Hartford Courant

Bill would expedite state IDS for formerly incarcerat­ed

Co-sponsor of 2017 law wants DOC to provide more data

- By Jaden Edison

Democratic and Republican legislator­s are working to fix loopholes in a law requiring the Department of Correction to issue state identifica­tion cards or driver’s licenses to people being released from prisons.

Under the law passed in 2017, the department is mandated to provide state IDS or driver’s licenses to people returning home from prison — as long as the person requests the identifica­tion, qualifies for it and will pay the associated fees.

But some people are still leaving prison without forms of identifica­tion, which has made activities like opening a bank account and applying for jobs an uphill battle for them. The situation has caused frustratio­n among members of the Judiciary Committee, some of whom thought the DOC began addressing the matter six years ago.

“They are not meeting the law,” Sen. Gary Winfield, D-new Haven, who is co-chair of the judiciary and co-sponsor of the 2017 legislatio­n, told the CT Mirror on Thursday. “I don’t think they’re meeting the law, and if anybody would know whether they’re meeting the law, it would be me.”

Winfield has requested that the DOC provide data on people who have been issued ID cards or driver’s licenses, while lawmakers are backing new legislatio­n — House Bill 6875 — that would change the previous law’s requiremen­t that people request identifica­tion from the DOC.

If passed, the department would pay any fees associated with getting the identifica­tion, unless a person indicates in writing they don’t want a card or license.

The proposed law would also expedite the time in which the DOC would begin preparing the necessary documents for a person to get identifica­tion and require the department to provide the identifica­tion by the time that person gets released.

Sen. John Kissel, R-enfield and a ranking member of the judiciary, told DOC Commission­er Angel Quiros on Wednesday, during a public hearing for the legislatio­n, that he doesn’t understand why the agency doesn’t have an internal process already to address identifica­tion.

“On the IDS, I don’t get it,” Kissel said. “Clearly the underminin­g of reintegrat­ion with society and becoming law-abiding and taxpaying citizens, just that little thing is a real impediment. … It just doesn’t seem like rocket science.”

Rep. Craig Fishbein, R-wallingfor­d and the other judiciary ranking member, also questioned how the agency has handled IDS for incarcerat­ed people. He spoke about how much the world has changed over the last quarter-century. Sending people who were incarcerat­ed for longer periods of time back into the world without proper identifica­tion seems like a “big hurdle,” he said.

“It’s basically, from what I’m hearing, go figure it out,” Fishbein, who co-sponsored the new bill, said.

Quiros told the lawmakers that he supports the legislatio­n. He also said the department does have an internal process for processing the IDS, which the current law says comes in collaborat­ion with the Department of Motor Vehicles.

“We do have reentry counselors that work with these individual­s,” he said. “For the calendar year 2022, there were 4,800 pieces of identifica­tion that were secured by the Department of Correction. Some were birth certificat­es, others were social security cards.

Others were driver’s licenses … others were non-driver’s licenses.”

However, the current law cites the need for ID cards and driver’s licenses upon request from those who are incarcerat­ed, not the other forms of identifica­tion referenced by Quiros.

“To me, the law is crystal clear as it currently sits,” Winfield said at Wednesday’s hearing. “The law suggests that what we have been talking about are driver’s licenses and state-issued non-driver’s IDS. The informatio­n we get is other stuff, and I’m not suggesting that other stuff is not important. But in order to know whether or not we are complying with the law, or somewhat complying with the law, we need that informatio­n.”

The exchange between legislator­s and the DOC comes as community organizers have continued calling on the state to invest in communitie­s directly affected by mass incarcerat­ion.

Connecticu­t has closed three prison facilities in the last two years, saving the state more than $26 million in annual operating costs. Thus far, the governor’s administra­tion hasn’t specified where it wants to prioritize the money saved from the closures.

“People reentering the community have to navigate numerous challenges in the process of reintegrat­ing into society, attaining housing, reintegrat­ing with their families and communitie­s, finding employment and just meeting basic needs,” said Benjamin Howell, a professor at the Yale School of Medicine, who testified Wednesday. “Not surprising­ly, reentry is associated with high rates of unemployme­nt, poverty, homelessne­ss and social isolation.”

A 2021 study in Connecticu­t found that 1 in 5 people who used homeless shelters had been released from prison in the past three years. And out of the more than 8,000 formerly incarcerat­ed people who utilized shelters, 35% were Black, despite being only around 13% of the state population.

Howell described state-issued identifica­tion as a “crucial tool” needed for successful reentry. During the hearing, several formerly incarcerat­ed people testified about their troubles having to navigate life without an ID card or driver’s license.

Andrew Ramsay, a West Haven resident who was incarcerat­ed for 30 years before his release around a year and a half ago, said when he asked his parole officer to help him attain an ID, the officer told him that it “wasn’t his job.” And when he went on his own to the DMV, they told him he needed a physical ID card, not the social security card he attempted to use.

“I’ve been gone for 30 years, I came home … so many things going on. I don’t have any health care and certain things,” Ramsay said. “I do not want to go back to what I know because I’m trying to change my life and live productive­ly in society.”

Donald Moody said when he was released nine months ago, he had a hard time because it appeared that the DOC documented the wrong social security number for him while he was incarcerat­ed. He couldn’t get a state ID or a learner’s permit because of it, he said, and his wife had to use her own money to help him.

“And for 25 years, I was under a social security number that the DOC had, and I don’t understand how that happened,” Moody said. “So I support this bill, because it’s very important for all of us to have identifica­tion. Because as soon as we come home, we want to be productive citizens. And in order for us to do that we have to work, we have to create our bank account … and to do that we have to have some support on getting this stuff.”

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