BILL ANALYSIS                                                                                                                                                                                                    



                                                          AB 873
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ASSEMBLY THIRD READING
AB 873 (Villaraigosa)
As Amended May 28, 1999
Majority vote 

  HUMAN SERVICES      5-3         APPROPRIATIONS      14-7        
  
 ----------------------------------------------------------------- 
|Ayes:|Aroner, Bock, Ducheny,    |Ayes:|Migden, Cedillo, Davis,   |
|     |Dutra, Strom-Martin       |     |Hertzberg, Kuehl, Papan,  |
|     |                          |     |Romero, Shelley,          |
|     |                          |     |Steinberg, Thomson,       |
|     |                          |     |Wesson, Wiggins, Wright,  |
|     |                          |     |Aroner                    |
|     |                          |     |                          |
|-----+--------------------------+-----+--------------------------|
|Nays:|Ashburn, Kaloogian,       |Nays:|Brewer, Ashburn, Battin,  |
|     |Olberg                    |     |Pescetti, Maldonado,      |
|     |                          |     |Runner, Zettel            |
 ----------------------------------------------------------------- 

  SUMMARY  :  Repeals the sunset on the California Food Assistance  
Program (CFAP) and Cash Assistance Program for Immigrants (CAPI)  
and expands eligibility.  Specifically,  this bill  :  

1)Removes the July 1, 2000, sunset of CFAP and extends the  
  program indefinitely.

2)Expands eligibility for CFAP to include:

   a)   Legal immigrants who entered the country on or after  
     August 22, 1996, and who are otherwise eligible for  
     benefits.

   b)   Battered immigrant spouses and children and the parents  
     or children of the battered immigrant.

   c)   Cuban or Haitian refugees under the federal Refugee  
     Education Assistance Act of 1980.

3)Repeals CFAP requirement that only individuals who entered the  
  country on or after August 22, 1996, and who are victims of  
  abuse by their sponsor or whose sponsors are dead or disabled  
  are eligible for benefits.









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 4) Requires CFAP recipients who do not also receive CalWORKs  
   benefits to meet the federal food stamp work requirements.

 5) Removes the July 1, 2000, sunset of CAPI and extends the  
   program indefinitely.

 6) Expands eligibility for CAPI to include disabled legal  
   immigrants who entered the country on or after August 22,  
   1996, and who are otherwise eligible for benefits.

 7) Repeals CAPI requirement that only individuals who entered  
   the country on or after August 22, 1996, and who are victims  
   of abuse by their sponsor or whose sponsors are dead or  
   disabled are eligible for benefits.

 8) Requires that all federal and state laws and regulations  
   intended to protect Supplemental Security Income/State  
   Supplemental Payment (SSI/SSP) recipients apply to all CAPI  
   recipients.

 9) Requires, to the extent permitted by federal law, the  
   deeming of an immigrant's sponsor's income and resources to  
   the immigrant for a period of five years.

 10)States legislative intent to appropriate funds annually in  
   the Budget Act for CFAP and CAPI.

  EXISTING LAW  : 

1)Requires the Department of Social Services (DSS) until January  
  1, 2000, to administer CFAP to provide state-funded food  
  stamps to legal immigrants who entered the country on or  
  before August 21, 1996, and who are eligible for federal food  
  stamp benefits but for their immigration status under P.L.  
  104-193.

2)Provides that legal immigrants who enter the country on or  
  after August 22, 1996, are eligible for CFAP benefits only if  
  their sponsor is dead or disabled or he or she is a victim of  
  abuse by their sponsor.

3)Requires DSS, until July 1, 2000, to establish and supervise a  
  county-administered program, CAPI, to provide cash assistance  
  to aged, blind and disabled legal immigrants who entered the  
  country on or before August 22, 1996, and who are eligible for  








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  SSI/SSP benefits but for their immigration status under P.L.  
  104-193.

4)Provides that legal immigrants who enter the country on or  
  after August 22, 1996, are eligible for CAPI benefits only if  
  their sponsor is dead or disabled or they are victims of abuse  
  by their sponsor.

  FISCAL EFFECT  :   The Assembly Appropriations Committee found  
General Fund costs of $105.8 million, effective 2000-01, to  
continue the CFAP and CAPI programs beyond the current sunset  
date and $11.9 million in 1999-00 to expand food stamp program  
eligibility.  Unknown costs to expand CAPI eligibility.

  COMMENTS  :  The Food Stamp Program is a federal program  
administered by the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) which  
provides food coupons to low-income individuals to improve  
nutrition through the purchase of food products.  Under P.L.  
104-193, most legal noncitizen residents are permanently barred  
from receiving food stamps.  In response to P.L. 104-193,  
California created the CFAP program.  Under this program, the  
state purchases food stamp coupons from the federal government  
with General Funds.  The program provides benefits to legal  
immigrants who would qualify for federal food stamp benefits but  
for the federal legal immigrant restrictions.  With limited  
exceptions, only legal immigrants who entered the country prior  
to August 22, 1996, are eligible.  This bill would expand the  
state-only food program to individuals regardless of the date  
that they entered the country, provided that they are otherwise  
eligible for benefits.  It would also require immigrants to be  
subject to the same work requirements as citizens.

Although P.L. 104-193 denied SSI eligibility to most legal  
immigrants, many of those cuts were restored in the federal 1997  
Budget Reconciliation bill.  Aged legal immigrants who are not  
disabled and were not receiving SSI benefits before August 22,  
1996, even though they entered the country before that date, are  
not eligible for SSI benefits.  The CAPI provides state-funded  
benefits for these individuals.  Legal immigrants who enter the  
country after August 22, 1996, are not eligible for SSI or CAPI  
benefits.  This bill expands CAPI to disabled individuals, with  
benefits and eligibility criteria identical to the SSI/SSP  
program.

The Sponsor of this bill, California Immigrant Welfare  








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Collaborative, states that almost 100,000 legal immigrants are  
receiving CFAP benefits and over 11,000 are receiving CAPI  
benefits.  They assert that this bill is necessary to ensure  
that low-income legal immigrants have an adequate and dependable  
nutrition source and to allow elderly and disabled immigrants to  
maintain their housing, nutrition and medical care.  Supporters  
state that the loss of CFAP benefits would push thousands of  
families into hunger and further strain the already burdened  
charitable food supply.


  Analysis Prepared by  :  Curtis Child / HUM. S. / (916) 319-2247 
 

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