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Rights and Liberties

The Real ID Act Is an Unfixable Disaster... Why Tinkering with it Won't Help

By Joan Friedland, Immigration Impact. Posted June 24, 2009.


PASS ID would repeal the REAL ID Act, a burdensome, unfunded mandate that's akin to creation of a national ID system.
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Introduced by Sen. Akaka (D-HI) last week with 5 co-sponsors, the “Providing for Additional Security in States’ Identification Act” (PASS ID) (S. 1261) would give states a breather from the costs and restrictions imposed by the REAL ID Act, which became law in 2005 without Congressional hearings and as part of must-pass war funding bill. The PASS ID Act, however, would do little for immigrant access to licenses and nothing for a common sense approach to immigration reform.

PASS ID would repeal the REAL ID Act, which numerous states have vociferously opposed as a burdensome, unfunded mandate and akin to creation of a national ID system.  Currently, 23 states have passed laws and resolutions opposing the REAL ID Act, including Arizona whose former governor, Janet Napolitano, is now the Secretary of the Department of Homeland Security (DHS).  But PASS ID—like REAL ID—sets national standards for driver’s licenses.  Driver’s licenses won’t be accepted for federal purposes if they don’t meet the national standards.

Most of the differences between PASS ID and REAL ID actually have nothing to do with immigration. Here’s what PASS ID proposes to do:


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See more stories tagged with: immigration, real id, pass id

Joan Friedland is Immigration Policy Director of the National Immigration Law Center's Washington, DC office.

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National ID
Posted by: muzunguhowru on Jun 26, 2009 12:42 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I am in agreement that using state driving licenses as an instrument of National Identity or right to reside in the United States is cumbersome, erratic and shifts the burden to the states. Sooner or later we are going to have to bite the bullet on some form of secure national ID. Those who cry about civil liberties and "big brother" are deluding themselves. Anyone living their lives in a normal way with bank accounts, a job, paying taxes is already infinitely traceable. Your travel movements, purchasing habits and other actions are traceable in a hundreds of different ways. The privacy horse has long since been stolen and it ain't coming back Only those living outside the law benefit from the lack of a secure national ID,(instead of a paper social security card we have now) Almost all other countries have such a system even many in the developing world. It has to deal with a great deal more than simply immigration issues.Further those who believe they are helping illegal immigrants by protecting their anonymity and ability to live off the books are equally deluded IMHO. Undocumented or falsely documented persons are ripe for exploitation and it happens every day. A clear,humane and legitimate path to immigration must be found. Helping people hide so corporations and criminals can exploit, hurt and rip them off is not the answer.

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