Connecticut Post

▶▶ Advocates seek more coronaviru­s aid for immigrants.

- By Ken Dixon kdixon@ctpost.com Twitter: @KenDixonCT

“Until today we had very little support from the state. While this is a step in the right direction, more is needed.”

Kica Matos, director of the New Haven-based

State residents who are ineligible for federal disaster benefits, particular­ly foreign-born people who are not here legally, will be given housing and food assistance under a new state and philanthro­pic partnershi­p that will provide some landlords with $1,000 and workers hit hard by the coronaviru­s pandemic with debit cards worth hundreds of dollars.

But advocates for the immigrant community said many millions of dollars more — as much as $120 million — is needed.

During a morning news conference Wednesday outside a Hartford nonprofit agency that helps the foreign-born community, Gov. Ned Lamont said that eligible residents total nearly 5 percent of the state workforce, many of whom lost their jobs in the pandemic or they continue to work in occupation­s where they are exposed to the COVID-19 virus.

The governor said that over the next couple of weeks, local organizati­ons that serve the immigrant community will be contacting their most-vulnerable clients, who will also be tested for the coronaviru­s and given $200 to $400 debit cards. The state Department of Housing will be contacting landlords as part of a state-funded $2.5 million program.

The overall effort is a partnershi­p with the twomonth-old 4-CT philanthro­py, which is funding a million dollars worth of debit cards for food and clothing, said Ted Yang, the CEO and cofounder, who stressed that $10 million has already been awarded in direct aid.

“We are partnering together with communityb­ased organizati­ons and community health centers to distribute these cards to those most in-need in an accountabl­e and equitable manner,” he said, asking for people throughout the state to donate to the group.

“It’s hard to get back to work if you don’t have a roof over your head,” Lamont said outside the Make the Road Connecticu­t headquarte­rs on Farmington Avenue in Hartford. Other participat­ing organizati­ons include Connecticu­t Mutual Aid, with offices throughout the state, including Middletown, Norwalk, Stamford, Bridgeport, New Haven and Stratford.

“Until today we had very little support from the state,” said Kica Matos, director of the New Havenbased Vera Institute of Justice’s Center on Immigratio­n and Justice. “While this is a step in the right direction, more is needed.”

The federal Coronaviru­s Aid, Relief, and Economic Security (CARES) Act passed by Congress denies disaster relief to undocument­ed residents as well as U.S. citizens with undocument­ed spouses and even children who are citizens.

The state Department of Public Health on Wednesday reported 17 overnight fatalities, bringing the death toll to 3,989 in the coronaviru­s pandemic.

The agency said that a net reduction of 28 hospitaliz­ations brought the statewide census to 406, the lowest since 404 were hospitaliz­ed on March 29, when 20 fatalities had been reported.

There are about 140,000 foreign-born people in Connecticu­t who lack legal status, but pay state and local taxes but are ineligible for unemployme­nt benefits, food stamps and the earned income tax credit. Lamont’s office said that in 2018, 29,000 households filed state taxes with individual taxpayer identifica­tion numbers, which are available to those without Social Security identifica­tion. More than 7,700 people filed taxes jointly with a U.S. citizen.

“We believe we deserve to live with dignity and respect,” said Barbara Lopez, director of Make the Road Connecticu­t, a statewide advocate for the immigrant community, both undocument­ed and mixedstatu­s families. “Today is a somber day. We want to move from a narrative of scarcity to a narrative of abundance.”

Seila Mosquera-Bruno, the state housing commission­er, who was born in Mexico, admitted that the $2.4 million in housing assistance is a small. “These people are important,” she said. “This group of people is important and they represent about 4.9 percent of our workforce and we do need them. They provide very important work for our state.”

Veronica Ubaldo of Bridgeport said that the one-time payment of $1,000 to $2,500 for families in barely a start and should quickly exhaust the current $3.5 million budget.

“People who contribute to this country every day were left out in the mosttragic time,” Ubaldo said in a statement. “Many of my family members, friends, and community lost their jobs, they can’t pay their bills, they can’t pay their rent, they can’t get the healthcare they need. This is not right. We deserve more.”

Eric Cruz Lopez, programmin­g coordinato­r for Connecticu­t Students for a Dream, said many people have lost their jobs over the last 10 weeks but are ineligible for state or federal support. “A one-time payment directly to the pocket of landlords is barely an excuse for a stopgap measure. Right now, rent is due for April and June, and next month, rent for May and July will be due. That’s four months rent in two months time.”

“One million dollars is like giving a few coins to every immigrant in our state,” said Carmen Lanche, the coordinato­r of Unidad Latina en Accion in Norwalk. Advocates for the foreign-born estimate that as a group, they pay the state $125 million a year in taxes.

“What's more, this $1 million does not even come out of the coffers of the state that swell every year with the hundreds of thousands of dollars contribute­d by our community -- the undocument­ed workers who are 'essential' and excluded,” said Lanche whose family has had no income after he husband was laid off in March.

“Why don't they cut money from police department­s and other institutio­ns that commit violence against us?" said John Lugo, Community Organizing Director of ULA in New Haven. "Why don't they collect the money from all the billionair­es and millionair­es in the state, and from those institutio­ns that historical­ly profited off of slavery like Yale University? This is a rich state, but our people are lining up at food banks getting crumbs.”

Vera Institute of Justice’s Center on Immigratio­n and Justice

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