Current through Register Vol. 56, No. 18, September 16, 2024
(a) A person
born in the United States is, by definition, a United States citizen. The
United States is defined as the Continental United States, Alaska, Hawaii,
Puerto Rico, Guam and the Virgin Islands of the United States. Native-born
persons of American Samoa, Swains Island and the Northern Mariana Islands are
also regarded as citizens of the United States. Additionally, persons
recognized as citizens of the United States pursuant to
8 U.S.C. §
1401 are also regarded as citizens of the
United States.
(b) Naturalized
citizens are those persons upon whom United States citizenship is conferred
after birth. This may be accomplished through individual or collective
naturalization or, under certain conditions, citizenship may be derived from a
naturalized parent. Thus, a child(ren) of a naturalized parent(s) is
automatically considered a naturalized citizen(s). Women who themselves could
be lawfully naturalized and, prior to September 22, 1922, were married to
citizens, or were married to aliens who became citizens before that date,
automatically became citizens. On and after that date, standard U.S.
Citizenship and Immigration Services conditions have to be met before any
person can become a naturalized citizen.
1. A
naturalized citizen, unless automatically naturalized as outlined above, should
have his or her naturalization certificate as proof of citizenship. If the
applicant does not have this document, the county welfare board should contact
the nearest U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS) district office
to verify that the applicant meets the requirements of a naturalized
citizen.
(c) The
following aliens, if present in the United States prior to August 22, 1996, and
if otherwise meeting the eligibility criteria, are entitled to full Medicaid
benefits:
1. An alien lawfully admitted for
permanent residence;
2. A refugee
admitted pursuant to section 207 of the Immigration and Nationality
Act;
3. An asylee admitted pursuant
to section 208 of the Immigration and Nationality Act;
4. An alien whose deportation has been
withheld pursuant to section 243(h) of the Immigration and Nationality
Act;
5. An alien who has been
granted parole for at least one year by the U.S. Citizenship and Immigration
Services pursuant to section 212(d)(5) of the Immigration and Nationality
Act;
6. An alien who has been
granted conditional entry pursuant to section 203(a)(7) of the immigration law
in effect prior to April 1, 1980;
7. An alien who is granted status as a Cuban
or Haitian entrant pursuant to section 501(e) of the Refugee Education
Assistance Act of 1980;
8. An
American Indian born in Canada to whom the provisions of section 289 of the
Immigration and Nationality Act apply;
9. A member of an Indian tribe as defined in
section 4(e) of the Indian Self-Determination and Education Assistance
Act;
10. An alien who is admitted
to the United States as an Amerasian immigrant pursuant to section 584 of the
Foreign Operations, Export Financing, and Related Programs Appropriations Act
of 1988;
11. An alien who is
honorably discharged or who is on active duty in the United States Armed Forces
and his or her spouse and the unmarried dependent children of the alien or
spouse; and
12. Certain legal
aliens who are victims of domestic violence and when there is a substantial
connection between the battery or cruelty suffered by an alien and his or her
need for Medicaid benefits, subject to certain conditions described below:
i. The alien has been battered or subjected
to extreme cruelty in the United States by a spouse or a parent;
ii. The alien has been battered or subjected
to extreme cruelty in the United States by a member of the spouse's or parent's
family residing in the same household of the alien and the spouse or parent
acquiesced to such battery or cruelty;
iii. The alien's child has been battered or
subjected to extreme cruelty in the United States by the spouse or the parent
of the alien (without the active participation of the alien in the battery or
cruelty);
iv. The alien's child has
been battered or subjected to extreme cruelty in the United States by a member
of the spouse's or parent's family residing in the same household as the alien
and the spouse or parent acquiesced to and the alien did not actively take part
in such battery or cruelty;
v. In
addition to the conditions described in (c)12i through iv above, if the
individual responsible for the battery or cruelty continues to reside in the
same household as the individual who was subjected to such battery or cruelty,
then the alien shall be ineligible for full Medicaid benefits under this
chapter;
vi. The county welfare
agency shall apply the definitions "battery" and "extreme cruelty" and the
standards for determining whether a substantial connection exists between the
battery or cruelty and the need for Medicaid as issued by the Attorney General
of the United States under his or her sole and unreviewable discretion, in
accordance with
8
U.S.C. §
1641.
(d) The following aliens entering
the United States on or after August 22, 1996, and if otherwise meeting the
eligibility criteria, are entitled to Medicaid benefits:
1. An alien lawfully admitted for permanent
residence, but only after having been present in the United States for five
years;
2. A refugee admitted
pursuant to section 207 of the Immigration and Nationality Act;
3. An asylee admitted pursuant to section 208
of the Immigration and Nationality Act;
4. An alien whose deportation has been
withheld pursuant to section 243(h) of the Immigration and Nationality
Act;
5. An alien who has been
granted parole for at least one year by the Immigration and Naturalization
Service pursuant to section 212(d)5 of the Immigration and Nationality Act, but
only after the alien has been present in the United States for five
years;
6. An alien who has been
granted conditional entry pursuant to section 203(a)(7) of the immigration law
in effect prior to April 1, 1980, but only after the alien has been present in
the United States for five years;
7. An alien who is granted status as a Cuban
or Haitian entrant pursuant to section 501(e) of the Refugee Education
Assistance Act of 1980;
8. An
American Indian born in Canada to whom the provisions of section 289 of the
Immigration and Nationality Act apply;
9. A member of an Indian tribe as defined in
section 4(e) of the Indian Self-Determination and Education Assistance
Act;
10. An alien who is admitted
to the United States as an Amerasian immigrant pursuant to section 584 of the
Foreign Operations, Export Financing, and Related Programs Appropriations Act
of 1988;
11. An alien who is
honorably discharged or who is on active duty with the United States Armed
Forces and his or her spouse and the unmarried dependent children of the alien
or spouse; and
12. Certain aliens
who are victims of domestic violence as specified in (c)12 above, but only
after the alien has been present in the United States for five years.
(e) Any alien who is not an
eligible alien as specified in (c) and (d) above is ineligible for full
Medicaid benefits. Any such alien, if a resident of New Jersey and if he or she
meets all other Medicaid eligibility requirements, is entitled to Medicaid
coverage for the treatment of an emergency medical condition only.
1. An emergency medical condition is one of
sudden onset that manifests itself by acute symptoms of sufficient severity
(including severe pain) such that the absence of immediate medical attention
could reasonably be expected to result in:
i.
Placing the patient's health in serious jeopardy;
ii. Serious impairment to bodily functions;
or
iii. Serious dysfunction of any
bodily organ or part.
2.
An emergency medical condition includes all labor and delivery for a pregnant
woman. It does not include routine prenatal or post-partum care.
3. Services related to an organ transplant
procedure are not covered under services available for treatment of an
emergency medical condition.
(f) Persons claiming to be citizens and
eligible aliens shall provide the county welfare agency with documentation of
citizenship or alien status.
(g) As
a condition of eligibility, all applicants for Medicaid (except for those
applying solely for services related to the treatment of an emergency medical
condition) shall sign a declaration under penalty of perjury that they are a
citizen of the United States or an alien in a satisfactory immigration status.
In the case of a child or incompetent applicant, another individual on the
applicant's behalf shall complete the same written declaration under penalty of
perjury.
1. The following are acceptable
documentation of United States citizenship:
i. A birth certificate;
ii. A religious record of birth recorded in
the United States or its territories within three months of birth. The document
must show either the date of birth or the individual's age at the time the
record was created;
iii. A United
States passport (not including limited passports which are issued for periods
of less than five years);
iv. A
Report of Birth Abroad of a Citizen of the U.S. (Form FS-240);
v. A U.S. Citizen I.D. Card (USCIS Form-197,
Nationality Certificate (USCIS Form N-550 or N-570);
vi. A Certificate of Citizenship (USCIS Form
N-560 or N-561);
vii. A Northern
Mariana Identification Card (issued by the USCIS to a collectively naturalized
citizen of the United States who was born in the United States before November
3, 1986);
viii. An American Indian
Card with a classification code "KIC" (issued by the USCIS to identify U.S.
citizen members of the Texas Band of Kickapoos);
ix. A contemporaneous hospital record of
birth in one of the 50 states, the District of Columbia, Puerto Rico (on or
after January 13, 1941), Guam (on or after April 10, 1899), the U.S. Virgin
Islands (on or after January 17, 1917), American Samoa, Swains Island or the
Northern Mariana Islands (unless the person was born to foreign diplomats
residing in any of these jurisdictions); or
x. Other documentation allowed through
regulation by the Secretary of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services
in compliance with
42 U.S.C. §§
1396b(x).
2. If an applicant presents an
expired USCIS document or is unable to present any document demonstrating his
or her immigration status, the county welfare agency shall refer the applicant
to the local INS district office to obtain evidence of status. If, however, the
applicant provides an alien registration number, but no documentation, the
county welfare agency shall file USCIS Form G-845 along with the alien
registration number with the local INS district office to verify
status.
3. The following sets forth
acceptable documentation for eligible aliens:
i. Lawful Permanent Resident--USCIS Form
I-551, or for recent arrivals, a temporary I-551 stamp in a foreign passport or
on Form I-94.
ii. Refugee--USCIS
Form I-94 annotated with stamp showing entry as refugee under section 207 of
the Immigration and Nationality Act and date of entry into the United States;
USCIS Form I-688B annotated "274a. 12(a)(3)," I-766 annotated "A3" or I-571.
Refugees usually adjust to Lawful Permanent Resident status after 12 months in
the United States, but for purposes of determining Medicaid eligibility they
are considered refugees. Refugees whose status has been adjusted will have
USCIS Form I-551 annotated "RE-6," "RE-7," "RE-8" or "RE-9."
iii. Asylees--USCIS Form I-94 annotated with
a stamp showing grant of asylum under section 208 of the Immigration and
Nationality Act, a grant letter from the Asylum Office of the U.S. Citizenship
and Immigration Services, Forms 688B annotated "274a. 12(a)(5)" or I-766
annotated "A5."
iv. Deportation
Withheld--Order of an Immigration Judge showing deportation withheld under
section 243(h) of the Immigration and Nationality Act and the date of the
grant, or USCIS Form I-688B annotated "274a. 12(a)(10)" or I-766 annotated
"A10."
v. Parole for at Least a
Year--USCIS Form I-94 annotated with stamp showing grant of parole under
section 212(d)(5) of the Immigration and Nationality Act and a date showing
granting of parole for at least a year.
vi. Conditional Entry under Law in Effect
before April 1, 1980--USCIS Form I-94 with stamp showing admission under
section 203(a)(7) of the Immigration and Nationality Act, refugee-conditional
entry, or USCIS Forms I-688B annotated "274a. 12(a)(3)" or I-766 annotated
"A3."
vii. Cuban Haitian
Entrant--USCIS Form I-94 stamped "Cuban/Haitian Entrant under section 212(d)(5)
of the INA."
viii. An American
Indian born in Canada--USCIS Form I-551 with code S13 or an unexpired temporary
I-551 stamp (with code S13) in a Canadian passport or on Form I-94.
ix. A member of certain Federally recognized
Indian tribes--Membership card or other tribal document showing membership in
tribe is acceptable documentation.
x. Amerasian Immigrant--USCIS Form I-551 with
the code AM1, AM2 or AM3 or passport stamped with an unexpired temporary I-551
showing a code AN6, AM7 or AM8.
4. For aliens subject to the five-year
waiting period before eligibility for Medicaid can be established, the date of
entry into the United States shall be determined as follows:
i. On USCIS Form I-94, the date of admission
should be found on the refugee stamp. If missing, the county welfare agency
should contact the USCIS local district office by filing Form G-845, attaching
a copy of the document;
ii. If the
alien presents USCIS Form I-688B (Employment Authorization Document), I-766 or
I-571 (Refugee Travel Document), the county welfare agency shall ask the alien
to present Form I-94. If that form is not available, the county welfare agency
shall contact the USCIS via the submission of Form G-845, attaching a copy of
the documentation presented;
iii.
If the alien presents a grant letter or court order, the date of entry shall be
derived from the date of the letter or court order. If missing, the county
welfare agency shall contact the USCIS by submitting a Form G-845, attaching a
copy of the document presented.
5. For aliens who present themselves as on
active duty or honorably discharged from the United States Armed Forces, the
following serve as documentation:
i. For
discharge status, an original or notarized copy of the veteran's discharge
papers issued by the branch of service in which the applicant was a
member;
ii. For active duty
military status, an original or notarized copy, of the applicant's current
orders showing the individual is on full-time duty with the U.S. Army, Navy,
Air Force, Marine Corps, or Coast Guard (full-time National Guard duty does not
qualify), or a military identification card (DD Form 2 (active));
iii. A self-declaration under penalty of
perjury may be accepted pending receipt of acceptable documentation.
(h) An applicant who
declares that he or she is a United States citizen (or national) or otherwise
eligible non-citizen and who meets all other eligibility requirements will be
approved immediately for benefits.
1. An
applicant who makes such a declaration shall be afforded a reasonable
opportunity to provide documentary evidence of citizenship or qualified
immigration status. Reasonable opportunity is defined as 90 days from the time
that the applicant is informed of the need to provide the necessary documentary
evidence of the declared citizenship or qualified alien status.
i. The applicant shall provide documentation
as described in (g) above; or
ii.
The applicant shall provide a valid Social Security number, so that the
Division can access the State Verification Exchange System (SVES) to
obtain/confirm information related to the applicant. Any inconsistencies
between the information provided by the applicant and the information obtained
from SVES shall be reported to the applicant for resolution.
2. If the applicant has not
submitted the required documentary evidence or resolved any inconsistencies by
the end of the 90th day of the reasonable opportunity period, a termination
notice shall be sent informing the applicant of termination of benefits. The
termination date shall be effective no later than 30 days after the end of the
90-day reasonable opportunity period and will clearly identify which household
member(s) have not complied and are being terminated from the program.
Terminated applicants may re-apply for benefits once they have secured the
required documentary evidence of citizenship or qualified alien immigration
status.
(i) Medicaid
applicants who are Medicare beneficiaries and who can provide an original and
valid Medicare Identification Card are not required to provide additional proof
of identity and citizenship. A copy of the beneficiary's Medicare card shall be
retained in the case record as evidence that additional documentation was not
required.