Some Pacific Islanders Hit Hardest By COVID-19 Can’t Get Federal Aid For Burials
U.S. Sen. Mazie Hirono said she is working to extend the help to citizens of nations in compacts with the U.S., some of whom face crippling costs for burials.
Last October, Kalihi resident Steve Palsis buried his wife of 28 years.
She caught COVID-19 in late September, and died within days. The suddenness of her death was compounded by his own sickness and the high cost of her funeral: about $13,000.
A new federal program is aimed at helping people who lost their loved ones to the coronavirus recoup the cost of their burials. But Palsis, who has lived and worked in Hawaii for decades, is not eligible.
The Federal Emergency Management Agency rolled out a new COVID-19 funeral assistance program this month that鈥檚 open to U.S. citizens, U.S. nationals 鈥 such as people born in American Samoa 鈥 and qualified immigrants.
Democrats in Congress have touted the program as helping low-income communities of color who were disproportionately killed by the pandemic. However, many Pacific Islanders like Palsis living and working legally in the United States even though they have been among those most affected by the coronavirus.
Those excluded are citizens of the Marshall Islands, Federated States of Micronesia and Palau who are subject to聽treaties with the United States known as the Compacts of Free Association. The agreements allowed citizens of those countries to stay聽indefinitely in the United States in exchange for U.S. military strategic control over a vast swath of the western Pacific.
Pandemic-inspired border closures have left some Pacific migrants who want to bury their loved ones back home in limbo while they wait for their island nations to reopen.聽But even those who choose to bury their loved ones in Hawaii have struggled with the high costs.
The FEMA program from families who can prove their loved one died of COVID-19 in a U.S. state or territory. The deceased person does not have to have any particular legal status.
Families can receive up to $9,000 per funeral or $35,500 if they paid for multiple funerals. So far, there’s high demand 鈥 in the first 90 minutes.
U.S. Sen. Mazie Hirono said she has heard from many Micronesian community leaders who are concerned about the issue and she is working on a solution.
鈥淢y office is working to understand if FEMA has any flexibility to interpret the applicable law to make COFA citizens eligible for funeral benefits,鈥 she said in an emailed statement.
鈥淚f we determine that a change in law is required, I will be working on legislation to make the changes necessary to ensure COFA citizens are eligible for this benefit and other crucial social safety net programs.”
High Costs
In Hawaii, people from those countries are among those who have borne the brunt of the pandemic, with data showing Pacific Islanders 鈥 excluding Native Hawaiians 鈥 have reported the highest rates of infections, hospitalizations and deaths compared with other ethnic groups.
A recent state report found that non-Hawaiian Pacific Islanders were 14 times more likely to die of COVID-19 than the average Hawaii resident and 38 times more likely to die than white Hawaii residents.
Palsis, 53, moved to Hawaii in 1989 from Kosrae in Micronesia to attend trade school and learn flooring, plumbing and other skills. He and his wife of 28 years, a registered nurse, raised their family in Salt Lake before moving to Kalihi.
But when the pandemic hit, Palsis said he lost his job at a flooring company. He said his wife Brocula, 65, was already unemployed before the pandemic because she had diabetes and was too sick to work.
Brocula died on Oct. 1, days after contracting COVID-19.
鈥淚t was very sudden,鈥 Palsis said in a phone interview. 鈥淚t鈥檚 hard to talk about it.鈥
Palsis caught COVID-19 too but survived. He paid for his wife鈥檚 funeral with the help of family, friends and his church. But it was still a huge cost, totaling about $13,000. Since then, Palsis has struggled to pay rent while working part time.
He had hoped the FEMA funerals program would help him pay back rent and avoid eviction.
But he learned he was excluded and began looking into other rental subsidy options and for cheaper, smaller housing.
Hawaii isn鈥檛 the only state where Pacific Islanders were hit hard by COVID-19. The community reported high rates across multiple states including Oregon and and .
In Arkansas, where many Marshallese work in chicken factories, more likely to die than white Arkansas residents.
Melisa Laelan, who runs the nonprofit , has spent the past year helping families take care of their sick loved ones, avoid eviction and bury their family members who died of COVID-19. She’s disappointed about the limitations of the funeral funding program.
鈥淚t鈥檚 just another systemic injustice,鈥 she said.
A Recurring Issue
Part of what鈥檚 frustrating to Laelan is that the exclusion from the federal program comes just four months after Congress reinstated Medicaid for the community.
鈥淚t seems like you fix one issue and another one pops up,鈥 she said. 鈥淚t seems like this ongoing revolving door and now I鈥檓 beginning to think that there will never be an end to the fight.鈥
Related Story
The 1996 Welfare Reform Act removed Compact migrants鈥 eligibility for many federal safety net programs. Effectively they are treated as temporary residents under the law, even though their legal status allows them to stay in the U.S. indefinitely.
Some get green cards and become U.S. citizens, but many live here for decades and die here without doing so, in part because there’s no dedicated pathway for Compact migrants to obtain permanent residency.
While Medicaid access was recently restored, the community is still ineligible for other programs such as Social Security Supplemental Security Income, Temporary Assistance for Needy Families and Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program, also known as food stamps, according to a 2019 report by a Hawaii advisory group to the U.S. Civil Rights Commission that recommended restoring migrants’ eligibility for several programs.
In 2018, in the wake of Super Typhoon Yutu on Saipan, migrants who lost their homes in the disaster were ineligible for FEMA disaster assistance.
There have been other systemic challenges too. After Congress left the community out of the REAL ID Act, it took more than a decade to fix the problem and allow them to fully access federally approved driver’s licenses. Last year, Hawaii left the migrants’ legal status off of an application for unemployment insurance, even though people who work are eligible for that support.
Laelan and other community advocates were excited about the funeral assistance program but now see it as one more program that they pay into as taxpayers but can鈥檛 access.
鈥淲e are most impacted by death from COVID and now we are being excluded from this program,鈥 Laelan said. 鈥淚t really doesn鈥檛 make sense (that) the people who need this more, we are going to take them out.鈥
Sign up for our FREE morning newsletter and face each day more informed.
Support Independent, Unbiased News
Civil Beat is a nonprofit, reader-supported newsroom based in 贬补飞补颈驶颈. When you give, your donation is combined with gifts from thousands of your fellow readers, and together you help power the strongest team of investigative journalists in the state.
About the Author
-
Anita Hofschneider is a reporter for Civil Beat. You can reach her by email at anita@civilbeat.org or follow her on Twitter at .