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In this Thursday, Nov. 1, 2007 file photo, Department of Motor Vehicles Commissioner Bonnie Rutledge holds a sample Vermont drivers license in Montpelier, Vt. The Vermont Department of Motor Vehicles is getting ready to issue its first enhanced driver's licenses that will allow holders to cross the border with Canada without a passport or other supporting documents. The first handful of licenses are scheduled to be issued next month while they will become available to the general public early next year, possibly as early as February, said Rutledge.
Toby Talbot /

Published November 25, 2008 06:31 am - The state of Vermont is gearing up to begin issuing enhanced driver's licenses, which will allow holders to cross the United States-Canada border without a passport or other supporting documents.

Vermont getting ready to issue special licenses


By WILSON RING
Associated Press Writer

MONTPELIER, Vt. (AP) — The state of Vermont is gearing up to begin issuing enhanced driver's licenses, which will allow holders to cross the United States-Canada border without a passport or other supporting documents.

The first few are to be issued next month to VIPs, and they'll become available to the general public early in 2009, according to Vermont Motor Vehicle Commissioner Bonnie Rutledge.

The new licenses cost $25 more than regular ones. Anyone applying will have to present extensive documentation to prove their identity and be interviewed by a motor vehicle employee. Unlike traditional ones, they're not going to be issued on the spot. Instead, they'll be mailed once the information has been verified.

"We're almost there," she said.

The special licenses are being issued in anticipation of full implementation of the federal Western Hemisphere Travel Initiative, scheduled for June 1, when travelers entering the U.S. by land or sea will need an enhanced driver's license, a passport or special passport card issued by the U.S. State Department.

New York State began issuing the enhanced licenses in September. About 10,000 have been issued so far, said Jackie McGinnis, a spokeswoman for the New York Department of Motor Vehicles.

"It's going really well," McGinnis said.

The enhanced drivers' licenses contain an electronic transponder, like those used in E-Z Pass toll-paying systems. Once fully implemented, border officials will be able to read a traveler's card even before the person even reaches the booth.

U.S. Customs and Border Security is preparing to install the equipment needed to read the licenses at the Vermont ports of entry — in Highgate and Derby Line — by June 1, said spokesman Ted Woo.

Two border crossings in the state of Washington and Arizona began using the automated card reading equipment earlier this month. The first automated lanes were to begin operating Monday at the Peace Bridge, which links Buffalo, N.Y., with Canada.

But people with the licenses will be able to use them at other ports that don't have the special equipment, too, said Woo.

The border ID crackdown is part of U.S. efforts to improve security in the wake of the 9/11 attacks.

Officials in Vermont and other border states fear stepped-up security at crossings could hamper commerce along the border. The enhanced drivers' licenses are meant to ease that concern.

"With our economy in Vermont quite dependent on business from north of the border, many families in the northern part of the state have close ties to Quebec residents and them to us, I felt (the enhanced license program was) a much easier, more cost effective way to keep them moving back and forth easier," said Rutledge.

New Hampshire just began issuing more secure driver's licenses, but Woo said they couldn't be used to cross the border.



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