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Florida's new Driver License Requirements
Got a Post Office Box as your mailing address? Before you obtain or renew your Florida Drivers License, read this topic first before you go! |
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01/16/10 |
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On this page:
What to expect at the Driver's License Office in Florida For those that receive mail at a post office box What should be done to safeguard our privacy?
We have heard about REAL ID for a few years and the Federal government's role in implementing REAL ID. It is here in Florida as of 1 January 2010 and it's going to mean different, if not difficult, ways in obtaining or renewing your Florida Drivers License. The new rules are supposed to enhance security of identity documents such as drivers licenses.
What to expect at the Driver's License Office in Florida
Now here's the lowdown on what to expect when you go to obtain or renew your Florida drivers license. Here's what you are going to have to bring with you when you go to the drivers license office to obtain or renew your license:
If you were born in Florida and need a copy of your birth certificate, follow this link to the Vital Statistics Office at the Florida Department of Health.
If you were born outside of Florida but elsewhere and need a copy of your birth certificate, follow this link to the US CDC's Where to Write for Vital Records page.
For USA passport information, see the US State Department's passport site.
If you need a replacement Social Security card, follow this link to the Social Security Administration.
3. Two proofs of Florida residential address: The State of Florida wants proof that you actually live here in the Sunshine State to get or renew a Florida drivers license. Here is a partial list of the documents you will need to prove Florida residency according to the folks over at the Florida Department of Highway Safety and Motor Vehicles at their specialty site, GatherGoGet.com:
You can obtain an unofficial copy of your deed at your county's Clerk of the Circuit Court; for Pinellas County click here
Residential lease
Florida Voter ID card (this is your Voter Information card) Need a duplicate voter information card? You can get one at your county's Supervisor of Elections; for Pinellas County click here
Florida vehicle registration or title
A utility connection order (60 days old or less)
Homeowners, condo unit owners or renters insurance policy or bill
A utility bill 60 days old or less
Disclaimer for this page: Links to government offices described above are provided as a public service of your webmaster to assist you in gathering the information you need to get or renew your Florida Driver's License.
For those that receive mail at a Post Office Box - read this!
For those of you Floridians out there that have a residential street address but receive all of your mail at a post office box, you need to read this section. What follows is very important, especially if you value and protect your privacy.
Now when you receive your Florida drivers license, it will have, among other things as required by the federal REAL ID law, your residential street address printed on your license. A residential street address?
In my opinion, Florida's new drivers license requirements in the name of REAL ID is very dangerous. Why? There are a lot of Floridians like myself who have a residential street address but have all mail sent to a post office box for security reasons. Florida's new requirement that took effect on 1 January 2010 will require that the residential street address be listed on the drivers license.
In practically all European countries, a national identity card is not an option - instead, it is the law. Even carrying your national identity card is mandatory if you are out and about; a police officer can even stop you for the purpose of checking your identification. If you are caught without your national identity card, either the police officer will follow you home if you left it there or you can be taken into custody while your identity is determined. After all, this is life in a country which has a national identification card system.
Now there's a meaning to the phrase "your papers, please".
On the other hand, I believe in the notion that a drivers license is simply that - a license by the State of Florida or your home state to operate a motor vehicle and nothing more. After all, driving is a privilege and not a right - did we learn this in driver's education school? (Emphasis added)
A residential street address on a voter ID card is fine, as it proves where you live and what polling place you have to go to. On a drivers license, it is a different matter as it is used as a primary identification card; I do have a residential street address but all my mail goes to a post office box for security reasons. Presenting it to a law enforcement officer (especially if you get pulled over) is very important; you're supposed to carry your drivers license with you when you are operating your motor vehicle in the very first place. On the other hand, presenting a drivers license with where you physically live to a total stranger for identification - such as to a sales clerk in a retail store - opens up Pandora's Box to unwanted invasion of your personal privacy; that's why so many Floridians such as me have a post office box for privacy and security reasons.
In other words, to law enforcement is one thing, while to private businesses such as retail stores, my knowing where I live is none of your business.
s What should be done to safeguard our privacy?
In a nutshell, I agree with making identity documents such as a drivers license more secure but I do not believe in trading privacy for security. This is something our federal and Florida lawmakers need to address.
The Federal REAL ID law has placed an extreme burden on the states in upgrading their driver licensing standards. Furthermore, REAL ID violates states' rights as driver licensing is the power of each of the fifty states, much like the No Child Left Behind Act of 2002 which mandates testing such as the FCAT in Florida.
Either REAL ID should be repealed in its entirety or at least amend its provisions to allow people who have mailing addresses to keep them on their drivers licenses. Besides, a law enforcement officer can find out where you live within the matter of a few seconds when the officer runs your drivers license through the computer. That's how it should be.
True yet transparent safeguards should be in place to make sure that driver license data does not fall into the wrong hands. These safeguards should be held accountable in order to keep the public's faith and confidence in government. |
This site was last updated 01/16/10