IMMIGRANTS & DRIVER'S LICENSES

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Twenty-four states introduce driver's license bills

Immigrants' Rights Update, Vol. 20, Issue 1, March 23, 2006


     So far during the 2006 state legislative sessions, at least 66 bills are pending in 24 different states that address immigrants' ability to obtain a driver's license.  Since some legislative sessions began in 2005, approximately half of the bills were newly introduced in calendar year 2006.  As in previous years, most bills seek either to expand or restrict immigrants' eligibility for driver's licenses.  However, a number of bills this year specifically seek to create a different license or "driving certificate" for certain immigrants.  In addition, a number of bills and resolutions also address the federal REAL ID Act.  (For more on the REAL ID Act, see "REAL ID Enacted: Imposes Rigid Driver's License Requirements," Immigrants' Rights Update, June 30, 2005, pp. 1-3.)

     Bills that seek to create a license for immigrants that is different from that issued to state residents who are U.S. citizens have been introduced in California, Georgia, Illinois, Indiana, Kentucky, Michigan, Mississippi, New Jersey, and Virginia.  All these bills are pending except the Mississippi bill, which has been rejected.  Although not identical, the bills generally call for the creation of a "driving certificate" or "temporary license" that would be issued to immigrants who either cannot prove that they are lawfully present in the U.S. or who would not qualify for a license under the provisions of the REAL ID Act (which will not take effect until 2008 at the earliest).  Most bills also would require that the certificate be valid only for the length of the applicant's authorized stay in the U.S.  These proposals are based largely on existing policies in Tennessee and Utah (see "New Tennessee Law Creates 'Driving Certificate' for Most Noncitizens," IRU, Aug. 9, 2004, p. 3, and "Utah Creates 'Driving Privilege Card' for Applicants without SSNs," IRU, Mar. 31, 2005, p. 3).  In all cases, the driving certificate or temporary license would have to look different from a regular driver's license and could not be used as ID for federal purposes. 

     Bills that seek to implement the REAL ID Act's requirements have been introduced in California, Illinois, Michigan, Mississippi, New Mexico, and Wisconsin.  However, in all cases the bills seek only to implement the immigration status restrictions and not the act's other requirements, such as its information-sharing provisions and technology standards.  Because the U.S. Dept. of Homeland Security has not yet issued regulations clarifying or implementing the relevant provisions of the REAL ID Act, states that pass laws to implement the act's requirements before the regulations are issued will likely be forced to make revisions later.  Two of the many questions that remain unanswered because the DHS has not yet issued regulations include what documents will be acceptable to prove an applicant's lawful status in the U.S., and what provisions will be made for immigrant applicants who are lawfully present in the U.S. but whose immigration statuses are not listed among those in the REAL ID Act as making a person in that status eligible for a REAL ID-compliant driver's license or ID.  The Wisconsin bill, which implements the immigration status restrictions in the REAL ID Act, passed the legislature and was signed by the governor on Mar. 10.  Meanwhile, the New Hampshire House of Representatives has passed a bill that would prohibit the state from implementing the REAL ID Act and which states that it is "contrary and repugnant" to the New Hampshire and U.S. Constitutions.

     REAL ID-related resolutions are also pending in Kentucky, New Hampshire, Virginia, and Washington.  The Kentucky resolution calls for a study of driver's licenses as they relate to REAL ID; the New Hampshire resolution (which is separate from the bill mentioned above) declares the state's opposition to REAL ID; the Virginia resolution calls for a joint subcommittee to study the impact of REAL ID on the commonwealth; and the Washington resolution calls on Congress to repeal the REAL ID Act.  Resolutions expressing opposition to the REAL ID Act have already passed in New York City and Santa Fe, New Mexico (see "Resolutions Critical of REAL ID Adopted by Santa Fe and the American Library Association, and Introduced in New York City Council," IRU, Oct. 5, 2005, p. 3).

     A new law also passed in Maine that would restrict certain expired documents from being used as proof of identification, including a passport, foreign document, or immigration visa. 

     For more detail on driver's license bills introduced in 2006, check the "Immigrants & Driver's Licenses" page of NILC's website, especially its "State Driver's License Legislation & Requirements" section.   

By Tyler Moran, NILC policy analyst

 

 

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