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Welcome to Call to Decision
National
ID Card Rules Unveiled
Source:
Wired News
http://www.wired.com/
National ID Card Rules Unveiled
http://tinyurl.com/32qp2e
By Ryan Singel
Mar, 01, 2007
Homeland Security officials released long-delayed guidelines that
turn state-issued identification cards into de facto internal
passports Thursday, estimating the changes will cost states and
individuals $23 billion over 10 years.
The move prompted a new round of protest from civil libertarians
and security experts, who called on Congress to repeal the 2005
law known as the Real ID Act that mandates the changes.
Critics, such as American Civil Liberties Union attorney Tim
Sparapani, charge that the bill increases government access to
data on Americans and amplifies the risk of identity theft,
without providing significant security benefits.
"Real ID creates the largest single database about U.S.
people that has ever been created," Sparapani said.
"This is the people who brought you long lines at the DMV
marrying the people at DHS who brought us Katrina. It's a marriage
we need to break up."
Homeland Security officials point to the 9/11 hijackers' ability
to get driver's licenses in Virginia using false information as
justification for the sweeping changes.
"Raising the security standards on driver's licenses
establishes another layer of protection to prevent terrorists from
obtaining and using fake documents to plan or carry out an
attack," Homeland Security Secretary Michael Chertoff said in
a press release.
The 162 pages of proposed rules http://tinyurl.com/yp3kf8
require:
* Applicants must present a valid passport,
certified birth certificate, green card or other valid visa
documents to get a license and states must check all other states'
databases to ensure the person doesn't have a license from another
state.
* States must use a card stock that glows under
ultraviolet light, and check digits, hologramlike images and
secret markers.
* Identity documents must expire before eight
years and must include legal name, date of birth, gender, digital
photo, home address and a signature. States can propose ways to
let judges, police officers and victims of domestic violence keep
their addresses off the cards. There are no religious exemptions
for veils or scarves for photos.
* States must keep copies of all documents,
such as birth certificates, Social Security cards and utility
bills, for seven to 10 years.
However, many difficult questions, such as how state databases
will be linked or how homeless people can get identity documents,
were left unanswered by the proposed rules. Citizens of states
that don't abide by the guidelines will not be able to enter
federal courthouses or use their identity cards to board a
commercial flight.
Sophia Cope, a staff attorney at the centrist Center for Democracy
and Technology, says the rules only mention privacy once.
"The Real ID Act does not include language that lets DHS
prescribe privacy requirements, so there are no privacy
regulations related to exchange of personal information between
the states, none about skimming of the data on the magnetic
stripe, and no limits on use of information by the feds,"
Cope said.
The Real ID Act, slipped into an emergency federal funding bill
without hearings, originally required states to begin issuing the
ID documents by May 2008. The proposed rules allow states to ask
for an extension until Jan. 1, 2010.
Cope wants Congress to step in and rewrite the rules. The ACLU and
Jim Harper, a libertarian policy analyst at the Cato Institute who
specializes in identity and homeland security issues, agree.
"With five-plus years behind us, now is the time to be
looking at what works and what doesn't work," Harper said.
"Students of identification know that a national ID does not
help with security."
Maine has already declared it will not follow the rules, and other
states are close to joining that rebellion. In Congress, a
bipartisan coalition is forming around bills that would repeal
portions of the Real ID Act, but it is unclear if today's rules
will slow or accelerate these efforts.
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