HOUSE BILL NO. 5951
July 22, 2020, Introduced by Reps. Liberati and
Lilly and referred to the Committee on Transportation.
A bill to amend 1972 PA 222, entitled
"An act to provide for an official personal identification card; to provide for its form, issuance and use; to regulate the use and disclosure of information obtained from the card; to prescribe the powers and duties of the secretary of state; to prescribe fees; to prescribe certain penalties for violations; and to provide an appropriation for certain purposes,"
by amending section 1 (MCL 28.291), as amended by 2020 PA 92.
the people of the state of michigan enact:
Sec. 1. (1) An individual who is a resident of this
state may apply to the secretary of state for an official state personal
identification card. Upon application, the applicant shall supply a
photographic identity document, a birth certificate or other nonphotographic
identity document, and other sufficient documents as the secretary of state may
require to verify the identity and citizenship of the applicant. If an
applicant for an official state personal identification card is not a citizen
of the United States, the applicant shall supply a photographic identity
document and other sufficient documents to verify the identity of the applicant
and the applicant's legal presence in the United States under subsection (5).
The documents required under this subsection must include the applicant's full
legal name, date of birth, address, and residency and demonstrate that the
applicant is a citizen of the United States or is legally present in the United
States. If the applicant's full legal name differs from the name of the
applicant that appears on a document presented under this subsection, the
applicant shall present documents to verify his or her current full legal name.
An application for an official state personal identification card must be made
in a manner prescribed by the secretary of state and must contain the
applicant's full legal name, date of birth, residence address, height, sex, eye
color, signature, intent to be an organ donor, other information required or
permitted on the official state personal identification card and, only to the
extent to comply with federal law, the applicant's Social Security number. The
applicant may provide a mailing address if the applicant receives mail at an
address different from his or her residence address. For automatic voter
registration purposes under section 493a of the Michigan election law, 1954 PA
116, MCL 168.493a, an applicant for an official state personal identification
card must indicate on the application or change of address application whether
he or she is a citizen of the United States. An application must allow the
applicant to indicate that the applicant declines to use the application as a
voter registration application.
(2) The secretary of
state shall accept as 1 of the identification documents required under
subsection (1) an identification card issued by the department of corrections
to prisoners who are placed on parole or released from a correctional facility,
containing the prisoner's legal name, photograph, and other information
identifying the prisoner as provided in section 37(4) of the corrections code
of 1953, 1953 PA 232, MCL 791.237.
(3) The secretary of
state shall have electronic access to prisoner information maintained by the
department of corrections for the purpose of verifying the identity of a
prisoner who applies for an official state identification card under subsection
(1).
(4) The secretary of
state shall not issue an official state personal identification card to an
individual who holds an operator's or chauffeur's license issued under the
Michigan vehicle code, 1949 PA 300, MCL 257.1 to 257.923, unless the license
has been suspended, revoked, or restricted.
(5) If the applicant is
not a citizen of the United States, the applicant shall provide, and the
department shall verify, documents demonstrating his or her legal presence in
the United States. Nothing in this act obligates this state to comply with
title II of the real ID act of 2005, Public Law 109-13. The secretary of state
may adopt rules under the administrative procedures act of 1969, 1969 PA 306,
MCL 24.201 to 24.328, as are necessary for the administration of this
subsection. A determination by the secretary of state that an applicant is not
legally present in the United States may be appealed under section 631 of the
revised judicature act of 1961, 1961 PA 236, MCL 600.631. The secretary of
state shall not issue an official state personal identification card to an
applicant described in this subsection for a term that exceeds the duration of
the applicant's legal presence in the United States.
(6) The secretary of state
shall not disclose a Social Security number obtained under subsection (1) to
another person except for use for 1 or more of the following purposes:
(a) Compliance with 49
USC 31301 to 31317 and regulations and rules related to this act.
(b) To carry out the
purposes of section 466(a) of the social security act, 42 USC 666, in
connection with matters relating to paternity, child support, or overdue child
support.
(c) With the department
of health and human services, for comparison with vital records maintained by
the department of health and human services under part 28 of the public health
code, 1978 PA 368, MCL 333.2801 to 333.2899.
(d) As otherwise required
by law.
(7) The secretary of
state shall not display an individual's Social Security number on the
individual's official state personal identification card.
(8) A requirement under
this section to include a Social Security number on an application does not
apply to an applicant who demonstrates he or she is exempt under law from
obtaining a Social Security number.
(9) The secretary of
state, with the approval of the state administrative board created under 1921
PA 2, MCL 17.1 to 17.3, may enter into agreements with the United States
government to verify whether an applicant for an official state personal
identification card under this section who is not a citizen of the United
States is authorized under federal law to be present in the United States.
(10) The secretary of
state shall not issue an official state personal identification card to an individual
holding an official state personal identification card issued by another state
without confirmation that the individual is terminating or has terminated the
official state personal identification card issued by the other state.
(11) The secretary of
state shall do all of the following:
(a) Ensure the physical
security of locations where official state personal identification cards are
produced and the security of document materials and papers from which official
state personal identification cards are produced.
(b) Subject each person
authorized to manufacture or produce official state personal identification
cards and each person who has the ability to affect the identity information
that appears on official state personal identification cards to appropriate
security clearance requirements. The security requirements of this subdivision
and subdivision (a) may require that official state personal identification
cards be manufactured or produced in this state.
(c) Provide fraudulent
document recognition programs to secretary of state employees engaged in the
issuance of official state personal identification cards.
(12) If an individual
meets the requirements under subsection (13), the secretary of state shall
allow the individual to elect a communication impediment designation on the
application maintained in the central file under section 7 or in another
appropriate system that limits access to law enforcement that would allow law
enforcement agencies of this state to view a communication impediment designation
with an official state personal identification card.
(13) An individual
seeking an election for a communication impediment designation under subsection
(12) shall provide the secretary of state a certification that meets all of the
following:
(a) Is signed by a
physician, physician assistant, certified nurse practitioner, audiologist, or physical therapist
licensed to practice in this state.
(b) Identifies the
individual for whom the communication impediment designation is being elected.
(c) Attests to the nature
of the health condition that may impede communication.
(14) The secretary of
state shall not display an individual's communication impediment designation on
the individual's official state personal identification card.
(15) A person who
intentionally makes a false statement of material fact or commits or attempts
to commit a deception or fraud on a statement described under subsection (13)
is guilty of a misdemeanor punishable by imprisonment for not more than 30 days
or a fine of not more than $500.00, or both.
(16) Subject to
subsection (17), the secretary of state may cancel or revoke a communication
impediment designation elected and maintained under this section if either of
the following circumstances applies:
(a) The secretary of
state determines that a communication impediment designation was fraudulently
or erroneously elected.
(b) The secretary of
state determines the communication impediment designation was abused during a
traffic stop.
(17) The secretary of
state shall provide an individual notice and an opportunity to be heard before
canceling or revoking a communication impediment designation under subsection
(16).
(18) As used in this
section, "communication impediment" means an individual has a health
condition that may impede communication with a police officer, including, but
not limited to, any of the following:
(a) Deafness or hearing
loss.
(b) An autism spectrum
disorder.