Without a Pandemic Safety Net, Immigrants Living Illegally in US Fall Through the Cracks
Anaās 9-year-old son was the first in the family to come down with symptoms that looked like covid-19 last March. Soon after, the 37-year-old unauthorized immigrant and three of her other children, including a daughter with asthma, struggled to breathe.
For the next three weeks, the family fought the illness in isolation ā Ana clutching the top of door frames to catch her breath ā while friends and neighbors left food on the porch of their home in Colorado Springs, Colorado. Ana and her children never took tests to confirm they caught the coronavirus, but the pressure in her lungs, the fever, the headache and the loss of smell and taste convinced her it couldnāt be anything else.
āIt was horrible,ā said Ana, a Colorado resident for more than two decades who requested her last name not be used because of her immigration status. āWe had to lay on the floor to breathe.ā
Nearly a year later, the effects of the virus go far beyond nagging shortness of breath for Ana. She lost her job cleaning houses when she got sick last March, so she couldnāt pay rent. A local nonprofitās cash assistance funded by some federal covid relief helped her catch up in the fall, but she still had no work and fell behind on rent again. Her landlord finally threw the family out of their home at the beginning of January with 30 hoursā notice, she said.
Ana is one the nearly 11 million undocumented immigrants living in the U.S. without legal permission, who are particularly vulnerable to the economic fallout wrought by the pandemic and have no direct access to the billions of dollars in federal pandemic relief over the past year. An estimated 4 in 5 of them work essential jobs that put them at high risk to catch the covid virus. They are also more likely to suffer the economic consequences, even with protections in place ā such as the Centers for Disease Control and Preventionās eviction moratorium, ā because they fear that reaching out for help or reporting landlords could lead to deportation or detention.
President Joe Bidenās inauguration brought some encouraging news, as heās said he wants to for many of the nationās undocumented immigrants. they should be able to be vaccinated against covid without worrying that they will be arrested and deported.
Even though the covid vaccines are available to everyone no matter their citizenship, a distrust of government and law enforcement in the immigrant community and a lack of culturally competent vaccination information and even misinformation have made some undocumented immigrants reluctant to come forward early in the vaccination rollout.
Even if Biden makes good on his pledge of equitable access to a vaccine, unauthorized U.S. residents continue to have no direct access to billions of dollars in federal pandemic relief. The issue was brought up again on March 6 when Republican Sen. Ted Cruz claimed Bidenās new $1.9 trillion aid package would send stimulus checks . Democratic Sen. Dick Durbin in the measure that passed the Senate. The House was set to take up the Senateās changes on Tuesday.
Advocacy groups have argued for āinclusiveā aid packages that provide direct aid to as many immigrants as possible no matter citizenship status, and while a few states set up aid for the undocumented, itās not nearly enough, according to Marielena HincapiĆ©, executive director of the National Immigration Law Center.
āImmigration status shouldnāt be the gatekeeper to any of these programs. It really ultimately is about need and ensuring that families have the economic stability, to not only survive, but to get through this pandemic that all of us are impacted by,ā HincapiĆ© says. āEighty percent of undocumented immigrants are working as essential workers. We are relying on them, and yet are denying their families this basic support that everyone else is getting.ā
Couples with mixed immigration status ā in which only one partner is a U.S. citizen ā were also blocked from aid until December. They can now apply for stimulus payments retroactively but will still receive less than couples who are U.S. citizens. Though the change made millions more families eligible for some aid, couples in which both partners are undocumented immigrants also have not received stimulus payments for their children even if their children were born in the U.S. and are citizens. A group of families after it excluded children in the first COVID-19 aid package known as the CARES Act. The Department of Justice under the Biden administration has continued to defend the policy and has asked a federal judge to dismiss the lawsuit. A decision is pending.
Meanwhile, in February, eight Senate Democrats, including John Hickenlooper of Colorado, that continues to block both documented and undocumented immigrants who pay taxes using ITINs (individual taxpayer identification numbers) from receiving direct relief. (A Social Security number is a requirement for federal pandemic aid, which means immigrants who pay taxes with ITINs canāt qualify.) After getting blowback for his vote from Coloradoās immigration rights community and a from the Colorado ACLU accused the senator of breaking campaign promises to stand with immigrants, Hickenlooper met with community members and released a to a local news station: “I recognize how this vote has distorted that important fact and fed dangerous and damaging narratives about the undocumented community. ⦠I remain committed to working together to finally achieve a comprehensive fix for our broken immigration system, including a pathway to citizenship.ā
HincapiĆ© calls the vote āmorally unconscionable.ā āThe pandemic has shown how interdependent we are and that this is a time in our nation to make sure weāre taking care of everyone. Itās the only way weāre going to get out of this,ā she said. āThere is no recovery without including immigrants.ā
Nearly half of the nearly living illegally in the United States (including some in Colorado) pay taxes, according to the American Immigration Council, a Washington, D.C.-based advocacy organization. In Colorado, they paid an estimated in federal taxes and $156.5 million in state and local taxes in 2018. According to the , ITIN filers nationwide pay over $9 billion in annual payroll taxes.
The Migration Policy Institute, a nonprofit think tank in Washington, D.C., in January that 9.3 million unauthorized immigrants whose income meets the threshold for covid aid are blocked from accessing it, and also canāt apply for federal programs that provide cash and food assistance. It reported that undocumented people represent more than half of the workers in the hardest-hit industries, such as meatpacking, the restaurant business, health care and child care.
The Colorado nonprofit that provided Ana with rental assistance, , received applications from 300 families for rental help. The group could assist only 51 of them, said Julissa Soto, the groupās director of statewide programs. Soto, who used to be undocumented herself, said she knows of at least 30 undocumented families that are homeless because of the pandemic in El Paso County, which includes Colorado Springs. She said she is frustrated by a lack of action by Coloradoās political leaders to address the problem.
āMy community is starving and getting evicted, and this is because we are undocumented and we donāt exist,ā she said. āNo one wants to talk about the undocumented community.ā
Itās unclear how many people living illegally across the nation have been evicted during the pandemic. One reason for the uncertainty is because they often leave the moment a landlord threatens to kick them out to avoid going to eviction court and risking deportation, immigration advocates say. As a result, landlords can often evict undocumented people without ever officially filing in civil court and without following the state and federal rules, so there is no paper trail to track.
āRather than go to court and assert their rights, they just move out,ā said Zach Neumann, founder of the . āThey often do so in a way that’s really disruptive to their families and their lives.ā
Anaās landlord evicted her at the end of her lease exploiting a loophole in the federal eviction moratorium that allows evictions when leases expire. She said her landlord threatened to call the police, so she left as quickly as possible. The short time frame her landlord set does not follow Colorado law, which allows tenants 10 days to appeal an eviction in court or leave the property after official notice is given.
A phone number listed for the landlord, AB Property Management, was disconnected, and multiple attempts to contact the owners of Anaās past rental property were unsuccessful.
Though President Joe Bidenās proposed emergency pandemic aid package mentions ensuring vaccine access to Americans āregardless of their immigration status,ā there is no similar statement included for the $30 billion proposed in rental and critical energy and water assistance, or extended unemployment benefits or individual stimulus checks..
and developed payment programs for undocumented residents. But despite having an undocumented population of almost 200,000 ā accounting for about 3% of the stateās population in 2016 ā Colorado has no financial aid program to address that community.
Ana and her children are now sleeping on the floor in a friendās unfurnished spare room. She recently found a cleaning job that pays $300 a week. Itās not much, but sheās thankful to have it after nine months of looking for work. Sheās still terrified of losing her kids if social-service workers find out the family is homeless.
āThis is not living. This is just surviving. Letās be clear. This is just surviving, and I want to live. I want a house for my kids,ā she said.
