Press Release: New Report Highlights Opportunity for New York State to Expand Immigrant Health Care Coverage

For Immediate Release

*Press Release*

NEW REPORT HIGHLIGHTS OPPORTUNITIES FOR NEW YORK STATE TO EXPAND IMMIGRANT HEALTH CARE COVERAGE


New York Must Address Eligibility, Documentation, Outreach, and Oversight Barriers to Ensure Access to Health Care for Immigrant New Yorkers

February 6, 2013 (New York) – As New York State works to implement the Affordable Care Act and establish its Health Benefit Exchange, key opportunities exist to expand immigrants’ access to health reform. A report released today by the New York Immigration Coalition (NYIC), the New York State Health Foundation (NYSHealth), and Empire Justice Center urges New York State policymakers to preserve and promote immigrants’ access to health care coverage and offers recommendations to mitigate disparities between citizens and noncitizens in health care.

The report, “Maximizing Health Care Reform for New York’s Immigrants,” written by the NYIC in conjunction with Empire Justice Center,  highlights opportunities for New York to address key factors that can ameliorate or impede immigrants’ access to health care coverage, including eligibility classifications; documentation and verification policies and practices; marketing and outreach; and oversight and monitoring. The report also includes recommendations for ensuring access to care for those immigrants who will remain uninsured even after health reform is implemented. 

Federal health reform will expand coverage opportunities and increase access to care for many of New York State’s uninsured residents, but there are gaps in federal Affordable Care Act provisions regarding the inclusion of immigrants. For example, lawful immigrants will continue to face federal restrictions on enrolling in public health insurance programs, and undocumented immigrants are barred from most types of public coverage and from purchasing coverage in new Health Benefit Exchanges. The report offers recommendations for how New York State can address the health care needs of those left out of federal reform by making policy choices at the state level that expand access to health care coverage for immigrants, as well as by strengthening its safety net system.

“The full participation of immigrants in the Exchange is critical to meeting the goals of health reform,” said Chung-Wha Hong, executive director of the New York Immigration Coalition. “It will be up to New York State to craft an Exchange and related public health programs that are responsive the needs of immigrant New Yorkers. This is the chance for New York to create a health program that serves as a national model for reducing health disparities.”

[Photo left to right] Chung-Wha Hong, executive director of the New York Immigration Coalition and Jackie Vimo, director of advocacy at the New York Immigration Coalition introduce the report, “Maximizing Health Care Reform for New York’s Immigrants.”

New York State’s noncitizens (both lawfully present and undocumented) are three times as likely as citizens to lack health insurance coverage. Impediments to coverage include working for small businesses that are less likely to offer health insurance, having misconceptions about the effect of documentation and public health benefits on their immigration status, and encountering language barriers in enrollment and retention process.

“With implementation of the health reform law, we have an unprecedented opportunity to extend health insurance coverage to more than 1.2 million New Yorkers,” said James R. Knickman, president and CEO of NYSHealth. “Our success in achieving an affordable, equitable health care system that covers as many people as possible is dependent largely on how well the State implements the Affordable Care Act, and how well it serves our immigrant population.”

[Photo above] James R. Knickman, president and chief executive officer of the New York State Health Foundation speaks about the report’s recommendations.

“The health care exchange opens up an exciting new avenue for New York’s immigrants to access affordable health care,” said Barbara Weiner, senior staff attorney at Empire Justice Center, a contributing author to the report. “Nevertheless, New York must continue in its praiseworthy tradition of providing help to those whom the federal government has continued to leave out in the cold.  The young people who are being granted deferred action because they were brought to the U.S. as young children comprise one such group.  Current federal policy excludes them from benefits under both Medicaid and the Exchange.”

[Photo above] Barbara Weiner, senior staff attorney of Empire Justice Center gives more details on the report.

Immigrant community-based organizations (CBOs), such as the New York Immigration Coalition’s 200 member groups, are immigrants’ main source of information and assistance in navigating the health care system. Incorporating these CBOs into outreach and enrollment efforts will be crucial for reaching immigrant communities.  

“With the help of the New York Immigration Coalition, KCS has been able to give presentations to uninsured seniors in our community about their options and help them through the murky public healthcare waters,” said Sandra Oh, community health educator, The Korean Community Services of Metropolitan New York, Inc.

Maha Attieh, health program manager at the Arab-American Family Support Center said, “The uninsured, underserved and low income people in my community reach out to me with many questions that I can’t answer. Due to language barriers, they don’t know how to navigate the system. I hope the new exchange program is affordable and easy to access for the Arab American community. We want our community to be insured and have access to health care to have a healthy life.”         

[Photo above] Maha Attieh, health program manager at the Arab-American Family Support Center speaks about the affect the new exchange program will have on immigrants in her community.

“We see hope that there will be rational and effective healthcare for New York immigrants through the soon to be implemented New York State Health Benefits Exchange,” said Siobhan Dennehy, executive director of Emerald Isle Immigration Services. “It is critically important that we all continue to work toward ending health care disparities which take such toll on the health of uninsured immigrants. We see hope that there will be no fear or confusion when uninsured immigrants seek health care under the NY State Health Benefits Exchange.”

The report made several key recommendations, including:

  • Shape the State’s definition of “lawfully present” to ensure the broadest possible inclusion of immigrants under the ACA. Currently, immigration definitions and eligibility for public benefits vary by program.
  • Develop mechanisms for verifying citizenship and immigration status while protecting confidentiality and due process. Enrollment into public insurance programs and the exchange will require verification and documentation of status. The State can streamline the verification requirements under ACA with existing programs while maintaining privacy.
  • Conduct tailored, active outreach and marketing to engage immigrants and enroll them in health insurance coverage programs. Given the tremendous racial, ethnic, cultural, and language diversity of the State’s residents, a range of tailored approaches to outreach and enrollment activities will be needed to meet the unique needs of multiple immigrant communities.
  • Secure the safety net and charity care programs. Undocumented immigrants and some others will remain uninsured even after health reform is implemented, so the safety-net system of care will remain important to New York State’s health care infrastructure.

Copies of the report are available by clicking HERE and upon request.

# # #

The New York Immigration Coalition is an umbrella policy and advocacy organization for nearly 200 groups in New York State that work with immigrants and refugees. The NYIC aims to achieve a fairer and more just society that values the contributions of immigrants and extends opportunity to all by promoting immigrants’ full civic participation, fosters their leadership, and provides a unified voice and a vehicle for collective action for New York’s diverse immigrant communities.

The New York State Health Foundation (NYSHealth) is a private, statewide foundation dedicated to improving the health of all New Yorkers, especially the most vulnerable. Today, NYSHealth concentrates its work in three strategic priority areas: expanding health care coverage; improving diabetes prevention; and advancing primary care. The Foundation is committed to making grants, informing health care policy and practice, spreading effective programs to improve the health system, serving as a neutral convener of health leaders across the State, and providing technical assistance to our grantees and partners.

Empire Justice Center is a statewide, multi-issue, multi-strategy public interest law firm focused on changing the “systems” within which poor and low income families live. With a focus on poverty law, Empire Justice undertakes research and training, acts as an informational clearinghouse, and provides litigation backup to local legal services programs and community based organizations.  As an advocacy organization, we engage in legislative and administrative advocacy on behalf of those impacted by poverty and discrimination.  As a non-profit law firm, we provide legal assistance to those in need and undertake impact litigation in order to protect and defend the rights of disenfranchised New Yorkers.

AALDEF Spring 2013 Internships

As seen on the AALDEF website:

SPRING 2013 INTERNSHIPS

Date posted: November 19, 2012
Experience level: For Undergraduate, Graduate, and Law Students

Spring internships are available for the following program areas (open to all unless otherwise noted):

AALDEF Fundraising Events: provide administrative support in preparation for AALDEF’s annual gala. Computer experience with databases, graphics, and web programs are helpful. **Undergraduate students ONLY.  Workstudy grants accepted.**

Anti-Trafficking Initiative: Legal research and writing, organizing/outreach, and legal advocacy for trafficked clients pursuant to the Trafficking Victims Protection Act and other related legislation. Fluency in Indonesian, Hindi, or Bangla highly preferred. **Law students ONLY. **

Economic Justice for Workers: Provide legal advocacy, direct representation, and community education on behalf of Asian immigrant workers experiencing wage-and-hour, retaliation, and workplace safety violations in the restaurant, beauty/nail salon, and domestic worker industries, among others. Undergraduate interns will perform research and community outreach. Fluency in a second language is highly preferred.

Educational Equity and Youth Rights: legal services, policy work, community education, research, and litigation concerning educational equity, juvenile justice, language access, student free-speech and police surveillance, and anti-Asian harassment.

Housing and Environmental Justice: community outreach/education, research, and litigation on gentrification and other land use issues affecting low-income and Asian immigrant communities.

Immigrant Access to Justice: litigation, legal services, and organizing/outreach with communities impacted by 9-11 immigration and law enforcement policies. An additional emphasis on Asian communities’ access to representation and education about immigration policies and practices that may impact them including unconstitutional DHS stops, new deferred action policies for youth, and secured communities.

Voting Rights: legal research and fact development under the Voting Rights Act and Equal Protection Clause challenging anti-Asian voter discrimination, advocacy on bilingual ballots, and the redrawing of local, state, and federal district lines; produce reports and organize public forums; assist in organizing legal trainings.  

Description of Internships:
Interns are supervised by attorneys and/or AALDEF staff in specific program areas. These internships are not paid positions, but academic credit can be arranged. Interns work anywhere between 8 to 25 hours per week.  Internships usually commence with the start of classes (end of January) through late April/early May.

To Apply:
Any bilingual ability should be stated in the resume. Bilingual ability is helpful but not required. Applications should also state the number of hours the intern is able to work per week and which program area(s) you are interested in. Email applications are accepted. 

Deadline is December 3, 2012. Applications received after deadline will be considered on a rolling basis. Send a resume and cover letter (law students should include a writing sample) to:

AALDEF Spring Intern Search
Asian American Legal Defense and Education Fund (AALDEF)
99 Hudson Street, 12th floor,
New York, New York 10013-2815

Fax: 212-966-4303 or Email: [email protected]

For more information, contact Jennifer Weng at 212-966-5932, ext. 212 or [email protected].

NYIC Town Hall Meeting on DACA

Town Hall Meeting on
Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals

Learn more about Deferred Action and where to get help with your application

11:00 – 12:30, Sunday, October 7, 2012
LaGuardia Community College
31-10 Thomson Avenue
(Enter Community Entrance on Van Dam Street & 47th Avenue)
Long Island City, New York

  Please Join Host
Congresswoman Carolyn B. Maloney

and her special guest:

Congressman Luis V. Gutierrez

Along with Representatives of

American Immigration Lawyers Association
CUNY Citizenship Now
New York Immigration Coalition
& United States Citizen and Immigration Service

To view the flyer please click here.

NYC Screening: Harvest of Empire

From our friends at the New York Immigration Coalition:

Dear Members and Friends,

I would like to recommend a very powerful film about Latinos in America – Harvest of the Empire – opening at the Quad New York City next Friday, September 28th. The film is based on a book by Juan Gonzalez, a good friend of the NYIC and a renowned journalist. I believe the film will contribute significantly to the public’s understanding of the immigration issue by shedding very much needed light on some of the factors that spur immigration from Latin America. The film has some incredibly moving stories, gripping and rare historical footage and much more. Please see below for more information.

Chung-Wha Hong Executive Director New York Immigration Coalition

Friday, September 28th through October 4th
Quad Cinema NYC
34 West 13th St. New York, NY
Showtimes:1:00 // 2:50 // 4:40 // 6:30 // 8:20 // 10:20 pm
www.harvestofempiremovie.com

PRESS RELEASE: District Attorney Vance Announces Indictment of Garage Attendant for Defrauding Immigrant Co-Workers

Rosemary Yu, Co-Director of the New York County DA’s Immigrant Affairs Office (and AABANY member), shares the following press release about the ongoing efforts of her office to stop immigration fraud which has victimized our immigrant communities:

DISTRICT ATTORNEY VANCE ANNOUNCES INDICTMENT OF GARAGE ATTENDANT FOR DEFRAUDING IMMIGRANT CO-WORKERS

Case Referred by Caller to DA’s Immigrant Affairs Program Hotline: 212-335-3600

Manhattan District Attorney Cyrus R. Vance, Jr., announced today the indictment of JOSE DELVALLE, 32, for stealing approximately $6,000 from immigrants by promising to obtain labor certifications and green cards for them, and falsely claiming that he had a contact who worked for immigration authorities capable of helping them. The defendant is charged in New York State Supreme Court with Criminal Possession of Stolen Property in the Third Degree, Scheme to Defraud in the First Degree, and Grand Larceny in the Fourth Degree.  The District Attorney’s Office launched an investigation into the defendant’s criminal activity when the victims contacted the Office’s Immigrant Affairs Program.

“More than half of the 2,400 calls to my Office’s Immigrant Affairs Program Hotline over the years relate to scams involving individuals claiming to offer legitimate immigration services, when, in fact, they do not,” said District Attorney Vance. “The circumstances of each crime vary – sometimes, the defendants represent themselves to be attorneys. Other times, the defendants target members of their own immigrant community. However, these crimes all share one thing: a willingness on the part of the defendants to take advantage of people who are new to this country, not fluent in the language, and struggling to navigate a complex legal and social services system. I encourage anyone who feels he or she may be the victim of an immigration scam to call my Office’s Immigrant Affairs Program Hotline at 212-335-3600, regardless of immigration status.”

According to documents filed in court and statements made on the record in court, the defendant worked with the victims – two Ecuadorean immigrants – at a parking garage in Northern Manhattan. Between October and November 2010, DELVALLE is accused of befriending the two victims, telling them that he had a contact who worked in what he termed “immigration,” and promising to get them their labor certifications and green cards if they paid him $6,000 apiece: $3,000 up front, with the remainder to be paid after they received the documents. The defendant allegedly told his victims that it could take them anywhere from six months to one year for the cards to arrive. When they did not receive them, they contacted the defendant, who soon stopped taking their calls.  It was at that point that the victims reported the scheme to the District Attorney’s Office.

DELVALLE is not an authorized provider of immigration services, and no immigration filings were ever submitted on behalf of the two victims.

Assistant District Attorney Jonathan Gross of the Special Prosecutions Bureau is handling the prosecution of this case, under the supervision of Assistant District Attorneys Rosemary Yu and Mayerling Rivera, Co-Directors of the Immigrant Affairs Program, and Thomas Wornom, Chief of the Special Prosecutions Bureau. 

District Attorney Vance thanked the Office of Fraud Detection & National Security, within U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services, New York District, and the Executive Office for Immigration Review, within the United States Department of Justice, for their assistance in this investigation. 

Defendant Information:

JOSE DELVALLE, D.O.B. 6/12/80

Bronx, NY

Charges:

  • Criminal Possession of a Stolen Property in the Third, a class D felony, one count
  • Scheme to Defraud in the First Degree, a class E felony, one count
  • Grand Larceny in the Fourth Degree, a class E felony, two counts

Deferred Action for Childhood Arrival Pro Bono Training

Deferred Action for Childhood Arrival (DACA) 
 Pro Bono Training
MuBANY Logo small

An estimated 100,000 undocumented Asian immigrants are eligible for “Deferred Action Childhood Arrivals” (DACA). A new Department of Homeland Security directive, DACA gives eligible undocumented youth a two-year pause from the threat of deportation and an opportunity to secure a work permit. For many, this will be the first opportunity to legally work and live in this country.

  Many of these immigrants are from the communities served by the various Asian bar associations of New York. Taking on a DACA case pro bono is a discrete  way to learn basic immigration law and impact the life of undocumented youth. 

The Asian American Legal Defense and Education Fund (AALDEF) is seeking pro bono counsel to represent eligible young people applying for DACA. No prior legal experience is required, but pro bono counsel will be required to attend a training prior to taking a case. These cases will help support the work of AALDEF’s youth group for undocumented Asian Americans.

  

If you are interested in taking a DACA case through AALDEF, please join us for the training on:

Wednesday, September 5 from 6pm-7pm

at O’Melveny & Myers, 7 Times Square

To register for the training, please email AALDEF at: [email protected]

For more information about what this new directive means for Asian American communities, see our legal alert.

Generously Co-sponsored by:
 
Asian American Bar Association of New York  
 Korean American Lawyers Association of Greater New York
Muslim Bar Association of New York  
South Asian Bar Association of New York

Important Information – Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals

From NYC Mayor’s Office of Immigrant Affairs:

Dear Friends and Colleagues,

I’m sure you’ve heard about President Obama’s new program for undocumented youth, Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals. The following message and attached documents outline vital information about this new initiative.

Consideration of Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals is a new federal immigration process that allows certain undocumented young people to request temporary deportation relief and work authorization from the U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS). The City estimates that 50,000 to 60,000 New Yorkers may be able to request deferred action.

In order to show that they meet the criteria, Deferred Action applicants will need to submit verifiable documentation to the federal government with their applications. They may be able to get some of the documents they need from City agencies. Attached is a one-page flyer that highlights the types of documents the City can provide to individuals who have records on file, along with instructions on how to access those documents. I have also attached flyers in English and Spanish created by USCIS to show the eligibility criteria and application process.

Please note: unlike the DREAM Act, Deferred Action is not legal status, and it does not provide a pathway to obtaining a green card or citizenship. For more information about Deferred Action, including where to find free legal assistance and how to avoid and report immigration scams, please call 311 or visit NYC.gov.

All the best,

Sarah

Sarah Flatto | One NYC One Nation Coordinator | NYC Mayor’s Office of Immigrant Affairs 

212-341-9075 | 646-409-3116 |nyc.gov/immigrants | *[email protected]

Register Now for Deferred Action Legal Assistance for Dreamers

                                            

REGISTER NOW FOR DEFERRED ACTION
LEGAL ASSISTANCE FOR DREAMERS

Wednesday, August 15
12 p.m. to 6 p.m.

St. Mary’s Church
440 Grand Street (between Pitt St. and Attorney St.) – Manhattan

Nearest Subway: Delancey (F), Essex St. (J, M, Z), Grand St. (B, D)

Attendees will:

  • receive important information on the new policy
  • sign up for upcoming legal clinics to get application assistance for Deferred Action and work permit
  • Talk directly to lawyers on whether they qualify

 To RSVP, please contact [email protected]

If you are unable to attend but would like to register to receive free legal assistance for Deferred Action requests and work permit applications, please call 212-627-2227 ext. 243 or email [email protected]

Invite your friends and loved ones to the event.
 

Co-Sponsored By:
(List in formation)
Atlas: DIY
Chinese Progressive Association
Churches United to Save and Heal
El Centro del Inmigrante
New Sanctuary Coalition of NYC

NYIC Orientation on Deferred Action

August 15: Orientation on Deferred Action

On August 15, 2012, many young undocumented immigrants will be allowed to apply for a temporary work permit and deferred action relief.  

All across the country, immigrant rights groups are organizing legal workshops for youth who might be interested in applying.  In New York, The New York Immigration Coalition and its partners will hold an orientation workshop on:

Wednesday, August 15, 2012

12 pm
 Location TBA

Workshop attendees will receive important information on the new policy and can sign up for upcoming legal clinics to get screened for eligibility and receive assistance from lawyers on beginning the process.

Formal invitation & additional details coming soon
 
To RSVP, please contact [email protected]

Deferred Action Workshop

Which DREAMers are Eligible for Work Authorization and U.S. Stay? Learn the Facts

Are you or someone you know an undocumented foreign national despite having grown up in the United States? Can the recently announced Deferred Action policy help you?

Find Out Everything You Need to Know About Deferred Action at this Free Informational Workshop.

What is Deferred Action? Who is eligible? How may one apply?

* This is a FREE event and pro bono legal service.

When:

Wednesday, August 15, 2012

Time:

6:00pm – 9:00pm EST

Where:

NYU – Langone Medical Center, Alumni Hall “A” on the Ground Floor

550 First Avenue (at 33rd Street) New York, New York

Speaker:

Rio M. Guerrero, Esq. Guerrero Yee LLP www.guerreroyee.com

Your RSVP is not necessary but appreciated, please send an email to [email protected]