As Trump targets immigrants, elderly and others brace to lose caregivers
BOSTON The two women have been together since 2011, a 96-year-old originally from Italy and a Haitian immigrant who has helped her remain in her home giving her showers, changing her clothes, taking her to her favorite parks and discount grocery stores.
Hello, bella, Nirva greets Isolina Dicenso, using the Italian word for beautiful.
Hi, baby, Dicenso replies.
But changes to federal immigration policy are putting both at risk. Haitian caregivers like Nirva, who got temporary permission to stay in the United States after the 2010 earthquake destroyed much of their homeland, now face a July 22, 2019 deadline for returning. If they and tens of thousands of other immigrants with similar jobs and tenuous legal status are forced to leave the country, Americans living with disabilities, serious illness or, like Dicenso, the frailties of old age could find themselves with few options besides nursing homes.
And many of those facilities could themselves be caught short of staff, at a time when more of the countrys aging baby boom generation could need care.
The situation reflects the crosscurrents that often roil immigration debates, with a central question being how many Americans are willing to fill the arduous, low-pay positions that immigrants often work. The expected fallout offers a glimpse into how such policy changes under President Trump will affect older Americans nationwide, especially those in large cities.
Some 59,000 Haitians live in the United States under temporary protected status (TPS), a humanitarian program that has given them permission to live and work in this country since the earthquake. Many are nursing assistants, home health aides and personal care attendants the trio of jobs that often defines direct-care workers.
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