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WASHINGTON – A systematic analysis of the Department of Homeland Security’s (DHS) final regulations for the Real ID Act reveals that the regulations still address only 11 percent of the problems with the act that have been identified, the American Civil Liberties Union said today.
“The government has tried to peddle these regulations as lifting the burdens that Real ID imposes on the states and the population,” said Barry Steinhardt, Director of the ACLU’s Technology and Liberty Program. “But the close, issue-by-issue analysis of the regulations we carried out for this scorecard reveals that Real ID’s problems remain unresolved.”
The ACLU’s analysis of the DHS regulations is based on a list of 56 problems that have been commonly identified with the Real ID law by a variety of parties, including privacy activists, domestic violence victims, anti-government conservatives, religious leaders and DMV administrators. Of the 56 problems, the regulations successfully addressed or “passed” 6 (11 percent), scored an incomplete on 13 (23 percent), and failed 37 (66 percent).
“When DHS issued proposed regulations in March, they passed 9 percent,” said ACLU Senior Legislative Counsel Tim Sparapani. “Despite the outpouring of public feedback they received – an astounding 21,000-plus comments from the public – and 9 additional months of work, their passing score has barely budged and their incompletes have risen only slightly. It’s as if Secretary Chertoff covered his ears and pretended he couldn’t hear the public’s protests. Since legitimate complaints were ignored willfully by DHS, it is now clear that Congress needs to step in and fix what DHS will not.”
The scorecard was a response to Homeland Security’s long-awaited release of final regulations Friday implementing the 2005 Real ID Act, which would federalize state driver’s licenses and create the nation’s first-ever de facto national identity card system. Extensive delays in issuing these regulations have exacerbated state complaints, 17 of which have rebelled by passing anti-Real ID legislation.
Early reactions indicate the new regulations are not being
embraced in the states; yesterday the <?XML:NAMESPACE PREFIX = ST1 />
“On so many of the hard issues,
DHS has kicked the problems down the road to the next administration and
beyond,” said Steinhardt. “They are
trying to stretch out this bitter medicine to get the states and the American
people to swallow it, but what this scorecard shows is that once it’s down it
will still be poison.”
The ACLU’s Real
ID scorecard is online at:
/safefree/general/33700res20080117.html
The ACLU’s white
paper, “Fuzzy Math and the Real Cost of Real ID” is online
at:
www.aclu.org/safefree/general/33690res20080116.html
Both can also be
found at:
www.realnightmare.org.