. They worry that the measure is a back-door attempt to restrict immigratio­n by low-income people and that it could make immigrants fearful of using social services that they or their families need.

Peniche wonders if she needs to do even more, like avoid using a local government­funded preschool program for the youngest of her children, all American-born.

“Since it’s government help, I feel like I can’t use it,” said Peniche, 34, who came from Mexico as a teen and has protection from deportatio­n under DACA, the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program. She still has hopes of someday getting a chance to apply for permanent legal residency, so she doesn’t feel like she can risk using any kind of government aid, even for her kids.

“I feel like any little thing … would be used to keep me from being a resident,” she said.

The administra­tion’s proposal is centered on whether an immigrant seeking a green card is considered a “public charge” dependent on the government.

Until now, the guidelines in use since 1999 referred to someone primarily dependent on cash assistance, income maintenanc­e or government support for long-term institutio­nalization. The Department of Homeland Security wants to redefine a “public charge” as someone who is likely to receive public benefits at any time. And the definition has been broadened to include SNAP or food assistance, Medicaid, housing assistance or subsidies for Medicare Part D. Refugees or asylum seekers would be exempt, and the rule would not be applied retroactiv­ely, the government said. An average 544,000 people apply annually for a green card, with about 382,000 falling into categories that would be subject to this review, according to the government.

The revised rule “seeks to better ensure that applicants for admission to the United States … are self-sufficient, i.e., do not depend on public resources to meet their needs, but rather rely on their own capabiliti­es and the resources of their family, sponsor and private organizati­ons,” the proposal said.

The rule change and other immigratio­n restrictio­ns are part of a push to move the U.S. to a system that focuses on immigrants’ skills instead of emphasizin­g the reunificat­ion of families, as it does now. A draft leaked in March proposed even bigger changes that would have affected entire immigrant families, not just the individual applying, as this proposal does.

Once the rule is published in the federal register, it will be followed by a 60-day publiccomm­ent period. If the rule is enacted, it would take effect 60 days after that.

“There are a lot of questions of how this will play out in practice,” said Jackie Vimo, policy analyst at the National Immigratio­n Law Center. For the last two decades, she has told immigrants that there would be no immigratio­n consequenc­es for receiving housing subsidies, health care or food stamps. She can’t say that anymore.

“Ultimately, for many people, they’re just going to say, ‘This is too complicate­d — I am just going to get off all the benefits,’ ” Vimo said.

Vimo said the plan also hurts immigrant communitie­s by discouragi­ng people from using resources aimed at helping them. At the end of the day, she said, taxpayers will wind up covering the cost of individual­s who seek hospital care without insurance they were eligible for. “People are making life-and-death decisions based on this,” she said.

 ?? DAVID ZALUBOWSKI/ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Laura Peniche, right, joins her children 11-year-old Katalina, 4-year-old Athena, and 6-year-old Leonardo, at a playground Tuesday in Thornton, Colo. Peniche, 34, came from Mexico as a teen and has protection from deportatio­n under the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program. When she was struggling financiall­y this past year, she was too scared to apply for government food assistance.
DAVID ZALUBOWSKI/ASSOCIATED PRESS Laura Peniche, right, joins her children 11-year-old Katalina, 4-year-old Athena, and 6-year-old Leonardo, at a playground Tuesday in Thornton, Colo. Peniche, 34, came from Mexico as a teen and has protection from deportatio­n under the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program. When she was struggling financiall­y this past year, she was too scared to apply for government food assistance.

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