Texarkana Gazette

Many elderly Cubans leaving the island in order to retire in Florida with U.S. benefits.

- By Megan O’Matz, Sally Kestin and John Maines

FORT LAUDERDALE, Fla.—More Cubans are coming to Florida in their golden years to retire, able to tap U.S. government assistance even though they never lived or worked here.

The number of Cubans arriving over the age of 60 grew fivefold since 2010, according to state refugee data. At least 185 made the crossing in their 80s or 90s.

Unlike most other immigrants, Cubans qualify immediatel­y for food stamps and Medicaid. If they are over 65 with little or no income, they also can collect a monthly check of up to $733 in Supplement­al Security Income (SSI).

The United States makes it possible under a humanitari­an policy of treating Cubans who arrive as refugees. Elderly immigrants interviewe­d by the Sun Sentinel said they came primarily to be with family, met the aid qualificat­ions and are grateful for the help.

Jose Angel Rodriguez immigrated at 81 to join his daughter. He now lives in Miami on food stamps, Medicaid and SSI. “It wasn't that bad in Cuba,” he said. “But here, I'm better.”

Elisa Diaz came at 75 to be near her three children in the U.S. She lives in Miami in a subsidized apartment, gets food stamps and $700 a month in SSI. The benefits, she said, are much better than pensions in Cuba—about $7 a month.

Cubans are eligible for government assistance for up to seven years after they arrive in the U.S., and longer if they become citizens. Most elderly immigrants from other nations must first become citizens to receive Supplement­al Security Income—a process that takes at least five years.

The special status that Cubans have enjoyed for decades has helped make Miami-Dade top in the nation among large counties in the percentage of people over 65 collecting SSI, the Sun Sentinel found in an analysis of Census and Social Security data. Miami-Dade had more seniors on SSI than all other Florida counties combined in 2013.

Cubans know about the government program before they leave the island, said Jose Rolon-Rivera, a former Social Security judge in Miami.

Some move in with grown children or relatives already here and receive U.S. aid even though their families have the means to support them, according to annual Census surveys.

A couple with a toddler in south Miami-Dade County, with a combined annual income of $125,000, brought over the husband's 67-year-old father, who then collected food stamps and $8,400 a year in SSI.

A Miami Lakes woman and her husband took in her aging parents, who qualified for $7,200 a year in SSI. The family's household income: $144,200.

Congress created Supplement­al Security Income in 1972 as a safety net for disabled adults and children, and poor seniors. Its use mushroomed over the next two decades, particular­ly among immigrants.

SSI had become so popular among elderly Chinese in California that they considered it a right of immigratio­n and viewed it nonchalant­ly, like getting a library card, a University of California professor testified during a 1996 welfare reform debate. Congress cut new immigrants off of SSI but made an exception for Cubans and grandfathe­red in some other immigrants who were already here or had long work histories in the U.S.

The monthly payments are considered a vital source of income for many elderly Cubans, and Congress, at the behest of Florida's influentia­l delegation, has protected their eligibilit­y.

Juan Fleites, who came when he was 62 and never worked in the U.S., is grateful for the help. Now a U.S. citizen, he lives in a government-subsidized apartment and receives SSI and food stamps, saving enough to visit Cuba every two to three months.

“This is the greatest country in the world,” he said.

 ?? Associated Press ?? Elisa Diaz, 78, from Hialeah, Fla., is grateful for the financial assistance that Cuban immigrants are entitled to in the United States.
Associated Press Elisa Diaz, 78, from Hialeah, Fla., is grateful for the financial assistance that Cuban immigrants are entitled to in the United States.

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