Kate M. Manuel
Legislative Attorney
The Immigration and Nationality Act (INA) has long provided for aliens’
exclusion and deportation from the United States on “public charge”
grounds. Under current law, aliens outside the United States who seek to
obtain visas at U.S. consulates overseas, or admission at U.S. ports of
entry, are generally denied entry if they are deemed “likely at any time to
become a public charge.” Aliens within the United States who seek to
adjust their status to that of lawful permanent resident (LPR), or who
entered the United States without inspection, are also generally subject
to this ground of inadmissibility. Similarly, LPRs and other aliens who have
been admitted to the United States are removable if they become a public
charge within five years after the date of their entry due to causes that
pre-existed their entry. These public charge grounds have recently been of
interest because of concerns, among some Members of Congress and the public, regarding
noncitizens’ receipt of public assistance.
The INA does not expressly define what it means for an alien to be a public
charge, and, prior to 1996, there was no statutory guidance on what was to
be considered in determining whether an alien is inadmissible or
deportable (removable) on public charge grounds. Then, in 1996, the INA was
amended to require that certain factors be taken into account when determining
whether aliens are inadmissible on public charge grounds, including the
alien’s age, health, family status, financial resources, education, and
skills. There still is no similar guidance on the public charge ground of
deportability.
Given this general lack of statutory guidance, the executive and judicial
branches initially construed the meaning of
public charge in
adjudicating cases involving individual aliens. In so doing,
administrative authorities interpreted
public charge differently for
purposes of the grounds of inadmissibility than for the grounds of
deportability. Specifically,
public charge was construed broadly in
the context of admissibility, with determinations based on a “totality of the circumstances”
test that considered factors like those codified in the INA in 1996. In
contrast, in the context of deportability, “public charge” was construed
more narrowly. Aliens could only be found to be deportable on public
charge grounds if (1) they received government assistance that they were
legally obligated to repay, (2) the government entity providing the assistance
demanded repayment, and (3) the alien or the alien’s sponsor was unable to
pay.
Following the enactment of the Personal Responsibility and Work Opportunity
Reconciliation Act (PRWORA) of 1996, executive agencies issued guidance
regarding the public charge grounds. While PRWORA generally restricts
noncitizens’ eligibility for “public benefits,” it permits them to receive
specified benefits, and its enactment raised questions about whether aliens who
receive benefits for which they are eligible under PRWORA could
potentially be removable on public charge grounds. Immigration officials
addressed these questions in a 1999 policy letter that defined
public
charge, and identified which benefits are considered in public charge determinations.
This policy letter underlies current regulations and other guidance on the
public charge grounds of inadmissibility and deportability.
Collectively, the various sources addressing the meaning of
public charge suggest
that an alien’s receipt of public benefits, per se, is unlikely to result
in the alien being deemed removable on public charge grounds. Neither the
INA nor implementing regulations address the role that receipt of public
benefits plays in public charge determinations. Other agency guidance and court decisions
indicate that, while receipt of certain public benefits could be considered in
public charge determinations, other factors are also considered (e.g.,
age, obligation to repay).
Date of Report: September 9, 2013
Number of Pages: 17
Order Number: R43220
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