To get an EIC, Kennie needs to be able to show the Texas department of public safety (DPS) other forms of documentation that satisfy them as to his identity. He presented them with his old personal ID card issued by the DPS itself and with his photo on it but because it is more than 60 days expired (it ran out in 2000) they didnt accept it. Next he showed them an electricity bill, and after that a cable TV bill, but on each occasion they said it didnt cut muster and turned him away.
Each trip to the DPS office involved taking three buses, a journey that can stretch to a couple of hours. Then he had to stand in line, waiting for up to a further three hours to be seen, before finally making another two-hour schlep home.
In one of his trips to the DPS last year they told him he needed to get hold of a copy of his birth certificate as the only remaining way he could meet the requirements and get his EIC. That meant going on yet another three-bus trek to the official records office in a different part of town.
The cost of acquiring a birth certificate in Texas is $23, which may not sound much but it is to Kennie. He is poor, like many of the up to 600,000 Texans caught in the current voter ID trap.
The outcome was perhaps predictable by now: the birth certificate wasnt up to scratch either. When he took it to the DPS (another three buses there, three buses back, another two hours waiting in line) they told him that the name on the birth certificate didnt match the name on his voter registration card. The birth certificate has him down as Eric Caruthers his mothers maiden name even though his parents were married at the time he was born.
Oh, good grief. So now it's racist to make this guy take a long bus trip, stand in line, get a copy of his own birth certificate, and fix a 45-year-old error (on his birth certificate) that his parents never caught or tried to fix themselves?
And where are the Donks... they don’t want him to get that ID either, and a conscientious one could probably cut that Gordian knot for him in a few days. But what political use is that compared with getting him to scream in frustration?