NYCLU Praises Expansion of Immigrant Access to Driver’s Licenses (9/21/2007)
Urges Governor Spitzer to
Resist Unjust Federal ID Law in New York
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
CONTACT: media@aclu.org
NEW YORK -- The New York Civil Liberties Union, along with
immigrants'
rights and labor organizations, applauds Governor Eliot
Spitzer’s decision to broaden immigrant access to
driver’s licenses. Under
guidelines announced today, New Yorkers can obtain a driver’s
license without regard to their immigration status.
“Governor
Spitzer’s decision to broaden immigrant access to
driver’s licenses is a great victory for all New
Yorkers,” said Donna Lieberman, Executive Director of the
NYCLU. “We applaud Governor Spitzer for his leadership in
ensuring that all New Yorkers are treated equally by their state
government and granted the same access to a state driver’s
license.”
In 2002, then-Governor George Pataki instituted a requirement
that all
driver’s license applicants provide a social security number
to prove their immigration status. Government officials estimate that
approximately 500,000 New Yorkers lost their eligibility for a
driver’s license due to this policy.
Today, Governor Spitzer announced a reversal of the Pataki-era
policy.
New Yorkers will no longer have to prove their immigration status when
applying for a driver’s license. Instead, applicants will be
required to submit secure identity documents, such as valid foreign
passports.
The new policy will benefit millions of New York residents, as
hundreds
of thousands of motorists who used to be uninsured will be able to
obtain a driver’s license and automobile insurance, ensuring
safer roads.
“The broadening of immigrant access to
driver’s licenses will bring hundreds of thousands of New
Yorkers out of the shadows and allow them to become full contributing
members of our society and economy,” said Udi Ofer, Field
Director and Legislative Counsel at the NYCLU. “We look
forward to continuing to work with the governor to prevent misguided
and unjust federal policies, such as those contained in the Real ID
Act, from erasing the positive gains for immigrants made under the new
state policy announced today.”
The NYCLU is concerned that the federal government will
attempt to
force New York to reverse the progress made by Governor
Spitzer’s decision to broaden immigrant access to
driver’s licenses.
Congress passed the Real ID Act in 2005 in an attempt to
federalize
state driver's licenses by imposing a broad array of regulations on how
they are issued and verified. Should the Real ID Act become law in New
York, it will force the Department of Motor Vehicles into the business
of enforcing federal immigration law by again requiring that all
driver’s license applicants prove their lawful immigration
status.
States are not required to implement the Real ID Act, and
seventeen
states have already passed legislation rejecting it. The NYCLU urges
Governor Spitzer to protect the important progress made today and
express his opposition to the federal Real ID Act.
More information on the Real ID Act can be found online at: www.nyclu.org/realid
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