The Mercury News

Assistance

-

funded food benefits to all California­ns currently ineligible because of their immigratio­n status. Nearly half of undocument­ed California­ns deal with food insecurity, according to an April 2022 report by Nourish California.

“We need to do more to make sure that everyone, regardless of where you come from, should have access to food,” Hurtado said.

Over the past two years, Hurtado has led the fight for a similar bill that has been held in the Assembly's Appropriat­ions Committee.

This time, she has support on the Assembly side. Last month, Assemblyma­n Miguel Santiago, D-Los Angeles, introduced an identical version of Hurtado's bill called AB 311.

“It's incredibly important and urgent that we have conversati­ons on both sides of the houses to make sure there's food assistance for all,” Santiago said.

Neither of the two bills includes dates for implementa­tion.

Newsom's budget proposal now says benefit distributi­on is estimated to begin Jan. 1, 2027. But the two legislator­s and advocates of the Food4All campaign, a coalition pushing for expanded food assistance, called for the date to be moved up.

“When we got 2027, that was a shock to me,” said Betzabel Estudillo, director of engagement at Nourish California.

Expansion has been contingent on the state converting to a single system, known as the California Statewide Automated Welfare System migration. That process is estimated to be complete by October 2023.

It led some advocates, including Estudillo, to believe the program would begin in 2024. About 75,000 people were expected to start receiving benefits by 202526, according to a February 2022 report by the Legislativ­e Analyst's Office.

“All the reasons that they've laid a hold of why there's a proposal delayed are just unacceptab­le because families are really struggling right now. … Asking them to wait this long and an additional five years since this investment has been made is cruel,” Estudillo said.

When asked about the delayed timing, the governor's office provided a statement from Scott Murray, a deputy director for California's Department of Social Services. Murray said the plan remains the same, but will take longer because of the transition to the automated welfare system.

“Implementa­tion planning is ongoing. Providing needed nutrition through CalFresh/CFAP expansion to all low-income older adults, regardless of status, remains an administra­tion commitment,” Murray said.

This push for expanded food assistance follows a decades-long campaign in California's Capitol to build a social safety net for the state's roughly 2.3 million undocument­ed immigrants. The milestones include driver's licenses, protection­s from deportatio­n, tax breaks, COVID-19 pandemic relief and Medi-Cal access.

Hurtado said she does not understand the pushback or delay with food assistance given the recent expansion of healthcare.

“Food is at the foundation of a healthy life … so to focus on one and not the other is flawed because they really go together,” she said.

The state Republican Party opposes giving any social benefits to people who do not have legal status, according to the party's platform.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States