Legislature(2007 - 2008)BELTZ 211

02/14/2008 09:00 AM Senate STATE AFFAIRS


Download Mp3. <- Right click and save file as

* first hearing in first committee of referral
+ teleconferenced
= bill was previously heard/scheduled
+ SCR 15 AMEND UNIFORM RULES: STANDING COMMITTEES TELECONFERENCED
Moved CSSCR 15(SED) Out of Committee
+= SB 215 REQUIREMENTS FOR DRIVER'S LICENSE/I.D. TELECONFERENCED
Moved SB 215 Out of Committee
*+ SB 202 PROHIBIT STATE SPENDING FOR REAL ID ACT TELECONFERENCED
Heard & Held
+ Bills Previously Heard/Scheduled TELECONFERENCED
= HB 101 UNIFORM TRAFFIC LAWS
Moved SCS CSHB 101(STA) Out of Committee
                                                                                                                                
9:27:40 AM                                                                                                                    
         SB 202-PROHIBIT STATE SPENDING FOR REAL ID ACT                                                                     
         SB 215-REQUIREMENTS FOR DRIVER'S LICENSE/I.D.                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
CHAIR MCGUIRE announced  the consideration of SB 215  and SB 202.                                                               
The concerns  about SB  215 are  centered on  the Real  I.D. Act,                                                               
instead of the "baseline issue itself."  The worry is that SB 215                                                               
will set the  state up for the federal Real  I.D. mandate without                                                               
addressing privacy  concerns. It is  logical to bring it  up with                                                               
SB 202,  which is something that  many other states have  done in                                                               
the process of enhancing driver's  licenses. Washington State has                                                               
allowed for an enhancement on  the license that requires proof of                                                               
citizenship and  documentation; however,  it is very  explicit in                                                               
statute  that it  will not  accept  the Real  I.D. mandate  until                                                               
privacy concerns are addressed.                                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
SENATOR BILL WIELECHOWSKI, Alaska  State Legislature, said SB 202                                                               
will ban state  funding for Real I.D., which was  put into law in                                                               
2005 as  part of an emergency  appropriation bill for the  war on                                                               
Iraq. It was  right after Hurricane Katrina, and it  was put into                                                               
a large, must-pass bill. There  was very little discussion on it,                                                               
and many people did not even  notice it. The Real I.D. law, which                                                               
most  Alaskans would  have serious  concerns about,  requires the                                                               
first federal  identification system.  Unlike the  passport, this                                                               
I.D. must be  carried and shown in order to  fly or enter federal                                                               
buildings. In  order to access  any federal facilities,  like the                                                               
IRS offices, a  federal courthouse, or a national  park, a person                                                               
would need this card.                                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
9:31:48 AM                                                                                                                    
SENATOR WIELECHOWSKI  said there  are bills proposed  in Congress                                                               
that will  extend reasons  for which the  I.D. will  be required.                                                               
Since Alaska  has a large percentage  of its land managed  by the                                                               
federal  government, this  is obviously  a  concern. "There's  no                                                               
reason  to  assume  that anything  that  the  federal  government                                                               
funds, whether  it be  hospitals … Amtrak,  or busses,  you would                                                               
now have  to show your  identification card." Section 202  of the                                                               
Real I.D.  law requires machine-readable technology  with defined                                                               
minimum data  elements. The  federal government  is setting  up a                                                               
system of scanning the card and  creating a data trail on people.                                                               
The government  will have access  to everywhere someone  has been                                                               
and had their  card scanned. The card will be  scanned every time                                                               
someone  goes  to  any  federal location,  flies,  opens  a  bank                                                               
account,  or  enters  a hospital.  This  raises  serious  privacy                                                               
concerns for many  people. It is the beginning  of a surveillance                                                               
society with the federal government tracking people's movements.                                                                
                                                                                                                                
9:33:55 AM                                                                                                                    
SENATOR  WIELECHOWSKI said  the  proposed  rules included  radio-                                                               
frequency (RF)  I.D.s. with a  radio chip  in the card,  but that                                                               
was not  in the final  rules. "There is  no reason to  doubt that                                                               
once this is implemented Congress  couldn't go back and simply do                                                               
a  one-line amendment  in a  massive  budget bill  in the  future                                                               
saying,  'well,  guess what,  now  your  cards  have to  have  RF                                                               
I.D.'." That  will allow the  federal government to  really track                                                               
where  people  are  going  even  if  cards  aren't  scanned.  The                                                               
government can choose  to put scanners in any  location that will                                                               
scan a card when someone walks by.                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
CHAIR  MCGUIRE said  she  has a  bill for  Friday  "on state  law                                                               
governing RF  I.D. chips  generally." It  isn't just  the federal                                                               
government;  a person  can buy  these scanners  on the  internet.                                                               
Chips are in  credit cards and grocery store  cards, "and anytime                                                               
you  walk by  or are  in the  presence of  someone that  has that                                                               
scanner  …  it  forecasts  your entire  -  your  social  security                                                               
number, your birth date - very sensitive information about you."                                                                
                                                                                                                                
SENATOR WIELECHOWSKI  said licenses might include  finger prints,                                                               
retinal  scans,  or DNA.  Every  time  the  card is  scanned  the                                                               
information goes  into a  system. The  Real I.D.  system requires                                                               
that Alaska and every other  state share data. Every DMV official                                                               
has access to every Alaskan's  data. Private organizations may be                                                               
working with this data. Some DMVs use private companies.                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
9:36:51 AM                                                                                                                    
SENATOR WIELECHOWSKI  said there are travel  treaties with Canada                                                               
and Mexico,  and the federal  government is still in  the process                                                               
of developing  rules in that regard,  "but there is no  reason to                                                               
expect that  when you go into  Canada or when you  go into Mexico                                                               
and you  swipe your  I.D., foreign  nationals in  those countries                                                               
will have access  to every American's private data."  The cost is                                                               
unknown,  but  DMV  estimated  it  will  cost  Alaska  about  $10                                                               
million.  Real  I.D.  requirements   include  keeping  paper  and                                                               
electronic  copies  for many  years.  That  will entail  a  cost.                                                               
States  must  ensure the  physical  security  of locations  where                                                               
driver's licenses  and I.D.  cards are  produced. "No  one really                                                               
knows what that  means, but when we enter  federal buildings now,                                                               
we  see armed  guards and  federal  police." That  will cost  the                                                               
state. The  Real I.D.  law requires  extensive changes  to hiring                                                               
and retention practices for DMV.  In Alaska there are people that                                                               
have  no easy  access  to DMV.  Bush residents  may  want to  fly                                                               
somewhere after they  have just turned 16. A person  can't get on                                                               
the  plane without  the card.  Physical  presence at  the DMV  is                                                               
required to get the Real I.D, including for license renewal.                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
9:39:32 AM                                                                                                                    
SENATOR WIELECHOWSKI  said there  are concerns  that this  is the                                                               
first step toward a national  gun registry. Gun Owners of America                                                               
opposes Real I.D. "Here's how it  can happen: When you go to Fred                                                               
Meyer or  wherever to purchase your  gun, you have to  fill out a                                                               
form -  4473 - you  have show your  I.D. You show  your federally                                                               
mandated national  identification card  and it's now  swiped, and                                                               
guess what, the  federal government and the state  now knows that                                                               
you've just purchased a gun." It  is the same for ammunition. The                                                               
Department of  Homeland Security (DHS)  can decide any  other use                                                               
for the I.D. He asked if it  is a stretch of the imagination that                                                               
an upcoming  DHS secretary will say,  "We need to now  swipe your                                                               
I.D.s  for  guns."  This  does nothing  to  secure  the  borders.                                                               
Illegal immigrants cannot get a driver's license in Alaska.                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
SENATOR  WIELECHOWSKI  said  many  presidential  candidates  have                                                               
opposed Real  I.D. as do  the American Bar  Association, American                                                               
Civil Liberties  Union, Catholic Social Services  of Alaska, John                                                               
Birch Society,  National Center on Domestic  and Sexual Violence,                                                               
National  Taxpayers  Union,  Citizens against  Government  Waste,                                                               
Privacy Rights Clearing  House, and People for  the American Way.                                                               
There are 18 states that  have passed similar legislation, and 18                                                               
more  are reviewing  it.  There are  many  religious groups  that                                                               
oppose Real I.D. He said to stand up for Alaska's sovereignty.                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
9:42:33 AM                                                                                                                    
SENATOR BUNDE said  federal legislation needs to  be addressed at                                                               
the federal level.  If Alaska opposes this  federal mandate, will                                                               
Alaskans not be able to get on an airplane or do other things?                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
SENATOR  WIELECHOWSKI  said  yes.  "We represent  the  people  of                                                               
Alaska, and  this is an encroachment  on the privacy rights  … of                                                               
the people."  He said  the legislature should  not stand  for the                                                               
government taking away those rights.                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
SENATOR BUNDE said  he doesn't think unknown  persons "should get                                                               
on our  airplanes either." It is  a right of passage  for a young                                                               
person to get a phony I.D.  on the streets Los Angeles. "What are                                                               
we going to  do about the other problem that  we have: people who                                                               
can have assumed identities … with ill intent for our country?"                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
9:44:13 AM                                                                                                                    
SENATOR WIELECHOWSKI  said this  does absolutely nothing  to make                                                               
our country safer.  If the federal government  is concerned about                                                               
illegal immigrants, it  needs to secure our borders.  This is the                                                               
federal government commandeering  the DMV and not  paying for it.                                                               
If the government  is creating big brother, they need  to pay for                                                               
it, and that is all SB 202 does.                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
SENATOR BUNDE said there is some hyperbole in the response.                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
CHAIR  MCGUIRE  said  her  philosophy  is  closely  aligned  with                                                               
Senator  Wielechowski's.  She  said   the  testimony  on  SB  215                                                               
addressed the issue of the Real  I.D. The sponsor said SB 215 was                                                               
not about Real  I.D., but about making  Alaska's drivers licenses                                                               
more secure.  Many states  are looking  at this,  and it  is "the                                                               
opposite  of what  we  did  with the  Patriot  Act, which  sailed                                                               
through. There are  tremendous concerns about it  now. States are                                                               
looking  at this  and saying,  'what  a revelation'  in terms  of                                                               
monitoring people's internet use at  our libraries, but we didn't                                                               
say anything. We didn't  do it. And so this is  one way of saying                                                               
sometimes  the states  can  … we  don't have  the  power if  they                                                               
mandate it,  but sometimes  states can  send messages  that there                                                               
are  concerns."  She  hopes the  federal  government  takes  into                                                               
account  the serious  privacy concerns.  It is  the kind  of bill                                                               
that needs to go to the appropriate people.                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
9:46:38 AM                                                                                                                    
SENATOR  FRENCH  said  the  committee is  in  agreement.  If  the                                                               
federal government wants a federal I.D.  card, it needs to set up                                                               
the  program   and  not  force   it  on  the  states.   "Put  the                                                               
responsibility where  it lies."  SB 215  is only  part of  a Real                                                               
I.D. It can be argued either  way. "What does the Commissioner of                                                               
Public  Safety do  should [SB  215] become  law with  that fiscal                                                               
note?"  It creates  difficulty in  implementing a  policy choice,                                                               
which Senator French agrees with.  "We should not be bearing this                                                               
cost." But  at some point, the  commissioner will have to  make a                                                               
call about whether it complies with the Real I.D. Act or not.                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
9:48:15 AM                                                                                                                    
CHAIR MCGUIRE said  perhaps it makes the dialogue  more overt. If                                                               
Real I.D. comes  to fruition, the commissioner  would come before                                                               
the legislature and discuss the merits of implementation.                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
SENATOR  STEVENS  noted  that  this is  the  direction  of  other                                                               
states, almost unanimously. He likes not using state money.                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
MATTHEW KERR, Anchorage, said he  supports SB 202, but the issues                                                               
of legal  presence and Real  I.D. are separate and  only somewhat                                                               
related. The primary purpose of  a driver's license is to protect                                                               
public safety rather than for  identification. He did not use his                                                               
driver's license to  fly last year, and it  wasn't too difficult.                                                               
He could  fly from Juneau to  Anchorage without any I.D.  at all.                                                               
The Real  I.D. has been  rejected by many  states. "If we  all go                                                               
along  with this,  it will  be a  self-fulfilling prophecy,  so I                                                               
support the state's efforts to oppose it."                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
9:51:24 AM                                                                                                                    
JAMES HARRISON,  Attorney, Sacramento  CA, said  he is  an Alaska                                                               
attorney and has been involved in  Real I.D. for quite some time.                                                               
Real I.D. requires  all drivers to be compliant by  2014. It is a                                                               
five-year process  of renewal,  so to be  Real I.D.  compliant by                                                               
2014, the  state will need to  start issuing them next  year. The                                                               
infrastructure, background  checks, and everything  else required                                                               
by Real  I.D. will  need to be  done now. The  money needs  to be                                                               
spent now,  not in the future.  The state has taken  an extension                                                               
of  time for  compliance, but  the state  can't sit  back and  do                                                               
nothing. DMV  argued that  it was  going to do  some of  the Real                                                               
I.D. things  anyway, but how  will Alaska differentiate  if there                                                               
are no  funds for Real I.D.?  He referred to the  Real I.D. rules                                                               
and the Appendix A checklist. It  is part of the federal register                                                               
and there are 18 points to  comply with. He told the committee to                                                               
have  DMV go  over the  list  for them.  Real I.D.  is not  about                                                               
illegal immigrants. It  is about everyone who will  have to prove                                                               
citizenship. This  is a prior  restraint on people's  rights, and                                                               
it has a danger of mission creep. It is anti-American.                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
9:54:43 AM                                                                                                                    
CHAIR MCGUIRE  said copies are  being made of  Washington State's                                                               
resolution and one by Senator Ted Stevens in Congress.                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
KEVIN BROOKS, Deputy  Commissioner, Department of Administration,                                                               
said this  week the  state filed  for an  extension for  the Real                                                               
I.D.  rules and  received preliminary  approval through  December                                                               
2009. The  rules are  200 pages.  He has  spoken with  the bill's                                                               
sponsor  regarding  its  impacts.   The  administration  is  very                                                               
concerned about  the privacy and  data security issues  that have                                                               
been raised. The  state is working on it. Currently  the state is                                                               
complying  with  many aspects  of  the  Real I.D.,  like  digital                                                               
photos  on  driver's licenses,  which  is  just a  good  business                                                               
practice.  It is  important  not to  restrict  the department  on                                                               
things  that  make  sense.  "We train  our  employees  to  detect                                                               
fraudulent  documents  and  things  of  that  nature."  The  bill                                                               
shouldn't be at  the expense of good business  practices that are                                                               
in place and are good  for Alaskans. He spoke against restricting                                                               
Alaskans' free movement, and he spoke  for taking a firm stand on                                                               
individual and state rights.                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
9:58:10 AM                                                                                                                    
CHAIR MCGUIRE asked about suggestions to the language.                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
MR. BROOKS said the meeting  just occurred yesterday, and Senator                                                               
Wielechowski was  told what Alaska  already does that  happens to                                                               
comply with  the Real I.D. rules.  There is a $13  million budget                                                               
for  the DMV,  and that  would not  allow implementation  of Real                                                               
I.D.  If there  was any  movement toward  compliance that  is not                                                               
already happening, the  department will need to come  back to the                                                               
legislature for money. That will spur the debate further.                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
CHAIR MCGUIRE  said it is  clear that  [the bill] refers  just to                                                               
those funds that  would aid in implementing the Real  I.D. Act of                                                               
2005. It is fairly specific, she  said. "I don't think … it would                                                               
exclude good  business practices that are  being implemented. For                                                               
example, under  Dwayne Bannock's lead,  we did go to  the digital                                                               
licenses." She doesn't see how that would be covered.                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
MR. BROOKS said he doesn't know,  but the digital photo is on the                                                               
checklist, and the  state doesn't want to be put  in the position                                                               
of  eliminating  that.  Digital  photography  is  better  than  a                                                               
Polaroid under a  laminate. "We just don't want  anything that we                                                               
are doing  to be prohibited  … under passage of  legislation." He                                                               
believes language can be found to address that concern.                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
SENATOR STEVENS asked what needs to be done after the extension.                                                                
                                                                                                                                
MR. BROOKS said the state  requested an extension, which does not                                                               
imply that  the state intends  to comply  with the act.  After an                                                               
exhaustive review  of the rules  of the act, the  department will                                                               
come back to  the legislature on what it will  mean for the state                                                               
to comply. The  state has rules that people are  worked up about,                                                               
but the  DMV must execute  good business practices.  The December                                                               
2009  date  is  looming.  "We   can  more  actively  engage  that                                                               
discussion the next  time you're down here meeting,  and we'll be                                                               
spending the interim working the issue."                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
10:02:12 AM                                                                                                                   
CHAIR MCGUIRE  said she would like  to have the bill  "as its own                                                               
full day  in State Affairs  to listen  to what the  department is                                                               
doing." She wants examples from other states.                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
BILL  SCANNELL, Spokesperson,  Identity Project,  Anchorage, said                                                               
he  has  been  working  on  opposing  Real  I.D.  nationally.  He                                                               
supports SB 202.  He said Mr. Brooks is  "essentially saying that                                                               
we should  all be  good Germans  and follow  the law."  The state                                                               
letter requesting an extension says  nothing about whether Alaska                                                               
will or  will not comply.  "In fact it reads  to me like  we have                                                               
every  intention  of  complying."   Alaskans  will  be  a  little                                                               
inconvenienced in order to take a  stand. He has heard people say                                                               
that freedom  is not free,  and if Alaskans  can't put up  with a                                                               
little inconvenience  …. "We can  still fly -  we may have  to go                                                               
through secondary  screening." He can't imagine  Michael Chertoff                                                               
[secretary  of DHS]  keeping  people out  of  courthouses. If  we                                                               
can't put  up with  a little  inconvenience to  stand up  for our                                                               
rights and  freedoms, then  we're nothing  but good  Germans, and                                                               
can't  call  ourselves  Americans.  The   Real  I.D.  Act  is  an                                                               
abomination. "I  deeply oppose it and  strongly, strongly suggest                                                               
that you pass Senator Wielechowski's Real I.D. bill."                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
10:05:19 AM                                                                                                                   
PATRICK  DALTON, Delta  Junction,  said, "I  hope  we still  have                                                               
freedom of speech." The real  I.D. started in the United Nations,                                                               
and  he quoted  a  2005 CNET  article:  "The Bush  administration                                                               
chose  to go  ahead with  imbedding 64  kilobyte chips  in future                                                               
passports,  acting a  desire to  abide by  globally interoperable                                                               
standards   devised   by   the   International   Civil   Aviation                                                               
organization." He  said the  Bush Administration  implemented the                                                               
Real I.D.  Act with  no Senate debate.  The public  still doesn't                                                               
know about  it, he explained. It  will be costly for  the states.                                                               
Alaskans  need   to  be  free  to   travel  without  unreasonable                                                               
encumbrances, and  that's what it  all gets down to.  If everyone                                                               
is checked  for I.D.s, we are  no longer free citizens.  It would                                                               
be better to tighten up the  border and things like that. Current                                                               
driver's licenses  work fine, so if  it is not broken,  don't fix                                                               
it. This is a global  identification system that will be machine-                                                               
readable  throughout Europe.  The  United States  is a  sovereign                                                               
country, and we need to  remain that way. U.S. Representative Jim                                                               
Guest of  Missouri claims that  the Real  I.D. Act gives  a false                                                               
sense of security because of  not knowing the authenticity of the                                                               
documents presented  to get the  I.D. A  fancy I.D. won't  be any                                                               
better than the documents that are used to get it.                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
TIMOTHY PETERS,  Paralegal, Anchorage,  said he opposes  the Real                                                               
I.D.  Act. It  is a  violation of  basic civil  liberties and  is                                                               
unconstitutional. States can't be told  what to do with regard to                                                               
identification  cards. It  also violates  Alaska's constitutional                                                               
right to privacy. He supports SB 202.                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
10:09:28 AM                                                                                                                   
IRVIN BAXTER, Bible Prophet, Garland,  Texas, said the bible says                                                               
there will come a time when  everyone will need a number in order                                                               
to  buy or  sell  anything.  "The powers  that  be" will  control                                                               
people by  economic restrictions.  The immigration bill  that was                                                               
defeated  had language  referring  to social  security cards  and                                                               
employment eligibility.  Many people are  pushing for an  I.D. to                                                               
show  they can  be employed  in  America. The  databases will  be                                                               
linked  nationally.  Homeland Security  denies  the  intent of  a                                                               
national  database, but  the bill  speaks  to the  creation of  a                                                               
unified  database   maintained  by  the  DHS   and  comprised  of                                                               
information  from the  Social Security  Administration. "So  they                                                               
fully intend  to have a  national database, which they  will have                                                               
through  the  Real I.D.  Act,  and  you'll  have  to be  in  that                                                               
database or you  won't be able to  hold a job." Without  a job, a                                                               
person can't  make money or buy  things. "This is getting  way to                                                               
close to  home, as we  are in this time  of setting up  of global                                                               
government."  He concurs  with the  previous speaker.  This is  a                                                               
national  I.D.  that  hasn't  been  needed  for  230  years.  The                                                               
perpetrators of  911 all could  have qualified for  this national                                                               
card. It would have stopped none  of them, but it ends freedom in                                                               
America. "It's  the worst thing we  could possibly do." He  has a                                                               
radio talk show about biblical prophecies.                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
10:12:24 AM                                                                                                                   
CHAIR MCGUIRE said SB 202 will be brought up again on Tuesday.                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
JEFFERY  MITTMEN,  Incoming  Executive Director,  American  Civil                                                               
Liberty Union (ACLU)  of Alaska, noted that  Washington State has                                                               
opted out of  the real I.D. until issues of  privacy can be dealt                                                               
with. Five states  have "absolutely opted out of  real I.D." Real                                                               
I.D. has  already failed to  protect citizens because  states are                                                               
refusing to participate. The final  regulations issued by the DHS                                                               
in 2008  were not done  in the normal manner.  Many organizations                                                               
that have  a stake  in the issue  had their  comments essentially                                                               
ignored.  The  regulations  fail  to truly  implement  an  actual                                                               
program that is workable and  will provide real security. The DHS                                                               
estimated that the  program will cost $9.9 billion,  but only $90                                                               
million  has  been   allocated.  Businesses  and  nongovernmental                                                               
entities will  be able  to access the  I.D. information.  The DHS                                                               
has refused  to require that  this information be  encrypted, "so                                                               
it's  essentially  creating a  large  target  of opportunity  for                                                               
identity thieves."  It will  make the  state more  vulnerable and                                                               
not  more secure.  Even if  Alaska has  full and  robust security                                                               
protections, any  state that fails  to provide  those protections                                                               
put Alaskans  at risk.  There are a  wide range  of organizations                                                               
that are against  [the Real I.D.]. He said there  will be greater                                                               
incentives to  obtain fraudulent I.D.s. Native  Alaskans fear the                                                               
loss of sovereignty. He said to look at www.realnightmare.org.                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
CHAIR MCGUIRE set SB 202 aside.                                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
10:16:41 AM                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
CHAIR MCGUIRE asked if the committee had further questions on SB
215.                                                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
SENATOR GREEN moved SB 215 from committee with individual                                                                       
recommendations and attached fiscal note(s). There being no                                                                     
objection, the motion carried. [SB 202 was held over.]                                                                          
                                                                                                                                

Document Name Date/Time Subjects