WASHINGTON, June 1 (UPI) -- New Hampshire and Oklahoma have joined
Montana and Washington in rejecting the U.S. government's 2005 Real ID
Act.
The states passed statutes refusing to submit to the program, meaning
driver's licenses issued by those states will eventually be disallowed
as official identification to board airplanes and enter federal
buildings, Stateline.org reported Friday.
Meanwhile, the Idaho Legislature refused to allocate any money to pay
for the act and the Georgia Legislature gave Gov. Sonny Perdue the
authority to ignore the act. Perdue's spokesman, Bert Brantley, said
the governor is hoping the federal government will make the expensive
program more affordable for states.
Opponents of the $14 billion program have criticized its high costs for
states and expressed fears the new security system for compliant
driver's licenses would amount to an invasion of privacy for the
holders.
"It's more and more clear that the Real ID system won't work to secure
the country," said Jim Harper of the Libertarian Cato Institute. He
predicted more states will join those rejecting the act.
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Two more states reject Real ID
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