|
Tennessee limits
who is eligible for a driver's license
Legal, illegal immigrants get 'certificate for driving'
By Ellen Barry
Los Angeles Times
July 29, 2004
NASHVILLE, Tenn. -- When Jerry Tseng left the Driver License Station
recently, he was the possessor of a new, and puzzling, form of identification.
Tennessee's "certificate
for driving," which identifies its holder as a non-U.S. citizen,
resembles a driver's license in some ways. Printed on it is a photograph
of Tseng, a Singaporean citizen studying at Vanderbilt University
on a student visa.
But the card is more remarkable
for a function it does not perform: Below the state flag are the
words "For driving purposes only -- not valid for identification."
The purple card represents
Tennessee's effort to solve a problem that has troubled many states.
Faced with huge numbers of illegal immigrants driving the nation's
highways, legislators have searched for a way to license and insure
them -- without granting them a state-issued driver's license.
Tennessee's answer is the
certificate for driving, which is being distributed to drivers who
are neither U.S. citizens nor permanent legal residents in the United
States. Legal immigrants on temporary student and work visas will
receive the certificate as will illegal immigrants.
But nearly a month after
Tennessee began distributing the new card, few people are cheering
the compromise. Advocates for immigrants contend that the certificates
mark its holders as inferior in the eyes of the state; anti-immigration
lawmakers have the opposite view -- that the cards give illegal
immigrants legitimacy they should not have.
Card prompts confusion
With about 1,200 of the cards issued, many Tennesseans are confused:
Will the card be of use when cashing a check, or renting a video,
or renting a car? When a police officer pulls a driver over and
is shown the driving certificate, can he arrest the holder for failing
to show a proper ID? If the card is not identification, what is
it?
"This is a disaster, potentially,"
said Tyler Moran, an analyst with the National Immigration Law Center,
which advocates for the rights of immigrants. "I really think it's
created a bit of a mess."
For once, Moran is in agreement
with state Rep. Donna Rowland, a conservative Republican from Rutherford
County. Rowland said she would "absolutely not" advise other states
to follow Tennessee's lead.
"I hope states learn from
our mistakes," she said. "The certificate of driving will become
exactly what the driver's license has become, which is a de facto
national ID."
Tennessee had been issuing
driver's licenses to illegal immigrants for two years when Gov.
Phil Bredesen took office. Bredesen concluded that the practice
was a threat to homeland security and determined to end it. In today's
America, a driver's license is "kind of like a passport," allowing
its holder to buy guns, board airplanes and open bank accounts,
said Bob Corney, Bredesen's communications director.
Not wanting to strip licenses
from immigrants who currently hold them, the governor approved a
second tier of state licensing, creating the certificate. Bredesen,
who considers the new law the strictest in the country, knew he
risked displeasing many factions in the immigration debate, Corney
said.
Both sides unhappy
In a compromise such as this one, he added, "You've struck a good
balance when no one on either side is completely happy."
Nashville's economy has boomed
over the past decade, and with new construction came immigrant laborers.
In the 1990s, the foreign-born population of Tennessee grew by 169
percent, giving it the sixth highest growth rate in the country,
according to the Urban Institute.
The availability of driver's
licenses was itself a draw, and 30,000 applicants surged through
driver license stations the first two months after the state dropped
the requirement of a Social Security number in 2001, said Wanda
Adams, assistant director of driver's license services at the Tennessee
Department of Safety.
Now, the department's clerks
must determine whether the applicant is a U.S. citizen or permanent
legal resident, Adams said. If the answer is no, applicants who
pass the driver's test will only be eligible for a certificate of
driving.
Tennessee's experiment is
being scrutinized by numerous states trying to balance road safety
against federal immigration policy and homeland security. Chief
among them is California. After rejecting proposals for years, former
Gov. Gray Davis in 2003 signed a bill that would have allowed undocumented
immigrants to receive California licenses. It became an issue in
the election last year to recall the governor. After Arnold Schwarzenegger
defeated Davis, he then lobbied the Legislature to repeal the bill.
This year, lawmakers in 25
states considered 49 bills that would loosen or tighten the requirements
for driver's licenses, although nearly all died in committee, according
to the National Immigration Law Center. Ten states issue licenses
to undocumented immigrants.
Greg Rodriguez, president
of the Tennessee Hispanic Chamber of Commerce, said it is too early
to know whether the new system will develop into a national model.
The governor deserves credit,
he said, for taking on an issue that has paralyzed states including
Texas and California for years.
Lawsuit filed
Others soured on the idea early. Two weeks after the new system
became law, plaintiff's attorney Jerry Gonzalez filed a class action
suit against Bredesen, charging that Tennessee is discriminating
against applicants on the basis of immigration status.
Moreover, Gonzalez argues,
the new law has forced low-level bureaucrats to enforce federal
immigration laws -- something they are not properly trained to do.
His complaint details occasions when clerks seized applicants' passports,
giving no receipt and no explanation. Another clerk told one of
Gonzalez's clients that Puerto Rico is not part of the United States
and seized her Social Security card and birth certificate, claiming
they were fraudulent, the lawsuit claims.
Beth Denton, a spokeswoman
for the Tennessee Department of Public Safety, said she could not
comment on the allegations because of the pending litigation, but
that the transition was proceeding smoothly.
"Our primary concern is to
know that person has passed the rules of the road and we feel comfortable"
granting them a license, she said.
ID accepted
Tseng, 26, picked up his driver's certificate the second week of
July, and found it was accepted as identification at local bars
and a car rental agency. But he carries around a Singaporean identification
card at all times now, just in case.
Mexican immigrants interviewed
shrugged when asked whether they would seek the certificates, wondering
what use it would be -- aside from marking them as illegal.
Ramon Curiel, who was working
a cash register at Supermercado La Reyna, said he saw no problem
with the old policy of issuing driver's licenses to residents regardless
of their immigration status. Tennesseans, he fears, are rolling
up the welcome mat.
"People want Nashville to
be one of the big cities of the U.S., that's the reason they need
Latin people," said Curiel, 49.
At building sites around
Nashville, "I see the American people walking with cell phones,"
he said. "But the people who poured the foundation, they're our
customers. The people who lay the carpets, paint the houses, they're
our customers."
Times researcher Rennie Sloan
contributed to this report. The Los Angeles Times is a Tribune Publishing
newspaper
|