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August 15, 1997 - Image 18

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1997-08-15

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

Advocacy Reaps
Many Rewards

The Michigan Jewish Conference and other
community groups worked hard this year for legal
immigrants. It paid off.

JULIE EDGAR SENIOR WRITER

I

t's been the best year in
decades for Jewish advocacy
in Lansing.
With the help of the Jewish
Federation of Metropolitan De-
troit, the Jewish Community
Council, the Lansing lobbying
firm of Muchmore, Harrington,
Smalley and Associates, the
Michigan Jewish Conference
scored important victories on be-
half of legal immigrants, hun-
dreds of them Jews from the
former Soviet Union.
When the state's Family In-
dependence Agency budget was
signed, it provided no relief for
asylees and other legal immi-
grants who stood to lose disabil-
ity and Supplemental Security
Income (SSI) benefits from the
federal government. As in the
federal budget, without full citi-

zenship, the population would
have been knocked off the rolls.
"This whole population
would've been cut off. We were
the ones that brought it to the at-
tention of legislators," said the
MJC's Cindy Hughey.
David Gad-Harf, head of the
JCCouncil, said the Jewish pres-
ence in Lansing, led by the MJC,
was critical to revising legislation
that could have hurt tens of thou-
sands of immigrants.
"This is the first time a critical
issue has come before the state
legislature that affected hun-
dreds of Jewish residents in
metro Detroit and other refugees
outside the Jewish community.
"People have been talking
about the importance of us hav-
ing a presence in Lansing, but
I'm not sure people understood

until this year the value of the in-
vestment. Now it's clear," he said.
Hughey was involved closely
with the budget process at the
Family Independence Agency,
and when the appropriations
committee began to hammer out
a budget, the MJC was able to re-
store over a third of the money
legal immigrants had lost on the
federal level — even if it's only
$246 per month compared to the
up to $700 some had drawn in
SSI benefits.
The Family Independence
Agency, formerly the Depart-
ment of Social Services, oversees
the state's cash assistance, wel-
fare and food stamp programs, of
which the latter has been cut.
The Community Health De-
partment controls another piece
of the pie — Medicaid — and le-
gal immigrants who faced the
loss of SSI benefits also faced the
loss of medical coverage if they
did not become U.S. citizens by
the end of this month. The 7-
year-old Michigan Jewish Con-
ference, with the help of the
JCCouncil and the Federation,
rallied to eliminate the citizen-
ship requirement in the state
budget so the population, most-
ly the elderly and disabled, could
receive state medical assistance.
"It means this population is
able to have some kind of med-

ical coverage. Once they lost SSI,
they would automatically lose
Medicaid and they would have
no medical coverage whatsoev-
er," Hughey said.
Rep. Nick Ciaramitaro and
Sen. Robert Geake chaired the
committees that restored some
of the benefits to legal immi-
grants.

Protecting benefits
for the most
vulnerable.

Lastly, the MJC fought hard
to reverse deep cuts in adult ed-
ucation spending that were ini-
tiated by Gov. John Engler.
Funding for classes in English As
A Second Language (ESL), es-
sential to immigrants trying to
pass citizenship exams, was pre-
viously capped at 450 hours. It is
now based on proficiency that is
tested periodically.
Hughey acknowledged that
some SSI and Medicaid benefits
were restored in the latest fed-
eral budget package. But on the
state level, a few dozen refugees
who have been in the country for
over seven years — the limit for
receiving SSI benefits — and who
were not 65 by last August — the

cutoff for receiving medical as-
sistance — won't fall through the
cracks.
The federal budget restored
the benefits to older legal immi-
grants, including refugees and
asylees, who were receiving them
as of last August or who became
disabled after August 1996.
"It wasn't a waste of time. We
did it because we were not confi-
dent the federal government
would make the fixes necessary.
Fortunately, they did. It was a
fight," Hughey said. ❑

See related story, page 27

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