By
Tanya Broder
Public Benefits Policy Director
The week of July 9,
the U.S. House of Representatives passed HR 2608, the SSI Extension
for Elderly and Disabled Refugees Act, on a voice vote.
Representatives Jim McDermott (D-WA), Jerry Weller (R-IL), Phil
English (R-PA), Pete Stark (D-CA), and Xavier Becerra (D-CA)
spoke
eloquently about the persecution, injustice, and torture from
which refugees flee, as well as the hardships they face in the U.S.
They noted that this bipartisan bill, urged by faith-based,
immigrant rights, and anti-poverty groups across the country, also
received support from the Social Security Administration.
The bill now moves to the Senate,
where intensive efforts will be needed to ensure that this
legislation can pass and be signed into law this year.
HR 2608 would allow low-income seniors and persons with
disabilities who fled persecution (refugees, persons granted asylum
or withholding of deportation/removal, Cuban and Haitian entrants,
and Amerasian immigrants) to receive critical assistance under the
Supplemental Security Income (SSI) program for an additional two
years. Without assistance, these seniors and persons with
disabilities risk homelessness, hunger and despair.
These humanitarian immigrants are often unable to naturalize
within the current seven-year eligibility period due to immigration
backlogs, delays and other barriers related to their age or
disability. The House-passed bill would allow all humanitarian
immigrants to receive assistance as non–U.S. citizens for a period
of nine years after obtaining the relevant status. Humanitarian
immigrants already terminated from SSI due to the seven-year time
limit would be eligible to receive SSI as noncitizens for an
additional two years. The bill would further extend the time limit
for humanitarian immigrants who have a pending naturalization
application. These new extensions would be in effect during a
three-year period, beginning Oct. 1, 2007, and ending Sept. 30,
2010.
Fact sheets and more information on the SSI Extension for
Elderly and Disabled Refugees Act is available on our
“Supplemental
Security Income” web page.