USA TODAY International Edition

Calif. opens health care to young adult migrants

About 100,000 eligible under $98 million plan

- John Bacon

Gov. Gavin Newsom signed legislatio­n making California the first state to provide health care coverage to young undocument­ed adults, a $98 million measure targeting almost 100,000 people.

The immigrants, ages 19 to 25, are eligible for Medi-Cal, the state’s Medicaid program. The law signed Tuesday was a win for Newsom, who rejected as too expensive a state Senate plan to include adults 65 and older living in the state illegally.

President Donald Trump has called the plan “crazy.” Newsom shrugs off

the criticism, calling California “the most un-Trump” state in the nation.

Newsom signed the measure the same day the state forecast an average premium increase of less than 1% for 2020 in the state’s individual insurance marketplac­e, the lowest such rate change in the state program’s history.

The coverage expansion and the low average premium increase are mostly being funded through restoratio­n of the individual mandate that requires state residents to purchase health insurance for themselves and their dependents. California­ns who fail to buy insurance would face a state tax penalty.

The plan is similar to a part of President Barack Obama’s health care law that Republican­s in Congress eliminated as part of the 2017 tax code overhaul.

Not that the state is desperate for cash: California is projected to have a surplus of more than $20 billion, the largest in 20 years.

“The bold moves by Gov. Newsom and the Legislatur­e will save California­ns hundreds of millions of dollars in premiums and provide new financial assistance to middle-income California­ns, which will help people get covered and stay covered,” said Peter Lee, Covered California’s executive director.

Lee said California is “building on the success of the Affordable Care Act” and expanding coverage to hundreds of thousands of people. The California Immigrant Policy Center lauded the inclusion of undocument­ed young adults but called the plan “bitterswee­t.”

“The exclusion of undocument­ed elders from the same health care their U.S. citizen neighbors are eligible for means beloved community members will suffer and die from treatable conditions,” said Cynthia Buiza, executive director of the California Immigrant Policy Center.

Newsom has pledged to further expand coverage. The new rules are effective in January and are part of a larger effort to ensure everyone in the state has access to health insurance.

 ?? JEFF CHIU/AP ?? Newsom is “un-Trump.”
JEFF CHIU/AP Newsom is “un-Trump.”

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