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Agree with New RMV Proof of Residence Law?

Starting Jan. 1, a new law will require that vehicles in Massachusetts be registered only by someone with proof of legal residence. Is this a backdoor way for immigration enforcement, or common sense?

 

The Massachusetts Registry of Motor Vehicles (RMV) is readying to implement a new law that goes in effect Jan. 1 and would require people registering a motor vehicle or trailer to provide proof of legal residence, the Boston Herald reports.

Accepted forms of proof would include—but are not limited to—a driver's license, a state identification card or a Social Security number, the Herald reports. RMV Registrar Rachel Kaprielian would be empowered to write exemptions for some residents, such as out-of-state students, military personnel, senior citizens and disabled persons.

According to Sharon Patch, Sen. Robert Hedlund (R-Weymouth), who put forth the amendment as part of the state budget, said in a written statement after the law passed, "This is a concrete measure that strikes at the heart of the support structure that allows illegal immigrants to register and operate motor vehicles all while avoiding prosecution for immigration violations."

Gov. Deval Patrick vetoed Hedlund's amendment, but both chambers of the state Legislature overrode his veto. Patrick said in his veto letter that it would force the state RMV to enforce federal immigration rules and that, according to the Herald, "The RMV is also ill-equipped and under-staffed for such an assignment."

The bill received additional attention after Auricelli Braga, a 32-year-old unlicensed illegal immigrant from Stoughton, was charged for her role in a fatal car crash.

Braga, originally from Brazil, was charged with motor-vehicle homicide, negligent operation of a motor vehicle and driving without a license following a two-car crash on Turnpike St. in Canton on June 24 which killed Sara Escudero, 64, also of Stoughton.

Read more about the law on Sharon Patch and the Boston Herald, and tell us: Is this a backdoor way for immigration enforcement, as Gov. Patrick suggests, or a common sense reform? Tell us your reaction in the comments. 

Editor's note: This article is cross-posted to multiple Patch sites.

Related Topics: Immigration, Massachusetts Registry of Motor Vehicles, Proof of Residence Law, and Vehicle Registration

Mario Marchese

11:03 am on Friday, September 14, 2012

I absolutely agree and this should have happened a long time ago.

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Jake Craken

11:19 am on Friday, September 14, 2012

It seems obvious that only a Massachusetts Licensed driver should be able to register a car in Massachusetts. Why would it be difficult for the RMV to cross-check that the person registering the car has a valid mass drivers license, they are standing right in front of them? What logical reason is there that an unlicensed driver can register a car?

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Meggle

10:51 am on Saturday, September 15, 2012

As far as I know the computer systems at the RMV are disgustingly outdated. I've had friends and relatives have a horrid time just trying to get a registration because their systems give up the ghost easily. They can't even deal with a pair of fraternal twins http://www.wggb.com/2012/02/17/identity-confusion-with-ludlow-twins-mass-rmv/

MJ Byrnes

11:26 am on Friday, September 14, 2012

Am wondering if the Govenor's stance on this, and other topics that are before the State's Legislatures on ILLEGAL Immigration, has anything to do with President Obama's illegal immigrant relatives living in his State? Mind you- the key word is illegal.

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L

11:34 am on Friday, September 14, 2012

I think the discussion of legal or illegal status is almost a red herring. If you live in Massachusetts and want to register a vehicle, obviously you should have some kind of proof that you are a resident. Seems like a no-brainer to me!

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BAV

11:45 am on Friday, September 14, 2012

Do you need "proof of residence" or "proof of residence in MA"? I ask because in addition to the exceptions listed above (students, military, etc) there would seem to be others who own a vacation house on the Cape or elsewhere but live in a different state. Can they no longer register a car in MA? I do agree that a valid license should be needed to register a car, but why must it be a MA license?

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Lori Sullivan

11:57 am on Friday, September 14, 2012

You cannot register a car in NH or another state and reside in MA. That was (prob still is) a huge problem several years back. Because insurance was cheaper elsewhere than MA people would register their cars in another state and live in MA. Neighbors started ratting each other out, and rightly so. If you own a vacation home in MA, you would not need to register a car here. Your own insurance would apply for your trip here.

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BAV

1:30 pm on Friday, September 14, 2012

Lori - I did not know that. So someone who resides in Florida but keeps cars at a vacation home in MA must register those cars in Florida? Strange, if true. My parents used to own a house in Florida but reside in MA. They were required to register the cars in Florida because, surprise surprise, Florida wanted the registration fees. Maybe that has all changed, I really don't know.

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cindy

6:54 am on Saturday, September 15, 2012

my aunt owns a vacation home in Florida. She has a mass and florida drivers license.

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Jennifer

9:42 am on Saturday, September 15, 2012

If you OWN a vacation HOME then wouldn't you have proof or residency? Real estate taxes? Water & sewer bills? If it's a condo you'd pay condo fees.

Lori Sullivan

11:51 am on Friday, September 14, 2012

I absolutely agree. We should require the same for voting!

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Linda W.

1:18 pm on Friday, September 14, 2012

Oh, if ONLY that could happen! But the Commonwealth doesn't believe in showing proof of residence to be able to vote.

Countless times I've pulled out my license to show I am the person who is listed on their registrar voting sheets, and they say "Oh we don't require that." When I looked at them in disbelief, saying "So I could find out online that Jane Doe lives at 123 Main Street, Anytown, MA, and go in first thing in the morning and say I'm that person, and you'd have to accept that?"

They respond "Yes. We don't like it, but if someone gives us a name and address, we have to trust that it's actually that person." And every person who is manning the polls doesn't seem to like not asking for identification to prove you are who you are. It *really* seems logical to do so to avoid voter fraud, but then again - this is Massachusetts. Nothing when it comes to government in this state is logical.

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Daniel DeMaina

1:35 pm on Friday, September 14, 2012

Lori and Linda—coincidentally, a debate about a Mass. Voter ID law was a previously discussion piece we posted on Patch over Labor Day weekend: http://malden.patch.com/articles/tell-us-should-massachusetts-pass-a-voter-id-bill-40fb97e3

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Linda W.

1:42 pm on Friday, September 14, 2012

VERY interesting article, Daniel! Just read some of the comments and this one seems to make the exact points I've thought about regarding voter fraud and the excuses the Atty. General uses for not wanting to require an ID:

"Hacim Obmed
7:16 pm on Friday, August 31, 2012
Without an ID card you cannot get on an airplane, buy cold medicine, drive a car, buy alcohol, open a bank account, or enter a government building. The list goes on and on. Without nan ID you just cannot survive in the modern world. So a person needs to be able to prove they really are who they say they are before they vote. It is no different than any of these other things where you need ID. If you are an honest person then there is nothing to worry about and it won't cost you a dime."

BINGO!

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Joe

8:56 am on Tuesday, September 25, 2012

Because in-person voter fraud is such a massive problem! Give me a break. It has been widely acknowledged that it almost never happens - something like 0.00001% of votes cast since 2000. Why? Because look at the risk/reward. If you pull it off, congratulations, you have added a drop of water to the ocean. If not, depending on which state you're in, you face fines up to $10,000, up to 10 years in prison and disenfranchisement. There are people that don't need a license - they don't have a bank account, don't drive cars etc. This cause has been taken up by republican state legislatures to discourage voting, and that's the truth. Here's some nimrod in PA admitting as much - http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=o32tF-S6K60.

Edward Connerty

12:02 pm on Friday, September 14, 2012

good idea! What about people who register automobiles in New Hampshire, but live in Massachusetts? Will they tackle that next?

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Gordon Pickguard

12:02 pm on Friday, September 14, 2012

Why should anyone need a license to buy and register a car ? An unlicensed citizen might want to buy a car for use by a family member. Why should anyone be denied this right ?

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Lori Sullivan

12:10 pm on Friday, September 14, 2012

Not sure I get your point. You do not need a license to buy a car. Anyone can buy someone else a car. It just cannot be on the street without being registered and insured. The family member using the car would need to be licensed and insured to drive it. Insurance companies have a right to know that only licensed people would be driving it.

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Mr White

1:21 pm on Friday, September 14, 2012

@Gordon
You may want to actually read the article before going off half-cocked.
It does NOT say you need a driver's license to register a car but that you can USE a driver's license as proof of residency.

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Jason

8:46 am on Sunday, September 16, 2012

You do not have a right to buy a car, it's private enterprise. Additionally you do NOT have a right to drive a car in the commonwealth, it's a privilege. It can be revoked in a heart beat if you screw up.

Bob

12:30 pm on Friday, September 14, 2012

I love Cadillac's excuse "The RMV is also ill-equipped and under-staffed for such an assignment." BUT they are full equipped and staffed to check my parking tickets, my alimony payments and 100 other criteria they deem important for me to renew my license or registration! And he isn't even embarrassed because people will STILL vote for him!

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BAV

1:35 pm on Friday, September 14, 2012

There is no one named Cadillac in the article. I think you are confused.

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Linda W.

1:44 pm on Friday, September 14, 2012

BAV,he's not confused at all. "Cadillac Duval" is to whom Bob was referring.

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BAV

2:07 pm on Friday, September 14, 2012

Oh, he means Deval Patrick? I didn't realize that name calling was part of the debate. Naturally, I now I find Bob's point to be much more persuasive. Maybe next time he could use "Devoid" (HAHA, that is a good one too!). Thanks for the clarification, Linda.

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C

2:17 pm on Friday, September 14, 2012

BAV, not sure if that qualifies as "name calling." Actually, I just checked. it doesn't. The dude traded in Romney's Lincoln for a new Cadillac as soon as he took office. Ahhh, life is good when you are king.

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Linda W.

2:25 pm on Friday, September 14, 2012

Caddy earned that nickname *all* by himself by leasing the Cadillac for an additional $543/month. And getting those office drapes for the low-cost price of $12,000. And creating a previously non-existent chief of staff job for his wife for $72,000.

Instead of doing that, perhaps he could have, as Bob noted, figured out how to streamline the RMV and make the place an actual working government office.

Oh wait. How silly. That's an oxymoron, isn't it? One can't even dream of a having "working government office." At least not without a lot of Beacon Hill pockets that are being lined with a whole lot of green.

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Bob

2:54 pm on Friday, September 14, 2012

BAV, Not confused at all. Here let me give you his full name, Cadillac Deval Patrick better? I figured since he was spending my money like there is no tomorrow he would be ok with me using his nickname!

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Bob

2:55 pm on Friday, September 14, 2012

BAV, BTW - Nice attempt at changing the subject. Right out of the Saul Alinsky play book! I see you never actually commented on my factual post. Care to try?

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BAV

3:48 pm on Friday, September 14, 2012

Bob, I agree with some of your post. However, you attempt at a petty insult make me disregard what you have to say. All I see is another partisan hack who would be unhappy with ANYTHING done by someone in the opposite party. (NIce try others to day that Cadillac is not intended as insult. Doesn't ring true.)

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Linda W.

3:52 pm on Friday, September 14, 2012

BAV wrote "(NIce try others to day that Cadillac is not intended as insult."
~~~~~~~~~~

I never said it wasn't. I just said Patrick earned the nickname on his own. It wasn't given to him until he gave cause to do so.

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BAV

3:57 pm on Friday, September 14, 2012

Linda - you are making my point. Thank you.

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Linda W.

4:20 pm on Friday, September 14, 2012

Interestingly, BAV - I'm not. I'm an Independent. I don't vote either party line. And I'll make fun of *any* public figure should the occasion warrant, regardless of which party they belong to.

I thought Sarah Palin was a moron and McCain tanked his run for the Presidency when he chose her as his Veep candidate.

But I also think Patrick is an idiot, as are most on Beacon Hill who continue to strip us of our tax dollars and line their own pockets with pensions and pork barrel spending. Yet again - don't do anything stupid like Patrick did in his first term, and the nicknames are harder to come by.

BTW, are the Dems and their followers innocent from not using derogatory nicknames for members of the other party? Of course not. That pendulum swings both ways quite readily, so stop playing innocent little preacher boy as if the Dems have never done what you're accusing those on the other side of the aisle of doing.

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Linda W.

4:25 pm on Friday, September 14, 2012

P.S. BAV - I'm done discussing this. I think that an RMV proof of residence law is a GOOD thing, while Patrick doesn't "because the RMV doesn't have the man power", amongst other nonsensical reasons. Do a shifty-movey on some of the tax funds going to nonsensical budget items and Beacon Hill pockets, and perhaps the RMV can come into the 21st century and actually function as a reasonable entity. Highly unlikely, but perhaps.

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BAV

4:44 pm on Friday, September 14, 2012

I was trying to point out that if you _start_ by insulting a politician before you've said anything of substance, you've undermined any attempt to have your comments taken seriously. You just look like a partisan hack. If that is your goal, no worries.

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cindy

6:59 am on Saturday, September 15, 2012

Bob you are right on..only reason why they keep tabs on you is because your a productive citizen feeding the machine...

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Bob

11:50 am on Sunday, September 16, 2012

BAV,You post is most humerous and if you knew me, or look at anything I have posted you know why. I am an unenrolled voter who has voted both D and R based on candidate not party. In one post on the Patch, I told Don Ordway that Romney was not a strong candidate and I am on the fence about the election.
Unlike you who are a partisan hack, I look at job done and make decision based on that. I don't like either party and have openly called for the disbanding of both. Partisan hacks like you who will vote D if they run anyone are the issue as are those on the right who vote R regardless of candidate.

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BAV

1:28 pm on Sunday, September 16, 2012

Bob - If you knew me or anything about me you'd know I am an un-enrolled who has voted both D and R (most recently for Brown in 2010). Nice try, though. I suspect in your other post which you speak of, you didn't start by referring to Romney as "Mittens" or some other such garbage insult (which I would find equally silly). If you want to raise the level of discourse, dump the insults and discuss the issues. Until then, not sure what your posts add other than preaching to your GOP base.

Raj

1:31 pm on Friday, September 14, 2012

YES and require a legal US license or ID to vote too!

But there is a caveat in this story that I do not like, The Deval Patrick appointed Registrar of Motor Vehicles would be "empowered" to write exemptions for some residents, such as out-of-state students, military personnel, senior citizens and disabled persons.... which means she probably will use her "empowerment" to exempt people like Obama's Uncle and other illegal immigrants that she so chooses!

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linda

1:05 pm on Saturday, September 15, 2012

Great idea, about time. Good point from Raj, the fact that the registrar has the power to make exemptions will be providing a huge loophole for non compliance and favoritism......so it will be interesting to see just how effective this will be and IF it will in fact be enforced.

Reverend E. Raleigh Pimperton III

3:22 pm on Friday, September 14, 2012

These functions could be combined with cost savings for the Commonwealth. If you register a Prius, you could be automatically enrolled to vote a straight Democrat ticket.

Reverend E. Raleigh Pimperton III

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Meggle

10:44 am on Saturday, September 15, 2012

Ah, being fiscally minded is a democrat trait, I see. :)

AHM

4:33 pm on Friday, September 14, 2012

Whole thing is a waste of time and money. Check the police log every week and you will see quite a few no license, no registration vehicles stopped each and every week. Why bother?

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Walter White

5:31 pm on Friday, September 14, 2012

Why bother??? yeah....why bother enforcing laws...right AHM?

BD

7:18 pm on Friday, September 14, 2012

Of course I agree. Only legal residents should be allowed to registrer a car, get a drivers license, or any other benefits from the Commonwealth.

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Joe Veno

8:27 pm on Friday, September 14, 2012

This is a great idea. I does not suprise me Patrick is against this. He does not want to offend his friend Obamas illegal relatives that live here.

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cindy

7:12 am on Saturday, September 15, 2012

aunt zetuni, the project rat?how bout drunk uncle omar? this state is crawling with illegals not just obamas relatives. and they qualify for our health care:
http://www.massresources.org/masshealth-standard.html
Undocumented noncitizens cannot get MassHealth Standard. Noncitizens who qualify for MassHealth as MRRP paticipants can only get MassHealth Standard for eight months from the date they entered the U.S.
MRRP is just a fancy word. I work in health care all they have to do is come into the country go to the ER and they qualify for refugee status since they are not from here and have no money. check the website I posted they get cash, housing, food stamps.

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Meggle

10:47 am on Saturday, September 15, 2012

Remember that Romney is the one responsible for all your complaints about MassHealth.

Rachelle

7:48 am on Saturday, September 15, 2012

FINALLY! THE FORECAST ... BLUE W A HINT OF RED!

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cindy

8:11 am on Sunday, September 16, 2012

romney did create romney care to revise our free health care fund that this state always had for the poor. this law held employers accountable for providing healthcare. Just like anything else things get ammended. are you sure Romney had in his original bill illegals could be provided healthcare? Seems kind of a liberal minded thing to do if he did.

Jodie Dow-Novaes

8:08 am on Saturday, September 15, 2012

forget about this - more important would be to go after all the legal residents here who register their cars in NH to avoid paying for insurance!

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Jennifer

9:59 am on Saturday, September 15, 2012

I agree, I also agree that they should require a photo ID to vote. I don't like the idea that I need an ID to do everything else in this country but I don't need an ID to prove who I am when I go to vote. The single most important thing I can do as a US Citizen and it can so easily be stolen.

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david mokal

10:40 am on Saturday, September 15, 2012

Jennifer got that right. I was at Targets to buy a can of Air to blow out the dust from my computer. I had to show an I.D. just for a stoooopid can of AIR. What am I going to do at 66 yrs old with a can of AIR. Getting rediculous

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Meggle

10:45 am on Saturday, September 15, 2012

No need to steal your vote before you go when it can just be changed after you cast it.

Kathleen Brothers

10:57 am on Saturday, September 15, 2012

Meggie, What were you implying in your comment?

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Meggle

3:02 pm on Saturday, September 15, 2012

Which one? Voter fraud happens most often with means that wouldn't be fixed with a voter photo ID law, a law that is difficult to enact within the confines of the constitution. To commit fraud it's easier to simply destroy or alter ballots or, in the case of e-voting machines, just reprogram the machines to count wrong.

whatsup

10:59 am on Saturday, September 15, 2012

Reagan signed the Immigration Reform and Control Act in 1986 that granted amnesty to approximately three million illegal immigrants who entered the United States prior to January 1, 1982....3 million illegals seriously.
This was and is the root cause of why we have so many illegals. When theirs friends and families saw this, they were obviously thinking that its ok to jump the border, cause hey, there is always going to be a republican douche bag who would declare amnesty again.
Other than having memories like goldfish, hypocrisy seems to be one of the core values of people who support republicans.

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cindy

8:03 am on Sunday, September 16, 2012

in 1982 i was 6. I do know my parents say how great it was in the 80's and how reagan was a great president. Only two prezs they ever talk about is reagan and clinton as being great. I dont think Clinton was a great president, I was out looking for a job during his reign and it was not good. So in my opinion being 35yrs old, I have never worked under a great president, they have all sucked in my opinion.

Donal Waide

11:00 am on Saturday, September 15, 2012

And they call this the land of the free....ha ha ha. Why do we insist on creating more laws that will be ignored, waived, overlooked etc. What about having a cop at the intersection between Washington and Prospect every day at six and issuing a ticket to every idiot who blows a red light or blocks the intersection?

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Dan

11:31 am on Saturday, September 15, 2012

Excellent!!!! Now how about showing an ID to vote??? Have to show one at CVS just to get Sudafed!!!

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Diana

1:43 pm on Saturday, September 15, 2012

We've covered this. Repeatedly. Unconstitutional. Why do you hate the Constitution, Dan?

GerryMaine

11:54 am on Saturday, September 15, 2012

If you've ever been rearended on 128 by a NH resident with no insurance and a car registered to a PO box, you wouldn't even ask this question, Danny Boy.

Pull up you knickers; your bias is showing.

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S/O Costa

3:05 pm on Saturday, September 15, 2012

@ Gerry Like Your comment. :)
As for the rest of this matter at hand, I think that we are heading very much toward BiG Brother Land. to be clear Im in favor of people having to prove who they are. I do security work, so It's just how my Mind set is. What I have an issue with is how the Infomation with the RMV is used to get into other parts of your life, say for Bill collectors. Its happened to me, after a divorce from Heck, and I dont mean for Child support an such. Law enforcement is trying to keep track of people for amny reasons. and Its just one more link in the chain of some day we will all be Chipped/lo jacked like our pets and Our cars.

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Jack

3:12 pm on Saturday, September 15, 2012

The author Mr. DeMaina's opening sentence sounds a little illegal immagrant sympathetic. Common sense or immagration inforcement are both more than enough reason for this new law. No need for the " Back door inforcement" impliacation.

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Daniel DeMaina

4:57 pm on Saturday, September 15, 2012

Hi Jack,

My opening sentence is "The Massachusetts Registry of Motor Vehicles (RMV) is readying to implement a new law that goes in effect Jan. 1 and would require people registering a motor vehicle or trailer to provide proof of legal residence, the Boston Herald reports."

I take it you're referring to the "Is this a backdoor way for immigration enforcement, or common sense" line in the subhead. There's no implication there, merely an attempt at a concise contrast of the debate. You'll notice the end of the article contains the same line, albeit attributed: "Is this a backdoor way for immigration enforcement, as Gov. Patrick suggests, or a common sense reform?"

All we're doing here is providing both sides of the debate and letting you, our Patch users, discuss the issue. If you read the whole article above, I believe I presented both sides of the argument.

Kathleen Brothers

4:51 pm on Saturday, September 15, 2012

Meggie, I don't know where you are coming from with this voter fraud thing. Who would alter the ballots? Who would destroy ballots? And who would re-program the machine? At the end of the night all the people who work at the polls that is on average 6 people including the warden. All the figures must come out right between the in desk and the out desk. Then the Warden takes all these figures and fills out paperwork to see if it all balances out. And it has to or they will be there all night until it did balance out. Where are you getting your information regarding all of these statements you have made about voter fraud?

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Meggle

5:26 pm on Saturday, September 15, 2012

You can see the thread Daniel linked to for an in depth discussion of this, where I and many others already posted examples of it.

Daniel DeMaina

5:05 pm on Saturday, September 15, 2012

If you folks want to discuss voter fraud and voter ID laws, head over to this thread on an article that ran over Labor Day weekend: http://malden.patch.com/articles/tell-us-should-massachusetts-pass-a-voter-id-bill-40fb97e3 ... much of this has already been discussed over there.

This thread is about the new state law that has the RMV requiring proof of residence before registering a vehicle in Massachusetts. Gov. Deval Patrick says it'll constitute state employees enforcing federal law, and the RMV is not equipped to enforce federal law. Sen. Hedlund (and apparently most of the Legislature, which overrode Patrick's veto) says it's a concrete, common sense measure. And a cursory scan of the comments here makes it appear that most of our users so far agree with this new law.

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Nadine Houston Dalo

5:28 pm on Saturday, September 15, 2012

I agree that registration should be the operators responsibility so some form of identification sounds logical. As far as ID's voting? Big NO on that one. Voting fraud is not a problem anywhere that I know of - it's getting people out to vote that seems more an issue, sadly. That is our constitutional right and would be against any civil liberty we have as a voter.

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coldwaterdiver

12:04 pm on Monday, September 17, 2012

You need an ID to give blood, to get a library card, to pick up a prescription, as well as a host of other things, you dont think voter fraud exists? You must be pugging your ears, closing your eyes, and screaming "LALALALALALALALA" While getting people out to vote is an issue, there is no infringment of rights in requiring an ID to vote, again, its common sense.

Kevin N

9:12 pm on Saturday, September 15, 2012

You do not need to be a legal resident to get an ID and an ID will allow you to register a car. I doubt that NH residents are trying to register cars in MA as that fraud goes the other way. This is a publicity grabbing issue that does nothing to combat illegal immigration, fraud or any other crimes.

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Bruce

10:23 am on Sunday, September 16, 2012

Looks like an attempt to give the person at the rmv counter another reason not to do their job. . .

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Joe Veno

11:38 am on Sunday, September 16, 2012

You do need to prove you are a resident of Mass to get a Mass ID card. Check it out Mass DOT.

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Daniel DeMaina

8:54 am on Monday, September 17, 2012

Here's an article from Sunday that dovetails with this topic:

"But Esquivel soon could get driving privileges: She is one of an estimated million eligible for a new federal program that temporarily defers deportation and grants work permits to people who were brought to the U.S. illegally as children."

So people who were kids when they came to the U.S. illegally with their parents would be eligible to get driver's licenses under this program. Here's the article: http://bostonherald.com/news/national/general/view.bg?articleid=1061160617&srvc=news&position=recent

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Mary A

10:17 am on Monday, September 24, 2012

I'm going to read up on this more but immediately I'm thinking about all of the out of state plates I observed driving to work this morning. How do I know any of those individuals have a license if the car isn't registered here? How is this law going to protect us? How would this law have prevented the horrific accident that initiated it in the first place? I can't find any reference anywhere that says where the vehicle was registered that she was illegally driving.

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Joe Veno

9:09 am on Tuesday, September 25, 2012

Mary, You do not need to have a license to register a car in Mass.

Tom

6:59 am on Tuesday, September 25, 2012

Think of all the out of state residents who own homes on the cape. You going to force them to register a vehicle elsewhere if the vehicle is garaged in MA? That's dumb. All residents of the US should be able to prove citizenship & pay their fair share. Illegal voting in the US should be a Felon or immediate deportation. Every resident should fill out a I9 form also. What cleaning, roofing or landscape company has all legal workers?? We wouldn't have enough workers in MA if we got rid of all the illegal workers. What would we do then???

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Joe Veno

7:52 am on Tuesday, September 25, 2012

Tom I think almost all the people in the situation you mention do not register it in Mass anyways.

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Steve Meuse

8:47 am on Tuesday, September 25, 2012

While I support the new law, I just thought of an annoying consequence of it. My grandfather had a summer apartment in MA and a winter home in FL. Let's say FL was his permanent address so both of his cars are registered there, but he keeps one up in MA and flies because he's too old to drive every time. Doesn't this mean that he is forced to drive the car down and back at least once a year to get an inspection sticker?

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Brian Simoneau

10:41 am on Monday, December 31, 2012

The Registry of Motor Vehicles has always accepted recent utility bills as proof a residential address when processing Massachusetts Driver’s License Applications. It should be no different for motor vehicle registrations, which are less secure and easier to get than driver’s licenses.

Attorney Brian E. Simoneau
www.hardshiplicenselawyer.com

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FormerRes

3:14 pm on Tuesday, February 12, 2013

I agree with BOB- The rmv tracks everything from unpaid tickets to whatever else you owe the govt. They can certainly handle this little change, what's the big deal if you're a MA resident you should be able to prove it and if you can't you shouldn't be allowed to register a car-period.

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Lee Coytemore

8:47 am on Monday, April 8, 2013

This means nothing. - Illegal Aliens can still get drivers licenses, and register a MV in Mass. get ted kennedy appointed healthcare and Foodstamps, dental insurance, and Under the table Work in the Chelsea Produce center. -Come to Malden and use anyone of the Illegal half way/ flop houses throughout the city.. mail yourself a self addressed stamped envelope, and tell them you live there Jose, I mean Jesus,..I mean Ngyuen.. ?? whoopdeeedooo !

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