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		Committee criticizes Pritzker as admin cuts non-citizen health care
		[April 09, 2025]  
		By Jim Talamonti | The Center Square 
		(The Center Square) – Members of the Illinois General Assembly’s Joint 
		Committee on Administrative Rules are not happy they’ve been given the 
		task of ending the state’s Health Benefits for Immigrant Adults program.
 HBIA currently serves eligible individuals ages 42 to 64. The program is 
		scheduled to end on July 1, 2025. The last day of medical coverage 
		through HBIA will be June 30.
 
 Gov. J.B. Pritzker did not include funding for HBIA in this year’s 
		budget proposal. Combined HBIA and Health Benefits for Immigrant Seniors 
		spending in fiscal year 2024 was $682 million. Since inception, the 
		total HBIS and HBIA program has cost Illinois taxpayers more than $1.6 
		billion.
 
 State Rep. Curtis Tarver, D-Chicago, questioned members of the Illinois 
		Department of Healthcare and Family Services why JCAR was handed new 
		emergency rules to end HBIA.
 
 “I want you to go back to there being a victory lap by the 
		administration about helping these individuals and simultaneously filing 
		emergency rules to kill the program. And then here we are with JCAR with 
		the responsibility of killing the program,” Tarver said.
 
 Omar Shaker is the Department of Healthcare and Family Services’ chief 
		of administrative rules.
 
 “The governor presented a budget in February of this year that did not 
		have any money allocated for the program and that’s when we began to 
		initiate the process of creating these administrative rules to respond 
		to that if that is the eventuality,” Shaker said.
 
 Shaker confirmed to Tarver that money had been allocated for the program 
		the past several years.
 
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            Illinois Gov. J.B. Pritzker - BlueRoomStream 
            
			
			 
            State Rep. Steven Reick, R-Woodstock, said he questioned why 
			emergency rulemaking authority was given when the HBIA bill was 
			first considered in the statehouse.
 “I believe this is an emergency of the administration’s own making. 
			It is not an emergency per se,” Reick said.
 
 Reick said the administration abused emergency rulemaking authority 
			and took a “meat axe” approach to cutting HBIA.
 
 “It’s an abuse of JCAR to use us as the vehicle by which this 
			program is terminated,” Reick said.
 
 Tarver said it would be important to advise immigrants who would be 
			no longer be receiving benefits.
 
 “It’s very concerning to me. I would like to certainly have a 
			conversation offline as well about specific outreach, so that those 
			individuals are aware and they can get the resources they need. I 
			don’t think any of this is their fault. Whether it’s the 
			administration, I don’t think it’s JCAR for sure, or the 
			legislature, it’s certainly not their fault,” Tarver said.
 
 Greg Bishop contributed to this 
			story.
 
			
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