Fiscal impact reports (FIRs) are prepared by the Legislative Finance Committee (LFC) for standing finance
committees of the NM Legislature. The LFC does not assume responsibility for the accuracy of these reports
if they are used for other purposes.
Current FIRs (in HTML & Adobe PDF formats) are a vailable on the NM Legislative Website (legis.state.nm.us).
Adobe PDF versions include all attachments, whereas HTML versions may not. Previously issued FIRs and
attachments may be obtained from the LFC in Suite 101 of the State Capitol Building North.
F I S C A L I M P A C T R E P O R T
SPONSOR Martinez
ORIGINAL DATE
LAST UPDATED
1/29/07
3/13/07
HB HJM 13/aSRC
SHORT TITLE Oppose Creation of National ID Card
SB
ANALYST Baca
APPROPRIATION (dollars in thousands)
Appropriation
Recurring
or Non-Rec
Fund
Affected
FY07
FY08
NFI
(Parenthesis ( ) Indicate Expenditure Decreases)
SOURCES OF INFORMATION
LFC Files
SUMMARY
Synopsis of SRC Amendment
The Senate Rules Committee amendment deletes the following provision
"that the New Mexico legislature enact no legislation nor authorize an appropriation to
further the implementation of the REAL ID Act in New Mexico, unless such appropriation is
used to mount a constitutional
challenge to the act by the state attorney general."
Synopsis of Original Bill
House Joint Memorial 13, endorsed by the Courts, Corrections and Justice Committee, opposes
the creation of a national Identification card and the implementation of the REAL ID Act of
2005. HJM 13 further resolves that a copy of the memorial be sent to President George W. bush,
U.S. Attorney General Alberto Gonzales, Governor Bill Richardson, Senator Pete Domenici,
Senator Jeff Bingaman, Representative Tom Udall, Representative Heather Wilson, and
Representative Steve Pearce.
SIGNIFICANT ISSUES
HJM 13 cites New Mexico’s diverse populations, the state’s tradition of protecting civil rights
and the expansive protections guaranteed by the United States constitution and denounce
terrorism in all its forms. Among the reasons for objecting the implementation of the REAL ID
Act OF 2005 are that the Act:
pg_0002
House Joint Memorial 13/aSRC – Page
2
places costly unfunded mandates on the state estimated at $37 million over five years
related to requirements that states are to place specified information on electronically
readable driver’s licenses or the licenses will not be honored by federally regulated
airlines and federal agencies (nationally the cost of implementation is estimated at more
than $11 billion over the next five years);
requires the creation of massive public sector databases containing information on every
American that is accessible to all motor vehicle agencies and law enforcement officers
that can be used to gather and manage information on citizens, a function not the business
or responsibility of the government;
enables the creation of additional transactional databases that can contain numerous
errors and false information thereby creating significant hardship for many Americans
attempting to verify their identities and perform many of the transactions needed to live
in the United states today; and
enable (facilitate) the crime of identity theft by making all this information available on
all Americans (the Federal Trade Commission estimates that 10 million citizens are
victims of identity theft annually).
Moreover, implementation of the REAL ID Act will place additional, undue burdens state staff
implementing the Act in areas relating to information verification, records retention, increased
documents requests, waiting periods and waiting lines for applicants and enormous costs on
businesses that will be affected. In addition, the Act will place state motor vehicle division staff
on the front lines of immigration enforcement by forcing state employees to determine federal
citizenship and immigration status, thereby excessively burdening both foreign-born applicants
and motor vehicle staff. State staff would also be required to issue two classes of driver’s
licenses, a practice that could promote discrimination among the citizens of the state.
The REAL ID Act, HJM 13 asserts, was passed without due deliberation among federal policy
makers and affected constituents, serves as unwarranted intrusion on the privacy of individuals,
widens access to those who would commit identify theft, would created enormous paperwork
requirements for all affected persons (citizens and non-citizens alike), and, basically, seems to
ignore many of the rights guaranteed to Americans by the United States constitution.
LRB/nt