The Guardian (USA)

Biden administra­tion expands healthcare coverage for Daca recipients

- Lauren Gambino in Washington and Jessica Glenza

The Biden administra­tion on Friday finalized a rule that would expand healthcare coverage for immigrants who came to the US as children and are shielded from deportatio­n under the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program, known as Daca.

Under the new rule, recipients of the Obama-era Daca program would be newly eligible to access healthcare coverage through the Affordable Care Act marketplac­es for the first time.

In a statement, Biden hailed the rule as a “historic step” but acknowledg­ed that only Congress could provide Dreamers and their families the security of permanent status and a pathway to citizenshi­p.

“Today, my administra­tion is expanding affordable, quality healthcare coverage to Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (Daca) recipients,” the president said. “Dreamers are our loved ones, our nurses, teachers and small business owners. And they deserve the promise of healthcare just like all of us.”

The White House move comes amid a searing election-year debate over immigratio­n, as Republican­s, led by their presumptiv­e presidenti­al nominee, Donald Trump, attempt to blame a rise in border crossings on Biden and his administra­tion’s polices.

Enrollees of the Daca program are authorized to study and work in the US, where they collective­ly pay an estimated $6.2bn in federal taxes every year. However, Daca enrollees were not eligible for government-subsidized health insurance programs because they were not by definition “lawfully present” in the US.

The rule modifies that definition to ensure Daca recipients are not excluded from individual healthcare marketplac­es due to their immigratio­n status.

Like the majority of Americans, most Daca recipients get health insurance through an employer. But about one-third of the 580,000 Daca recipients do not have access to insurance, and until now were ineligible for federal health programs. Recipients of Daca are about three times more likely than the general public to be uninsured.

The administra­tion estimates that the new policy could cover as many as 100,000 previously uninsured Daca recipients. At a federal cost of about $5,000 a person, the program is expected to cost less than $1bn.

The rule change does not make Daca recipients eligible for Medicaid, a health insurance program for poor and disabled Americans that is jointly run by the states and federal government. Proposals to make Daca recipients eligible for Medicaid infuriated Republican­s, even as many a left-leaning states have extended Medicaid to to immigrants or their children, including those living in the US without authorizat­ion. Medicaid is often states’ largest budget line item.

“Making Dreamers eligible to enroll in coverage will improve their health and wellbeing and strengthen the health and wellbeing of our nation and our economy,” the health and human services secretary, Xavier Becerra, told reporters, applauding so-called Dreamers as immigrants “who have worked hard to live the American dream”.

Uninsured people are more likely to skip preventive services, delay treatment when they are ill and to be saddled with medical debt. An estimated 22 million people in the US lacked health insurance in 2022 – an all-time low expected to climb as states boot people off Medicaid following the pandemic.

Daca recipients can apply for coverage through HealthCare.gov and state-based marketplac­es in November, and some may be eligible for financial assistance. However, like many Americans, even Daca recipients with insurance will not be entirely shielded from healthcare’s exorbitant cost.

Federally regulated insurance marketplac­es have among the highest cost-sharing in the industry. For people who are not low-income, insurers can force people on a family plan to kick in up to $18,900 a year. The exchanges were establishe­d through the ACA, a law better known as “Obamacare” that Biden helped push through Congress in 2010 as vice-president. During Trump’s presidency, Republican­s tried and failed repeatedly to repeal the law, which has grown in popularity.

Daca was created in 2012 by then president Barack Obama, after more than a decade of failed attempts by Congress to pass an overhaul of the nation’s beleaguere­d immigratio­n system. The White House action comes as the program, which has served roughly 800,000 immigrants since its creation, is in legal peril with its fate ultimately expected to be decided by the supreme court.

A bipartisan border bill, backed by Biden and other top Democrats, did not include a pathway to citizenshi­p for the hundreds of millions of Daca recipients, known as Dreamers. The legislatio­n was derailed by Trump shortly after it was unveiled in the Senate earlier this year.

But the lack of a provision providing a pathway to citizenshi­p for Dreamers, a broadly popular policy proposal that was once a top priority for Democratic lawmakers, was a major setback for immigrant rights advocates.

“Congress must act to ensure that Dreamers can remain here permanentl­y, so that they can fully contribute to our communitie­s and our country,” Neera Tanden, the White House domestic policy adviser, told reporters. “Dreamers are part of the American fabric. They’re our friends, neighbors and coworkers and we must do right by that, not just for them but for the country.”

 ?? ?? A rally in support of Daca recipients in Los Angeles on 12 November 2019. Photograph: Mario Tama/Getty Images
A rally in support of Daca recipients in Los Angeles on 12 November 2019. Photograph: Mario Tama/Getty Images

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