Chicago Tribune (Sunday)

Mixed-status families to get checks this time

- By CedarAttan­asio

SANTA FE, N.M. — Lily Guido was having trouble hearing and she felt warm while talking to her co-worker at a California nursing home. She knew something was wrong.

Fearing the coronaviru­s, Guido, 30, of Santa Rosa, California, didn’t gohometo avoid possibly spreading it to herfive children, isolating in a hotel roomprovid­ed for health careworker­s likeher.

“They confirmed that I had COVID, and my husband was like, ‘Oh God, what’s going to happen?’ ” she said last week. “I couldn’t take it. I was in tears.”

Out of work, her family’s bills began to pile up this summer. While Guido is a U.S. citizen, and so are her children, her family hadn’t gotten a relief check from the federal government in the spring because she files taxes jointly with her husband, Erik, who is an immigrant in the country illegally and not eligible for any federal payments.

An estimated 1.4 million spouses and 3.7 million children who are U.S. citizens or legal residents in mixed-status families like Guido’s were cut out of the payments that many needed as the pandemic tanked the economy, according to tax data analysis by the Migration Policy Institute.

That’s changed in the latest federal relief package. Guido celebrated that her family and others like them would get checks this time around, aswell as a retroactiv­e $1,200 tax credit.

“Mixed-status families with childrenco­unt,” Guido said. “That makes such a big difference. And I jump for joy, you know, for those people that unfortunat­ely aren’t able to work during this pandemic.”

But even in the latest bill, some 2.2 million children who are U.S. citizens or

legal residents will be left out again because both their parents are in the country illegally, according to the Migration Policy Institute. That means no $600 check per child.

During the pandemic, officials inDemocrat­ic-controlled places have targeted rent relief and direct payments to all immigrant families who didn’t receive checks. States like California and Vermont have distribute­d federal relief money to community groups helping immigrants, saying they pay taxes and work essential jobs, whileNewMe­xico lawmakers sent U.S. funds directly to those without legal status.

WhenGuido got sick, her husband had already lost hours athis pest control job, so he stoppedwor­king for 2

weeks totake careof their

kids.

Alone in the hotel, the virus took her appetite, strained her breath and tanked her heart rate. She prayed and talked to her husband every day. Though she isolated away from home, he and the kids got the virus, too, but not as badly.

“I was stressing on top of it, not knowing how we were gonna make it, how we’re gonna pay my mortgage, how we’re gonna pay the rest of the bills,” Guido said.

They maxed out their credit cards to buy food and other necessitie­s. Erik, whowas 10whenhear­rived fromMexico, doesn’t have a Social Security number and pays taxes using a special number for non-resident immigrants. He asked that his last name be withheld, fearing it could affect an

immigratio­n applicatio­n.

Guido says she tried to apply by phone for financial help from California but nevergotth­rough. California Gov. Gavin News om distribute­d money to a network of regional nonprofits to give tomixed-status familiesan­d adults in the country illegally early in the pandemic.

Recent aid packages passed by legislatur­es in NewMexico and Vermont directed federal relief funds to those who didn’t get checks in April, mostly through cash payments to mixed-status families and immigrants without legal status. InPhoenix, immigratio­n advocates successful­ly sued to ensure residents could access rent and bill relief regardless of legal status.

New Mexico’s effort is unique because it paid

applicants through direct deposit, instead of relying on community groups to distribute the funds, like California andVermont.

“These are families — many of them with young children — these are essential workers, these are folks whose livelihood­s have been interrupte­d by this pandemic,” said state Rep. Javier Martinez, who’s credited with getting the measure intoNewMex­ico’s larger emergency relief bill.

Some 15,000 New Mexico residents have received about $465 each from a $5 million fund created by the Legislatur­e. It’s not just immigrants benefiting. The only requiremen­ts for the money are being a state resident and having not received a federal check in April, which includes homeless and elderly Americans who didn’t get a check becauseof IRS rules.

After getting about four times the number of applicants that the fund could support, state officials reduced the maximum amount and prioritize­d the lowest-income households.

The fund faced no resistance from minority Republican­s in the New Mexico House, but some of them voted against the entire bill.

Cities also have used federal funds for direct payments to immigrants.

Angelica Rodriguez and her husband are restaurant cooks in Santa Fe and had their hours cut in half. But they have been able to catch up on rent thanks to the city’s pandemic relief: a $750 payment last month and $1,500 thismonth.

She’s a member of Somos Un Pueblo Unido, a Latino- focused group that advocated for the inclusion of immigrants in state relief efforts. It’s also educated immigrants about not worrying that pandemic assistance will count against them in immigratio­n applicatio­ns, which ask about public aid like food stamps.

Despitethe citypaymen­ts, Rodriguez’s family still can’t afford to fix a brokenwash­ing machine and couldn’t splurge on Christmas presents this year. She and her husband are in the country without permission while their three children areU.S. citizens.

“It’s really hard because the 15-year- old boy, the 13-year-old girl, they get it — we told them therewon’t be Christmas presents this year because we’ re working very little, andthemone­ywe are getting is to pay bills and rent,” saidRodrig­uez, 43.

“But the 6-year-old boy still doesn’t get it,” she said. When she told him Santa couldn’t come this year because the family had gotten COVID-19, he shot back:“He canleavemy present outside thedoorand­not come in.”

 ?? CEDARATTAN­ASIO/AP ?? AngelicaRo­driguezwal­ks with her children— ages 13, 15 and 6— froma playground to theirhomeD­ec. 23 in Santa Fe, New Mexico. Rodrigueza­nd herhusband, both cooks, struggled to pay rent this year after their hourswere cut.
CEDARATTAN­ASIO/AP AngelicaRo­driguezwal­ks with her children— ages 13, 15 and 6— froma playground to theirhomeD­ec. 23 in Santa Fe, New Mexico. Rodrigueza­nd herhusband, both cooks, struggled to pay rent this year after their hourswere cut.

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