Template for Creating New Headers - Must Add Banman Zone
Click logo for homepage of IMDiversity.com - where careers, opportunities and communities connect
home | search jobs | my account employer profiles | career center | about us | for employers
Featured Employers



 

Featured Jobs

View Featured Jobs

$100K-PLUS Jobs

Hispanic American Village Categories
  New! HAV Blog
  HAV Jobs Center
  News & Current Affairs
  Arts, Culture & Media
  Business, Careers, Workplace
  Community & Family
  Dialogue, Opinion, Letters
  Education
  History & Heritage
  Immigration
  Identity & Assimilation
  Latinas
  Latino Lifestyles
  People
  Politics & Policy
  The Hispanic World
  Organizations & Links
  Specials
   


Hispanic-American Village News
villages/hispanic/ AP Headlines Update Page
Grand jury indicts 7 in NY immigrant killing
Juanes sweeps Latin Grammys with 5 wins
Hispanic students juggle lives with school
Spain turns to Latinos to fill military ranks
Hispanic leaders endorse Richardson for cabinet
villages/hispanic/ AP Headlines Update Page
Specials

QuickSearch: Jobs preferring Bilingual/ Multilingual Candidates
New opportunities section added to our Career Center

Expanded Job Tools Section
New QuickSearches by location and industry, salary tools, more at the Career Center

Graduate/ Professional School Opportunities

What's New with the IMDiversity site

 

Ice on Immigration: Eligibility for Medical Care for Out-of-Status Children

By L. Patricia Ice, Featured Columnist


Question: I am an undocumented migrant and so is my wife. We have a 2 year-old child who is a United States citizen. He needs general medical attention and we do not always have enough to eat. Is my child eligible for Medicaid and/or WIC? If so, will Medicaid agents report me to U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement officials if I apply for my son?

Answer: Based upon income, U.S. citizens, certain qualified lawful permanent residents and non-citizen refugees and asylees are among those eligible for Medicaid. Citizen children of undocumented parents are also eligible. The Medicaid application form should allow you to enroll your U.S. citizen child without asking you for your immigration status. The child will have to provide proof of his U.S. citizenship (certified birth certificate), identity and social security number to enroll. The Medicaid agency should not ask for your immigration status unless you are also applying for Medicaid. The only information you will need to provide for your son is proof of household income and proof of state residency. State residency can be proved by utility bills, school registration, even mail addressed to you. As undocumented parents, you should simply say you are only applying for Medicaid for your child, who is a U.S. citizen. All states must provide Emergency Medicaid services to residents, regardless of immigration status. Applicants for Emergency Medicaid don't need to provide a social security number and can simply claim they do not have satisfactory immigration status.

Medicaid should not report anyone to U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE). Medicaid is only supposed to use immigration information for the purposes of administering the program - determining which applicants get which benefits. The only reporting to ICE that should occur is if an applicant is found to have committed fraud in obtaining the Medicaid benefits to begin with. Just knowing the parents are undocumented by their own statements is not enough to report them to ICE.

The Special Supplemental Nutrition Program for Women, Infants and Children (WIC) is available to state residents, regardless of immigration status.

For a discussion of eligibility requirements for Medicaid, WIC and other Federal benefit programs please see the National Immigration Law Center (NILC) website at http://www.nilc.org/.

 

L. Patricia Ice

Featured IMDiversity Immigration Columnist L. Patricia Ice is an attorney and counselor who has taught immigration law at Mississippi College School of Law in Jackson, and also contributes regular immigration advice stories to La Noticia and The Jackson Advocate.  A practicing attorney, Ms. Ice has recently taken on a two-year role as an Equal Justice Works Katrina Legal Fellow, focusing on immigrant employment issues as fair labor standards, and wage and hour problems, in areas around the Gulf Coast.  She is also dedicated to immigrants rights advocacy, and serves on the Board of the non-profit rights education group, MIRA: The Mississippi Immigrants Rights Alliance at www.yourmira.org.

Articles in this column are Copyright 2006 L. Patricia Ice.  All rights reserved.  Please do not reproduce further without seeking the permission of the author.

IMDiversity.com is committed to presenting diverse points of view. However, the viewpoint expressed in this article is the opinion of the author and is not necessarily the viewpoint of the owners or employees at IMD.

 

IMDiversity, Inc.
contact us
© 2008 IMDiversity Inc. All Rights Reserved.
privacy statement