US Senate reins in ID card act
Published: 28 Jun 2007 12:33 BST
The US Senate took a preliminary step on Wednesday towards reining in the controversial Real ID Act, which is scheduled to become America's first federal identification card in a few years.
During Wednesday's floor debate over a massive immigration bill, Real ID foes managed to preserve an amendment to prohibit the forthcoming identification card from being used for mandatory employment verification, signalling that the political winds have shifted from when the law was overwhelmingly enacted two years ago.
The anti-Real ID amendment is backed by two Montana Democrats, Max Baucus and Jon Tester, who say the digital ID cards represent an unreasonable government intrusion into Americans' private lives. In April, Montana became one of the US states that has voted to reject Real ID.
"This was a real victory for Montana and the American people," Tester said, after the Senate vote to kill their amendment failed to muster a majority. The unsuccessful vote to table it was 45-52.
Read this
The Blair IT projects
Ten years of leading the country coincided with a raft of controversial and failing government IT projects. ZDNet.co.uk brings you the decade's top 10 public-sector tech disasters...
The Real ID Act says that, starting on 11 May, 2008, Americans will need a federally approved ID card to travel on an aeroplane, open a bank account, collect Social Security payments or take advantage of nearly any government service. States must conduct checks of their citizens' identification papers, and driver's licences may have to be reissued to comply with Homeland Security requirements. (States that agree in advance to abide by the rules have until 2013 to comply.)
The immigration bill, which is backed by the Bush administration and has drawn the ire of many conservatives, requires employers to demand Real ID cards of new hires starting in 2013. It says that "no driver's licence or state identity card may be accepted if it does not comply with the Real ID Act."
It also would try to siphon off opposition on privacy or federalism grounds from state legislators by offering fat cheques — $1.5bn (£750m) over five years — with funds coming from the US Treasury.
Baucus's and Tester's amendment deletes the requirement for employer ID verification and says that "no federal funds may be provided" to states to create such a system.
Tim Sparapani, legislative counsel for the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU), called the vote a "victory for privacy and a rejection of building an immigration system on a faulty foundation, which was the Real ID Act."
"The way the bill was written," Sparapani said, "it should be seen as a Hail Mary pass to save Real ID from the scrap heap".
A political sea change?
Procedurally speaking, the vote was merely a preliminary one. The Baucus-Tester amendment itself still awaits a vote — and even if it is glued onto a successful immigration bill or if the immigration bill dies a second time, the underlying Real ID framework and deadlines remain in place.
That framework is estimated to cost $23.1bn (11.5bn), according to the Department of Homeland Security, and could include RFID chips on the cards (the idea is being considered but is not final). Personal data that's on the back of the card in a two-dimensional bar code will not be encrypted because of "operational complexity", meaning any business or government agency that scans the information could record it in a database.
Politically speaking, though, Wednesday's vote could be a turning point in the national debate over Real ID. It indicates that a majority of senators are willing to curb the controversial system, which has already led to a kind of grassroots rebellion among the states.
The ACLU says that 15 states have enacted an anti-Real ID measure, 10 more have had such legislation approved by at least one chamber, and eight more have had it introduced in the legislature.
Homeland Security officials have defended Real ID as a way to limit illegal immigrants and to thwart terrorists from obtaining driver's licences. Although some supporters exist in the US Congress, key Democrats have said the law — enacted with minimal debate as part of an emergency Iraq war spending bill — needs to be reformed.
CNET News.com's Anne Broache contributed to this report.




