San Francisco Chronicle

Panel backs Medi- Cal coverage for those here illegally

- By Melody Gutierrez Melody Gutierrez is a San Francisco Chronicle staff writer. E- mail: mgutierrez@sfchronicl­e.com Twitter: @MelodyGuti­errez

SACRAMENTO - A lawmaker’s proposal to offer Medi- Cal coverage to immigrants living in the country without documentat­ion made it through a key legislativ­e committee Thursday, although the bill was significan­tly scaled back to benefit primarily those ages 19 and under.

SB4 by state Sen. Ricardo Lara, D- Bell Gardens ( Los Angeles County), was narrowed to reduce the cost by allowing older immigrants to enroll in the medical system for low- income people each year only as state funds are available to cover them.

The bill would also authorize the state to seek a federal waiver so it could extend health insurance under its Covered California exchange to immigrants in the country without documentat­ion.

Those immigrants would be eligible only for unsubsidiz­ed insurance and would pay full price.

“Excluding people from our health care system is simply wrong,” said Lara, who is chair of the Senate Appropriat­ions Committee that approved his bill 5- 2 on Thursday.

The two Republican­s voted against it. “But prohibitin­g immigrants from even buying insurance from the state exchange with their own money is completely irrational.”

Lara has estimated that 30 percent of undocument­ed immigrants in the state can afford Covered California insurance without subsidies.

A similar bill by Lara stalled last year due to its $ 1.3 billion price tag. Cost estimates for this year’s bill were up to $ 740 million before it was pared down Thursday. A new estimate was not yet available.

SB4 now heads to the full state Senate for a vote next week.

On Thursday the Senate and Assembly weeded through more than 650 bills at an auctioneer- like pace in appropriat­ions committees.

Among the bills making it through were proposals to raise the minimum smoking age to 21, allow doctors to prescribe life- ending medication­s to terminal patients wishing to hasten their deaths, raise the minimum wage to $ 11 in 2016 and $ 13 in 2017, and require employers to post workers’ schedules at least two weeks in advance.

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