Ensuring Health Care for Nevadans: An Urgent Call for Justice and Action

Nevadans without health coverage have until Dec. 15, 2025 to enroll through Nevada Health Link, the state’s official health insurance marketplace, if they want coverage that begins Jan. 1, 2026. Enrollment through Nevada Health Link runs from Nov. 1, 2025 through Jan. 15, 2026, and coverage that starts Jan. 1 requires enrollment by Dec. 15. 

Nevada Health Link is the only place where qualifying residents who don’t have employer-sponsored insurance, Medicare, or Medicaid can access federal tax credits to help make health insurance affordable. 

But without congressional action to extend the enhanced Affordable Care Act tax credits—which are currently scheduled to expire at the end of this year—many Nevadans could face sharply rising costs. Experts warn that monthly premiums for those on the marketplace are expected to rise significantly in 2026, with average rate increases of about 26 percent before subsidies. 

Approximately 95,000 Nevadans receive enhanced subsidies to lower their monthly premium costs on Nevada Health Link, and more than 110,000 Nevadans are currently enrolled in coverage through the marketplace.  If enhanced subsidies expire, many could see their out-of-pocket costs rise substantially, and some could become uninsured. 

Families across Nevada are already stretched thin. In our congregations, I meet people every week who are being forced to choose between medications, groceries, and rent, choices no one should ever have to make.

At a time when critical safety-net programs for food, housing, and heating are being cut, the church is seeing the human cost up close. As people of faith, we believe every person is created in the image of God and deserves to live with dignity. These rising costs fall heaviest on those with chronic health conditions and on our most vulnerable neighbors—people we pray with, serve alongside, and accompany in our ministries. Our call is clear: to stand with them, raise our voices, and insist on policies that protect life, promote justice, and ensure that no child of God is left behind.

Nationwide, more than 24 million Americans are enrolled in health coverage through Affordable Care Act marketplaces, making this open enrollment period particularly critical. 

Ensuring that Nevadans can access and afford quality health care remains a central priority for LEAN. We continue to advocate for policies that:

• Protect and extend affordable coverage by maintaining and expanding meaningful tax credits
• Prevent medical debt and strengthen consumer protections
• Lower the cost of prescription drugs
• Increase transparency in health care pricing
• Require accountability for hospitals and providers
• Ensure that hospital mergers do not reduce access or drive up costs for communities

We also want to hear from you. If rising health care costs or challenges accessing care are affecting you, your family, or your congregation, your stories strengthen our advocacy and help shape policy solutions grounded in real community needs. Please email us at paullarson@leanforjustice.org with HEALTH CARE in the subject line, and we will be in touch.

The ELCA Social Statement on Health Care reminds us that:
“Health is central to our well-being, vital to relationships, and helps us live out our vocations in family, work, and community… Caring for the health of others expresses both love for our neighbor and responsibility for a just society.”

Free Families Launch Call!

Anchored by the faith engagement working group of the National Coalition to End Family and Child Detention and the Kairos Center, Free Families invites communities to connect and coordinate our actions around family separation, detention and deportation; to plan and carry out activities that nurture and protect our families; and respond and prepare for greater crises. Our message is straightforward: The use of family detention is wrong, inhumane, and must come to an end.

On Thursday, December 11th at 5 pm PT/ 6pm MT/ 7 pm CT/ 8 pm ET, the National Coalition to End Family and Child Detention invites you to join us for an interactive call where they will:

  • Share stories from around the country of how communities are taking action against this violence 
  • Share new resources – including a toolkit with songs, rituals, prayers, and more – that you can use in your next gathering or action.

Through vigils, song, prayer, action and more, Free Families is a rallying cry and public expression of our commitment to the beloved community we all deserve.

A Christmas Message From Bishop Curry

In his Christmas message to the church, Bishop Curry delivers a children’s sermon, describing the night when Jesus was born. “One silent night, far away in a town called Bethlehem, the stars twinkled brighter than ever. And the angels were there too. It was as if the whole sky was whispering: ‘Something wonderful is happening.’”

Curry emphasizes that “whispers make us stop, listen and pay attention” and reminds us that, this Christmas, we should listen closely because “the heavens are still whispering: ‘Jesus is here. God loves you. Share that love with the world.’”

A Holiday Guide: Debunking 5 Myths about Immigration in the U.S.

As families gather around the dinner table during the holidays, political debates are bound to come up—with immigration being no exception.

To counter the misinformation on this contentious topic and keep the conversation productive, the American Immigration Council is here to bust five common myths about immigrants in the United States.

1. Do undocumented immigrants commit more crimes?

False narratives about immigrants bringing crime to the United States are not new and have been exacerbated by claims that recent immigration enforcement efforts are focused on “the worst of the worst.” But the data is clear: noncriminals are increasingly being detained by U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE). People without any criminal record now make up the largest population in immigration detention.

Welcoming immigrants into American communities can actually strengthen public safety. In fact, immigrants—including those without legal status—are less likely to commit crimes than their U.S.-born counterparts.

  • Data from 1980 to 2022 shows that as the immigrant share of the U.S. population grew—from 6.2% to 13.9%—the crime rate declined by 60.4%. The violent crime rate fell by 34.5%, and the property crime rate fell by 63.3%.
  • Nineteen separate research reports published between 2017 and 2024 have found that the portion of immigrants in an area did not impact either the violent crime or property crime rate in that area. Increased shares of immigrants were actually associated with lower violent or property crime rates.
  • Despite President Trump claiming that immigration enforcement is focused on going after “the worst of the worst,” government data show that the majority of people detained by ICE have no criminal convictions. Read more: Debunking the Myth of Immigrants and Crime.

2. Can undocumented immigrants vote?

Increasingly, politicians are changing voting systems under the guise of stopping noncitizens from voting. There is no evidence, however, that noncitizens are voting in any significant way at all.

  • A database from the Heritage Foundation going back to the 1980s identifies 1,546 cases of alleged voter fraud. Only 68 cases pertain to noncitizens. Despite significant efforts to document noncitizen voting, proven incidents of noncitizen voting over a 40-year period were below 0.0001%.
  • Most cases of noncitizen voting involve lawful permanent residents—many who ended up voting due to bad information, being encouraged to vote by a government official, or being falsely told they were eligible to vote.
  • Read more: Unpacking Myths About Noncitizen Voting — How Heritage Foundation’s Own Data Proves It’s Not a Problem.

3. Do undocumented immigrants pay taxes?

The value of immigrants to the U.S. economy is under increased scrutiny, especially regarding their tax contributions. This is despite immigrant households—including undocumented immigrant households—contributing billions of dollars in federal, state, and local level taxes each year.

4. Can undocumented immigrants get Medicaid and SNAP?

Who qualifies for specific federal public benefits can be complicated. Complex eligibility rules and political rhetoric have fueled confusion and misinformation. The passage of President Trump’s One Big Beautiful Bill Act has further muddied the waters, but the truth about immigrants and public benefits is simpler.

  • Undocumented immigrants are ineligible for federally funded programs like Medicaid, Medicare, or the Children’s Health Insurance Program (CHIP). They do not receive Social Security benefits (despite paying into the program), cannot purchase healthcare coverage through the Affordable Care Act Marketplace, and are ineligible for SNAP benefits. Undocumented parents can apply for SNAP on behalf of their U.S. citizen children, but benefits can only be calculated based on the number ofeligible household members.
  • Lawfully present immigrants, including green card holders, can receive some public benefits, but must wait five years before they can apply, with limited exceptions.
  • Many immigrants avoid applying for benefits they may otherwise be eligible for due to confusion and fear stemming from a prior “public charge” rule—something the Trump administration is considering bringing back—leading to mixed-status households unenrolling from public benefits for which they are entitled.
  • Read more: Can Undocumented Immigrants Get SNAP or Medicaid? The Truth About Federal Benefits and Immigrants Help Fund Our Public Programs.   

5. Do immigrants take American jobs?

Immigrants are frequently portrayed as competitors for American jobs. In reality, immigrants are complementary to the U.S.-born workforce. They are job creators, fill labor shortages in key industries like agriculture and healthcare, and are vital to the long-term health of the U.S. economy.

While this is not an exhaustive list of myths, it highlights the widespread misinformation and confusion surrounding immigrants in the U.S. These myths not only affect our immigrant neighbors but also impact the well-being, safety, and prosperity of all Americans.

As we gather with our loved ones during the holidays, it’s important to remember that not only are we a nation built by newcomers, but we are a nation sustained and made prosperous by immigrants.

Needing Advent by Acting Bishop Rev Mike Girlinghouse, Grand Canyon Synod of the ELCA

Every year I grumble about how early the Christmas shopping season starts (usually at “Christmas in July” sales!). We skip from Halloween to Christmas in a heartbeat. Thanksgiving barely gets honorable mention anymore. Except maybe in grocery stores.

Advent? Do people outside the church even know what that is anymore apart from advent calendars that serve as a “countdown to Christmas?” But, in today’s world where everything is fast, immediate and instantly available 24-7, I think we need the themes of Advent: waiting, watching and getting ready.

Advent is important to counter-balance the frantic pace of the “Holiday Season.” Zechariah had a hard time believing the good news that he and Elizabeth would have a son. As a result, he was rendered silent during those long months of waiting. In the process he learned something not only about waiting, trust and faith, but about the power and promise of God.

We need Advent to help us hear, really hear, above the din of the world, the good news of God coming among us on that first Christmas night. Of God’s great gift to us, of God coming among us, for you and for me and for all those yearning for a savior.

Peace,

Pastor Mike Girlinghouse
Acting Bishop 
Grand Canyon Synod of the ELCA