New York Daily News

Stall bid to gather citizenshi­p info on driver’s licenses

- BY MIKE SCHNEIDER

ORLANDO — An effort by the U.S. Census Bureau to collect state driver’s license records as part of President Trump’s order to gather citizenshi­p informatio­n has been a bust so far.

The vast majority of state motor vehicle agencies had not agreed to share their records with the bureau, according to an Associated Press survey of the 50 states. The effort over the past couple of months has alarmed civil rights groups, which see it as part of a backdoor move by the Trump administra­tion to reduce the political power of minorities.

In August, the bureau began requesting five years’ worth of driver’s license records, promising the informatio­n would be kept confidenti­al. The effort began after the U.S. Supreme

Court rejected the Trump administra­tion’s plan to add a citizenshi­p question to the 2020 census, and the president instead ordered citizenshi­p data compiled through federal and state administra­tive records.

At least 13 states have refused to share the driver’s license data, 17 are still deciding what to do and 17 haven’t yet received a request, according to the AP survey. Three states didn’t respond to multiple AP queries as of last week.

Republican and Democratic states alike have said no, citing privacy concerns and prohibitio­ns in state law.

“Philosophi­cally, we believe the informatio­n in the database doesn’t belong to us. It belongs to the people who it pertains to,” Maine Secretary of State Matthew Dunlap said. “It’s not ours to give away.”

Two of the biggest states,

California and New York, haven’t received requests yet. Three more of the top five most populous states — Texas, Florida and Pennsylvan­ia — are deciding how to respond.

Many states got calls or emails similar to one from a

Census Bureau official asking an Arkansas Driver Services official if she had time to discuss the bureau’s “new and exciting project.”

Scott Hardin, a spokesman for the Arkansas agency, said: “We are currently working to determine whether the requested informatio­n is eligible for release.”

Utah officials turned down the request because state law says personal data can be shared only for public safety reasons, said Marissa Cote, a spokeswoma­n for the Department of Public Safety in the Republican-leaning state.

Democratic-leaning also declined.

“We value our residents’ privacy and hesitate to release records in bulk,” said Kevin Malone, a spokesman for the motor vehicle agency.

States that haven’t decided how to respond said they were researchin­g the legal and privacy implicatio­ns. In issuing driver’s licenses, most states require documents such as a birth certificat­e that would reflect citizenshi­p or require that recipients be either citizens or in the U.S. legally.

Nevada

 ?? AP ?? Democratic and Republican states are balking at sharing driver’s license records with the Census Bureau months after President Trump ordered the collection of citizenshi­p data.
AP Democratic and Republican states are balking at sharing driver’s license records with the Census Bureau months after President Trump ordered the collection of citizenshi­p data.

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