Meanwhile, Biden and company are giving taxpayer dollars up to at least $84 million to house these illegals in hotels while the American citzen homeless person still sleeps on the street, is not getting any medical attention and is getting zippo while illegals get all the benefits from our taxes. China Joe's policy is come one come all, and the American citizen be dammed. All to offer these illegals all the benefits of citizenship while not being a citizen. Even the right to vote if the Democratic Communist Party can pass HR-1. As a citizen you will become 2nd class while the illegals enjoy the benefits of your labor. I am sorry, some of these illegals may have legitimate reasons of fleeing thier country, but we do have immigration laws and most of these illegals do not fit withn the guidelines.
April 1, 2021 | 8:15pm | Updatedlarge Image
Legislators and Gov.
Andrew Cuomo’s office were hashing out details of the “Excluded Worker Fund,”
which would be part of the now-overdue 2021-22 state budget,
sources told The Post.
The proposal, introduced in the Senate and Assembly two
weeks ago, aims to help residents who are otherwise ineligible for federal aid,
such as people living in the country illegally or those recently sprung from
jail.
Advocates — who are
pushing for the fund to be closer to $3.5 billion — have stressed that these
so-called “excluded workers” were hit-hard by the pandemic but didn’t receive
COVID-19 stimulus checks or jobless aid.
The proposal would
impact an estimated 275,000 workers across the Empire State: 173,000 in New
York City; 187,000 undocumented immigrants; and 87,000 recently incarcerated people.
Payments would be
calculated to mirror the weekly amounts from federal or state unemployment
insurance, or roughly about $500 a week.
Recipients would reap
an estimated $12,600 on average, assuming they were unemployed for 24 weeks
from the start of the pandemic in March 2020, according to a report by the
Fiscal Policy Institute.
“The maximum benefit
anyone could receive, if they were unemployed for the entire time covered,
would be $28,600 for the first year of the pandemic, March 2020 through March
2021, and $17,500 for April through December of 2021,” the organization found.
Opponents argue that
the plan is fiscally irresponsible at a time when the state is hemorrhaging
money due to the pandemic.
“This outrageous
scheme is the latest in a long line of state government’s misplaced
priorities,” Republican State Senator Daphne Jordan, said in a
statement Wednesday.
Jordan, who represents
parts of the Hudson Valley and Capital Region, added: “it makes no sense to
send billions of taxpayer dollars to illegal immigrants and convicted felons.”
The ongoing
discussions over the fund involve requests from Cuomo’s office that people
provide documentation about their work and unemployment history in order to
qualify, according to sources.
But proponents,
including Democratic State Sen. Jessica Ramos, of Queens, argue that it would
be hard to get those documents since employers would likely not tell the
government that they once hired undocumented workers, the sources said.
“We’ve been fighting
for far-reaching eligibility,” Ramos told The Post about the negotiations on
Thursday.
“We want to make sure
we are including as many neighbors as possible because too many were excluded
from financial relief programs like unemployment insurance.”
The talks came as
Cuomo and lawmakers continued to hammer out the final details of the
state’s mammoth $200 billion spending proposal for the next fiscal year — after
Albany blew past the April 1 deadline.
Dozens of “excluded
workers” have reportedly been on a hunger strike for the last 17 days to push
for the fund — leaving advocates steaming over the budget delays.
“Every day that passes
without a decision on the budget is another day that puts the safety of workers
on hunger strike and the economic security of hundreds of thousands of excluded
workers further in jeopardy,” the Fund Excluded Workers Coalition said in a
statement.
New York Rep.
Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez on Thursday said she supported the “brave workers” who
were fasting.
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