logo
Minnesota House committee advances bill to remove undocumented immigrants from state-funded health care

Minnesota House committee advances bill to remove undocumented immigrants from state-funded health care

CBS News18-02-2025

Minnesota has some of the most inclusive laws in the country to support undocumented residents.
On Monday, however, a House committee advanced an effort to remove undocumented immigrants from state-funded health care, scholarships and other programs.
"Minnesotans today are seeing their tax dollars go to folks who are here illegally on public programs like MinnesotaCare, which are becoming magnets for people from foreign countries," Schultz said.
But health care providers, including hospitals, testified keeping an estimated 7,700 undocumented residents on MinnesotaCare keeps costly emergency room visits down. The Minnesota Farmers Union testified that farmers need undocumented workers, and that the workers need health care.
"We supported coverage for the undocumented because they play a critical role in our food and agriculture system," Stu Lowery with the Minnesota Farmers Union said. "Immigrants disproportionately work, not just on farms, but also in food processing, meatpacking, and food service. Farmers and our food system rely on people our new to our country."
All 11 Republican committee members voted to remove the undocumented from state health care and other programs, and all 10 Democrats voted no.
The bill now moves on to another committee in what is, for now, a Republican-controlled House.
In the Minnesota Senate, where the DFL has control, DFL Senators are vowing to preserve existing laws benefiting the undocumented.
The bill's sponsor says this measure would save the state an estimated $100 million.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Democrats Back Resolution Thanking Federal Agents For Handcuffing Alex Padilla
Democrats Back Resolution Thanking Federal Agents For Handcuffing Alex Padilla

The Onion

time22 minutes ago

  • The Onion

Democrats Back Resolution Thanking Federal Agents For Handcuffing Alex Padilla

WASHINGTON—After he was forcibly removed from a press conference held in Los Angeles yesterday by Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem, Democrats in the House of Representatives backed a resolution Friday that thanked federal agents for handcuffing Sen. Alex Padilla (D-CA). 'We express gratitude to law enforcement for bravely apprehending a sitting U.S. senator who expressed dissent in a public forum,' read the resolution, which won the support of 75 Democrats and praised both FBI and Secret Service agents for risking their lives to throw Padilla to the ground, handcuff him, and drag him outside. 'Every day, these brave officers stand in the line of fire to protect us from individuals who dare to exercise free speech. Thankfully, they were able to stop the senior senator from California before he could ask any difficult or probing questions on behalf of his constituents. We stand behind them, no matter which elected officials they may choose to assault, injure, or imprison.' Democrats also voted to give Noem a special commendation for bravely protecting authoritarianism in the face of danger.

Cobb County schools is ‘not going to invest' in storage for cellphones, superintendent says
Cobb County schools is ‘not going to invest' in storage for cellphones, superintendent says

Yahoo

time24 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Cobb County schools is ‘not going to invest' in storage for cellphones, superintendent says

Georgia lawmakers passed legislation to ban student access to phones during the legislative session. Now, the Cobb County School District says it won't be investing its budget into storage for phones at its schools. Cobb County School Superintendent Chris Ragsdale gave the update to parents, the school board and other community members at a meeting on Thursday. [DOWNLOAD: Free WSB-TV News app for alerts as news breaks] 'We will continue to communicate with parents throughout the school year as how that implementation is going to look. I can say that we are not going to invest any money into storage solutions for cellphones. The law allows us to determine what that storage place is going to be. And the storage place is going to be in a student's backpack or purse or pocketbook,' Ragsdale said. RELATED STORIES: A ban on cell phones in Georgia Schools heads to the governor's desk A bill banning cell phones in school for kids in K-8 is one step closer to becoming law Georgia student phone, tablet ban passes House vote, heads to state Senate Ban on student phones in Georgia public schools back up for review in House Education Committee Schools participating in cellphone lock-up pilot program says discipline issues are down The law in question won't take effect until July 2026, giving districts time to come up with new policies and enact them. Policy decisions have a January 2026 deadline, with additional months for implementation. For Cobb County's schools, Ragsdale said the district is going to update the student code of conduct and ensure all students and parents know the new rules. 'We will be making updates to the student code of conduct so that all students will be aware, as will parents, what the punishment would be for that,' Ragsdale said. 'We are certainly going to adhere to the law and follow the law as we always do. But the bottom line is we're going to be focused on having school.' The phone ban passed the legislation as the 'Distraction-free Education Act,' which would block students in kindergarten through eighth grade from having phones out or accessible while in class. [SIGN UP: WSB-TV Daily Headlines Newsletter]

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store