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Immigrant Activists Rally for Health Care, Stable Scheduling

by Hugh McQuaid

A group of immigrant activists marched Monday to the state Capitol where they rallied for passage of legislation including an expansion of Medicaid eligibility for undocumented children and stable scheduling requirements for service industry workers.

Dozens of people gathered to mark International Workers Day in Hartford’s Bushnell Park. ey shouted, alternatively in Spanish and English, slogans of solidarity for the state’s immigrant workforce and demands for state policymakers as they marched from the muddy turf of the park, across Trinity Street and assembled in front of the Capitol’s south-facing portico.

“We are here as organizations, residents of Connecticut, and elected o cials to demand better policies that guarantee the basic human rights of Black, brown, immigrant and working class communities,” said Veronica Ubaldo, a Mexican immigrant and member of the advocacy group Make the Road Connecticut.

On the group’s agenda were legislative proposals requiring many larger employers to publish work schedules two weeks in advance and compensate employees if their shi s are changed on short notice. Another bill attempts to ensure access to translation services for English language learner students and their families. e group pushed for a ordable housing and rent cap policies that have since been defeated. ey also called on legislators to expand Medicaid eligibility to otherwise eligible undocumented immigrants beyond the state’s current threshold at 12 years old. e immigrant workers’ push comes at a critical time for the legislature, where leaders are in the midst of negotiating a state budget for the next two years. e success or failure of most bills depends on whether a concept can secure funding in that eventual budget document, which despite an expected surplus, will be tightly constrained by scal constraints.

One of the nal pieces of the budget picture, updates on the state’s projected revenues, was expected to fall into place later Monday.

Some of the proposals sought by the advocates seem unlikely to make much

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William Spivey / Kam Williams Rev. Samuel T. Ross-Lee headway in the remaining ve weeks of the legislative session. For instance, policies capping increases in rent amounts already failed to advance out of the legislature’s Housing Committee this year. Other bills remain in play. e legislature’s spending committee was expected to consider a version of the predictable scheduling requirements as one of 95 items up for review during an a ernoon meeting. If advanced by the Appropriations Committee, the bill would return to the House, where lawmakers declined to vote on a similar proposal last year. e House will also consider the “English Learners’ Bill of Rights,” which was proposed this year by Gov. Ned Lamont. Meanwhile, a version of the expansion of Medicaid for undocumented people has already been included in the Appropriations Committee’s spending recommendations. e panel called for spending $3 million to increase eligibility for otherwise eligible children from the age of 12 to 15. Leaders of the panel argued the state had not yet been able to gauge the scal impact of the last expansion, which went into e ect earlier this year.

During Monday’s rally, advocates said the contemplated expansion did not go far enough.

As parents, we want it expanded for all ages, but we learned that they only want to expand to age 15 this year. For shame,” said Guadalupe Escamilla, a 37 yearold mother from Mexico who is now a resident of Hartford. “For us, who have worked so hard, to be given this news at this point with all that we have fought.”

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