Advance Secure Issuance licenses and ID cards available

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Staff Reports

Advance Secure Issuance Licenses and ID Cards Debut in Carson City Monday

Beginning Monday, Jan. 11 in Carson City, Monday, Feb. 1 in Reno and eventually statewide, the Nevada Department of Motor Vehicles will begin Advanced Secure Issuance (ASI).  ASI is a new license or ID card marked with a gold star indicating it meets federal identification standards for boarding commercial aircraft and entering federal buildings where identification is required.

Because the Department has met the first 18 bench marks of the federal Real ID Act, the licenses and ID cards Nevadans currently possess will be good for federal purposes for several years.  The Department recommends that motorists wait until their normal renewal date in the years ahead before applying for an ASI card.

"This will not have any immediate impact on most Nevadans," said DMV Director Edgar Roberts. "The federal government will continue to accept Nevada licenses and ID cards because we are in compliance with the Real ID Act."

The documents required to prove identity for an ASI card are the same documents Nevada already requires for first-time licensees and new residents.  The difference is that DMV will be accepting only those documents it can electronically verify.  The only additional information required for an ASI card is utility bills or phone bills to prove residency.

Nevada's compliance with the Real ID Act has not been plagued by some of the problems of other states.  Nevada has had one of the highest standards of identity in the nation for its licenses and ID cards for years.  Also, the Department's migration to a central issuance process for cards last year resulted in its current card being one of the toughest to alter or counterfeit.  Nevada has also been aggressive in pursing federal dollars to fund the compliance and, to date, has secured $3.7 million in federal grants.

Also, some of the concerns about the Real ID Act have no basis in fact, such as the act requiring a Radio Frequency Identification (RFID) chip in driver's licenses or a national database of driver information.  When Governor Gibbons signed emergency regulations that allowed the Department to comply with federal law, he ensured the regulations had specific language that prohibits the use of RFID chips or other technology used to track individuals was included in the final Emergency Regulations. The regulations also define how the DMV will store and restrict access to personal identification data.

Complete information is available on the DMV's website at www.dmvnv.com.

 

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