PSA…

REAL ID Act of 2005: Impact On Driver License Use as Security ID

If you’re planning to fly you may not be able to use your driver’s license as a form of identification to get through security. Also, its use in accessing Federal facilities
inclusive of military bases or entering nuclear power plants. That’s thanks to the REAL ID Act of 2005, which everyone in the travel industry is hoping you – and the other 719
million passengers who fly domestically every year – have heard about. The law, a counterterrorism measure that followed 9/11, calls for states to issue driver’s licenses with more security features – such as scannable bar codes and digital photos. They will be required for people to board any commercial flight and enter federal facilities and military bases.

Passports or other approved forms of federal identification- such as a border-crossing card, U.S. military ID, TSA Pre- Check or Global Entry card – can be used as an alternative.

Other alternative ID that will be accepted by TSA is listed at https://www.tsa.gov/travel/security-screening/identification. You will need this alternative ID if you live in one of 24 states that have yet to add the security measures to the driver’s licenses they issue. And you may need to get a new, updated license if you live in one of the states that already offers them. Enforcement began on January 22.
You can check your state’s status on the Department of Homeland Security website’s interactive map at https://www.dhs.gov/real-id. Some states have been granted
extensions to make their licenses compliant.

“It’s very complicated,” admits Katy Lloyd, spokesperson for the Virginia Department of Motor Vehicles. Virginia has been granted a REAL ID extension until Oct. 10, 2018,
when the state plans to have compliant licenses ready. Until then, residents can get through security using the driver’s licenses they already have. Delays are caused at least in part by the controversy over the legislation. Its opponents include some legislators who have called it an “unfunded mandate” that is too expensive to implement. Many states have repealed or are repealing those laws. While they are working on new compliant driver’s licenses, they also plan to offer unenhanced licenses as an option to
residents. The bottom line: You don’t want to find yourself barred from flying because you didn’t realize your old-school license is no longer an acceptable form of identification. If your state doesn’t have the new IDs, there is still time to get a passport or apply for another ID, says Tom Spagnola, senior vice president of supplier relations at the online travel agency CheapOair. Spagnola says airlines, not to mention airport security agents, don’t want to face a slew of angry and confused travelers when enforcement begins. Many in the travel industry are working overtime to inform the public, so he’s hopeful the message will get through.

Comments

PSA… — 19 Comments

  1. So many hoops to jump through to get on an airplane. Not only have to get ‘felt up’ by TSA, have your luggage x-rayed and possibly rummaged through, go through a metal detector. All that to find any possible weapons and/or explosives.

    THEN you have to prove who you are. What possible difference would it make (maybe it does – got to root out Magneto !). They now give free flights, relocating illegal aliens over the U.S. but if you are a U.S. citizen boarding an airplane – hands up, pants down and spread the cheeks.

    Outrageous.

    • My state required a state-issued photo ID to vote. And it had to be one of the IDs that went back to a verified birth certificate.

      A Federal court overturned that law, claiming it was “racist.” Their reasoning was along the line of “because we don’t have to justify ourselves to the likes of you.”

      My state still requires pre-registration to vote, and you have one (1) assigned poll, and they still cross your name off on a big pile of fan-fold printout. Even under the Federal jackboot, we still take voting seriously.

  2. Hey Old NFO;

    I was looking at the list, my state of GA is compliant, I have noticed that a lot of the “Blue States” are non-compliant, I am sure because of the illegal immigrant thing.

  3. This entire problem was caused by blue states handing out IDs to every Jose, Juan and Achmed that asked for one (or a handful). The complicated requirements grew out of certain states handing out container loads of blank ID forms to “immigrant rights” organizations.

    Talk to a decent social worker, and you will likely hear tales of illegals with handfuls of ID cards and a wallet full of social security numbers. And the social workers are not allowed, by law and policy, to report these felonies or report the their clients to Immigration.

  4. I’m trapped in Californistan, so I expect our drivers licenses to be rejected by the TSA sooner than the extension runs out. Part and parcel of refusing to cooperate with ICE.

    Good thing I already have a passport.

    • The California DMV is offering REALID compliant licenses as an option. They are also automatically registering holders of new licenses both REAL and unREAL to vote.

      It’s a shrewd (D) political move. Even if Congress were to pass a law requiring presenting a REALID or passport to vote, the precinct level enforcement is certain to be more, ah, liberal.

  5. I only get on an airline when no reasonable option is available. Use my passport. With a pacemaker I get screened differently. Not sure how safe that is but what can I do?

  6. So we now have a National ID card basically, one needed to travel from your place of residence to elsewhere. Maybe we should call it an internal passport? I recall another country like that, I believe it was called USSR!

    • Somewhat true, but unfortunately we kinda do have to take some measures to protect ourselves.

      RealID, as much as it puts a one-time burden on the individual, is actually a good idea. Most nations that our liberal moron betters like actually have more secure id systems than we do. Mexico, that failed narco-state, requires that to vote the voter must get a voting license with proof of citizenship and a fingerprint. Same with India. Yet we in the good old USA, who are striving to keep the enemies at bay, don’t require voter id in, ahem, certain states (cough, cough, BlueStates, cough, cough.) These same states also allow illegals to openly obtain driver’s licenses, rent, hell outright mortgages.

      A sensible country would require some valid sort of id. Sure, you can fake the RealID, but at least it is a start to removing services from illegals and morons (wait, I just described a large part of the Democratic party. Hmmm.)

  7. All- Thanks for the comments! And yes, it IS a screwed up situation… Sigh…

    Joe- Dead on the money…

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