Posted on 11/12/2007 6:19:03 PM PST by BGHater
MOORE Kenneth Pricer just wanted to renew his drivers license.
Pricer, 81, was shopping with is wife Tuesday, when a clerk pointed to his license said it had expired.
No big deal, Pricer thought. The last time he renewed his license, the trip took about 15 minutes; and because he was retired, it didnt cost him a thing.
So Pricer and his wife, Marlane, finished their shopping and traveled to the Moore Tag Agency for, what they thought at the time, would be a quick errand.
Six hours and four trips later Kenneth Pricer got his license.
But the process required traveling from the tag agency to home, then to Norman, then to the bank, then to Oklahoma City and, finally, back to Moore.
It was crazy, Pricer said. I had no idea.
Pricer was one of hundreds of residents caught in a web of problems caused by the states new immigration law, House Bill 1804.
The law, authored by state Rep. Randy Terrill, R-Moore, went into effect Nov. 1.
Terrill said the bill is supposed to curtail illegal immigration and prevent undocumented residents from obtaining state-issued identification.
To prevent undocumented workers from receiving state benefits, state and local agencies are required to verify the citizenship status of applicants before authorizing benefits and public employers are required to enter job applicants into an electronic immigration database to verify legal status.
Those rules also include drivers licenses.
And the changes apply to any resident lifelong or not who lets that license expire.
We went to the tag agency, but they said, because of the new law you have a problem, Pricer said. They said you have to go to the Department of Public Safety and take either your passport or birth certificate and get it okayed to get a drivers license. Then they said to bring it back and they would issue the license for you.
For Pricer, the new law meant traveling a total of more that 100 miles and spending about five hours to get his license renewed.
We couldnt find our visas, he said. So we went home and got a copy of our birth certificates. We took them and went over went to Norman. We finally found the place, but they said, sorry these are not notarized and we cant used them.
Frustrated, Pricer and his wife drove from Norman back to their bank, where they retrieved certified copies of the same birth certificates. From there, the couple went to another DPS testing station this one in Oklahoma City to prove their identity.
We went back to get different, certified, copy, he said. Then we went the testing center on I-240. We got there about 3 p.m., got a number and sat down. We were about the next to the last one. The place closes up at 4:45.
The Pricers were the 154th in line.
The experience, he said, was real stupid.
I guess what bothers me is there was nothing out that warned a person about this. We thought the bill was all about immigration, we didnt think it applied to us.
Under HB 1804, Oklahoma residents must prove their citizenship before they can get their drivers license upgraded or in the case of an expired license renewed.
Previously, an expired drivers license could be renewed at a tag agency without the extra documents or a visit to a DPS driving examiner.
But residents, Pricer said, didnt know about how the law would effect them. Everybody thinks its just about immigration. Well, its not.
According to a Department of Public Safety message e-mailed to state tag agents on Nov. 2, the day after the law went into effect any individual whose drivers license has expired (even one day) must appear before a drivers license examiner to show proof of legal presence.
The message said the tag agents computer will not prompt you to send them to the examiner at this time. You will have to look at the expiration date on the license. Computer programming will be in place on Monday with a prompt which will read this license has expired and driver must see a DL examiner.
DPS officials confirmed the new policy, but added that most residents will only have to show their citizenship proof one time.
If a resident has an expired drivers license, they will need to go to a DPS examining station, Department spokesman Captain Chris West said. The will need to see the examiner and let the examiner look at their forms, then they can go back to their tag agent and get their license renewed.
West said the law wasnt that complicated and only required residents to provide documentation one time.
Once theyve shown their documents to a drivers license examiner, thats the last time they are going to have to do that, he said. DPS now maintains that data on file.
That may be so, but tag agency officials say the law is confusing residents, and causing agents major problems.
We are turning people away by the dozens, said Cindy Virgin, the owner of the Moore Tag Agency. On Saturday, we had about 15 people we couldnt help and yesterday it was probably 30 to 40.
Along with upset customers, Virgin said in many smaller towns, there are no DPS testing stations. And those stations are not open on weekends.
The stations are understaffed; the lines are incredible. They are not open on weekends so our customers just have to wait and in many places the testing station is in another town.
The end result, Virgin said, is a very upset customer.
Kenneth Pricer agrees.
It was very inconvenient, he said. It was frustrating. We were lucky we were retired. It would be almost impossible for someone who has a job.
Still, even with all the difficulty, Pricer said he did learn something from the process.
Im gonna make sure every knows. Im gonna make sure all my kids and grandkids check their drivers license. I want them to be legal.
the old man’s problem could be that they mail out a reminder that your license expires say on May 30th, we have always had a grace period where if you went to the tag agency within 30 days after May 30th you got your new license. Last time I went took about 5 minutes for pic and got new license, luckily this time I didn’t have to pay for it.
That, and purge the voter registration lists the day after any election.
I will drive without a license before I have to prove to anyone that I’m a citizen. We don’t deserve this kind of knee jerk feel-good “vote for me because I’m protecting you” type politics and legislation.
If I get a ticket, I’ll tear the damn thing up on the spot.
ping
Yhe last time I renewed in Virginia, I had to prove citizenship. The social seruity computers were down so it took most of the day to get it done.
Once again, God Bless the people in the Great State of Oklahoma!!
Maryland doesn’t care where you’re from, and it still takes 5 hours. Those two things aren’t related as the story would have you believe.
This poor old guy lived in Moore, Oklahoma - I went to colleage at OU - lots and lots of real small towns - Moore is one of them where everybody pretty much knows everybody - suspect this whole situation has been pretty much of a shock to all of them. They live in these small towns so they won’t have to deal with the “city” folks and all their crazy ideas. May God watch over them all.
Here in S. Calif. you half to work at it to let your license or tags expire.
DMV sends you an official letter that is unmistakably
not junk mail, usually 3 to 6 months in advance.
If you renew it immediately, you save money, because the longer towards the renewal date you wait, the more it costs.
You can renew everything and pay for it on their website,
BUT WAIT, THERES MORE, renew this instant and we’ll send you a set of GINSU KNIVES at no extra charge(Arnold needs the money and has the knives left over from trying to get people to pay to see Pumping Iron).
I think this ought to happen in every state.
That, and purge the voter registration lists the day after any election.”
________________
Agreed
I won't have to pay for license renewal, gasoline(to include the various taxes included), vehicle insurance, yearly inspections, parking tickets, speeding tickets, regular (and expensive) maintenance of said vehicle, or license plates. I won't have to worry about OwlGore and his d*mnable global warming or any other green-weenie who wants to restrict any and all emmisions.
As far as ID is concerned- I have a passport. When that expires (as if I will cease to exist), I'll be another nobody in flyover country. I'm sure the gov would send me an ID for free in that case.
What is the worst that can happen? I would probably have to live off of governmental socialist handouts in HUD housing, where I wouldn't be able to afford a vehicle and could walk everywhere. It's good exercise.
/semi-sarc, see tagline
Yeah, that’s the ticket, that’ll show ‘em who’s the boss.
My sister also lives in Virginia and she let her license expire. Unfortunately for her, she was born at Guantanamo Naval Base in Cuba and has a birth certificate without an embossed official U.S. seal. This was several months ago, she has not been able to renew her license yet. I don’t think they were accepting her Social Security information.
Man, that is a tough situation. Does Gitmo have any records?
She’s trying to get a new birth certificate through the State Department. She was born there before the Cuban revolution.
Yes, for decades we here in the US have been admonished that “driving is a privilege” (not a right).
Now it has automagically morphed into a right. Care to guess why?
I wonder if this couple has an amateur video posted somewhere?
Wait a minute - you all are missing the whole point that the author of the article is trying to make!
This is a major inconvenience, so we need to drop all these citizenship laws that right wing reactionaries are trying to push through their local governments.
I believe letting a license expire makes it harder to renew in any state, regardless of their immigration laws.
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