AOL POLL

What do you think about the national standard for driver's licenses?    
I favor it  46% 
I oppose it 40% 
Not sure    13% 
Total Votes: 117,991    


By LESLIE MILLER
AP
WASHINGTON (Feb. 4) - A revolt against a national driver's license, begun in 
Maine last month, is quickly spreading to other states. 

The Maine Legislature on Jan. 26 overwhelmingly passed a resolution objecting 
to the Real ID Act of 2005. The federal law sets a national standard for 
driver's licenses and requires states to link their record-keeping systems to 
national databases. 

Within a week of Maine's action, lawmakers in Georgia, Wyoming, Montana, New 
Mexico, Vermont and Washington state also balked at Real ID. They are expected 
soon to pass laws or adopt resolutions declining to participate in the 
federal identification network. 

"It's the whole privacy thing," said Matt Sundeen, a transportation analyst 
for the National Conference of State Legislatures. "A lot of legislators are 
concerned about privacy issues and the cost. It's an estimated $11 billion 
implementation cost." 

The law's supporters say it is needed to prevent terrorists and illegal 
immigrants from getting fake identification cards. 

States will have to comply by May 2008. If they do not, driver's licenses 
that fall short of Real ID's standards cannot be used to board an airplane or 
enter a federal building or open some bank accounts. 

About a dozen states have active legislation against Real ID, including 
Arizona, Georgia, Hawaii, Massachusetts, Missouri, New Hampshire, Oklahoma, 
Utah 
and Wyoming. 

Missouri state Rep. James Guest, a Republican , formed a coalition of 
lawmakers from 34 states to file bills that oppose or protest Real ID. 

"This is almost a frontal assault on the freedoms of America when they 
require us to carry a national ID to monitor where we are," Guest said in an 
interview Saturday. "That's going too far." 

Guest a resolution last week opposing Real ID and said he expects it quickly 
to pass the Legislature. "This does nothing to stop terrorism," he said. 
"Don't burden the American people with this requirement to carry this ID." 

Though most states oppose the law, some such as Indiana and Maryland are 
looking to comply with Real ID, Sundeen said. 

The issue may be moot for states if Congress  takes action. 

Republican Sen. John Sununu of New Hampshire, along with Democratic Sen. 
Daniel Akaka of Hawaii, filed a bill last year to repeal the law. Sununu 
expects 
similar legislation will be introduced soon. 

"The federal government should not be in charge of defining and issuing 
drivers' licenses," Sununu said in a statement. 

Privacy advocates say a national driver's license will promote identity 
theft. 

Barry Steinhardt, a lawyer with the American Civil Liberties Union, said the 
Real ID ordered by Congress would require a digital photo and probably a 
fingerprint on each driver's license or state-issued ID card. That, he said, 
will 
make it more valuable to identity thieves because the ID card will be accepted 
as much more than a driving credential. 

"It's going to be a honey pot out there that's going to be irresistible to 
identity thieves," Steinhardt said. 

An identity thief, he said, could buy a Real ID from a rogue motor vehicle 
department employee with is own photo and fingerprint on it. 

"The victim is never going to be able to undo this," Steinhardt said. 

Other criticisms include: 

-Some states will have to invest millions in new computer systems that can 
communicate with federal databases. That is something they probably will not 
accomplish by the deadline. 

-It will be difficult to comply with the requirement that license applicants 
prove they are in the country legally. There are more than 100 different 
immigration statutes, Steinhardt said, which will pose problems for motor 
vehicle 
clerks unfamiliar with immigration law. 

-It does not solve the problem of terrorism. Oklahoma City bomber Timothy 
McVeigh and some of the hijackers from the attacks of Sept. 11, 2001, had 
legitimate driver's licenses. 

-Even the requirement that applicants' full legal names appear on licenses 
will pose problems because some states limit the number of characters on the 
face of the card. 

Copyright 2007 The Associated Press. The information contained in the AP news 
report may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or otherwise distributed 
without the prior written authority of The Associated Press. All active 
hyperlinks have been inserted by AOL. 

2007-02-04 12:59:14








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