Congress rethinks the Real ID Act

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Opposition is growing to a forthcoming digital ID card for American citizens, but it may be too late to make sweeping changes to the controversial identification requirements.

During a congressional hearing on Tuesday, Sen. Patrick Leahy (D-Vt.) savaged the Real ID Act as an unwarranted intrusion into Americans' personal lives that a Republican-controlled Senate enacted two years ago without a single hearing or debate.

"Americans deeply value their privacy," said Leahy, who heads the influential Senate Judiciary committee. "Americans have traditionally recognized the danger of an overreaching government." He said Real ID will "effectively create a national ID card."

Leahy's hearing coincided with the last day to file comments with the Department of Homeland Security on its draft Real ID regulations, which were released on March 1. They drew immediate criticism for, among other things, requiring that drivers' home address and personal information be included in a two-dimensional barcode without encryption.

That means bars and banks and other businesses would face no technical obstacles when skimming and retaining those data. There is "nothing limiting the use of the Real ID card for this type of purpose," said Sen. Russ Feingold, a Wisconsin Democrat. Also, Homeland Security has not ruled out the use of mandatory radio frequency identification tags in the cards, which raises additional privacy concerns.

Enacted as part of an emergency Iraq war spending bill, the Real ID Act compels state governments to issue driver's licenses that follow national ID standards to be set by Homeland Security. Eventually, Americans without the federalized ID will not be able to use their state-issued ID to do things like open a bank account, enter federal buildings, or fly on a commercial airline. Homeland Security puts the total cost at $23.1 billion over 10 years.

That has sparked a kind of grassroots rebellion, with seven states so far enacting legislation opposing Real ID, according to the advocacy site RealNightmare.org. (The list: Washington, Idaho, Montana, North Dakota, Colorado, Arkansas and Maine.) An additional 14 states have had one chamber of their legislature approve some sort of anti-Real ID measure and more have bills pending.

But because the federal law is already on the books and final regulations are nearly complete, Real ID opponents face a difficult task.

A split among conservatives
Three groups tend to be strong supporters of Real ID. National security aficionados claim secure IDs will stop terrorists from boarding commercial flights, and some businesses hope to secure some of that $23.1 billion in spending for themselves by selling compliance technology to motor vehicle departments. The most influential groups, however, are anti-immigration advocates who believe Real ID will stop the flow of illegal Mexican immigrants across the border.

Rep. James Sensenbrenner, a Wisconsin Republican who was chairman of the House Judiciary Committee in 2005, was the politician most responsible for inserting Real ID into the military spending bill, which also funded tsunami relief. In an editorial on Tuesday, The Wall Street Journal criticized Real ID and dubbed Sensenbrenner's effort a "poll-driven election panic" designed to "placate noisy anti-immigration conservatives."

Related audio
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News.com political reporter Declan McCullagh and editor Harry Fuller sort through the legal issues, the political pressure points and the likely short-term course of Real ID in the U.S.

Conservatives are split on Real ID. States like Idaho and Montana that have come out against the idea are hardly bastions of liberalism, and an anti-Real ID coalition includes People for the American Way and the National Center for Transgender Equality--but also Gun Owners of America and the Virginia Gun Owners Coalition.

During Tuesday's Senate hearing, James Carafano, a policy analyst at the conservative Heritage Foundation, defended Real ID.

"Adequate privacy protection can be implemented," Carafano said. "We can fairly implement this system in a reasonable timeline...There obviously is some security value in having national standards that credentials presented for a federal purpose must meet."

Janice Kephart, president of 9/11 Security Solutions, also praised the 2005 law. "Real ID does not invade privacy," Kephart said, adding that at least 23 state legislatures have bills supporting the measure and Kansas and Michigan have enacted them. "Real ID does not create a national ID card."

Kephart's inside-the-Beltway firm makes money by providing consulting services to government contractors "with special expertise in border security." Her Web site lists Northrop Grumman as a client.

For their part, Kephart and other proponents of the Real ID Act say it's designed to implement proposals suggested by the 9/11 Commission, which noted that some of the hijackers on September 11, 2001, had fraudulently obtained state driver's licenses. But not all did: At least one hijacker simply showed his foreign passport and walked onto the airplane that day.

CONTINUED: Revisiting Real ID...
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32 comments (Page 1 of 2)
National ID?
by BattleAce7101 May 8, 2007 2:52 PM PDT
I am not giving these SOBs any more control of my life. Wide open boarders exists and they feel that they need an ID card? Close the boarders first!! The illegal immigrants get pulled over by a policeman and the officer has to let them go without even a ticket. No arrest ever occurs for illegals. They are privileged residents. So what does this ID do? Does it help make us secure? Hell NO! It is only used to control and track US citizens. Illegals can open a bank account without any proof of residency or citizenship. We need a damn finger print, SSN, Drivers license etc to open an account and now we will need a National ID? Hell NO! Obviously the plan is to track and control US citizens not control airline access and not to make us safe. Just to tag and track us like animals. The elite leaders think that we are here to serve them and jump at their beck and call.
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Real TRACK
by Travis Ernst May 8, 2007 3:21 PM PDT
I seriously thought about bringing my passport with me to the MRI last time I had one just to screw up the RFID, if that could do it. What really bothers me is the Feds basicly taking over the State ID and license programs. There is a clear seperation between State and federal in our constitution. Lets keep it that way. Tenth ammendment. As for the boarder issue, We already have enough money being spent in the middle east. Lets divert it to the southern boarder and put up a 15 foot mine field, signs and audio alerts warnings so we are not at fault. Have a fence on OUR side of that 15 foot field so we don't have people injured from our country. Now tell me that won't help solve the illegals from the southern side getting over. NeXT thing you know they will require us to have barcodes tatooed on our hands for identification (so you can't leave home without it!) Are the Feds going to be exempt from this crazy ID? They love to be exempt from what they push on us.
Reply to this comment
An improved Identification system would help
by Jeremy.sarkilahti May 8, 2007 3:39 PM PDT
there needs to be a new identification system. I was once mistaken for a person with the same name by the police and ended up waiting in the back of a police car for about a half hour while they figured out what was going on. I happened to be on my way to work.
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Don't rethink it, repeal it.
by MSSlayer May 8, 2007 3:49 PM PDT
There is no way to make this work without turning the US into a bigger police state. Repeal it and tell Furor Bush to shove it!
Reply to this comment View reply
a new system will not help
by upuaut May 8, 2007 3:51 PM PDT
If you have been mistaken for another person now, how will a new system help? I reckon existing data needs to be scrubbed for the new system. garbage in existing system will be garbage in the new one. if they start from scratch, then the new system needs to be phased in over 10/20 years!. All kinds of exceptions and special cases will be introduced, rendering the system worthless (per stated goals) by the time it's fully implemented.
Reply to this comment
You Haff Your Paperss. Ja?
by mstrhypno May 8, 2007 4:08 PM PDT
RealID amounts to an Internal Passport and, to be honest, a national system that allows tracking of every citizen, on demand simply by pulling the records from any system into which the RealID Number has been entered. According to the law, without a RealID, no citizen would be able to enter a federal, state or local government building, including a courthouse, nor would they be allowed to open a bank account or to get on an airplane. In other words, by enacting this law, the government has just, de facto, taken control of the air travel industry (no valid ID, no travel by air - sorry, pal!) and has denied any citizen who has lost or had their ID stolen access to the courts or their duly elected public officials - including the ones who can replace their ID! How stupid is THAT?! So think hard about this one, folks. If you lose this precious item, you no longer exist (except at tax time, of course!) to the government, the travel industry or the banks (if you want to go inside of a bank to, say, get a mortgage or to fix a foul up in your accounts, that is!). And you WILL have to present your paperss. And they will contain information that you will not want anyone but your doctor (for instance) to have. SO kiss the "Land of the Free" goodbye because, if you don't have your RealID, you can't go to the bank, visit ANY government building (including museums, National Parks, State capitols or to see your IRS auditor should you be called in for an audit) or catch a plane OUT of here! That whirring sound you hear beneath your feet is the sound of the Founding Fathers, doing a perfect imitation of a high-speed drill in their graves - along with every veteran who ever gave his or her life to preserve these freedoms. I just can't wait to see what happens the first time a Congresscritter or, better yet, a Supreme Court Judge, tries to go to work without his or her RealID. THAT should be a lot of fun to watch! Because, under the law, they would not be allowed access to their own offices! Write your Congresscritter and get this law pulled! It is ill- conceived and un-American. Lee Darrow, C.H. Chicago, IL
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Sen. Sununu is from NH, not ME
by CyrylJ May 8, 2007 4:30 PM PDT
EOM
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National ID not all bad
by Mortomer May 8, 2007 6:38 PM PDT
In the military we use a Common Access Card (CAC). It has a photo on it has our photo, barcode and a chip (along w/ other privacy information that may not be best). It's encrypted and can be used instead of a password for everything. It also has a digital signature so you can prove who you are. It can only be accessed w/ a pin. We use software called active card gold and read the card via a CAC reader. Instead of physically signing credit card slips, checks, etc., use the CAC. It could be required for everything (proof of ID, credit card, bank account, etc). I personally think would work better than todays system. You can even set it up for status (citizen, resident alien, guest worker etc). Uncle Sam does not have the resources or the time to track everybody regardless of what you think. All this would do is better secure our id and rights as citizens.
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Oh well close up Buffalo Airport...
by caveat71 May 8, 2007 7:21 PM PDT
"Eventually, Americans without the federalized ID will not be able to ... fly on a commercial airline. " BUF depends on the cross-border traffic to make it a viable alternative to YYZ. Expansion in recent years is *not* due to a boom in Buff-town, but frustration over Toronto's airport congestion and 30 minute terminal to runway rides. Someone better not be forgetting to make a "passport" valid to board a plane... -A North American family since 1760...and still with family on both sides of the northern border...
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ID is not the problem
by ReVeLaTeD May 9, 2007 8:54 AM PDT
Social Security system is. Right now a SSN can be - - stolen and used to open accounts in someone else's name with very little effort - spoofed and used to open accounts illegally That's what needs to be rethought, is the now national requirement by businesses to defer to the SSN as an identifying piece of information, as well as a medium for extending credit. My driver's license isn't the problem as it doesn't really do anything but certify that I passed a written exam. The SSN, on the other hand, drives everything in today's economy. My suggestion would be to replace the current SSN-driven system with this Real ID, as the "identifier", but not replacing a person's driver's license.
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