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Do you need the new Travel ID? It's matter of preference

Posted 8/30/19

By Howard Fischer

Capitol Media Services

PHOENIX — Gov. Doug Ducey says he already has his.

Phoenix Mayor Kate Gallego admits she does not.

What we’re talking about is an enhanced …

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Do you need the new Travel ID? It's matter of preference

Posted

By Howard Fischer

Capitol Media Services

PHOENIX — Gov. Doug Ducey says he already has his.

Phoenix Mayor Kate Gallego admits she does not.

What we’re talking about is an enhanced Arizona driver’s license, one that will allow people to board aircraft after Oct. 1, 2020.

That’s the last date that the Transportation Security Agency will accept regular state-issued licenses and IDs to get to the boarding gates at airports.

After that, those without the new identification cards, marked with a gold star in the upper right corner, will need a passport or military ID.

And it’s not just about being able to fly. Without identification the government considers acceptable, federal buildings also will be off limits.

So unless people plan on visiting a federal building, they can probably get away with their original license or ID card and either a passport or military ID at the airports.

The mayor’s admission she had not gotten around to it came Thursday as Mr. Ducey and Ms. Gallego gathered the media at Sky Harbor International Airport to remind them of the federal law. They also provided a road map of sorts of what it takes to get the new IDs.

Arizonans will need a license like this, with a gold star in the corner, to board aircraft and enter federal buildings next year unless they have a passport or military ID. (Capitol Media Services)

But it’s more involved than simply dropping in at the local Motor Vehicle Division office.

The requirement is an outgrowth of the Real ID Act, enacted by Congress and the Bush administration after the attacks on the World Trade Center and Pentagon by terrorists who hijacked aircraft. That law directed the Department of Homeland Security to come up with requirements for secure documents for everything from getting into certain federal buildings to boarding commercial aircraft.

The agency’s answer was to recognize driver’s licenses only from states that follow certain procedures, including verifying the documents offered by the applicant to prove identity to ensuring that the license itself cannot be altered.

Arizona has, to say the least, been slow to comply. In fact, state legislators, reacting to concerns about creating a national ID card, specifically voted in 2008 to bar the Department of Transportation from creating a Real ID-compliant license.

It took until 2015 — and threats by Homeland Security to stop honoring Arizona licenses — for lawmakers here to finally come around. They first became available in March 2016.

Getting one of the new licenses requires gathering up some documents, starting with a passport or birth certificate. But applicants also need something with a Social Security number as well as two documents with a home address, like utility bills or bank statements, to prove Arizona residency.

That last requirement can be a bit of a problem for those who get all their mail at a post office box and do not have utility bills with the service address.

The next step is to go to an MVD office or one of the third-party license providers. But walking in without an appointment, which can be made online, can lead to sitting around and a lot of waiting.

It’s also possible to fill out the forms online ahead of showing up.

Be prepared to pay an extra $25 for the enhanced license.

The other downside, if you will, is these new licenses are good for only eight years. By contrast, once someone gets a regular Arizona license it is good until the 65th birthday, though there is a requirement to get a new photo every 12 years.

And what of Ms. Gallego’s lack of action to date?

“I have been traveling with my passport,” she said. And a passport will remain a viable form of identification beyond Oct. 1, 2020.

Mr. Ducey, for his part, boasted of already having his new ID.

“It took me 14 minutes and 38 seconds to receive it,” he said.

Actually, that’s not entirely accurate: While completing the application can be done in that short a time — especially with an appointment — it can take up to two weeks to actually get the new enhanced license in the mail.

For the moment, Arizonans have to take the governor’s word that he does, in fact, have the new ID, as he declined to pull it out of his wallet to show reporters.

“I do not want you showing up at my house,” he quipped.

But the truth is, it isn’t necessary to check out Mr. Ducey’s license to get that information: His Paradise Valley street address is on the nomination papers he submitted when he ran for re-election last year.

The Arizona Department of Transportation lists these tips on its website about whether people should get the Travel ID:

Worth considering?

  • If you’re using your driver license or ID card at airport security checkpoints
  • If you’re getting an Arizona Driver License or identification card for the first time
  • If you’re renewing your current license
  • If you’re getting a 12-year photo update to your current license

Not worth it?

  • If you furnish documentation other than your driver license or identification card at airport security or to gain access to secure facilities. A variety of documents other than a driver license are permissible at TSA checkpoints. For information on acceptable identification, please visit the TSA website(link is external).

"The final decision is yours," ADOT states.