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Senate OKs health coverage for undocumented children

Demonstrators seeking more funding for health care coverage gathered recently at the state Capitol. Inside, the Senate voted to expand coverage to undocumented choldren. (Photo: Alvin Chen, Capitol Weekly)

The state Senate has approved legislation that would make California the first state in the nation to extend health coverage to children who are in the country illegally and seek federal authorization to sell private insurance to those in the country illegally.

Senators approved a bill that would allow children under 19 from low-income families to qualify for state-funded Medi-Cal, regardless of their legal status. It also would seek a federal waiver for California to sell unsubsidized private health insurance through the state’s health exchange, known as Covered California.

The bill, SB4, advanced to the Assembly on a bipartisan vote, 28-11.

Sen. Ricardo Lara, a Democrat from Bell Gardens, hailed his bill as a historic move to expand access to health care on behalf of millions of immigrant workers who toil in the fields, clean hotel rooms and provide child care. If passed and signed by Gov. Jerry Brown, enrollment will be limited depending on the amount lawmakers approve in next year’s budget.

“Ensuring that every child in California grows up healthy with an opportunity to thrive and succeed is simply the right thing to do,” Lara said in presenting his bill. “It is what we are about in California.”

Some Republicans warned that it won’t help immigrants access doctors because of the shortage of providers who accept Medi-Cal, California’s version of Medicaid. GOP Sen. Janet Nguyen from Garden Grove abstained from the vote, saying that the proposal amounted to an empty promise.

“Make sure that we don’t promise someone a car if there’s no engine in it,” Nguyen said.

California Democrats, immigration groups and health care advocates have been galvanized by President Barack Obama’s executive order to spare some immigrants from deportation due in response to a lack of comprehensive immigration reform.

The president’s action excludes immigrants who came to the country illegally from qualifying for federal health benefits. But California has its own policy of providing health coverage with state money to low-income immigrants under Medi-Cal.

A legislative analysis estimates the cost to expand Medi-Cal to immigrant children will depend on the outcome of a legal challenge to Obama’s executive order.

It would cost up to $135 million a year without the president’s executive action and up to $83 million a year with the president’s action based on protection for 900,000 of the state’s 2.5 million immigrants without documentation.

Brown, a Democrat, has been reluctant to increase spending in his fourth and final term and has not said whether he would sign the bill. Supporters initially proposed expanding health coverage to all immigrants regardless of their legal status but narrowed the scope of their proposal in recent weeks, hoping to entice the governor’s support.
–Associated Press

 

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