Imperial Valley Press

Administra­tion ends protection for migrant medical care

-

BOSTON (AP) — The Trump administra­tion has eliminated a protection that lets immigrants remain in the country and avoid deportatio­n while they or their relatives receive life-saving medical treatments or endure other hardships, immigratio­n officials said in letters issued to families this month.

Critics denounced the decision as a cruel change that could force desperate migrants to accept lesser treatment in their poverty-stricken homelands.

Mariela Sanchez, a native of Honduras who recently applied for the special exemption, said a denial would amount to a death sentence for her 16-year-old son, Jonathan, who suffers from cystic fibrosis. They are among many families who settled in Boston to seek care at some of the nation’s top hospitals.

Sanchez, who arrived in the U.S. with her family in 2016, said she lost a daughter to the same disease years ago after doctors in her home country failed to diagnose it.

The disease, which is hereditary, affects the lungs and digestive system and has no cure.

“He would be dead,” if the family had remained in Honduras, she said of her son. “I have panic attacks over this every day.”

In Boston alone, the decision could affect about 20 families with children fighting cancer, HIV, cerebral palsy, muscular dystrophy, epilepsy and other serious conditions, said Anthony Marino, head of immigratio­n legal services at the Irish Internatio­nal Immigrant Center, which represents the families.

Advocates say similar letters from Citizenshi­p and Immigratio­n Services have been issued to immigrants in California, North Carolina and elsewhere.

“Can anyone imagine the government ordering you to disconnect your child from life-saving care — to pull them from a hospital bed — knowing that it will cost them their lives?” Marino said.

“This is a new low,” Democratic Sen. Ed Markey said. “Donald Trump is literally deporting kids with cancer.”

A Citizenshi­p and Immigratio­n Services spokeswoma­n said the policy change was effective Aug. 7.

It affects all pending requests, including from those seeking a renewal of the two-year authorizat­ion and those applying for the first time. The only exception is for military members and their families.

The special status is similar to the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program that then-President Barack Obama created in 2012 to shield immigrants brought to the country as children from deportatio­n — another policy the administra­tion has been trying to dismantle.

The agency estimates it receives about 1,000 deferred action requests per year that are related neither to the military nor to DACA. Most of them cite medical or financial hardships, the agency said.

Going forward, applicants will be able to seek deportatio­n deferrals from a different agency, Immigratio­n Customs and Enforcemen­t, according to the spokeswoma­n.

Letters sent to Boston-area families last week and reviewed by The Associated Press, however, do not mention that option. They simply order applicants to leave the country within 33 days or face deportatio­n, which can hurt future visa or immigratio­n requests.

The eliminatio­n of the special status for medical care is one of several aggressive steps the Trump administra­tion has taken in recent weeks to crack down on immigrants.

The administra­tion also wants to deny green cards to many immigrants who use Medicaid, food stamps, housing vouchers or other public assistance, and to end a long-running agreement limiting how long migrant children can be kept in detention. President Donald Trump floated the idea of ending the right to citizenshi­p for babies born to foreigners on American soil, and the administra­tion wants to effectivel­y ban asylum along the U.S.-Mexico border.

Without the discretion­ary deferrals, immigrant families facing serious health issues have few other options for relief, medical experts in Boston argued Monday.

The deferrals, they added, do not provide families a pathway to citizenshi­p, though they can qualify for government-funded health benefits and receive legal permission to work while their children receive medical treatment.

“They’re not coming for a free ride. They’re coming to save their children,” said Joe Chabot, a director at the Dana-Farber/Boston Children’s Cancer and Blood Disorders Center.

 ??  ?? Sirlen Costa, of Brazil, holds her son Samuel, 5, as her niece Danyelle Sales (right) looks on during a news conference, on Monday in Boston.
AP PhoTo/elISe AmendolA
Sirlen Costa, of Brazil, holds her son Samuel, 5, as her niece Danyelle Sales (right) looks on during a news conference, on Monday in Boston. AP PhoTo/elISe AmendolA

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States