Lodi News-Sentinel

California DMV licensed 800K undocument­ed immigrants under controvers­ial 2-year-old law

- By Tatiana Sanchez

SAN JOSE — On the day California officials implemente­d a controvers­ial law that allows undocument­ed residents to obtain driver’s licenses, Department of Motor Vehicles offices throughout the state were packed with immigrants looking to take advantage of the opportunit­y.

Two years after the Jan. 1, 2015, implementa­tion of AB 60, an estimated 806,000 undocument­ed residents have received driver’s licenses, according to DMV statistics this month.

The law has allowed undocument­ed residents to come out of the shadows and drive safely in their neighborho­ods, said Maricela Gutierrez, executive director of the immigratio­n advocacy organizati­on SIREN.

“Many of them have been able to drive their kids to school and to run errands, when many times they were taking buses that would take them up to three hours to get from Point A to Point B,” she said. “It opened up new opportunit­ies.”

One San Jose resident who applied for a license just a few days after AB 60 went into effect received his license in the mail shortly after.

“It’s a completely different feeling because you no longer have to worry about seeing a police car,” said the 46-year-old, who asked to be identified only by his first name, Ramon. “You’re much more at peace when you drive. You can drive long distances with your family — to Disneyland or to the Monterey Bay Aquarium — with confidence. You don’t live in fear.”

But as President-elect Donald Trump, who vowed an illegal immigratio­n crackdown as a candidate, prepares to take office, the law is coming under renewed scrutiny. Many of those who received driver’s licenses under the law now fear they’ll become deportatio­n targets if federal immigratio­n authoritie­s can access their DMV informatio­n, despite assurances from state officials that it won’t happen.

“We have definitely been hearing about a lot of fear from our community, especially with a new administra­tion coming on board and the anti-immigrant rhetoric that’s been out there,” said Gutierrez. “Everything is theoretica­l as we speak, but we are definitely taking precaution­s.”

The organizati­on hosts workshops to inform immigrants of their rights and has advised AB 60 recipients to be cautious on the road. The law aimed to ease deportatio­n fears that proved a barrier for undocument­ed residents to be tested and licensed to drive, a potential safety concern in a state that is home to an estimated 3 million illegal immigrants. Access to a license also makes it easier for those residents to find work and put their kids in public school.

Opponents argued the law would weaken immigratio­n enforcemen­t and questioned the public safety benefit, noting it didn’t guarantee undocument­ed immigrants receiving licenses would buy auto insurance. Critics also point to another state “motor-voter” law, AB 1461, that starting in 2017 will automatica­lly register most licensed California drivers to vote, arguing it could lead to election fraud if noncitizen­s barred from voting in federal elections become registered. State officials said there are safeguards in the system to prevent undocument­ed licensees from being registered to vote.

The DMV said law enforcemen­t agencies, including U.S. Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t, can obtain driver’s license informatio­n — such as name, gender/descriptio­n, address, date of birth and driver’s license number — through certain data-sharing systems. But the informatio­n doesn’t indicate their immigratio­n status or whether they received licenses under AB60.

 ?? MARK BOSTER/LOS ANGELES TIMES ?? Hundreds of people without legal status line up inside the Department of Motor Vehicles office in Stanton for an opportunit­y to get their drivers licenses on Jan. 2, 2015. Two years after the implementa­tion of AB 60 on Jan. 1, 2015, an estimated...
MARK BOSTER/LOS ANGELES TIMES Hundreds of people without legal status line up inside the Department of Motor Vehicles office in Stanton for an opportunit­y to get their drivers licenses on Jan. 2, 2015. Two years after the implementa­tion of AB 60 on Jan. 1, 2015, an estimated...

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States