New York Daily News

GREEN LIGHT

Cuomo OKs driver’s licenses for undocument­ed immigrants

- BY DENIS SLATTERY

ALBANY — Undocument­ed immigrants will have access to driver’s licenses under a law green-lighted by the Legislatur­e on Monday and signed by Gov. Cuomo hours after he’d tried to tap the brakes on the controvers­ial measure.

Cuomo has repeatedly expressed support for the bill — but raised last-minute concerns Monday about whether the informatio­n about undocument­ed immigrants gathered by the state DMV could be obtained by federal officials and used for immigratio­n enforcemen­t.

“You create a driver’s license for undocument­ed people, you just have to make sure you do it in a way that the feds don’t come in the next day and access that database with the exact opposite intention,” Cuomo told WAMC.

As lawmakers debated the bill, the Cuomo administra­tion’s top lawyer sent a letter to state Solicitor General Barbara Underwood seeking her legal opinion on whether the measure could expose undocument­ed immigrants to federal immigratio­n enforcemen­t.

“Obviously in responding to this question, we ask that you assume a Federal legal challenge to such a New York law should it be enacted, and take into considerat­ion similar laws or circumstan­ces in other states, as well as our current data sharing process with the Federal Government,” Cuomo’s counsel Alphonso David wrote.

“Why give Trump a list of undocument­ed immigrants?” Cuomo mused at an unrelated press conference.

Attorney General Letitia James responded to the inquiry with a terse defense of the measure, calling it not only constituti­onal, but “wellcrafte­d.” “The legislatio­n is well-crafted and contains ample protection­s for those who apply for driver’s licenses,” James said in a statement. “If this bill is enacted and challenged in court, we will vigorously defend it.”

Overcoming the governor’s qualms, Republican opposition and the reservatio­ns of moderate members concerned about the policy’s unpopulari­ty in upstate and suburban districts, Senate Democrats approved the bill with 33 votes.

“By passing this needed legislatio­n, we are growing our economy while at the same time making our roads safer,” Majority Leader Andrea Stewart-Cousins (D-Yonkers) said. “This is the right step forward for New York State as we continue to advocate for comprehens­ive immigratio­n reform on the federal level.”

Twelve states plus the District of Columbia have similar laws.

Supporters say the so-called ‘Green Light’ bill will make more than 265,000 people eligible for licenses and improve road safety

by making non-citizens who drive take road tests and get insurance and annual vehicle inspection­s.

“Today’s vote shows that we as New Yorkers are committed to the dignity and safety of all our community members, especially the most marginaliz­ed among us,” said bill sponsor Sen. Luis Sepulveda (D-Bronx). “We are taking a stand for the rights of immigrants in the time when their livelihood­s are being threatened and degraded to extreme degrees.”

Before 2001, undocument­ed residents in New York could get driver’s licenses if they passed the required tests. The issue has remained deeply divisive since former Gov. Eliot Spitzer’s abandoned executive order that would have offered licenses to non-citizens in 2007.

Advocates argued that the governor’s sudden concern about data was misplaced because the bill was crafted with the issue in mind.

“I think that those concerns are a bit disingenuo­us considerin­g if he’d read the bill he’d see that the ‘Green Light’ New York bill has some of the strongest data protection­s in the nation,” said Murad Awawadeh, the vice president of advocacy with the New York Immigrant Coalition. “We’ve seen what’s happened in other states and we wanted to make sure that nothing like that can happen here.”

The governor signed the bill on the basis of James’ assurance that it protects immigrants, said David, Cuomo’s counsel.

Protection­s are built into the bill that purposely make it difficult for federal officials to access data collected by the state when someone applies for a license, Awawadeh noted.

Under the bill, which passed the Assembly last week, a license holder must be notified within three days if any request is made to access their personal file and a court order would have to be secured before the state can release a driver’s informatio­n to the federal government.

The license would also have a stamp on it saying it is not eligible for federal identifica­tion purposes and it would not enable a holder to vote.

Some said Cuomo was simply seeking an excuse to shoot down the legislatio­n, calling his support in recent months nothing more than lip service.

“Governor Cuomo is simply trying to block progress because it has not emanated from his office. Immigrant communitie­s and legislativ­e allies have led the way to pass this historic legislatio­n,” Javier Valdés, coexecutiv­e director of Make the Road New York, told the Daily News. “There is no credible case against this bill for immigrants rights reasons, which is why our movement is united in support. The Governor should stop playing games and sign it immediatel­y.”

Advocates spent months petitionin­g lawmakers on the policy, talking up its safety as well as economic benefits at rallies in the Capitol Building and outside the offices of undecided Democrats.

 ??  ?? Gov. Cuomo signed the Green Light bill late Monday, after earlier expressing fears that it would help feds deport immigrants.
Gov. Cuomo signed the Green Light bill late Monday, after earlier expressing fears that it would help feds deport immigrants.
 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ?? After day of raising objections, Gov. Cuomo signed bill granting driver’s licenses to undocument­ed immigrants. Following legislativ­e OK, bill sposnor Sen. Luis Sepulveda (below opposite page) hailed the victory.
After day of raising objections, Gov. Cuomo signed bill granting driver’s licenses to undocument­ed immigrants. Following legislativ­e OK, bill sposnor Sen. Luis Sepulveda (below opposite page) hailed the victory.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States