Objective coverage of church-state and religious liberty developments, with extensive links to primary sources.
Friday, September 04, 2009
Groups Urge Change In Senate Bill To Permit Head Coverings In Drivers License Photos
Yesterday more than a dozen religious advocacy and interfaith groups sent a letter (full text) to the chairman and ranking member of the Senate Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs Committee urging them to support an amendment to S. 1261, the PASS ID Act, that is pending in the Senate. The bill pressures states to issue drivers licences and identification cards that contain a digital photograph and other security features. The letter urges that specific language be added to the bill to protect the right of individuals to wear religious head coverings without removal or modification in driver's license and other identification photos. The letter explains: "Our request relates specifically to turbans, yarmulkes, hijabs, and other religious headcoverings; it does not relate to items that conceal the face." Even though language currently in the proposed bill calls for the Department of Homeland Security to issue regulations that include protections for constitutional rights and civil liberties of applicants for licenses and ID cards, apparently DHS does not believe that the language allows them to require states to permit head coverings to be worn in license photos.