-Caveat Lector-

------- Forwarded message follows -------

Reveal Everything Just to Keep a Driver's License
  Wes Vernon
  Saturday, July 14, 2001
Driving may obligate you to tell bureaucrats minute details of your health
problems and other personal matters. Dean C. Eger of New Bern, N.C.,
was
stunned when he received a 10-page questionnaire this month from the
state
Division of Motor Vehicles. Some of the 114 questions were to be
answered
by him, the others to be filled out by his physician. Failure to answer in
30 days "will result in cancellation or denial of your driving privilege.�

NewsMax.com has reviewed the questionnaire and found it to be
extremely
detailed and intrusive. A physician would have a hard time answering it
without going back to the driver and asking questions the doctor himself
had probably not thought to ask most patients.

For example, how is a doctor to know at what age the patient started
drinking alcohol or whether, in the absence of Alzheimer�s disease, the
patient has any memory problems?

"I have not had one person I have asked say they have received such a
message from the Division of Motor Vehicles,� Eger told NewsMax.com.
"I am
very upset by the way our privacy is fading from the American scene. I
do
not want personal information going to every agency, government or
commercial, which could, in some cases, be detrimental to one�s
well-being.�

The 79-year-old Eger sounds very lucid and articulate on the phone. He
sounds 30 or 40 years younger.

But what really leaves him puzzled is that he is "blessed with great
health
and [has] been driving and have never had an accident.�

Wouldn�t anyone who had a record like that be surprised if, out of the
blue, he were to receive a 10-page questionnaire demanding answers to
114
personal questions?

Some clue as to the rationale for the questionnaire comes from Bill
Jones,
a spokesman for the North Carolina DMV. He told NewsMax.com that
such
inquiries were triggered when:


a.. A � A highway patrolman sees something that convinces him a
motorist
should not be driving, and he tells DMV.

a.. B - A driver�s license examiner sees something curious during the
motorist�s application for renewal of his license, and submits that
concern
to DMV headquarters.

a.. C - Anyone - it could be a neighbor or a complete stranger - may
write
the DMV and express a concern about the eligibility of the motorist to be
driving.

a.. D - An adult child of the motorist, out of concern for the parent�s
safety, will write to the DMV expressing a belief that the parent should
not be driving. Eger shot down the last possibility in a conversation with
NewsMax.com. His only adult child lives several states away and
knows full
well that he (Eger) has all his faculties.

Here are samples of what North Carolina�s DMV wants to know:

How Far to Your Church?


a.. Miles to and from work, church, grocery store, drug store, doctor.

a.. Days of week you work. During what hours? Occupation?

a.. Type of vehicle you drive. ___Automobile ___Truck ___Bus
___Other. The
doctor portion of the document requires him to say how long the motorist
has been his patient. And if you ever had any apparently quaint notions
about the privacy of your medical records, you can forget it. If the feds
have to wait awhile to prepare public opinion for a national medical ID
card, complete with computerized records to your medical history, trust
someone to find a way and a rationale extract it through a back door.

Someday, in order to hold on to your driver�s license, you might be in the
position of asking your physician to answer questions about your
cardiovascular, respiratory, neurological, "emotional" (Could one think of
a more subjective category than that?), or "any other impairment."

"Do you feel the patient should drive?� "Should he be restricted in driving
distance or to daylight driving?"

The doctor is asked to address his diagnosis, date and type of
operations
or treatments, and on one case (hypoglycemia) the patient�s "attitude�
toward treatment. Does the patient have diabetes?

Is oxygen used at home?

What are locations, dates and discharge diagnoses of any and all
hospitalizations for the past two years?


When was the patient�s last drink? (Do they think a person�s doctor
places
a cop in the patient�s home to observe whether he has a glass of wine
with
dinner?)

Is the patient involved in "social or other type of health aid program such
as mental health, private counseling�? Whose business is that?

Bill Jones, the public information officer with North Carolina�s DMV, was
very cooperative with NewsMax.com. With Southern courtesy, he
explained
that anyone targeted in such a manner as to receive such a
questionnaire
could, in a timely manner, find out the name of the person "who turned
him
in.� However, he immediately sought other terminology on the grounds
that
many people who write the DMV (and the information must be
submitted in
writing with his signature) do so out of concern for the driver, and not
necessarily in an adversarial spirit.

Of course, there�s no way of determining motivation. The move could as
easily be prompted by malice or ignorance.

All the driver has to do is visit his local DMV examiner�s office and ask
the name of the person whose letter triggered the mailing from the DMV.
He
should get back the information within "a matter of a few days.�

If he wanted to see the letter, complete with other information in the
driver�s medical file, he would have to write the DMV and ask for it. That
should take 30 days.

Jones said a federal drivers privacy act forbids any public release of the
information or to other agencies.

Even assuming the best of intentions here, there are privacy questions
raised by the very idea of anyone "turning in� anyone, unbeknownst to
the
driver until he receives the shock in the mail. Perhaps that barrier has
long been broken. The federal Internal Revenue Service for years has
been
openly encouraging informers to tell them of anyone whom they even
suspect
of evading his taxes.

It is legitimate to ask whether, even in the interest of safety on roads
and highways, such an exhaustive time-consuming and invasive inquiry
is a
case of overkill.

And how easy is it to get around the federal privacy law involved? Are
there teeth in it? Drivers who are subjected to this kind of intrusion into
their lives are bound to ask themselves questions like that.

a.. http://www.newsmax.com/cgi-bin/printer_friendly.pl


------- End of forwarded message -------
--

Best Wishes


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Their flag to April's breeze unfurled,
Here once the embattled farmers stood,
And fired the shot heard round the world. ~ Emerson

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