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Grinches prevail in holiday season budget vote,
but the battle continues into 2006

Immigrants' Rights Update, Vol. 19, Issue 8, December 22, 2005


     As Congress wrapped up its business for 2005, legislators attempted to present an unwelcome holiday offering to low-income families:  a budget bill that rolls back programs providing a lifeline to families struggling to make ends meet.

     On Dec. 21, with the tie-breaking vote of Vice President Dick Cheney, the Senate passed the Work, Marriage, and Family Promotion Reconciliation Act of 2005.  The 51-50 vote fell largely along party lines, except for five Republicans who voted against the bill — Sens. Smith (OR), DeWine (OH), Snowe (ME), Collins (ME), and Chafee (RI) — and independent Sen. Jeffords (VT).  However, as a result of a successful procedural challenge to the bill, the Senate version of the budget bill was amended at the last minute and therefore differs slightly from the version passed by the House of Representatives (on a vote of 212-206) on Dec. 19.  The House must now approve the Senate's amended version before it can be sent to the president for his signature.  The House will not likely reconvene for a vote on the budget bill until late January, providing advocates additional time to make sure that their representatives understand the harsh impact of the proposed budget on low-income families.

     The long saga of this year's budget process was initiated by a March budget resolution calling for approximately $35 billion in cuts to mandatory (entitlement) programs over five years.  The "budget reconciliation" process, originally scheduled for September, was first postponed in the immediate aftermath of Hurricanes Katrina and Rita, and was delayed again to avoid the unseemly appearance of a simultaneous cut in benefits for the poor and enactment of tax breaks for the wealthy.  When the House and Senate finally passed their respective budget reconciliation bills, the differences were substantial:  the Senate adhered to the $35 billion in savings required by the budget resolution and made some attempts to shield beneficiaries from the brunt of the cuts, while the House enacted nearly $50 billion in cuts, imposing new restrictions in core antipoverty programs such as food stamps, Medicaid, and Temporary Assistance for Needy Families (TANF).  One measure in the original House bill targeted immigrants directly, cutting an estimated 70,000 lawfully present immigrants from the Food Stamp Program by extending from five to seven years the period that "qualified" immigrants must wait before securing assistance.  The bicameral Budget Conference Committee was charged with "reconciling" these two disparate budget bills and crafting a compromise bill that the House and the Senate could approve.

     As the December recess approached, it was unclear whether Congress could reach, with sufficient support, a compromise.  In the Senate, bipartisan motions passed by overwhelming majorities, instructing the budget conferees not to accept any compromises that undercut assistance to food stamps or Medicaid beneficiaries, thereby calling into question the possibility of a workable compromise.  However, the Republican leadership redoubled its efforts to bring the process to a conclusion.  Before the conferees were named, deals were quietly being made regarding the content of the final conference report on the bill.  Immediately after they were announced, the conferees engaged in a flurry of closed-door weekend negotiations and, shortly after midnight on Monday, Dec. 19, released a 774-page conference report including nearly $40 billion in budget cuts.  Only a few hours later, voting on the conference report began in the House, which passed the bill by the narrow 212-206 vote.  The conference report quickly headed to the Senate for approval.  Realizing that the Senate vote would be close, Vice President Cheney cut short a trip overseas so he could return to the Capitol to cast the deciding vote in the Senate.

     The conference report bills that passed the House and Senate include a range of spending cuts that harm beneficiaries of a variety of safety-net programs.  However, in this otherwise bleak budget bill, Congress spared the Food Stamp Program from any cuts, including the cuts that had specifically targeted immigrants.  This was an important victory.  The House's budget bill had arbitrarily targeted immigrants for cuts in food stamps just a few years after their eligibility had been restored by the bipartisan 2002 Farm Bill.  While the proposed cuts would have harmed tens of thousands of immigrants directly, the political impact of the new restriction would have been even more extensive.  It would have marked the first time that Congress reversed its own attempt to correct the harsh immigration status–related restrictions in the 1996 welfare law. 

     At times it seemed that advocates faced an uphill battle fighting the food stamp cuts targeted at immigrants.  Rep. Bob Goodlatte (R-VA), chair of the House Agriculture Committee, had opposed the 2002 food stamp restorations to immigrants and appeared intent on using his leadership position to roll them back.  President George Bush, widely credited for successfully championing the 2002 restorations, failed to defend against their unraveling by the House's initial budget bill.  After the White House's "Statement of Administration Policy" was silent on the House bill's immigrant food stamp cuts, immigrant and ethnic organizations from across the country sent a letter to Bush, urging him to lend his leadership on the issue.  In the end, the coalition of organizations that led the 2002 campaign to restore food stamps to immigrants successfully coordinated to defend against inclusion of food stamp cuts in the budget reconciliation process.  Antihunger groups, faith-based organizations, immigrant advocacy groups, and broader antipoverty organizations opposed any food stamp cuts and were steadfast in their insistence that cuts targeting immigrants were wholly unacceptable.  

     Several legislators deserve special commendation for their leadership in protecting food stamps.  Sen. Saxby Chambliss (R-GA), chair of the Senate Agriculture Committee, expressed no interest in undoing the 2002 restorations and spared food stamps from any cuts in the bill introduced to his committee.  Sen. Gordon Smith (R-OR) made clear that he would not vote for a conference report that contained food stamp cuts and rallied fourteen other Senate Republicans to sign a letter urging Chambliss not to compromise with the House on the issue.  Senate Minority Leader Harry Reid (D-NV) and Sen. Tom Harkin (D-IO), ranking member of the Agriculture Subcommittee with jurisdiction over the Food Stamp Program, were outspoken in their defense of food stamps and the injustice of targeting immigrants for cuts.  Rep. James Walsh (R-NY) used his leverage to insist that food stamp cuts not be included in the conference report.  Rep. Joe Baca (D-CA), a consistent defender of immigrants' participation in the Food Stamp Program, implored his colleagues again and again to stand by the accomplishments of the 2002 restorations.

     In spite of this victory, the conference report passed by the House and Senate is no cause for celebration.  It includes harsh cuts to key programs on which many low-income families depend.  Citizens and noncitizens alike will face greater obstacles to securing critical assistance under Supplemental Security Income (SSI), TANF, subsidized child care, and foster care assistance.  The bills also cut funding for child support enforcement and student loans.

     Legislators also targeted the Medicaid and Medicare programs to achieve the bulk of the cost savings, but the Senate and House proposed different approaches.  The Senate's original version of the budget bill did not include spending cuts that would harm beneficiaries directly.  Instead, the Senate achieved cost savings by obtaining rebates from drug companies and eliminating wasteful payouts to health plans to encourage their participation in the Medicare program.  In contrast, the House's version of the budget imposed costly new burdens on Medicaid beneficiaries.  Unfortunately, the conference report adopts many of these proposals and eliminates existing Medicaid protections by permitting states to impose monthly premiums and costly copayments for needed medical services — with few exceptions.  Not only would Medicaid families be forced to choose between paying for health care and other basic necessities on their limited income, but they could lose Medicaid coverage and be denied medical care by their doctor or pharmacist if they fail to pay the new premiums or copayments.  The cost savings from these burdens will ultimately be achieved from anticipated reductions in the number of Medicaid-eligible beneficiaries and in the rate of utilization of medical services because beneficiaries will not be able to afford the premiums and copayments to stay on Medicaid and obtain medical services.  At the same time that beneficiaries are forced to pay more for necessary medical care, states will be free to reduce the minimal level of medical services available to Medicaid beneficiaries.  This new state flexibility is likely to lead to the elimination of Early and Periodic, Screening, Diagnostic, and Treatment (EPSDT), an essential program that guarantees comprehensive health care to children under age 19.  The bill also would effectively increase the cost of the monthly Medicare Part B premiums for certain low-income individuals who receive both Medicare and Medicaid ("dual-eligibles").

     Finally, the bill introduces yet another barrier to Medicaid enrollment and imposes an unfunded mandate on states, which will be forced to require U.S. citizens to provide specific documentation of their citizenship in order to obtain Medicaid.  Without any evidence, legislators claimed that this provision was needed to prevent noncitizens from improperly obtaining Medicaid by falsely stating that they are U.S. citizens.  Noncitizens already provide documentation of their immigration status during enrollment and have disincentives under immigration laws that prevent them from falsely claiming U.S. citizenship.  Instead, the new documentation requirement will harm U.S.–born citizens by denying them Medicaid if they are unable to produce or pay for specific documents such as a birth certificate or passport.  The cost savings from this requirement would be realized by preventing citizens from enrolling in Medicaid rather than by preventing any nonexistent fraud by noncitizens.

     In light of the life and death choices that low-income families could face under the budget bill, it is a holiday "miracle" that the draconian conference report was not enacted into law as the year comes to an end.  We are proud of the effort we and other advocates made to ensure that people need not experience hunger or food insecurity as they maintain eligibility for food stamps.  Our efforts should now focus on protecting low-income families from severe cuts to other safety-net programs by preventing enactment of the budget reconciliation bill in 2006.  Members of the House, who will reconvene in late January to approve or reject the Senate-passed budget bill, need to remember the true spirit of the underlying holiday celebrations, and advocates need to remind them of the real human harms that would occur if they approve such a Scrooge-like budget.

By Jonathan Blazer, NILC public benefits policy attorney, and
Sonal Ambegaokar, NILC health policy attorney
blazer@nilc-dc.org | ambegaokar@nilc.org

 

 

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