The Utah Senate voted Friday to take
driver's licenses away from people who cannot prove they are legal
residents and issue them a driving "privilege" card instead. Gov. Jon
Huntsman, a Republican, said he would support the bill. Hundreds of
Hispanics and other immigrants protested the vote at the Capitol. Tony
Yapias, who was director of the State Office of Hispanic Affairs under
Governors Olene Walker and Michael O. Leavitt, both Republicans, said
the measure amounted to second-class privileges, would encourage racial
profiling, and would allow the police to corral the undocumented for
deportation. Mr. Yapias said as many as 500 people were at the
Capitol on Friday afternoon, filling the halls of the Capitol west wing
and spilling outside on a plaza. It was a peaceful demonstration,
without chants or placards. The Legislature has debated this
topic for years; last year a bill to deny licenses to undocumented
workers was defeated. Senators supporting the bill said they were
alarmed by a legislative investigation that found that 58,000
undocumented workers, sometimes using common addresses, had Utah
licenses, and that some noncitizens were able to register to vote and
even cast ballots at the polls. One apartment in Salt Lake City
was listed by 62 people who got a driver's license in the past year,
raising the prospect of fraud, said the report, from Legislative
Auditor General John Scharff. The driving "privilege"
card, for anyone unable to prove legal residency, could not be used to
board a plane, register to vote, obtain any other official
identification, trade for a license in another state or obtain any
trappings of citizenship. It would have to be renewed annually, and it
would have different fonts and colors than a regular blue-colored
driver's license. It would read, "For driving privileges only - not
valid for identification." Utah is one of about 10 states
that allows residents without a Social Security number to obtain a
driver license by using an "individual tax identification number"
issued by the Internal Revenue Service. [more] and [more]