MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER
Gwеndolyn Hicks, on behalf of herself and other similarly situated plaintiffs, seeks a permanent injunction against the enforcement of Illinois Public Aid Code’s multi-ti-ered durational residency requirement (“the Illinois durational residency requirement”). 305 ILCS 5/11-30. 1 Hicks says that this state legislation violates her constitutional right to travel or migrate from Alabama to Illinois, that the law is not based on any compelling or rational state interest, and that it is prohibited by the Privileges and Immunities Clause of Article IV.
Hicks has applied for welfare benefits in Illinois and has received welfare benefits in Alabama within the last twelve months. Hicks received less money in Alabama than she would receive if she were an Illinois resident for more than twelve months. Illinois has capped the amount of benefits that new residents like Hicks may receive. Under the Illinois durational residency requirement, people in Hicks’s position may receive no amount greater than that which they had been paid under their prior state’s comparable aid program. The five-year-old Illinois law imposing this multi-tiered durationаl residency requirement applies only to those new residents who have received aid from their former state within twelve months prior to moving to Illinois. In 1996, Congress passed the Personal Responsibility and Work Opportunity Reconciliation Act of 1996 (“PRWORA”), 2 expressly authorizing states to implement such residency requirements.
Standard for Permanent Injunction
The standard for a permanent injunctiоn is essentially the same as for a preliminary injunction except that in seeking a permanent injunction, Hicks must prove actual success on the merits rather than likelihood of success on the merits.
Hope Clinic v. Ryan,
Prior Challenges in Other Jurisdictions
With the passage of the PRWORA, welfare recipients have begun anew to challenge the constitutionality of state implementation of residency rеquirements for payment distribution. Other courts have addressed the constitutionality of other states’ welfare residency requirements since Congress passed PRWORA and they have primarily struck down durational residency requirements applying either strict scrutiny or rational basis review. I discuss the most relevant below: 3
*1005
The court in
Maldonado v. Houstoun,
177
F.R.D.
311, 329-30 (E.D.Pa.1997), struck down a state statute that capped welfare benefits at a recipient’s former state’s levels. The district court applied its interpretation of right-to-travel jurisprudence and held that the plaintiffs could not show that the primary objective of Pennsylvania’s residency requirement was to deter migration, that the statute actually deterred such travel, or that it used a classificatiоn that penalized the right to travel. Because plaintiffs proved none of these three elements, the court applied rational basis review to the Pennsylvania statute and found that it was not rationally related to its only legitimate governmental purpose of encouraging self-reliance over reliance on welfare.
Id.
at 332-33. Citing
Shapiro v. Thompson,
In
Westenfelder v. Ferguson,
In
Roe v. Anderson,
Hicks argues that Illinois’s residency requirement penalizes her constitutionally guaranteed right to travel by denying her a basic necessity of life and therefore triggers strict scrutiny under
Shapiro,
Illinois’s durational residency requirement distributes benefits unequally and therefore is subject to scrutiny under the Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment.
Zobel v. Williams,
Illinois says that its statute is intended to affect Congress’s mandate under the PRWORA, that is to promote employment and to end welfare dependence. These goals are legitimate, but a one-year waiting period is not rationally related to these objectives unless it requires a similar waiting period for its long-term residents.
5
See Shapiro,
Illinois’ tailoring of the law to new residents who have received welfare within the last 12 months does not save the statute. This provision seems to attempt to track those interstate migrants who move to Illinois in search of higher benefits, but is irrelevant to the above criticism. In other words, under Shapiro, to encourage self-sufficiency and discourage wеlfare dependence a broader categorization including long-term, instate residents is needed. The Illinois statute merely narrows the out-of-state group affected, but does not broaden the limitation to include in-state residents as Shapiro requires.
Because the Illinois durational residency requirement’s only stated purpose is to encourage self-sufficiency and end welfare dependency, and because it does not distinguish between in-state and out-of-state residents, I find that it fails rational basis review and violates the Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment. 6 Thus Hicks has *1007 succeeded on the merits of her claim. 7
If I were required to, I would also find that the Illinois durational residency requirement did not impose a penalty on the right to travel. A statе law implicates the right to travel and triggers strict scrutiny when (1) its primary objective is to impede interstate travel, (2) when it actually deters interstate travel, or (3) when it uses any classification that penalizes the right to travel.
See Soto-Lopez,
All three of Hicks’s arguments, in my view, fail. First, she has not shown that the Illinois residency requirement’s primary objective is to deter interstate travel. The only evidence that Hicks presents to support this position is the cover letter of the Illinois Department of Health and Human Services, which reads that the legislation “reduces the incentive for families to migrate to Illinois for the purpose of obtaining higher aid payments.” Illinois counters that the primary purpose of the durational residency requirement is to promote employment and end welfare. Hicks has insufficient evidence that the statute’s primary purpose is to deter migration. By itself, the cover letter does not show that the Illinois legislature’s primary intent was to restrict interstate travel among poor families. Similarly, Hicks admits that she cannot show that the Illinois residency requirement actually deters migration. Hicks’s own expert has statеd that families do not, on a collective basis, migrate to obtain higher benefits.
Finally, Hicks argues that the Illinois residency requirement penalizes poor families and individuals for having exercised their right to choose homes in a new state. The Illinois statute differs from those in
Maldonado,
Hicks’ proof also meets the other elements necessary for her to obtain a permanent injunction against enforcement of the Illinois durational residency requirement. Hicks has no adequate remedy at law if denied benefits at this time. She is currently receiving $194 per month plus food stamps. She has three children. Undue deprivation of $220 per month, the amount she would receive absеnt the statute, will cause her irreparable harm. The harm to Hicks and those like her greatly outweighs the administrative and fiscal harm to Illinois if I am reversed. Inconvenience to the State does not trump plaintiffs who are deprived of essential benefits.
See Shapiro,
Conclusion
I grant Hicks’s motion for a permanent injunction, and enjoin the Department of Human Services from enforcing Illinois Public Aid Code, 305 ILCS 5/11-30. Under relevant precedent, I find that this durational residency requirement is not rationally related to any legitimate governmental purpose, that Hicks will be irreparably harmed if an injunction does not issue, that this harm outweighs any fiscal or administrative harm to Illinois, and that it is in the public interest to do so.
Notes
.305 ILCS 5/11-30 reads as follows:
Notwithstanding any other provision of this Code, if an applicant for aid under any Article of this Code has moved to this state from another state, and if the applicant received public aid in that othеr state under its laws that are equivalent to this Code at any time within the 12 months immediately preceding the date the applicant became a resident of this state, then during the first 12 months that the applicant resides in this state the applicant shall not be eligible to receive aid under any Article of this Code in an amount greater than the amount of сomparable aid the applicant received under the laws of the state from which he or she moved to this state. The Illinois Department shall apply for all necessary federal waivers, and implementation of this Section is contingent on the Illinois Department receiving any necessary federal waivers.
. PRWORA, 42 U.S.C. § 604(c) states:
A state operating а program funded under this part may apply to a family the rules (including the benefit amount) of the program funded under this part of another State if the family has moved to the State from the other State and has resided in the State for less than 12 months.
.
See, e.g., Warrick v. Snider,
. Commentators have suggested that the Zobel court, unwilling to use strict scrutiny, has created a more searching rational basis review for right to travel cases. See, e.g., Lawrence H. Tribe, American Constitutional Law § 16-2 ("Such cases [like Zobel], however, seem more the result of dissatisfaction with the existing tоols of equal protection analysis for dealing with 'fixed permanent distinctions between... classes of concededly bona fide residents, based on how long they have been in the State,’ than of any overall shift in the Court's scrutiny of how well various purposes fit legislatively chosen means.”).
. It is arguable that because the Illinois durational residency rеquirement does not penalize the right to travel,
Shapiro
does not apply and its imperfect classification that distinguishes long and short-term residents passes rational basis review.
See, e.g., Jones,
.Hicks argues that the Illinois durational residency requiremеnt relates to no conceivable, legitimate governmental interest. In the interest of preventing a motion for reconsideration I find that Hicks is correct.
See, e.g., Shapiro,
. Although I do not find it necessary to reach it here, Hicks’s reliance on thе Privileges and Immunity Clause of Article IV of the Constitution appears to be misplaced. This argument, proposed by Justice O’Connor in
Zobel,
. One could argue that Illinois’s law constitutes less of a penalty than California’s or Pennsylvania’s durational residency requirement because Illinois's law only applies to residents who actually received welfare in their prior state of residence within the last twelve months. Illinois does not make the argument and therefore waives it. Furthermore, I do not see that this makes a difference in determining whether the law constitutes a penalty and therefore triggers strict scrutiny. Instead this limitation deals with the relationship between thе law’s goal, eliminating welfare dependance, and its execution. Therefore it is appropriate to consider in construing the fit of the law and its objective, not the level of scrutiny required.
.I do note that
Green,
