Gavin Newsom touts health care plan for undocumented Californians during Kern County visit
This story is part of the Central Valley News Collaborative — a bilingual, community journalism project funded by the Central Valley Community Foundation and with technology and training support from Microsoft Corp. The collaboration includes The Fresno Bee, Valley Public Radio, Vida en el Valle, Radio Bilingüe and the Institute for Media & Public Trust at Fresno State.
In an effort to close a gap in health care coverage for hundreds of thousands of Californians, Governor Gavin Newsom on Tuesday touted a new proposal to expand Medi-Cal access to all residents, regardless of immigration status.
Newsom detailed his plan while visiting the Clinica Sierra Vista at the Lamont Community Health Center in Kern County, which predominantly serves mixed-status and undocumented families.
“We believe in the right to quality health care,” he said. “This is about strengthening families, strengthening communities and the economy here in the state of California. It is a point of deep pride, not just principle, that we’re here in particular in the Central Valley.”
Newsom’s plan, which he unveiled Monday in his $286 billion state budget proposal, would expand access to the state’s low-income health program for an additional 764,000 undocumented Californians between the ages of 26 and 49. Coverage would begin on Jan. 1, 2024 and would cost the state an ongoing $2.7 billion annually.
Newsom is also calling for the creation of an Office of Health Care Affordability, which he said aims to “address underlying cost drivers” and reduce health care costs. He’s also hoping to allocate $1.7 billion for health infrastructure improvements, including expanding the state’s health care workforce through scholarship programs, loan repayments and grants. The plan also includes dollars for increased resources for local health departments.
Currently, undocumented people are eligible for Medi-Cal through age 26. Undocumented adults ages 50 and older will become eligible for Medi-Cal after May 1. State officials last year projected about 200,000 undocumented immigrants would be enrolled in Medi-Cal by the end of the 2026 fiscal year. California is home to about 2 million undocumented immigrants, the largest number of undocumented people in the U.S.
Newsom said the proposal not only addresses a “moral” concern, but also aims to cut costs for California taxpayers. He said opponents of the proposal should weigh how preventative health care for immigrants could reduce the burden on the health care system.
“For those who are critical of this proposal, I would only offer this: We have universal health care in this state and in this country, but it’s on the back end. It’s called the emergency room,” he said. “It’s costing you the taxpayer a fortune. That alone should be an argument in favor of universal health care.”
Newsom appeared Tuesday during a press conference alongside Assemblymember Rudy Salas, D-Bakersfield and civil rights leader Dolores Huerta, among other advocates.
Salas said the governor’s announcement marked a “historic moment” for the Central Valley’s undocumented population because the clinic, which was started in 1971, was created to provide quality health care to migrant farmworkers.
“We care about all Californians, we care about our families, we care about your health,” he said. “The governor’s proposal in his budget does exactly that.”
Huerta said California will be the first state in the U.S. to “finally recognize our immigrants and to give them the kind of health care that they need.”
The Kern County visit comes on the heels of an ongoing surge of COVID-19 cases across the state. The rise in cases spurred by the omicron variant has inundated hospitals, caused staffing shortages and overwhelmed the state’s testing facilities. As of Monday, several counties across the Central Valley reported a significant increase in the number of new coronavirus cases. Hospitalizations in six Valley counties were up 37% from the previous week.
Newsom on Tuesday discussed other proposals to address the COVID-19 pandemic’s ongoing impact in communities across the state.
He signed an executive order Tuesday creating more leeway for school officials to hire retirees and substitute teachers to address a staffing shortage caused by the uptick in COVID-19 cases. The executive order will expire at the end of March, he said.
This story was originally published January 11, 2022 at 3:52 PM with the headline "Gavin Newsom touts health care plan for undocumented Californians during Kern County visit."