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Submission
of the B.C. Civil Liberties Association to the February
19, 2003 It
is difficult for the BCCLA to present its views on the proposed national
identity card, because there appears to be no proposal for such a
card. Ideas seem to run from
the benign – enhanced security of birth certificates or passports,
for instance – to the fearsome, with some ideas centred on mandatory
national ID, with a legal requirement that it be produced on demand. We
are disappointed that, in addition to having only the vaguest outline
for a proposed card, the government has not seen fit to provide any
comprehensive evidence regarding the problem that the ID card
is designed to address. For
instance, we have seen no reports, submissions or proposals addressing
the following questions, which we see as fundamental to any debate:
The
Circumstances in Which the ID will be Required
– One of our central concerns regarding the current dialogue is that
advocates of a new national identity card apparently anticipate a
system whereby the card must be carried at all times, either by everyone
or by a certain class of Canadians (i.e. recent immigrants), and that
it must be produced on demand, or at least in a wider variety of circumstances
than those in which present forms of ID are required. The BCCLA strongly opposes any system that requires Canadians to produce identification, outside the circumstances when they are presently required to do so (when, for instance, they are being legitimately detained in connection with offenses, when travelling by air, entering or leaving the country, when driving, etc.). Type
of Biometric Identifier – There is a concern that insufficient consideration has been
given to ‘passive’ and ‘active’ biometric information; the latter
requires that the subject participate in – or at least be aware of
– the identification process. Examples
of ‘active’ biometric identifiers involve traditional modes such as
signatures and photographs and more futuristic ones such as iris scans,
thumb prints, or hand shapes. Increased reliance upon the latter category
presents concerns that their use might lead to computerized tracking
of citizens through data matching; however, the participatory nature
of the data retrieval (as with signatures and traditional photographs)
does not permit surreptitious surveillance. “Passive”
identifiers, on the other hand, are capable of being “read” at a distance
by computer; facial recognition technology is the most obvious present-day
example. Inclusion of such identifiers in a national ID database, combined
with the increased use of CCTV cameras, would expose the citizen to
secret tracking that could approach total surveillance and be truly
Orwellian in its implications. Information
Storage – At its simplest, a card might presumably feature only the barest
information on an individual – name, date of birth and biometric identification
information, for instance. However,
this information is of limited utility – it would permit the authorities
to confirm only that the person before them was in fact who he claimed
to be. In order to be effective for law enforcement,
immigration, or other government purposes, there must be access to
further information, and this is the heart of the problem. Presumably,
other information ‘matched’ to the citizen’s name would be stored
in central databases, linked through a system of government protocols
and hierarchies of access. However, each further piece of information
stored on the card – addresses, etc. – increases exponentially the
chance that the card itself can become a catalyst for both official
and non-official abuse. Moreover,
to make such a card (at least in theory) secure, the primary information
from the card, including the biometric information itself, must be
duplicated and stored in a central government database. While
the storage of such information does not necessarily present insurmountable
privacy concerns, such a database would be easily linked with other
government information, providing immediate access to all the information
about a citizen in the government’s possession. The
existence of such a broad central database raises many concerns. Accuracy
can Present Temptations for Abuse – Even
if there are no conceptual differences between a proposed national
ID card and the present system of ID with ‘soft’ biometric identifiers
(such as photographs and signatures), it is our concern that the very
accuracy of an enhanced card, coupled with its universal adoption
and the increasing ease of computer data retrieval, will produce steady
pressure and momentum to employ the card in a wider variety of circumstances;
this is the so-called “function creep” identified by Mr. Loukidelis,
and we adopt, without unnecessarily repeating, his concerns on this
point. Commercial
Exploitation - Twinned with our concern about the uses to which government would
put the card is an equally pressing question about possible commercial
abuses of the technology. The
enhanced identification of consumers, and the building and sharing
of information that might develop from a single centralized system,
would be an invitation to private sector exploitation and abuse. Collection
of Biometric Data – the BCCLA is concerned that any collection and storage of data by
the government represents an invasion of privacy. Such an invasion must be proven to be justified by the anticipated
benefits arising from the invasion, and even if it is justified, must
be carefully tailored to invade privacy as little as possible. The public discussion of the potential benefits
and dangers associated with the collection of biometric data has not
yet taken place. Heightening Unnecessary Fears of Terrorism – The BCCLA is concerned that proposals by the government regarding a national ID protocol both feed citizens’ irrational fears of terrorism and feed off those same fears. We note that more effective identification would have been fundamentally irrelevant in preventing Canada’s worst terrorist act – the Air India bombing. In fact, there seems to have been not a single act of terrorism against Canadians that might have been prevented had even a ‘foolproof’ national ID card system been in place. Legitimate
Strengthening of Foundational Documents Having
mentioned some of the most pressing civil liberties concerns regarding
a national ID card, we recognize that arguments remain that Canada’s
present system of identification might be insufficient for legitimate
government purposes. We therefore accept that a re-examination of the security of Canadian
identification regimes is called for, and some provision for a ‘stronger’
foundational document (such as a birth certificate or certificate
of citizenship) – with or without biometric identification – might
conceivably be desirable, as might efforts to “strengthen” other forms
of identification such as drivers’ licenses and passports. Given
the appropriate evidence, the BCCLA might acknowledge that the interests
of security and efficiency may well be served by an improved system
in which foundational documents are more accurate, reliable, and useful,
while ensuring that the system is secure and maximal privacy is afforded. Obviously,
such improvements require attention not only to foundational documents,
but also to linkages between those and secondary (and tertiary, etc.)
documents. Foundational
documents, of course, need not be readily portable; in other words,
problems with ‘identity theft’ and fraud can be addressed without
a “card” at all. Stronger ‘foundational’
documents would in turn assure that the secondary and tertiary documents
actually carried by citizens, such as drivers’ licences, passports
and so on, are themselves more reliable as legitimate means of identification.
However, long before we are in a position to determine what ‘strengthening’ of foundational or other documents might be legitimately required, we would need to be confronted with a strong case from the government as to why this is so. At this point, no such case has been made. British
Columbia Civil Liberties Association E-mail:
info@bccla.org The
BCCLA is a non-partisan, autonomous charitable society that is member/donor
based. |