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WASHINGTON (AP) — The Bush administration and
New York cut a deal Saturday to create a new generation of super-secure driver’s
licenses for U.S. citizens, but also allow illegal immigrants to get a
version.
New York is the fourth state to reach an agreement on federally approved
secure licenses, after Arizona, Vermont and Washington.
The issue is pressing for border states, where new and tighter rules are
soon to go into effect for crossings.
The Arizona deal announced in August does not contemplate issuing licenses
to illegal immigrants, said Jeanine L’Ecuyer, a spokeswoman for Arizona Gov.
Janet Napolitano.
The proposed Arizona version would not be available to anyone illegally in
the country, since one of the intended uses of the 3-in-1 identity card would be
to prove U.S. citizenship, L’Ecuyer said.
It could be used as a license, as proof of citizenship and as a
passport-like document valid for travel in Canada, the U.S. and Mexico.
It would be voluntary and available for a small extra fee.
“It is something that clearly would not be available for people who are in
the county illegally,” L’Ecuyer said.
The New York deal comes about one month after Gov. Eliot Spitzer announced
a plan whereby illegal immigrants with a valid foreign passport could obtain a
license.
Saturday’s agreement with the Homeland Security Department will create a
three-tier license system in New York. It is the largest state to sign on so far
to the government’s post-September 11 effort to make identification cards more
secure.
Spitzer, who has faced much criticism on the issue, said the deal means New
York “will usher in the most secure licensing system in the nation.”
Homeland Security Secretary Michael Chertoff said he was not happy that New
York intended to issue IDs to illegal immigrants. But he said there was nothing
he could do to stop it.
“I don’t endorse giving licenses to people who are not here legally, but
federal law does allow states to make that choice,” Chertoff said.
The governor made clear he is going forward with his plan allowing licenses
for illegal immigrants.
But advocates on both sides of the debate said Spitzer had caved to
pressure by adopting the administration’s stance on tighter security standards
for most driver’s licenses.
GOP Rep. Thomas Reynolds, who represents the Buffalo suburbs, said he was
glad Washington had heeded his concerns about border identification. But he said
he feared that Spitzer “is taking this state down a risky path” by giving any
kind of license to illegal immigrants.
Under the compromise, New York will produce an “enhanced driver’s license”
that will be as secure as a passport. It is intended for people who soon will
need to meet such ID requirements, even for a short drive to Canada.
A second version of the license will meet new federal standards of the Real
ID Act. That law is designed to make it much harder for illegal immigrants or
would-be terrorists to obtain licenses.
A third type of license will be available to undocumented immigrants.
Spitzer has said this ID will make the state more secure by bringing those
people “out of the shadows” and into American society, and will lower auto
insurance rates.
Those licenses will be clearly marked to show they are not valid federal
ID.
Officials, however, would not say whether that meant local law enforcement
could use such a license as probable cause to detain someone they suspected of
being in the U.S. illegally.
“Besides being a massive defeat for the governor, I can’t imagine many —
if any — illegal immigrants coming forward to get the driver’s licenses,
because they’d basically be labeled as illegal,” said New York Rep. Peter King,
the top Republican on the House Homeland Security Committee.
New York has between 500,000 and 1 million undocumented immigrants, many of
whom are driving without a license and car insurance or with fake driver’s
licenses, Spitzer said in September when he announced his executive order.