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Immigrants and Public Benefits in Nebraska

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Title: Immigrants and Public Benefits in Nebraska


1
Immigrants and Public Benefits in Nebraska
Rebecca L. Gould, J.D.
Executive Director
2
Facts About Immigrants
  • 85 of immigrant families with children live in
    mixed status families.
  • Almost 43 of immigrants work at jobs paying less
    than 7.50 an hour, compared to 28 of all
    workers.
  • Only 26 of immigrants have job-based health
    insurance.
  • Only 13.2 percent of low-income non-citizens
    used Medicaid in 2001, compared with 33 of
    low-income citizens.
  • Welfare does not drive migration patterns.
    Between 1995 and 2000, the number of immigrant
    families with children grew four times faster in
    states with the least generous safety nets for
    immigrants (such as Arkansas and Texas) than it
    did in states with more generous safety nets
    (such as California).

3
Immigrant Eligibility for Federal Public Benefits
  • 1996 Welfare Reform The Personal Responsibility
    and Work Opportunity Reconciliation Act (PRWORA)
  • Added substantial restrictions on the receipt of
    federal public benefits.
  • Transferred to state and local governments
    authority to offer or deny eligibility to
    immigrants under some federal and state benefit
    programs.
  • Prior to PRWORA undocumented immigrants were
    already ineligible for most federal public
    benefits. The brunt of the restrictions under
    PRWORA actually applied to lawfully present
    immigrants.
  • However, over half of the states, including
    Nebraska, continue to spend state dollars to
    cover at least some of the immigrants who are
    ineligible for federally funded services.

4
Immigrant Eligibility for Federal Public Benefits
  • Qualified vs. Not Qualified Immigrants
  • Federal Public Benefits
  • Verification
  • The 5 Year Bar
  • Sponsorship Deeming

5
Qualified vs. Not Qualified Immigrants
  • PRWORA divided immigrants into two groups,
    Qualified and Not Qualified.
  • Qualified Immigrants
  • Lawful permanent residents (holders of green
    cards).
  • Refugees Asylees.
  • Persons granted withholding of deportation/removal
    .
  • Conditional entrants Cuban Haitian entrants.
  • Persons granted parole for a period of at least
    one year.
  • Certain abused immigrants, their children, and/or
    their parents.
  • Not Qualified Immigrants all other immigrants
    as well as many immigrants who do not have green
    cards but are lawfully present.

6
Federal Public Benefits
  • PRWORA prohibits not qualified immigrants from
    enrolling in most federal public benefits
    programs.
  • PRWORA does not clearly define federal public
    benefits, leaving it up to each federal agency
    to determine which of its programs meet the
    definition.
  • (A) any grant, contract, loan, professional
    license, or commercial license provided by an
    agency of the U.S. or by appropriated funds of
    the U.S., and (B) any retirement, welfare, health
    , disability, public or assisted housing,
    postsecondary education, food assistance,
    unemployment, benefit, or any other similar
    benefit for which payments, or assistance are
    provided to an individual, household, or family
    eligibility unit by an agency of the U.S. or
    appropriated funds of the U.S.

7
Federal Public Benefits
  • The Federal Department of Health and Human
    Services has designated the following as federal
    public benefits
  • Medicaid, SCHIP (Kids Connection), Medicare
  • TANF (ADC)
  • Foster Care, Adoption Assistance
  • Child Care
  • LIHEAP

8
Federal Public Benefits
  • Exceptions to the restrictions
  • Emergency Medicaid
  • Public Health Immunization and Communicable
    Disease Programs
  • School Meal Programs WIC
  • In-kind services to protect life or safety as
    long as there is no income requirement
  • Child and adult protective services, weather
    emergency programs, homeless programs, shelters,
    soup kitchens, meals-on-wheels etc.

9
Verification
  • For federal public benefits programs, States
    are required to verify all applicants
    immigration and citizenship status.
  • Declaration under the pains and penalties of
    perjury
  • Documentation requirements

10
The 5 Year Bar
  • The 1996 laws barred most qualified immigrants
    who entered the U.S. on or after August 22, 1996
    from receiving federal means-tested public
    benefits during the first five years after they
    become qualified immigrants.
  • Most qualified immigrants cannot receive federal
    public benefits for five years after becoming
    qualified.

11
The 5 Year Bar
  • Federal means-tested public benefits are
  • Supplemental Security Income (SSI)
  • Food Stamps
  • Medicaid (except emergency Medicaid)
  • TANF (ADC)
  • SCHIP (Kids Connection)

12
The 5 Year Bar
  • Exempt from the 5 Year Bar
  • Refugees
  • Asylees
  • People granted withholding of deportation/removal
  • Cuban/Haitian entrants
  • Amerasian immigrants
  • Victims of trafficking
  • Veterans
  • Active duty military and their spouses and
    children

13
Special Rules for SSI and Food Stamps
  • PRWORA imposed the harshest restrictions on the
    Food Stamp and SSI programs.
  • SSI is not available to most qualified
    immigrants who came to the U.S. after 1996 and
    seniors without disabilities who were in the U.S.
    before 1996.
  • Food Stamps
  • Originally, most qualified immigrants were
    barred from the Food Stamp program.
  • The 2002 farm bill restored food stamp
    eligibility to 3 groups of qualified immigrants.
  • Those who have lived in the U.S. for at least 5
    years (5 year bar)
  • Children regardless of their date of entry
  • Persons receiving disability-related assistance
    regardless of their date of entry.

14
Sponsorship Deeming
  • Under the 1996 laws, family members and some
    employers eligible to file a petition to help a
    person immigrate must become financial sponsors
    of the immigrant by signing a contract with the
    government called an affidavit of support.
  • Enforceable Affidavit the sponsor promises to
    support the immigrant, maintaining them at 125
    of the federal poverty level, and to repay
    certain benefits that the immigrant may use.
  • In some cases, the law requires the agency to
    deem the income of the immigrants sponsor or
    the sponsors spouse as available to the
    immigrant.
  • The sponsors income and resources are added to
    the immigrants, which can take them over the
    income/resource guidelines for the program.

15
Sponsorship Deeming
  • 1996 laws authorize deeming for approximately 10
    years (40 quarters of work) or longer for
  • TANF (ADC)
  • food stamps
  • SSI
  • Medicaid
  • SCHIP (Kids Connection).

16
Sponsorship Deeming
  • Nebraska (Neb. Rev. Stat. 68-1070).
  • Requires sponsorship deeming in
  • TANF (ADC)
  • Food stamps
  • Medicaid/SCHIP (Kids Connection)
  • SSI

17
Sponsorship Deeming
  • Exceptions to Sponsorship Deeming
  • Domestic violence survivors.
  • Immigrants who would go hungry or homeless
    without assistance.
  • Can get benefits for 12 months without deeming.

18
Other Barriers to Assistance
  • Sponsor Liability
  • Public Charge
  • Language Access
  • Reporting Requirement to Department of Homeland
    Security
  • Verification Procedures

19
Sponsor Liability
  • Enforceable affidavits of support require
    sponsors to agree to maintain the immigrant at
    125 fpl and repay and means-tested benefits they
    may receive.
  • Means-tested benefits are TANF (ADC), SSI, food
    stamps, non-emergency Medicaid, and SCHIP (Kids
    Connection).
  • However, very few immigrants with enforceable
    affidavits of support are eligible for these
    programs.
  • States have not attempted to pursue
    reimbursement.
  • Concern over liability has deterred eligible
    immigrants from applying for benefits.

20
Public Charge
  • The public charge provision allows immigration
    officials to deny applications for permanent
    residency if the authorities determine the
    intending immigrant is likely to become a public
    charge.
  • In determining public charge they look at the
    totality of the circumstances, including an
    immigrants health, age, income, education and
    skills, and affidavits of support.
  • The law on public charge did not change in 1996
    and the use of public benefits programs had never
    been a major factor in determinations of public
    charge.
  • May 1999 guidance clarifies that receipt of
    health care and other non-cash benefits will not
    jeopardize the immigration status of recipients
    or other family members under public charge
    provisions.

21
Language Access
  • Limited English Proficiency (LEP)
  • 18 of the U.S. population speak a language other
    than English at home.
  • 8 of the U.S. population do not speak English
    well.
  • Title VI of the Civil Rights Act of 1964
  • prohibits recipients of federal funds from
    discriminating on the basis of national origin.
    Failure to provide language services may be
    considered national origin discrimination.
  • HHS is required under the guidance to provide
    interpretation to clients free of charge and to
    translate vital documents, including notices of
    action.

22
Reporting to Department of Homeland Security
  • The 1996 laws contained a reporting requirement
    that agency officials report to HHS people whom
    the agency knows are not lawfully present in the
    U.S.
  • Only applies to people who are applying for
    benefits, not relatives applying on their behalf.
  • Only applies to three programs
  • SSI, Public Housing, and TANF (ADC).
  • No reporting unless there has been a formal
    determination, subject to administrative appeal,
    on a claim for benefits.
  • The conclusion must also be supported by a
    determination by the immigration authorities such
    as a final order of deportation.

23
Reporting to Department of Homeland Security
  • Things that do not trigger the reporting
    requirement
  • HHS response to a SAVE computer inquiry
    indicating an immigrants status.
  • Oral or written admission by applicants.
  • Suspicions of agency workers.
  • Agencies are not required to make determinations
    about immigration status that are not necessary
    to determine eligibility for benefits.

24
Verification Procedures
  • There has been confusion over what information
    needs to be gathered and how it should be
    gathered. As a result, some forms ask questions
    that are not necessary for determining
    eligibility for programs.
  • Agencies can and should use the Systematic Alien
    Verification for Entitlements (SAVE) program.
  • Agencies should make financial and other
    eligibility determinations before asking the
    applicant for information about immigration
    status.
  • Agencies should only seek information about the
    person applying for benefits, and not about other
    family members. Agencies should designate these
    family members as non-applicants.

25
Overview of Key Programs
  • TANF (ADC)
  • Medicaid/SCHIP (Kids Connection)
  • Food Stamps
  • Child Care
  • SSI
  • WIC
  • LIHEAP
  • Child Nutrition Programs
  • Refugee Resettlement Assistance
  • Earned Income Tax Credit (EITC)
  • Legal Services

26
TANF (ADC)
  • Temporary Assistance for Needy Families (TANF)
    called Aid to Dependent Children (ADC) in
    Nebraska.
  • Provides monthly cash assistance to help families
    meet their basic needs.
  • Adults are required to participate in Employment
    First, Nebraskas welfare to work program, doing
    40 hours a week of a work activity.
  • Eligibility is at 46 of the federal poverty
    level.

27
TANF (ADC) Special Considerations for Immigrants
  • Eligible children may receive TANF (ADC) even if
    their parents are ineligible.
  • Eligibility can be affected by deeming.
  • Will count the income and resources of the
    sponsor and the sponsors spouse if they are
    living together.
  • Exception for those who have been subject to
    domestic violence amounting to extreme cruelty
    and it has been verified by a judge or
    administrative law judge.
  • May be public charge consequences.

28
TANF (ADC) Special Considerations for Immigrants
  • New citizenship documentation requirement.
  • Is the same requirement applied to the Medicaid
    program.

29
Medicaid/SCHIP (Kids Connection)
  • Provides health care coverage to low-income
    parents, children, pregnant women, seniors and
    people with disabilities.
  • Payments are made directly to providers for
    medically necessary services.
  • Eligibility varies based on age/situation.
  • Low-income parents 46 fpl
  • Children100-185 fpl
  • Pregnant women 185 fpl
  • Seniors100 fpl
  • People with disabilities 100-250 fpl

30
Medicaid/SCHIP Special Considerations for
Immigrants
  • Immigrants regardless of status are eligible for
    Emergency Medicaid if they meet the other
    eligibility requirements for the appropriate
    category.
  • Emergency a medical condition (including labor
    and delivery) with acute symptoms that could
    place the patients health in serious jeopardy,
    result in serious impairment to bodily functions,
    or cause serious dysfunction of any bodily organ
    or part.

31
Medicaid/SCHIP Special Considerations for
Immigrants
  • Eligible children can receive Medicaid even if
    their parents are ineligible for Medicaid based
    on their immigration status.
  • Migrant workers can be considered residents of
    the state to meet the residency requirement.
  • Eligibility may be affected by deeming.
  • Medicaid does not carry public charge
    consequences.

32
New Medicaid Citizenship Documentation Requirement
  • Passed as part of the Deficit Reduction Act of
    2005 (DRA). Goal was to address the myth that
    undocumented immigrants were fraudulently
    declaring citizenship to receive Medicaid.
  • Requires certain Medicaid recipients to document
    their citizenship and identity.
  • Medicare and SSI recipients and title IV-E foster
    kids are exempt from this requirement.

33
Food Stamps
  • Provides a monthly allotment of money on an
    Electronic Benefits Transfer (EBT) card, which is
    similar to a debit card.
  • EBT cards can only be used to purchase food
    products, not alcohol, tobacco, or paper
    products.
  • Income eligibility is 130 fpl.
  • Able bodied adults must participate in 30 hours a
    week of a work activity.

34
Food Stamps Special Considerations for
Immigrants
  • Eligible children can receive food stamps even if
    their parents are ineligible for food stamps
    based on their immigration status.
  • Eligibility may be affected deeming.
  • Sponsors income and resources are counted. The
    spouse of the sponsors income and resources are
    only counted if the spouse signed the affidavit
    of support.
  • Populations exempt from deeming
  • People sponsored by an organization or employer
  • People participating in their sponsors food stamp
    household
  • Children age 17 or younger
  • Indigent immigrants
  • Battered spouse or child
  • Ineligible or disqualified household members.
  • Food stamps do not carry public charge
    consequences.

35
Child Care
  • Pays child care providers for part or all of a
    households child care expenses each month.
  • Provided to children under age 13, or under age
    19 if the child is disabled.
  • Parents must be participating in a work activity
    during the time care is provided.
  • Eligibility is at 120 fpl or 185 fpl for
    transitional child care.

36
Child Care Special Considerations for Immigrants
  • Eligible for Child Care Development Fund (CCDF)
    child care in Nebraska
  • Qualified immigrant children.
  • All immigrants regardless of status when
  • Child care is provided in settings subject to
    public educational standards, including public or
    private pre-kindergarten or public and private
    child care provided after school or during school
    holidays.
  • Child care is subject to Head Start performance
    standards.
  • Eligibility for child care services is determined
    by a nonprofit charitable organization.
  • Not eligible for CCDF child care in Nebraska
  • Not qualified immigrants.

37
Child Care Special Considerations for Immigrants
  • Child care assistance does not carry public
    charge consequences.
  • Child care providers who take children receiving
    child care assistance may be required to provide
    an employer tax identification number or Social
    Security Number.

38
Supplemental Security Income (SSI)
  • Monthly cash check to folks who are
  • 65 or older.
  • Blind.
  • Disabled adults (physical/mental impairment
    expected to last at least 12 months or to result
    in death and prevents substantial gainful
    activity.)
  • Disabled children (physical/mental impairment
    expected to last at least 12 months or to result
    in death and result in marked and severe
    functional limitations.)

39
SSI Special Considerations for Immigrants
  • Receipt of SSI may have public charge
    consequences.
  • Eligibility may be affected by deeming.
  • Parents ineligible for SSI based on immigration
    status may receive SSI on behalf of an eligible
    child.
  • Parents who do not have a SSN may still apply to
    become a disabled childs representative payee.
  • For immigrants 65 or older, their age,
    impairments associated with advanced age,
    illiteracy, or inability to communicate in
    English are weighed in the disability
    determination for immigrants over 72, any
    medically determinable impairments are considered
    severe.

40
Special Supplemental Nutrition Program for Women,
Infants and Children (WIC)
  • Provides food vouchers, nutrition education, and
    access to health care for low-income pregnant
    women, new mothers, infants, and children under
    five years of age who are at nutritional risk.
  • Food vouchers can be used for milk, infant
    formula, juice, cereal, cheese, and eggs.
  • Income eligibility is 185 fpl.
  • All immigrants regardless of status are eligible.

41
Low Income Home Energy Assistance Program (LIHEAP)
  • Heating and cooling assistance payments to help
    offset costs.
  • Crisis energy assistance to cover unpaid
    bills/prevent shut offs.
  • Weatherization such as insulation, weather
    sealants, and other energy related home repairs.
  • Eligibility at 116 fpl.

42
LIHEAP Special Considerations for Immigrants
  • Eligible for Heating, Cooling, and Crisis
    assistance in Nebraska
  • Qualified immigrants.
  • Eligible for LIHEAP Weatherization
  • Single-Unit Dwellings
  • Qualified immigrants.
  • Multi-Unit Dwellings
  • Families living in multi-unit dwellings are
    eligible without regard to the immigration status
    of the inhabitants.

43
Child Nutrition Programs
  • Free or reduced price meals or snacks to children
    in schools, child care centers, family child care
    homes, residential institutions, summer day
    camps, and after school programs.
  • School Lunch and Breakfast Programs, Child and
    Adult Care Food Programs (CACFP), Summer Food
    Program.
  • Income Eligibility 130 fpl for free meals, 185
    fpl for reduce priced meals.

44
Child Nutrition Programs Special Considerations
for Immigrants
  • Eligible for Child Nutrition Programs in
    Nebraska
  • All immigrants regardless of status.
  • The family may be required to fill out a
    financial application to participate in school
    meal programs. The form may ask for a Social
    Security Number but the applicant can just write
    none in the blank.

45
Refugee Resettlement Assistance
  • Newly arrived refugees are eligible for all
    public assistance programs offered by HHS. If
    refugees are determined ineligible for public
    assistance programs, eligibility will be
    determined for the following funds, which are
    made available for the first eight months after
    arrival in the United States
  • Refugee Resettlement Program (RRP) Also known
    as Refugee Cash Assistance (RCA). Cash payments
    to low-income refugees who are ineligible for
    TANF (ADC), SSI, or similar programs for seniors
    and persons with disabilities
  • Refugee Medical Assistance Program (RMAP)
    Medical assistance to low-income refugees
    ineligible for Medicaid and/or SCHIP (Kids
    Connection)

46
Refugee Resettlement Assistance Special
Considerations for Immigrants
  • Eligible for Refugee Resettlement Assistance in
    Nebraska
  • Refugee categories refugees, asylees, Amerasian
    immigrant, Cuban/Haitian entrant, or immigrants
    paroled as refugees or asylees.
  • Victims of trafficking.

47
Refugee Resettlement Assistance Special
Considerations for Immigrants
  • Refugees and most other immigrants eligible for
    RRP/RCA are not subject to public charge
    inquiries. However, RRP/RCA may have public
    charge consequences for those subject to public
    charge inquiries.

48
Earned Income Tax Credit
  • Federal tax credit available to low income
    workers including workers whose earnings were too
    small to have been taxable.
  • The amount varies based on income and the number
    of children in the household.
  • Advanced EITC payments may be available to some
    individuals.
  • Available to full and part-time workers who claim
    the credit on their federal tax return (even if
    they did not have enough earnings to be required
    to file a return) and have low to moderate income
    and support a qualifying child or are between
    the ages of 25 and 64 with very low income.
  • Those eligible for the federal EITC are also
    eligible for Nebraskas state EITC that pays an
    additional 10 of the amount paid by the federal
    EITC.

49
EITC Special Considerations for Immigrants
  • Eligible for the federal EITC and Nebraska EITC
  • Immigrants with SSNs valid for work.
  • Each person listed on the schedule EITC must have
    a valid SSN for work purposes.
  • ITIN numbers and non-work SSNs will not satisfy
    this requirement.
  • Workers and qualifying children must have lived
    together in the U.S. for at least 6 months in a
    given tax year (or for at least 12 months for
    foster children).
  • The workers main home must be in the U.S.

50
Legal Services (Legal Aid)
  • Legal Services Corporation (LSC) provides grants
    to legal service programs to give free legal
    services to low-income clients in non-criminal
    matters such as public benefits, housing,
    consumer issues, employment, education, and
    family law.
  • Income eligibility depends on the legal issue.

51
Legal Services Special Considerations for
Immigrants
  • Eligible immigrants in Nebraska
  • Lawful permanent residents
  • Refugees, asylees, persons granted withholding of
    removal/deportation.
  • Victims of trafficking.
  • Conditional entrants.
  • Immigrants who have filed an application for
    adjustment of status.
  • Special Agricultural Workers.
  • Nonimmigrant agricultural laborers (H2A workers)
  • Certain American Indians born outside the U.S.
  • Foreign Nationals
  • Certain victims of domestic violence regardless
    of their status.

52
Nebraska Appleseed Center for Law in the Public
Interest
Questions?
Rebecca L. Gould, JD 941 O Street, Suite 105
Lincoln, NE 68508 (402) 438-8853
1-800-845-3746
wdpp_at_neappleseed.org www.NeAppleseed.org
Sowing the Seeds of Justice since 1996.
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