2. Until July 2025, Undocumented Were Eligible for Many Federal Programs
Box 2: New Programs Considered “Federal Public Benefits” Under the 2025 Policy Change
- Certified Community Behavioral Health Clinics
- Community Mental Health Services Block Grant
- Community Services Block Grant (CSBG)
- Head Start
- Health Center Program
- Health Workforce Programs not otherwise previously covered (including grants, loans, scholarships, payments, and loan repayments)
- Mental Health and Substance Use Disorder Treatment, Prevention, and Recovery Support Services Programs administered by the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration
- Projects for Assistance in Transition from Homelessness Grant Program
- Substance Use Prevention, Treatment, and Recovery Services Block Grant
- Title IV-E Educational and Training Voucher Program
- Title IV-E Kinship Guardianship Assistance Program
- Title IV-E Prevention Services Program
- Title X Family Planning Program
- List is not exhaustive and may be added to in the future
Source: U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (July 2025), “HHS Bans Illegal Aliens from Accessing its Taxpayer-Funded Programs”
1.
Immigrant Enrollment in ‘Emergency Medicaid’ Surges to
480,000
One of the biggest drivers of New York’s Medicaid enrollment
growth over the past decade has been “emergency Medicaid” for undocumented
immigrants, newly released state records show.
The program –
which is limited to short-term care for emergency conditions – has soared by
440,000 or more than 1,200 percent since 2014, according to Health Department
records obtained by the Empire Center under the Freedom of Information Law. As of March 2024, sign-ups for emergency
Medicaid stood at 480,000, or 7 percent of total enrollment.
'Emergency Medicaid' enrollment in New York State
The only Medicaid cohort that grew by a larger amount was
able-bodied, childless adults from 19 to 64, which increased by 796,000 or 68
percent. Overall, enrollment in the New York’s version of the safety-net health
plan for the lower-income and disabled was up 1.6 million or 28 percent from
March 2014 to March 2024. Emergency
Medicaid enrollment is overwhelmingly concentrated downstate, with 74 percent
of recipients living in New York City, 14 percent on Long Island and 12 percent
in the Mid-Hudson region.
Officials attributed the spike to a policy change enacted in
2014, as the federal Affordable Care
Act went into full effect. Through the state’s newly established insurance exchange, immigrants
ineligible for other forms of coverage were invited to pre-register for
emergency Medicaid even if they didn’t immediately need emergency care. Enrollment has been rising at double-digit
rates ever since, including a 33 percent spike during the first year of the
Covid-19 pandemic and another 26 percent since 2022, as thousands of newly
arrived migrants were bused
to New York from border states.
Spending on emergency Medicaid has roughly tripled, from
$207 million in fiscal 2013-14 to $639 million in fiscal 2023-24, officials
said. Because more people were signing up without knowing if they would need
care, the share of enrollees who used services in any given year has dropped
from 43 percent to 21 percent, and the annual cost per enrollee has declined
from $5,700 to $1,300, officials said. In addition to emergency Medicaid, New
York offers government-sponsored coverage through its Essential Plan to
another 494,000
non-citizens. These include legal immigrants who arrived less than five
years ago and people without green cards who are “permanently residing under
color of law,” such as those approved for asylum and people who qualify for
President Obama’s Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program.
Lower-income legal immigrants who have resided in the U.S.
for at least five years are eligible for regular Medicaid. About 1.5 million non-citizens live in New
York City, including 670,000 who are undocumented, according to estimates from the Center for Migration
Studies.
The Empire Center obtained the figures on emergency Medicaid
as part of a larger request seeking a breakdown of the eligibility categories
for all Medicaid enrollees over the past decade. It was expected that this data
would shed light on why the safety-net health plan has grown to be millions
larger than New York’s population living in poverty, as documented in a recent
report.
Despite a delay of eight months, the Health
Department’s initial
response in January was incomplete – omitting information on almost 1
million enrollees, as the Empire Center reported earlier this month. The day after that post was published, the
department provided a second data set that appeared to be more comprehensive –
but which was puzzlingly inconsistent with the figures provided earlier.
The numbers for some eligibility categories went up
substantially, while others went down. Categories that were counted separately
in the first round were seemingly combined together in the second – and some
disappeared completely. Another issue is
plausibility: The state reported Medicaid enrollment of 693,000 in a category
for “pregnant consumers,” which seems far too high. The state’s most recently
available vital statistics, from 2022, show that 206,000
women gave birth and 68,000
had abortions. Medicaid covered about half of each, indicated pregnant
enrollees would have numbered about 137,000.
https://www.empirecenter.org/publications/immigrant-enrollment-in-emergency-medicaid-surges-to-480000/
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