Jan 10, 2008 8:33 pm US/Eastern
Feds Try To Tighten Driver's License Rules
WASHINGTON (AP) ―
Americans born after Dec. 1, 1964, will have to get more secure
driver's licenses in the next six years under ambitious post-9/11
security rules to be unveiled Friday by federal officials.
The Homeland Security Department has spent years crafting the final
regulations for the REAL ID Act, a law designed to make it harder for
terrorists, illegal immigrants and con artists to get government-issued
identification. The effort once envisioned to take effect in 2008 has
been pushed back in the hopes of winning over skeptical state
officials.
Even with more time, more federal help, and technical advances,
REAL ID still faces stiff opposition from civil liberties groups.
To address some of those concerns, the government now plans to
phase in a secure ID initiative that Congress passed into law in 2005.
Now, DHS plans a key deadline in 2011, and then further measures to be
enacted three years later, according to congressional staffers who
spoke to The Associated Press on condition of anonymity because an
announcement had not yet been made. DHS officials briefed legislative
aides on the details late Thursday.
The Sept. 11 attacks were the main motivation for the changes.
The hijacker-pilot who flew into the Pentagon, Hani Hanjour, had a
total of four driver's licenses and ID cards from three states. The
DHS, which was created in response to the attacks, has created a slogan
for REAL ID: "One driver, one license."
By 2014, anyone seeking to board an airplane or enter a federal
building would have to present a REAL ID-compliant driver's license,
with the notable exception of those more than 50 years old, Homeland
Security officials said.
The over-50 exemption was created to give states more time to get
everyone new licenses, and officials say the risk of someone in that
age group being a terrorist, illegal immigrant or con artist is much
less.
(© 2009 The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.)
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