The Mercury News

Trump rule change fallout

‘Public charge’ policy is having a chilling effect on families of immigrants

- By Erica Hellerstei­n ehellerste­in@bayareanew­sgroup.com

Last month, Yuri sat in her dining room in San Jose, turned on the TV and heard something that made her sit up straight and sent her mind racing.

The Trump administra­tion, the newscaster announced, had just published a new rule that could make it harder for immigrants to get a green card if they used, or were likely to use, public government benefits like food stamps or Medicaid.

Yuri, who came to the United States from Michoacán, Mexico, was enrolled in Calfresh, California’s food stamp program, for her seven children, who range in age from just over a month to 15 years and who all were born in this country. But with the new rule, Yuri wondered, would staying on food stamps imperil her asylum applicatio­n or get her deported? Would she and her family have to move back to Michoacán, one of the Mexican states with the worst cartel violence?

She decided to terminate food stamps for her kids and to disenroll from Medi-cal, despite some health complicati­ons she said accompanie­d her latest pregnancy. She worries, she said, about how she will keep her children’s bellies full without food stamps. But she doesn’t want the use of social service programs to put her at risk for deportatio­n somehow.

Across the Bay Area, the looming change in what is known as the “public charge” rule is sowing confusion and fear within the immigrant community, causing many people to abandon programs they need for fear of retaliatio­n from immigratio­n authoritie­s, according to nearly two dozen interviews with health care providers, lawyers, nonprofit organizati­ons and social service agencies. Statewide, the rule could affect more than 2 million California­ns, most of whom are not subject to the regulation, and could result in 765,000 people disenrolli­ng from Medi-cal and Calfresh, according to UCLA’S Center for Health Policy Research.

In fact, Yuri, who did not want her last name used for fear of drawing attention to her family, would not be affected by the rule change: Refugees and asylees are exempted from the policy, as are the food stamps she gets for her children, who are U.S. citizens. But many immigrants like her who are not subject to the rule are feeling the chilling effect, with some withdrawin­g from social services unnecessar­ily.

Social service experts described patients staying away from crucial medical appointmen­ts, domestic violence survivors avoiding food stamps, a crime victim with a humanitari­an visa dropping health coverage during treatment for cancer, and parents considerin­g removing their children from benefits ranging from free and reduced-price school lunches to health coverage.

Currently, green card applicants must prove they will not be a financial burden — referred to as a “public charge” — on the United States through the use of cash welfare programs or publicly funded institutio­nal care. The new regulation, which — if it survives legal challenges — will take effect in mid-october, would expand the public charge definition to include Medicaid, food stamps and housing vouchers. Immigratio­n officials also will consider income, education, English language abilities and health when making a determinat­ion.

Claribel Chavez, an outreach worker for the Second Harvest Food Bank of Silicon Valley, said the primary reason the people she talks to resist signing up for food stamps is public charge.

“They’re just not doing it because they are scared,” she said. “They say, ‘We would rather struggle than put our name into the system.’ It’s getting bad.”

In August, Santa Clara and San Francisco counties sued the Trump administra­tion over the regulation and filed a joint motion for a preliminar­y injunction seeking to block the rule before it takes effect. The motion argues that the rule, if implemente­d, would cause “irreparabl­e harm” to the counties and “will cause individual­s to dis-enroll from or forgo critical public benefits out of fear of potential immigratio­n consequenc­es.” California is one of several states suing to block the policy.

The Department of Homeland Security estimated that 324,000 people in households with noncitizen­s will withdraw or stay away from public benefits because of the change.

But immigrant rights advocates said they expect the affected pool to be much larger, because the effects are trickling down to legal immigrants and mixedstatu­s families who, fearing negative consequenc­es, may now withdraw or stay away from housing assistance, health care or other social services. A recent report by the Kaiser Family Foundation estimated that the rule could result in up to 4.7 million people withdrawin­g from Medicaid and the Children’s Health Insurance Program (CHIP).

Although it is difficult to measure the full impacts of the policy before it takes effect, there are some suggestion­s that it may already be having an influence.

In San Francisco County, according to court records, food stamp enrollment in households with at least one noncitizen dropped sharply when the proposed rule was announced in the fall of 2018, while citizen household enrollment remained relatively steady.

In Santa Clara County, court records data indicates that the number of households receiving food stamps with at least one member who is not a citizen decreased 20% — from about 15,000 to about 12,000 — from October 2018 to May 2019. During the same time period, food stamp enrollment in citizen households stayed at roughly 26,000. The records also show that Medi-cal participat­ion in households with at least one noncitizen decreased 13.5% from the fall of 2018 to July 2019, while participat­ion in citizen households increased 6%.

For health care providers in the Bay Area, the prospect of patients declining medical care is worrisome. Santa Clara County has the fourth-highest rate of tuberculos­is in California, according to Dr. Sara Cody, the county’s director of public health, with almost 10% of the population infected with latent TB. Patients forgoing evaluation and treatment could heighten the risk for spreading infection to county residents, she said.

Jane Garcia, the chief executive of La Clinica health clinic, which operates in Alameda, Solano and Contra Costa counties, said health care providers have reported patients skipping appointmen­ts and disenrolli­ng from county health programs, as well as from Medi-cal. She said she gets three to four emails a day from doctors reporting appointmen­t cancellati­ons and no-shows.

Greg C. Garrett, the chief policy and external affairs officer of the Alameda Health Consortium, shared the story of a 13-year-old U.S. citizen with severe depression and schizophre­nia whose mother withdrew her from health services because she was afraid of the public charge rule. “Her provider told me she is having nightmares wondering what is happening with this young girl because of her issues,” Garrett said.

Asylum seekers and refugees would be exempt from the rule, as would victims of domestic violence and traffickin­g. But advocates and lawyers who work with those population­s say many of them are confused about the 800-plus page rule and have asked if they should reconsider using benefits.

In addition, neither the Special Supplement­al Nutrition Program for Women, Infants, and Children (WIC) nor the free and reduced-price school lunch programs would be affected by the change, but social service providers in the Bay Area say recipients of both have expressed concern about continuing their enrollment.

As for Yuri, the path forward is one without Calfresh for her children, and, although she is seeking the advice of an immigratio­n lawyer, legal consultati­on seems unlikely to change her mind about withdrawin­g. For now, she said, it all just seems too uncertain.

“We don’t want to have the risk,” she says, rocking her newborn’s pink crib. “You never know what’s going to happen.”

 ?? KARL MONDON — STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER ?? Claribel Chavez hands out flyers for Second Harvest Food Bank of Silicon Valley at San Jose State. She says a Trump administra­tion rule has some immigrants forgoing social services.
KARL MONDON — STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER Claribel Chavez hands out flyers for Second Harvest Food Bank of Silicon Valley at San Jose State. She says a Trump administra­tion rule has some immigrants forgoing social services.

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