Immigrants in New York line up for driver's licenses under new law

Loading Video…

This browser does not support the Video element.

DHS slams new NY law

The U.S. Department of Homeland Security disapproves of New York's new driver license law. Reported by Teresa Priolo

Bundled in winter jackets, immigrants lined up at some Department of Motor Vehicle offices throughout New York as the state began issuing driver's licenses Monday that don't require applicants to prove they are in the country illegally.

Hundreds of New Yorkers waited outside motor vehicle agencies in New York City, while several upstate clerks said they saw few applicants. License applicants without a valid Social Security number can now submit multiple alternative forms of ID that includes valid passports and driver's licenses issued in other countries.

"This is a major step forward for all New Yorkers as we keep building New York to live up to its full potential of equity, opportunity, and justice," said state Sen. Luis Sepúlveda last week. "We also look forward to the significant economic and safety benefits the law will bring to communities across our state."

At least one county clerk in upstate New York opposed to the law said he was turning away applicants. Rensselaer County Clerk Frank Merola, one of several clerks who has sued to block New York's law said his office had turned away an applicant who wanted a driver's permit but lacked a social security number.

"I was pretty adamant that I was going to have a tough time doing it out of my office," Merola said. "That might have discouraged people coming to my office."

The Republican clerk said his office directed the applicant across the Hudson River to the state-run Department of Motor Vehicles offices in Albany. He and several other Republican clerks have argued their staff lack the training and equipment to properly comply with the law.

Loading Video…

This browser does not support the Video element.

New York new driver’s license law

New York's controversial Greenlight NY law went into effect Monday. It allows people to use foreign ID documents to apply for a New York State driver's license. Reported by Teresa Priolo

The state Department of Motor Vehicles has said they have provided clerks with resource guides, document authentication devices and training materials. Merola said only three out of 17 of his employees have had time to watch a one-hour webinar provided by the DMV this month. An emailed message seeking comment was left Monday with a DMV spokesperson.

Immigration advocates have said they're ready to go to court to defend the law.

"We are grateful to the state for providing DMV staff and county clerks the training, equipment and resources they need to ensure the smooth implementation of Greenlight NY," New York Immigration Coalition NYIC Executive Director Steve Choi said.

Lawmakers in June made New York the 13th state to authorize licenses for drivers without legal immigration status. New Jersey lawmakers passed a similar bill Monday.

An estimated 265,000 immigrants without legal documents are expected to get driver's licenses within three years, more than half of them in New York City, according to the Fiscal Policy Institute.

Applicants must still get a permit and pass a road test to qualify for a "standard driver's license," which cannot be used for federal purposes like an enhanced driver's license or Real ID.