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Maine Rejects REAL ID Act;
Other States Considering Similar Legislation

Immigrants' Rights Update, Vol. 21, Issue 1, February 20, 2007

     Maine has become the first state to refuse to comply with the REAL ID Act, a federal law enacted in May 2005 that prevents the federal government from accepting state-issued driver’s licenses or ID cards as identification unless they meet the act’s strict and complex requirements by May 2008.  Under these requirements, applicants for driver’s licenses must present extensive documentary proof of their identity, citizenship or lawful immigration status, and residence; and the documents they present must then be verified as being authentic. 

     On Jan. 25, 2007, by a unanimous vote in the state Senate and a vote of 137 to 4 in the House, Maine’s legislature passed a resolution declaring that Maine refuses to implement REAL ID and that Congress should repeal the law.  Official copies of the resolution were also transmitted to President George Bush; Vice President Richard Cheney; Nancy Pelosi, speaker of the U.S. House of Representatives; Michael Chertoff, secretary of Homeland Security; John E. Baldacci, governor of Maine; and each member of the Maine congressional delegation.

     The resolution lists as reasons for refusing to comply with REAL ID (1) that the law creates an unfunded mandate that would cost Maine residents approximately $185 million, (2) that its implementation will invite identity theft and invasion of privacy, and (3) that it will impose inconveniences and higher taxes on residents.   A bill is also pending in the Maine legislature to prevent any state funds from being appropriated for the implementation of REAL ID.   

     Several other states, including Arizona, Idaho, Georgia, Hawaii, Maryland, Massachusetts, Missouri, Montana, New Mexico, Oklahoma, Utah, Vermont, Washington, and Wyoming also are considering opting out of REAL ID, placing conditions on their participation in implementing the law, or urging Congress to repeal it.  A summary of these proposals in the form of a chart is available on NILC’s website.

     More information on REAL ID is available from NILC’s “Immigrants & Driver’s Licenses” webpage, at realnightmare.org, and on the website of the National Conference of State Legislatures, which features a “Countdown to REAL ID” clock ticking off the seconds until the law’s May 11, 2008, implementation deadline.  PowerPoint presentations made during a Dec. 15 probo.net webinar by staff from NILC (“Immigrants, Driver's Licenses and the REAL ID Act: Requirements, Implementation and Options Available to States”), the ACLU (“The REAL ID ACT: Implications for Privacy”), and the National Conference of State Legislatures (“The REAL ID Act: Requirements, Implementation Options, and Costs”) are also available.

     In addition, a thought-provoking article by security technology expert Bruce Schneier about the security liabilities that will be created by REAL ID, “Real ID: Costs and Benefits,” is available in his weblog.

 

 

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