Immigration advocates are asking the Biden administration to take extra steps to make sure immigrants with Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals, or DACA, know they are eligible to buy Affordable Care Act Insurance.
The Biden administration opened the way for DACA recipients to buy into ACA health plans through a federal regulation that went into effect in May. Like everyone else, DACA recipients can begin enrolling for the subsidized private coverage on Nov. 1.
But Juliana Macedo do Nascimento, deputy director of federal advocacy at United We Dream, an immigration advocacy group, said if DACA recipients are to benefit, then Health and Human Services needs to help get the word out.
“HHS, in conversations that they’ve had with advocates, they’ve said they weren’t going to allocate resources to really advertise this and specifically target DACA recipients,” Macedo do Nascimento said.
HHS did not provide comment when reached.
The agency estimates about 100,000 immigrants protected by DACA will be eligible to enroll in a health plan through the ACA marketplace. Nearly 600,000 young adult immigrants have permission to work or study here and are protected from deportation through DACA, a program created under President Barack Obama.
Rep. Joaquín Castro of Texas and Sen. Cory Booker of New Jersey, both Democrats, urged HHS in a letter this week, signed by 86 additional House and Senate members, to invest in outreach and assistance for eligible DACA members.
“Given this unique and time-sensitive opportunity, it is imperative that DACA recipients know of this opportunity, are informed about their eligibility, and can navigate the registration process so that they can take full advantage of their new access to medical care,” the letter states.
DACA recipients’ enrollment period begins just days before the Nov. 5 presidential election and ends Jan. 15, 2025, less than a week before the next presidential inauguration.
But the future of DACA itself is uncertain. The 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals is considering a Republican challenge to the program’s legality. If the court upholds a lower court decision that DACA violates the law, the case could go to the Supreme Court. Oral arguments have not yet been held in the 5th Circuit.
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