ACLU: Senator Collins’ Real ID Amendment is Not a Real Solution; Proposal Fails to Address Law’s Fundamental Flaws (2/28/2007)
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE Contact: Media@dcaclu.org
WASHINGTON - The American Civil Liberties Union today said that the proposal
introduced by Senator Susan Collins (R-ME) to delay the implementation of the
Real ID Act by two years, fails to resolve the law’s fundamental privacy and
civil liberties concerns.
"The Collins amendment will only delay the real nightmare of Real ID," said
Caroline Fredrickson, Director of the ACLU Washington Legislative Office. "The
states want Congress to act, not delay. The state of Maine overwhelmingly
rejected the Real ID Act and Senator Collins’ amendment does not address her
constituents’ fundamental concerns. Real ID is an unfunded mandate that fails to
protect privacy and could lead to rampant identity theft."
The Collins proposal was offered as amendment to S. 4, the 9/11 Commission
Act of 2007. In addition to the delay in the act’s implementation, the Collins
amendment would give the Department of Homeland Security the authority to give
states partial credit for taking steps to implement portions of the act.
The Real ID Act federalizes the design, issuance and management of state
driver’s licenses, creating a uniform identity card and database tantamount to
the first national ID card. Under the act, residents of states that fail or
refuse to comply will be unable to use their driver’s licenses for any activity
that requires federally accepted identification, such as boarding airplanes or
entering federal buildings.
In January, the state of Maine passed a resolution rejecting participation in
the Real ID scheme. Similar legislation has been adopted by one state
legislative chamber in Georgia, Idaho, Montana, New Mexico, Utah, Vermont and
Wyoming. Bills rejecting Real ID have also been introduced in Arizona, Hawaii,
Illinois, Kentucky, Maryland, Missouri, Nebraska, New Hampshire, Oklahoma,
Washington and West Virginia.
"Extending the deadline of a flawed program is not the solution Americans
need," said Timothy Sparapani, an ACLU Legislative Counsel. "States around the
nation are moving to opt out of this program. The Collins amendment is not an
acceptable solution to the changes that the law so desperately needs."
For more on the Real ID Act, including its status in various
states, go to: www.realnightmare.org
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