Senate Oppose Biometric Id 04142010
Senate Oppose Biometric Id 04142010
Dear Senator:
Both Republicans and Democrats have opposed a National ID system. President Reagan
likened a 1981 proposal to the biblical "mark of the beast," and President Clinton dismissed a
similar plan because it smacked of Big Brother. A National ID would not only violate privacy
by helping to consolidate data and facilitate tracking of individuals, it would bring government
into the very center of our lives by serving as a government permission slip needed by everyone
in order to work. As happened with Social Security cards decades ago, use of such ID cards
would quickly spread and be used for other purposes – from travel to voting to gun ownership.
The cost of this system will be extraordinary, running to hundreds of billions of dollars
and dwarfing the expense associated with other parts of immigration reform. As one example,
the federal government recently began to issue a limited number of biometric ID cards, called
Transportation Worker Identification Credentials. It is estimated that the Department of
Homeland Security will spend $1.9 billion to issue cards to approximately 1 million workers.
Expanded to the entire US workforce of 150 million people, that would translate to a
proportionately greater cost of $285 billion. A biometric system would likely have to be fee
based – requiring not just government permission, but also a government fee to work.
Adding insult to injury, this unaffordable scheme will probably never work. Even
ignoring the enormous difficulties of creating a system to fingerprint every worker and
distributing readers to employers across the country, the truth is that some employers prefer the
ambiguity of the current process. Unless significantly greater resources are dedicated to
enforcing the law, employers will continue to have a strong incentive to circumvent a broken
system. Such enforcement could be accomplished just as easily without a National ID.
For all of these reasons we believe that a National ID system should play no part in the
otherwise needed reform of our immigration system.
Sincerely,