Posts Tagged ‘Real ID’

KC District MO state Senator Justus, Vice Chair of committee passionately supports Real ID Repeal

Friday, April 24th, 2009

Yesterday, an action alert was posted about the Missouri Senate and HB 361 (a bill that recently passed the Missouri House to repeal the federal Real ID requirements for the state of Missouri).

Today I had a face-to-face conversation with Missouri State Senator Jolie Justus from the 10th district.  She is Vice Chair of the Progress and Development committee that will be hearing the bill.

She came to me to express her support for repealing the Real ID act in the state of Missouri.  She mentioned the requirements to obtain a driver’s license being overreaching for those who do not fit certain requirements or are unable to obtain a Birth Certificate.  She had also mentioned the Real ID act as an unfunded Federal mandate and how it was created out of a wave of Terrorism-related legislation.

She mentioned how she expressed these sentiments to Senator Callahan and looks forward to hearing this bill in the committee.

Continue your support of this bill by thanking Senator Justus (ask her to co-sponsor) and by asking these other Senators to support the bill’s easy passage from committee.

Sen. Victor Callahan (573) 751-3074
Sen. Jolie Justus (573) 751-2788
Sen. Jason Crowell (573) 751-2459
Sen. Brad Lager (573) 751-1415
Sen. Wes Shoemyer (573) 751-7852

Thanks,
Kevin L. Kobe
Liberty Restoration Project
kevin@libertyrestorationproject.org

Arizona Prohibits Real ID

Tuesday, June 24th, 2008

(retrieved from http://www.freedomsphoenix.com/Feature-Article.htm?InfoNo=034608 )

For Immediate Release
Contact: Senator Karen S. Johnson (602-926-3160)
Gov. Napolitano Approves Prohibition on Real ID
Arizona Governor Janet Napolitano signed a bill today that prohibits the implementation of the REAL ID in Arizona. SB2677 received a Final vote of approval in the House last week by an overwhelming margin of 51 to 1. Napolitano’s signature was uncertain until today when she signed the bill into law.
The bill prohibits implementation of the REAL ID Act of 2005, which was passed by Congress as part of a supplemental spending bill for tsunami relief and the War on Terror. The bill did not receive a hearing in either the House or the Senate, and the public was largely unaware of it until it had already been signed into law.
“Everyone thinks that the REAL ID is just about protecting us against terrorism,” said co-sponsor Senator Karen Johnson (R-18). “But it really represents a cash cow for technology companies as well as the birth of the National ID card, complete with all the biometric information that technology can handle – face recognition, fingerprints, etc.”
“Corporations which specialize in selling identity cards stand to gain millions of dollars in profits if the Real ID Act is implemented,” said Johnson, “so, of course, they’re eager for everyone to be required to carry a National ID card everywhere they go.” Two of those corporations are Digimarc ID Systems and L-1 – the Number 1 and Number 2 companies for the manufacture of state driver’s licenses and identity cards. L-1 is considered the main driver behind the REAL ID and last year had nearly $100 million in federal contracts involving identity cards. Digimarc spent $350,000 in the first six months of 2007 lobbying Congress on the Real ID Act. Apparently the two companies are soon to be merged, resulting in a powerhouse corporation, pushing the “identification-as-security” concept to the maximum in order to increase company profits as they add more and more biometric features to state driver’s licenses.
“It’s misguided to think that identification equals security,” says Johnson. “Identification is just identification – it doesn’t prove intent and it doesn’t stop terrorists. Indeed, terrorists will forge documents – as they always have – to obtain the identification they want to commit crimes. Making U.S. citizens carry identity papers to board a plane or enter a government building stinks,” says Johnson. “It’s odious, onerous, and a violation of our civil liberties.”
“I refuse to be tagged and numbered,” said Johnson. “Requiring people to carry papers takes away their freedom. There are other, better ways to stop terrorism and to protect us against criminals. The federal government needs to butt out and let the states handle driver licensing. It’s not the business of the Dept. of Homeland Security to tell us how to run our state.”
Real ID – SB2677
1. Proponents always claim that the sole purpose of the Real ID is to prevent another 9/11-type attack by disrupting terrorists travel. That is bogus. If the government really wanted to prevent such an attack, they would secure our borders, which would (1) cost less than implementing Real ID, (2) would be more effective at keeping terrorists out, and (3) would be less intrusive and less inconvenient for American citizens. Until the borders are secure, all the rosy pleas for the Real ID are just so much hogwash.
2. The Real ID will cost the states billions of dollars. The Dept. of Transportation estimates that in Arizona alone, it will cost $40 to $70 million to implement just in the first year, and $15 to $20 million in subsequent years. But they really don’t have a clue – they don’t know what the regulations are going to be yet. They are just estimating. It will depend on what the Rules say when they are finally issued.
They already do some things that will be part of the requirements. For example, they already check citizenship, or whether or not someone is legally authorized to be in the country. So that would not be an additional expense. But even factoring in that some things required by REAL ID are already being handled, the $40 to $70 million is over and above what we already do!!!
3. The Real ID is an invasion of privacy. Why should so much personal information be compiled on one place for so many people to have access to?
- medical history
- social security number
- insurance information
4. The Real ID increases the risk of Identity Theft. Identity theft is a major problem in Arizona already. Throwing everyone’s personal information – including social security numbers, birth dates, medical information, driver’s license and auto licensing information, etc. – into one massive data base just makes it easier for identity thieves to harvest identities for fraudulent purposes. The Real ID requires all Arizona driver’s license information to be compiled with all the information for the other 49 states and the District of Columbia into one massive database that will be accessible by thousands of clerks and government employees throughout the country. This is a horrendous idea – an invitation to identity theft on a massive scale.

Missouri will test federal Real ID program

Tuesday, June 24th, 2008

http://www.news-leader.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=2008806220378

Missouri will test federal Real ID program

Driver’s licenses would have to meet national standard.

The Associated Press • June 22, 2008

Kansas City — Missouri will get $17 million to help develop and test
the Real ID program and will house a verification hub to help states
validate identification cards.

The federal Real ID Demonstration Grants were announced Friday by the
Homeland Security Department.

Officials with the Missouri Department of Revenue said the money will
help the state develop and test a national “verification hub,” a key
factor in allowing states to validate licenses and identification
cards.

“We would be a single access point for different states,” said David
Griffith, spokesman for the Missouri Department of Revenue. “Missouri
is in the position to improve security for all state driver’s
licenses.”

The Bush administration says Real ID’s requirement for more secure
identification will hinder terrorists and illegal immigrants.

Under Real ID, states would have to bring their driver’s licenses
under a national standard and link their license record-keeping
systems.

Implementation of Real ID would require the public to show need Real
ID-compliant driver’s licenses or other identification in order to
enter federal buildings or board airplanes.

But some states have viewed the act as an unfunded mandate, and
critics say it’s a violation of privacy for the government to have
access to so much information. In some states, residents have staged
protests condemning the Real ID Act.

Missouri Rep. Jim Guest, a King City Republican, has been a vocal
opponent of Real ID.

“I would oppose that even if they fund it,” he said Friday. “I don’t
think you can put a price on your privacy. This nation is at a
crossroads right now, and if we go down the road and lose more
freedoms, we’ll never get them back.”

Each of the 48 states that applied for federal grants to assist with
the program will get some funding.

While Missouri is set to lead the development of the “verification
hub,” four other states will also be instrumental, Homeland Security
officials said in a news release.

Florida, Indiana, Nevada and Wisconsin will each receive $1.2 million
to partner with Missouri for the hub testing and implementation.

Eventually, other states and territories will connect to the
verification hub and have the capability to verify applicants’ source
documents.