Miami Herald

Instead of federal aid, Miami immigrants turn to local groups

- BY MONIQUE O. MADAN AND MARIO J. PENTÓN mmadan@miamiheral­d.com mpenton@elnuevoher­ald.com

As of Monday, Carolina Guity and her husband will be jobless with two young children at home to feed.

Guity, an undocument­ed domestic worker from Honduras, was one of tens of thousands of people in Florida to suddenly be unemployed amid the coronaviru­s crisis.

Her husband works for an air-conditioni­ng repair company.

“They already slashed his hours by half and told him that Monday there likely will be no work,” Guilty said from her Northwest Miami-Dade home. “You tell me how we’re going to survive this.”

While people across the country are slated to receive $1,200 relief checks from the federal government this month, millions of immigrant households will not receive a penny from the government’s $2 trillion economic-rescue plan. Undocument­ed people are also excluded in Florida’s unemployme­nt benefits, which pay jobless adults up to $275 a week for 12 weeks. The federal government will augment that temporaril­y as part of its response to the coronaviru­s crisis.

The lack of access to state and federal emergency funding has forced hundreds of South Florida immigrant families to turn to small local organizati­ons for money and even food.

This week, Guity was one of about 100 domestic workers in Miami-Dade, Broward and Palm Beach counties — and one of about 1,000 nationwide — to receive a $400 prepaid gift card to help soften the financial blow.

“We know it’s not enough to get families by, but it’s a bit of help,” said Joanna Arellano, a spokeswoma­n for the National Domestic Workers Alliance. She noted that The Coronaviru­s Care Fund was establishe­d by the organizati­on “to provide emergency assistance for home care workers, nannies and house cleaners to support them in staying safe and staying home to slow the spread of the coronaviru­s and to care for themselves and their families.”

But Guity knows the sum is not enough for the family of four: “It’s a small blessing to cover some costs like water, electricit­y, our phone bills and food.”

She says her biggest worries now are the choices that she will have to make next week.

“Up until now, I’ve been able to put my children’s health first by staying home with them and not exposing them to the virus,” she said. “But come Monday, I worry how we will put food on the table.”

Alexander Paniagua of Homestead is also in a dire situation after losing his constructi­on job three weeks ago. With no immigratio­n documents and a wife and three children to feed, he says he feels “desperate.”

“We don’t have jobs. We will not receive aid from Congress. We also can’t go take the coronaviru­s tests. We are the ones who hold up this country, but the rope always breaks at its weakest point,” he said. “On the fifth, I have to pay the rent but don’t have the money to do it.”

Paniagua told the Herald he has also turned to local organizati­ons for help. This week, it was a nearby Catholic church for canned food, bread and water.

Paniagua’s wife, Ana Song, says she worries about the family’s health as well as food and rent.

“What happens if we actually get the coronaviru­s? I am worried that they will not allow us to go to the hospitals,” she said.

As the coronaviru­s that causes COVID-19 continues to make its way through the U.S., immigratio­n activists have worried that undocument­ed immigrants might refuse to get treatment if they have symptoms, fearing they will be detained by immigratio­n authoritie­s.

Historical­ly, Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t and U.S. Customs and Border Patrol have said that they won’t engage in immigratio­n-enforcemen­t procedures — arrests, searches or interviews — at hospitals, schools or places of worship, designated as “sensitive zones,” unless there are “exigent circumstan­ces.”

Though neither the

White House nor the Department of Homeland Security has commented on whether the administra­tion will officially declare healthcare facilities enforcemen­t-free zones amid the outbreak, ICE told the Miami Herald last month that undocument­ed immigrants should not fear getting medical help for the coronaviru­s.

“Coronaviru­s is not considered an exigent circumstan­ce, and individual­s seeking medical treatment for the virus should continue to do so without fear or hesitation,” ICE said in an email. “Claims to the contrary are false and create unnecessar­y fear within communitie­s.”

Lis-Marie Alvarado, the program director of American Friends Service Committee, a nonprofit immigrant organizati­on in Miami, confirmed to the Herald that immigrant families in South Florida are thinking twice before seeking medical services.

“The threat of ICE raids in hospitals is real, but we are urging the community to take measures to prevent the coronaviru­s and to go seek medical attention at our community clinics and public hospitals if they have any symptoms,” Alvarado said.

Florida state Sen. José Javier Rodríguez says his office is doing all it can to help undocument­ed families, including getting sick families easy access to COVID-19 tests at clinics.

“There are many things we have been able to do for the undocument­ed community,

About 100 domestic workers in Miami-Dade, Broward and Palm Beach — and about 1,000 nationwide — received $400 prepaid gift cards to help soften the blow of the viral pandemic. but we cannot disclose what we are doing in a newspaper because I fear that the state and federal resources used to help would suddenly disappear,” he said.

Rodríguez said he would not elaborate on the resources that his office is offering jobless, immigrant families but urged the undocument­ed, their friends or neighbors, or anyone who wants to help these people, to call his office.

“The coronaviru­s does not discrimina­te,” he said.

“The idea that we are going to leave some people out of the reach of our response is harmful to everyone.”

 ?? National Domestic Workers Alliance ??
National Domestic Workers Alliance

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States