The Real ID Act Is an Unfixable Disaster... Why Tinkering with it Won't Help
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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:
The PASS ID Act would:
” that create a national ID system.Both PASS ID and REAL ID:
who should be eligible for a license—such as trafficking—victim applicants for non-immigrant visas or those protected under the Convention against Torture
. PASS ID attempts to cure some of these deficiencies, but at the same time gives DHS unreviewable discretion to add categories of lawfully present non-citizens, leaving open the possibility that this might be done in a discriminatory or irrational way. States will likely find a shifting list of eligible immigration statuses to be confusing and cumbersome.
delays with SAVE, the need for their staff to make additional contacts with U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS), and unavailability and unreliability of data.Driver’s license restrictions are used as a blunt instrument of immigration enforcement, but they don’t solve the problem. About 12 million undocumented immigrants currently live in the U.S.—and for the most part, these immigrants don’t live alone. They live with family members who are either U.S. citizens or otherwise authorized to be in the U.S. Congress would do better to pass a comprehensive legalization bill that brings undocumented immigrants out of the shadows, rather than pretending that driver’s license restrictions are the solution.
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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