
Immigrants in US illegally fear seeking aid
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But immigrant rights groups and religious volunteers in the region worry that residents lacking permanent legal status in central Texas, such as Leo and his family, are not getting what they need amid immigration crackdowns that have pressed a large migrant community underground. 'A lot of people are afraid,' said Sonya De La Garza-Walker, a member of the League of United Latin American Citizens in San Antonio, a Latino civil rights organization that has assisted in the devastated areas. 'They think that asking for help may call attention to themselves.'
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Officials in Kerr County did not respond to requests for comment about the area's community of immigrants living in the country illegally. The county, at the heart of the Texas Hill Country, suffered 108 known deaths, including at least 27 counselors and campers from Camp Mystic.
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During a recent Texas legislative committee hearing that took place in Kerrville, the county seat, Auburne Gallagher, a witness, pleaded with legislators, 'Did you account for the illegal population in our area?'
When the legislators failed to answer, she did. 'No,' she said, 'you did not.'
Gallagher, who lives in Leander, Texas, said in an interview Thursday that, despite the criticism she received on social media about her views on illegal immigration, she believed that everyone deserved aid after a natural disaster.
'We're all human beings. We're all God's children, whether we're here legally or illegally,' Gallagher said. 'Everybody should be treated humanely. If you need something, ask.'
Gabriela, who sought medical care for her wounded teenage son despite their immigration status, said her family felt the same way. They stay indoors in their humble home in Kerr County unless they have to go to work; she works at a restaurant, and her husband, Francisco, 39, is in construction.
The morning of July 8, she said her son was moved by the tragedy at Camp Mystic, where most of the deaths were concentrated in two cabins that housed the youngest campers, and joined a group of search-and-rescue volunteers along the Guadalupe River.
The once placid river where he and his two brothers liked to go swimming had been ravaged. Torn trees, appliances, debris, and even corpses littered the banks. Then the boy tripped. Blood was dripping down his leg. He could see finger bones protruding through the skin of his mangled left hand.
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'Maybe I was in shock, but at the time I did not feel pain,' he said.
At first, his parents thought they could treat him at home. Family members were aware that Gov. Greg Abbott signed an executive order last year requiring some hospitals to collect data on patients lacking permanent legal status, part of a broader effort to curtail tax money going to residents living in the state illegally.
Patients are not required to answer the citizenship question, and hospital officials have said they cannot turn away patients if they can't present legal documents.
Gabriela said she was not aware of those details. Her motherly instincts kicked in. She feared that the dead bodies and debris in the river had contaminated her son's open wounds. After a fierce debate, the family decided that Leo's health was worth the risk of deportation.
'Yes, I was afraid,' Gabriela said. 'But I was more afraid that he may get sicker here at home and even something worse, a bad infection and even death.'
At a local clinic, medical staff told them that they could not do much for him other than to clean his hand and wrap it with bandages. They loaded into the family truck and drove an hour east to an emergency room in San Antonio, where they were told that the teenager needed emergency surgery.
Leo, seeing his parents' worried expressions, pulled on his mother's sleeve and told her they could go home. 'No,' she said. 'We are saving your hand.'
While their son was undergoing surgery, his parents were questioned by medical workers about their health insurance and how they planned to pay for the boy's care. Their immigration status did not come up, she said.
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Last week, the boy was still recovering with a cast on his hand. He had regained movement of most of his fingers and hoped to return to school. A bill of nearly $40,000 had arrived in the mail, and the family was trying to figure out how to pay it.
'Money comes and goes,' Gabriela said. 'All that matters is that he is home, healthy, and we are still together.'
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