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Advocates Testify In Favor Of Bill To Allow Driver's Licenses For Undocumented Immigrants

Desi Burnette testifies in favor of HB 279 for the House Transportation Committee.
Courtesy of Movimiento de Inmigrantes Líderes en Pensilvania
Desi Burnette testifies in favor of HB 279 for the House Transportation Committee.

Immigration advocacy groups and state agency officials testified Wednesday in support of a bill that would allow undocumented immigrants obtain driver’s licenses.

Supporters told the House Transportation Committee it would make roads safer and ensure undocumented farmworkers can perform duties at their jobs. They say it will also protect children of mixed-status families who are dependent on undocumented parents.

“Our parents risk their lives, risk being detained, risk being separated, in order to provide for us, to take us to medical appointments, grocery shopping, classes, or even leisure activities that we’d like to take as a family,“ said Julissa Morales, a youth coordinator for the Movement of Immigrant Leaders in Pennsylvania.

The bill proposes that undocumented people could apply for a license by submitting alternative documentation.

Two state agencies, the departments of agriculture and transportation, testified in favor of the bill.

Cheryl Cook, a deputy secretary at the agriculture department, argued that the bill is needed in order to ensure that the state has a stable farm labor supply. She said it would eliminate a barrier at a time when the pandemic has caused worker shortages at farms.

“Both on the food production and processing side of the coin, we need to give those workers the ability to do their jobs,” Cook said.

There are 16 states that allow undocumented immigrants to obtain driver’s licenses, including New Jersey, Delaware and Maryland. Pennsylvania also allowed licenses for undocumented immigrants until 2002, when the state legislature enacted a law that changed license requirements in response to the Sept. 11 attacks.

PennDOT deputy secretary Kurt Meyers said the department supports the measure because it would increase safety by ensuring undocumented workers take the required tests and acquire car insurance. The department currently asks for proof of “lawful presence” in the country.

It was the first time the bill had been heard in committee since it was introduced in 2011. The latest iteration, HB 279, is sponsored by Rep. Danilo Burgos (D-Philadelphia).

The bill has privacy provisions. It would create a warrant or consent requirement for sharing driver information with third party federal agencies such Immigration Customs and Enforcement. Muneeba Talukder, an attorney for ACLU of Pennsylvania, testified in favor of those provisions.

“Federal agencies like ICE currently have access to these databases, even though they are only supposed to be accessible by law enforcement, which ICE is not,” Talukder said. “And although data brokers are prohibited from selling information to third parties, audits have revealed that data brokers that have access to information have broken group agreements with PennDOT and sold information to third parties.”

In the hearing, Rep. Tim Hennessey (R-Chester) expressed concerns about the portion relating to this privacy provision that was drafted in the bill, saying it seemed to propose stripping away current law enforcement authorizations in dealing with driver information. He also questioned why ICE is not considered a law enforcement agency.

Talukder said the bill would add safeguards and would not take away law enforcement’s access to driver information from PennDOT. In response to Hennessey’s question about ICE, she said it is a federal agency that enforces civil immigration law and does not function as local criminal law enforcement.

Rep. Doyle Heffley (R-Carbon), said he does not feel comfortable with the legislation at this point, but that he also believes the country’s immigration laws are “broken.”

“I know, ‘Well, it’s just a driver’s license,’ but it’s a little bit more than that, you know, you’re giving that status as somebody who maybe didn’t follow the rules or the laws to get here, and that’s a concern,” Heffley said. “Maybe they’re broken laws, but they’re still the laws until they’re adjusted.”

Rep. Hennessey, the committee chair, did not indicate a timeline for the bill at the hearing.

There are more than 160,000 undocumented immigrants living in Pennsylvania who are eligible to drive, according to a study by the the Keystone Research Center and its Pennsylvania Budget and Policy Center. The study also estimates that Pennsylvania could see an increase of about $13 million in revenue from taxes, registration fees, license fees and vehicle-related purchases.

In New Jersey, a new law allowing undocumented immigrants to obtain driver’s licenses went into effect in May. New Jersey Spotlight reports that the state has issued roughly 100,000 new driving permits — a 65% increase from previous years.

Immigration advocates argue expanding access to driver’s licenses could lead to safer roads. In some states, there have been some improvements in traffic safety.

Astudy by Stanford University researchers examined the short-term effects of a California law that extended driving privileges to undocumented immigrants. It found there were 4,000 fewer accidents in the first year after the law went into effect. However, the study did not find that the law led to fewer traffic accidents or fatalities.

In Connecticut, where a license law went into effect in 2015, hit and runs decreased between 2016 and 2018, according to an analysis by the New England Center for Investigative Reporting.

Read more from our partners, WITF.