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Legal U.S. residency no longer required for Colorado benefits

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Migrants at the south border (image: shutterstock)


Legal U.S. residency is no longer required to obtain state and local government benefits, professional licenses or business permits under a law that took effect July 1, 2022.

The 2021 law signed by Gov. Jared Polis makes available state benefits, including dental care, mental health counseling and family services. It also expands eligibility for property tax, rent and utility subsidies.

The estimated cost for expanding eligibility to immigrants is $12 million a year, according to a legislative analysis.

The city of Denver announced that it would no longer verify legal residency when issuing business licenses and is now accepting more forms of identification.

Yes, but: The Polis administration and local leaders appear reluctant to follow the city's lead, Axios Denver has learned.

The governor's spokesman, Conor Cahill, told us the law didn't require the benefits to be available by July 1. He didn't say when — or even if — the administration would expand eligibility.

Likewise, the Colorado Municipal League and Colorado Counties association could not identify any other local governments opening benefit programs.

The new law is part of a broader, years-long effort by Democrats in Colorado to remove restrictions on state resources for immigrants without permanent legal status, most notably rolling back a bipartisan 2006 law signed by Republican Gov. Bill Owens.

This year, the state agreed to open some health care coverage to immigrants, and made it easier for high school students without legal residency to get in-state college tuition.

In 2021, the state allowed federal stimulus dollars to go to those without lawful U.S. residency.

In 2019, the state expanded a program to provide driver's licenses to immigrants without legal permission.

The extension of state and local benefits to immigrants is expected to cause widespread confusion, because well-known federal programs like Medicaid and food assistance remain off-limits.

The governor said when he signed the law that more legislative changes and a robust education campaign are needed to explain the "limited applicability."

What they're saying: Still, immigrant advocates are celebrating the milestone.

"What we know as we recover from the pandemic — and the ensuing economic rollercoaster that we're all currently riding — is that we need everyone involved in order to help us rebound in a way that is equitable and fair," state Sen. Julie Gonzales, D-Denver, told us.



Source

by John Frank

Axios Denver
scalabrinian spirituality 2023

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