Sun Sentinel Palm Beach Edition

DHS cuts New York residents from ‘trusted traveler’ passage

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WASHINGTON — New York residents will be cut off from “trusted traveler” programs that speed their re-entry into the country, a senior Homeland Security official said Thursday, blaming a new state law that prohibits immigratio­n agents from accessing motor vehicle records.

Tens of thousands of New Yorkers will face the inconvenie­nce of slower re-entry because of a law that acting Department of Homeland Security Secretary Ken Cuccinelli says puts public safety at risk by preventing federal agents from quickly accessing vehicle and criminal records.

“I know other states are looking at laws like this,” Cuccinelli said. “We would urge them to reconsider.”

The decision to freeze New Yorkers’ access to Global Entry and three other programs, which the New York governor dismissed as “extortion,” reflects an escalation of the conflict between President Donald Trump and states and cities that have declared themselves sanctuarie­s for immigrants in the country without legal authorizat­ion.

New York’s “Green Light” law, which went into effect in December, allows people to get a driver’s license even if they don’t have legal residency in the United States.

It includes a provision prohibitin­g the Department of Motor Vehicles from providing any data to entities that enforce immigratio­n law unless a judge orders it to do so.

The DHS action on trusted travelers could have economic consequenc­es. It applies to nearly 30,000 commercial truck drivers enrolled in a program that eases their crossing at four U.S.-Canada ports of entry in upstate New York.

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