ACLU Warns Against “Sucker Money” Plot to Save Real ID (7/20/2007)
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE Contact: media@dcaclu.org
Washington, DC – The American
Civil Liberties Union warned today that proposals afloat in Congress to provide
limited funding to states for implementation of the Real ID Act would amount to
nothing more than “sucker money” that would cover only a fraction of Real ID’s
costs. The ACLU said that state
officials should not be fooled, and released a “Sucker Money Calculator” to
estimate just how much states will still be stuck paying under current
proposals.
“The amount of money that is
being talked about on Capitol Hill is a laughable pittance compared to what
Homeland Security itself has estimated Real ID will cost,” said Caroline
Fredrickson, director of the ACLU Washington Legislative Office. “The rebellion against Real ID across
the United States is based on privacy and other issues but also the fact that it
is a giant unfunded mandate. We do
not want to see state legislators or others fooled into thinking that issue has
been resolved.”
One
figure being talked about in Congress is $300 million, which would be divided
among the 50 states and the District of Columbia. But in a Notice of Proposed Rulemaking
published in March 2007, the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) estimated
that the total cost of Real ID would be $23.1 billion, including $7.9 billion in
costs to individuals and $14.6 billion in costs to the states.
“The fact is, it was
Congress that passed the Real ID Act, and until Congress commits to funding the
full $23.1 billion cost, it remains an unfunded mandate, a ‘security tax’ on
states and individuals that won’t even deliver security – and will actually
increase drivers’ exposure to identity theft,” said Fredrickson.
“That does not, however,
mean we think Congress actually should spend $23 billion to fund Real ID,” she
added. “It would be a colossal
waste of tax dollars that would bring Americans far less security than many
other potential uses for that money.
Congress should do something real to help security and pass the
Akaka-Sununu bill, S. 717.”
The
ACLU’s Sucker Money Calculator spreadsheet offers an estimate (based on a simple
per capita calculation) of how much Real ID would cost each state according to
the DHS estimate, how much each state would receive under a Congressional
allocation of $300 million (or any other size), and how much that would leave
the residents of each state paying through taxes and fees. The ACLU pointed out that actual costs
in each state will vary according to a large number of factors, including
whether the state already complies with some elements of Real
ID.
“Just this week the GAO issued a
report forecasting serious fiscal problems for the states in the next few
years,” said
Timothy Sparapani, senior legislative counsel to the ACLU. “Real ID is
not what they need. State officials
should do themselves and their constituents a big favor by continuing to demand
that Congress undo this wasteful boondoggle of a law.”
A copy of the Sucker Money Calculator spreadsheet (in Excel
format) can be found at: http://www.aclu.org/safefree/general/30840res20070720.html
To read the GAO report on state fiscal challenges, go
to: http://www.gao.gov/new.items/d071080sp.pdf # #
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