CNN:
Americans May Need Passport To Have Picnic in a Park
CNN | August 16, 2007
By
Eliott
C. McLaughlin
(CNN) -- Americans
may need passports to board domestic flights or to picnic in a
national park next year if they live in one of the states defying
the federal Real ID Act.
The act, signed in
2005 as part of an emergency military spending and tsunami relief
bill, aims to weave driver's licenses and state ID cards into a sort
of national identification system by May 2008. The law sets baseline
criteria for how driver's licenses will be issued and what
information they must contain.
The Department of
Homeland Security insists Real ID is an essential weapon in the war
on terror, but privacy and civil liberties watchdogs are calling the
initiative an overly intrusive measure that smacks of Big Brother.
More than half the
nation's state legislatures have passed symbolic legislation
denouncing the plan, and some have penned bills expressly forbidding
compliance.
Several states have
begun making arrangements for the new requirements -- four have
passed legislation applauding the measure -- but even they may have
trouble meeting the act's deadline.
The cards would be
mandatory for all "federal purposes," which include boarding an
airplane or walking into a federal building, nuclear facility or
national park, Homeland Security Secretary Michael Chertoff told the
National Conference of State Legislatures last week. Citizens in
states that don't comply with the new rules will have to use
passports for federal purposes.
"For terrorists,
travel documents are like weapons," Chertoff said. "We do have a
right and an obligation to see that those licenses reflect the
identity of the person who's presenting it."
Chertoff said the
Real ID program is essential to national security because there are
presently 8,000 types of identification accepted to enter the United
States.
"It is simply
unreasonable to expect our border inspectors to be able to detect
forgeries on documents that range from baptismal certificates from
small towns in Texas to cards that purport to reflect citizenship
privileges in a province somewhere in Canada," he said.
Chertoff attended
the conference in Boston, Massachusetts, in part to allay states'
concerns, but he had few concrete answers on funding.
The Department of
Homeland Security, which estimates state and federal costs could
reach $23.1 billion over 10 years, is looking for ways to lessen the
burden on states, he said. On the recent congressional front,
however, Chertoff could point only to an amendment killed in the
Senate last month that would've provided $300 million for the
program.
"There's going to
be an irreducible expense that falls on you, and that's part of the
shared responsibility," Chertoff told the state legislators.
Bill Walsh, senior
legal fellow for the Heritage Foundation, a Washington-based
conservative think tank that supports the Real ID Act, said states
shouldn't be pushing for more federal dollars because, ultimately,
that will mean more federal oversight -- and many complaints about
cost coincide with complaints about the federal government
overstepping its bounds.
"They are only
being asked to do what they should've already done to protect their
citizens," Walsh said, blaming arcane software and policies at state
motor vehicle departments for what he called "a tremendous
trafficking in state driver's licenses."
The NCSL is calling
Real ID an "unfunded mandate" that could cost states up to $14
billion over the next decade, but for which only $40 million has
been federally approved. The group is demanding Congress pony up $1
billion for startup costs by year's end or scrap the proposal
altogether.
Everyone must visit
DMV by 2013
The Real ID Act
repealed a provision in the 9/11 Commission Implementation Act
calling for state and federal officials to examine security
standards for driver's licenses.
It called instead
for states to begin issuing new federal licenses, lasting no longer
than eight years, by May 11, 2008, unless they are granted an
extension.
It also requires
all 245 million license and state ID holders to visit their local
departments of motor vehicles and apply for a Real ID by 2013.
Applicants must bring a photo ID, birth certificate, proof of Social
Security number and proof of residence, and states must maintain and
protect massive databases housing the information.
NCSL spokesman Bill
Wyatt said the requirements are "almost physically impossible."
States will have to build new facilities, secure those facilities
and shell out for additional equipment and personnel.
Those costs are
going to fall back on the American taxpayer, he said. It might be in
the form of a new transportation, motor vehicle or gasoline tax. Or
you might find it tacked on to your next state tax bill. In Texas,
Wyatt said, one official told him that without federal funding, the
Longhorn State might have to charge its citizens more than $100 for
a license.
"We kind of feel
like the way they went about this is backwards," Wyatt said,
explaining that states would have appreciated more input into the
process. "Each state has its own unique challenges and these are
best addressed at state levels. A one-size-fits-all approach to
driver's licenses doesn't necessarily work."
Many states have
revolted. The governors of Idaho, Maine, Montana, New Hampshire,
Oklahoma, South Carolina and Washington have signed bills refusing
to comply with the act. Six others have passed bills and/or
resolutions expressing opposition, and 15 have similar legislation
pending.
Though the NCSL
says most states' opposition stems from the lack of funding, some
states cited other reasons for resisting the initiative.
New Hampshire
passed a House bill opposing the program and calling Real ID
"contrary and repugnant" to the state and federal constitutions. A
Colorado House resolution dismissed Real ID by expressing support
for the war on terror but "not at the expense of essential civil
rights and liberties of citizens of this country."
Privacy concerns
raised
Colorado and New
Hampshire lawmakers are not alone. Groups like the American Civil
Liberties Union and Electronic Frontier Foundation say the IDs and
supporting databases -- which Chertoff said would eventually be
federally interconnected -- will infringe on privacy.
EFF
says on its Web site that the information in the databases will lay
the groundwork for "a wide range of surveillance activities" by
government and businesses that "will be able to easily read your
private information" because of the bar code required on each card.
The databases will
provide a one-stop shop for identity thieves, adds the ACLU on its
Web site, and the U.S. "surveillance society" and private sector
will have access to the system "for the routine tracking, monitoring
and regulation of individuals' movements and activities."
The civil liberties
watchdog dubs the IDs "internal passports" and claims it wouldn't be
long before office buildings, gas stations, toll booths, subways and
buses begin accessing the system.
But Chertoff told
legislators last week that DHS has no intention of creating a
federal database, and Walsh, of the Heritage Foundation, said the
ACLU's allegations are disingenuous.
States will be
permitted to share data only when validating someone's identity,
Walsh said.
"The federal
government wouldn't have any greater access to driver's license
information than it does today," Walsh said.
States have the
right to refuse to comply with the program, he said, and they also
have the right to continue issuing IDs and driver's licenses that
don't meet Real ID requirements.
But, Walsh said,
"any state that's refusing to implement this key recommendation by
the 9/11 Commission, and whose state driver's licenses are as a
result used in another terrorist attack, should be held
responsible."
State reaction to
Real ID has not been all negative. Four states have passed bills or
resolutions expressing approval for the program, and 13 states have
similar legislation pending (Several states have pending pieces of
legislation both applauding and opposing Real ID).
Chertoff said there
would be repercussions for states choosing not to comply.
"This is not a
mandate," Chertoff said. "A state doesn't have to do this, but if
the state doesn't have -- at the end of the day, at the end of the
deadline -- Real ID-compliant licenses then the state cannot expect
that those licenses will be accepted for federal purposes."
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