LOS ANGELES - A big share of the financial burden of
raising Nadya Suleman's 14 children could fall on the shoulders of
California's taxpayers, compounding the public furor in a state already
billions of dollars in the red.
Even before the 33-year-old
single, unemployed mother gave birth to octuplets last month, she had
been caring for her six other children with the help of $490 a month in
food stamps, plus Social Security disability payments for three of the
youngsters. The public aid will almost certainly be increased with the
new additions to her family.
Also, the hospital where the
octuplets are expected to spend seven to 12 weeks has requested
reimbursement from Medi-Cal, the state's Medicaid program, for care of
the premature babies, according to the Los Angeles Times. The cost has
not been disclosed.
Word of the public assistance has stoked the
furor over Suleman's decision to have so many children by having
embryos implanted in her womb.
"It appears that, in the case of
the Suleman family, raising 14 children takes not simply a village but
the combined resources of the county, state and federal governments,"
Los Angeles Times columnist Tim Rutten wrote in Wednesday's paper. He
called Suleman's story "grotesque."
On the Internet, bloggers
rained insults on Suleman, calling her an "idiot," criticizing her
decision to have more children when she couldn't afford the ones she
had, and suggesting she be sterilized.
"It's my opinion that a
woman's right to reproduce should be limited to a number which the
parents can pay for," Charles Murray wrote in a letter to the Los
Angeles Daily News. "Why should my wife and I, as taxpayers, pay child
support for 14 Suleman kids?"
She was also berated on talk radio, where listeners accused her of manipulating the system and being an irresponsible mother.
"From
the outside you can tell that this woman was playing the system," host
Bryan Suits said on the "Kennedy and Suits" show on KFI-AM. "You're
damn right the state should step in and seize the kids and adopt them
out."
A call to Suleman's publicist Mike Furtney was not immediately returned.
In
her only media interviews, Suleman told NBC's "Today" she doesn't
consider the public assistance she receives to be welfare and doesn't
intend to remain on it for long.
Also, a Nadya Suleman Family Web
Site has been set up to collect donations for the children. It features
pictures of the mother and each octuplet and has instructions for
making donations by check or credit card.
Suleman, whose six
older children range in age from 2 to 7, said three of them receive
disability payments. She said one is autistic, but she has not
disclosed the other youngsters' disabilities, and refused to say how
much they get in payments.
In California, a low-income family can
receive Social Security payments of up to $793 a month for each
disabled child. Three children would amount to $2,379.
The
Suleman octuplets' medical costs have not been disclosed, but in 2006,
the average cost for a premature baby's hospital stay in California was
$164,273, according to the U.S. Department of Health and Human
Services. The average cost for just one cesarean birth in 2006 was
$22,762 in California. Eight times that equals $1.3 million.
For
a single mother, the cost of raising 14 children through age 17 ranges
from $1.3 million to $2.7 million, according to the U.S. Department of
Agriculture.
Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger, who is struggling to
close a $42 billion budget gap by cutting services, declined through a
spokesman to comment on the taxpayer costs associated with the
octuplets' delivery and care.
Suleman received disability
payments for an on-the-job back injury during a riot at a state mental
hospital, collecting more than $165,000 over nearly a decade before the
benefits were discontinued last year.
Some of the disability
money was spent on in vitro fertilizations, which was used for all 14
of her children, Suleman said. Suleman said she also worked double
shifts at the mental hospital and saved up for the treatments. She
estimated that all her treatments cost $100,000.
A dozen states,
including California, have laws requiring insurance companies to cover
infertility treatment, according to the National Conference of State
Legislatures. But California does not require insurers to cover in
vitro procedures. It's not clear what type of coverage Suleman has.
In
the NBC interview, Suleman said she will go back to California State
University, Fullerton in the fall to complete her master's degree in
counseling, and will use student loans to support her children. She
said she will rely on the school's daycare center and volunteers.