Chicago Sun-Times

Surprise criticism of municipal ID

Program advances despite arguments it should be state issue

- BY FRAN SPIELMAN City Hall Reporter Email: fspielman@suntimes.com Twitter: @fspielman

Mayor Rahm Emanuel’s plan to create a municipal identifica­tion program — but prevent sensitive informatio­n from being used against undocument­ed immigrants — was advanced Thursday amid surprise opposition from a handful of aldermen.

South Side Ald. Anthony Beale ( 9th) argued that the municipal ID program, for which Emanuel has already allocated $ 1 million, is a waste of money and would be better handled by the state.

“I don’t get complaints in my office that people can’t obtain any identifica­tion. If we do, it’s minimal. I just think we’re wasting taxpayer dollars, time and energy on this program. I think it’s a bad idea,” Beale said.

“If they’re having problems getting IDs, we can probably spend a fraction of this money toward helping people obtain a state ID or a driver’s license,” he said. “To come up with a municipal ID, we’re trying to skirt the system.”

Northwest Side Ald. Nick Sposato ( 38th) voted against the $ 1.3 million Legal Protection Fund created by the mayor to support immigrants threatened with deportatio­n under President Donald Trump.

Sposato was also a “No” vote on a resolution reaffirmin­g Chicago’s status as a sanctuary city.

So it was no surprise when Sposato declared he can’t support the municipal ID.

“Why not the state? Why us? The state has the infrastruc­ture in place to handle this,” Sposato said. “If people claim to be homeless — and I’m not doubting that they are homeless — they’re gonna get somebody to vouch for them and say, ‘ Yes, they are homeless. And yes, it is John Smith. And yes, he does live here.’ And that way, we’re gonna give him an ID.”

Ald. Jason Ervin ( 28th) said, he, too, is concerned about the potential for “fraud.”

Ald. Ray Lopez ( 15th) cut to what he views as the “where’s mine” mentality behind the opposition.

“This isn’t a Latino issue. This isn’t an undocument­ed issue. This isn’t any one group’s issue. It’s a Chicago issue,” Lopez said.

“We have an opportunit­y to help our residents at a time when nobody else is trying to. . . . Nobody else is trying at a government­al level to help some of the neediest people in our city,” he said. “And while it is only limited to being valid in Chicago, it’s a start. And so often, it’s the start that people need — whether they’re returning citizens, undocument­ed citizens, new students who don’t have a permanent residence.”

At a time when undocument­ed immigrants are living in fear of the mass deportatio­ns, City Clerk Anna Valencia assured the Budget Committee once again that personal informatio­n required to qualify for a municipal ID will not end up in the hands of U. S. Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t.

To protect confidenti­ality, the city will ask for “minimal informatio­n” and will not ask applicants about their immigratio­n status. Nor will the city retain copies of applicants’ personal informatio­n.

The name and date of birth will be the only informatio­n retained by the city. No address will be required.

The bare- bones approach outlined in the ordinance is tailormade to follow San Francisco’s lead. In that city, applicants bring in the documents to prove someone’s identity. They hand them over to a specially trained individual who review the documents, then hand them back.

“New York did it on a point system. So four points to prove your identity and be able to get a municipal ID card,” Valencia said.

 ??  ?? Ald. Anthony Beale ( 9th) says the
city is “wasting taxpayer dollars, time and energy” on a municipal ID program.
| SUN- TIMES FILE PHOTO
Ald. Anthony Beale ( 9th) says the city is “wasting taxpayer dollars, time and energy” on a municipal ID program. | SUN- TIMES FILE PHOTO

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