Texas closing in on January 15th deadline to comply with Real ID
Texas Insider Report: AUSTIN Texas To date. the Federal Government has approved some 53000 people under the program known as
Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals or DACA and
close to 250000 more have applied for drivers licenses since President Obamas June announcement all but
ended deportation of illegal immigrants younger than 31 who are veterans students or recent high-school or college graduates.
The Obama Administrations decision
to stop deporting certain qualified undocumented Americans will soon give them driving privileges in more than a dozen additional states.
The federal government gives successful DACA applicants Work Authorization Forms and Social Security cards.
So although DACA does not directly address drivers licenses in more than a dozen states that do not currently allow illegal immigrants to drive those two documents are enough under state law to qualify for a license.
The Migration Policy Institute estimates as many as 1.76 million immigrants are eligible.
The practice of granting drivers licenses to illegal immigrants has become rare in recent years and the issue had dropped off most legislative agendas before the federal action thrust it into states laps once again. It is now rapidly re-emerging as states close in on a January 15 deadline to comply with
Real ID a federal law signed by President George W. Bush that was aimed at tightening license restrictions.
The states are supposed to comply with the laws rules for secure licenses by January 15. Currently only three states let illegal immigrants drive but the Obama Administrations decision is set to give them driving privileges in dozens of additional states.
And while California is the only one that changed its laws to explicitly permit the expansion officials in a handful of the affected states have scrambled to block the licenses from being issued prompting a political backlash in Michigan and yet another immigration-related lawsuit in Arizona.
The new license issuance programs are a direct consequence of President Obamas June decision all but ending deportation of qualified illegal immigrants younger than 31 implementing the program known as
Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals or DACA. These immigrants can work in the United States if they:
- Arrived in the country when they were younger than 16
- Have been here for the preceding 5 years
- Have no major criminal convictions and
- Pay a fee of $465
- Individuals can get a two-year deferral and then must apply again.
Licenses for young Immigrants |
Officials in the following states confirmed that illegal immigrants who qualify for the federal Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program can also qualify for drivers licenses:
- California
- Connecticut
- Delaware
- Florida
- Georgia
- Illinois
- Indiana
- Massachusetts
- Maryland
- Nevada
- New Mexico
- Tennessee
- Texas
- Utah
- Virginia
- Washington
- Wisconsin
Officials in the following states announced that DACA recipients will not qualify for drivers licenses:
- Arizona
- Arkansas
- Kansas
- Michigan
- Mississippi
- Nebraska
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Source: National Immigration Law Center. |
Tanya Broder an attorney with
the American Immigrant Law Center says allowing immigrants to get licenses is an important part of achieving the goal of fully integrating

them into their communities and the economy. Certainly in places like Arizona the ability to drive is essential" she says.
But
Janice Kephart an attorney with the Center for Immigration Studies which seeks to curb both legal and illegal immigration says DACA and states reaction to it undermines the Real ID law which passed in 2005. Kephart Director of National Security Policy at the
Center for Immigration Studies.
Kephart argues illegal immigrants need more than just paperwork to get licenses under the law; the immigrants must also be in a federal immigration database identifying them as being in the country legally she says. States that do not use the extra step Kephart says are not obeying Real ID and could expose themselves to fraud.
But she adds states may be reluctant to buck the Obama administration on immigration after the federal government sued Arizona and largely won over the states 2010 anti-immigration law. I dont really blame the states for this at all" she says. How could you? Theyve gotten no support from the feds."
The federal government has not taken sides in the dispute and so far it has declined to weigh in on whether DACA specifically authorizes states to issue drivers licenses to immigrants who qualify for the program or whether Real ID prohibits them from doing so.
The first test of those competing theories could soon come in a Phoenix courtroom.
Arizona Governor Jan Brewer announced on the day the federal government began accepting applications for the program that her state would not issue drivers licenses to the newly authorized workers. The federal document they receive she said does not evidence lawful authorized status or presence."
Arizona law requires that applicants for a drivers license must show proof satisfactory to the department that the applicants presence in the United States is authorized under federal law."
But the American Civil Liberties Union and immigrant groups sued to force Arizona to let the young immigrants get licenses. They argue that Arizona had accepted the same forms of identification to grant licenses for other groups. They say the state is overstepping its bounds by trying to regulate immigration and is illegally treating immigrants who qualify for DACA differently than others in similar situations.
A similar argument is brewing in
Michigan where Republican Secretary of State Ruth Johnsons office also barred immigrants who get documents under DACA from obtaining

drivers licenses. Spokesman Fred Woodhams says a 2008 Michigan law requires license holders to be in the country legally.
The deferred action paperwork he says is not enough. It makes clear to everyone that they are not in the United States legally. It is simply deferring deportation action against individuals."
In contrast
California lawmakers explicitly authorized the state to issue licenses to DACA qualifiers this summer. The state is already issuing licenses to them although it is not tracking how many immigrants have received licenses.
Illinois lawmakers are poised to go one step further. The Hispanic vote was a big reason why Democrats in Illinois built their majorities in both the House and Senate in the November elections. The lopsided results spurred several Republicans to rethink their opposition to drivers licenses for illegal immigrants an issue that has languished in Springfield since Obama served in the state Senate early in the last decade.
Advocates for immigrants hope they can finally pass a law achieving that goal before the new class of lawmakers takes office in January. The state Senate easily passed a measure recently 41-14 with bipartisan support that would allow immigrants to get temporary drivers licenses which would look different from those carried by citizens and legal residents. (
Utah has a similar set-up.) The Illinois House could take up the measure early next month.
In the meantime though young immigrants in
Illinois who qualify for deferred action can get the same licenses as their American friends because they will receive all the necessary documents says Dave Druker a spokesman for the secretary of

states office.
Texas too will issue licenses although at first it looked like it would not. It is second only to
California as the home of the most applicants for deferred action.
Governor Rick Perry is a border hawk who nonetheless defended granting in-state tuition for illegal immigrants in his presidential campaign.
Perry sent a letter to all state agencies in August reminding state workers that the federal program confer(s) absolutely no legal status whatsoever to any alien who qualifies for the federal deferred action designation."
Only a few days later the
Texas Department of Public Safety confirmed that those immigrants would indeed be eligible for licenses.