ACLU: DHS Border Crossing Plans Show Mix of Arrogance and Incompetence (1/22/2008)
FOR
IMMEDIATE RELEASE CONTACT: media@dcaclu.org
WASHINGTON – Plans by the Department of Homeland Security to impose
new identity-document requirements at the Canadian border in defiance of
Congress are the latest example of the department’s characteristic combination
of arrogance and incompetence, the American Civil Liberties Union said today.
“It’s
bad enough that DHS is so arrogant and high-handed,” said Barry Steinhardt,
director of the ACLU’s Technology and Liberty Program. “But worse, they have no cause to be
arrogant because they are so incompetent.”
The
policy, which will require all travelers entering the United States from Canada to
present either a passport or both a driver’s license and a birth certificate
beginning January 31, was affirmed by DHS Secretary Michael Chertoff in remarks
to the Associated Press over the weekend.
“This
is truly a case where defiance of Congress reflects a greater defiance –
defiance of the real interests of the American people,” said ACLU Senior
Legislative Counsel Tim Sparapani.
“Congress needs to restore some sanity to our border policy, assert its
will, and quickly countermand this decision.”
The
ACLU and others cited several problems with the policy, including:
·
Border disaster. Misguided passport requirements for land
border crossings, passed in a different environment in 2004, have been
repeatedly delayed because of their impracticality. Chertoff’s rigid new policy will create
havoc at the border.
·
Economic drain. Uninhibited movement is a vital part of a
healthy economy, and the new regulations are being imposed just as the economy
appears to be heading into a recession.
·
Birth certificates. Not only are
they issued by thousands of separate jurisdictions and therefore easy to forge,
but many Americans cannot obtain their birth certificates because they have been
destroyed, compromised by fraud, or because they were not born in a hospital and
have never had one. This is
especially true of the elderly, poor, and minorities. Many others cannot obtain their birth
certificates without significant expense and red tape – certainly not in the two
weeks they now have.
·
Fairness. The DHS rules will leave little recourse
for aggrieved individuals who need to fix document problems. They also impermissibly interfere with
the First Amendment-protected Right to Travel.
“It is
a mystery why the Bush administration is so doggedly fixated upon identity
systems as pillar of its anti-terrorism policy,” said Steinhardt. “They are disruptive, alien to American
values, and a terribly inefficient way of stopping terrorism.”
“If
Americans like this policy, they’re going to love Real ID, which has many of the
same problems – bureaucratic nightmares, economic drains, and a shaky reliance
on birth certificates,” added Sparapani.
“Let’s hope Congress ends both.”
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