PA residents might soon need new IDs

Daily News Article   —   Posted on October 17, 2016

(by Emily Babay, Philly.com) – Pennsylvania residents likely won’t be able to use their driver’s licenses as identification to get into federal buildings or board planes for much longer.

Starting in January, Pennsylvanians may need an alternative, more secure form of identification to enter federal facilities. And in 2018, current state licenses won’t be sufficient for boarding commercial flights.

The problem is that Pennsylvania licenses and state IDs don’t meet the requirements of the federal REAL ID Act, which was enacted in the wake of the 9/11 terror attacks and sets standards for secure identification cards.

A Pennsylvania law passed in 2012 bars the state from participating in REAL ID. The state has been granted several extensions for compliance in the past, but the Department of Homeland Security this week denied PennDot’s latest request. [PennDot is the Pennsylvania Department of Transportation. It is responsible for motor vehicle titles and registration along with issuing driver licenses.]

“Pennsylvania has not committed to meeting all remaining requirements and has not provided adequate justification for continued noncompliance,” the department [of Homeland Security] said in a letter to PennDot.

That means Pennsylvanians will need another secure form of identification to enter federal facilities, military bases, and nuclear power plants starting on Jan. 30. That requirement doesn’t apply when going to a federal facility to apply for or receive federal benefits.

Each federal agency determines the types of secure identifications it accepts, according to PennDot.

And if Pennsylvania remains out-of-compliance and without an extension through Jan. 22, 2018, state residents will need an alternative Transportation Security Administration-approved identification to board planes.

New Jersey has an extension for compliance through at least October 2017. Just four states other than Pennsylvania – Kentucky, Maine, Oklahoma, and South Carolina – are non-compliant and do not have have renewed extensions.

realid

Department of Homeland Security explainer graphic.

The Homeland Security letter to PennDot notes that “Pennsylvania may request an extension if there are new developments or additional information regarding your jurisdiction’s progress towards meeting outstanding requirements, the reasons that these standards remain unmet, and the reasons for continued noncompliance.”

A PennDot spokesman directed questions about whether the state could receive another extension to Homeland Security. A call to the department wasn’t immediately returned Friday.

“PennDOT has always focused on providing a secure driver’s license and supporting process and we already have made additional improvements,” PennDOT Secretary Leslie S. Richards said in a statement. “In large measure, we are out of compliance for limited technical reasons and because existing state law bars us from fully complying. While we understand frustration with the cost of this unfunded federal mandate, our failure to comply because of the prohibition of current law will be a burden for Pennsylvanians.”

The agency noted that the state legislature could lift the REAL ID ban, but even if that happened, it would take time to make the system changes necessary for compliance.



Background

REAL ID standards cover: (from wikipedia)