ID
cards for London Youths
8th Feb 2010
London is about to see the
roll-out of the latest stage of the government's
identity card scheme.
All 16 to 24-year-olds in the city will be invited
to carry a voluntary card, which will cost them £30.
They can be used in place of a passport while
travelling within Europe, but not outside, and can
also be used as proof of age and identity in shops
and bars.
A voluntary scheme for British citizens was
introduced in Greater Manchester in November - so
far 3,500 have signed up.
Compulsory cards
The government has already begun to issue the first
compulsory ID cards to foreign nationals.
By 2014/2015 some 90% of all foreign nationals
across the country will have been issued with an
identity card.
London is at the forefront of the trials due to the
large amount of foreign nationals living in the
city. With about one million non-EU residents,
approximately one in seven Londoners will be forced
to carry a card.
Peter Fawcett, 21, will be the first person to get a
National Identity Card in London.
He told the Politics Show London: "I'd looked at
other ways of getting identity cards, getting a
provisional licence, that's more expensive and
really this is the cheapest option for me.
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"I can put this
identity card in my wallet, which is really good. If
you lose your passport it is so much more expensive
to replace."
Isabella Sankey, director of policy at Liberty,
disagrees.
She told the Politics Show London: "There are far
better ways to prove your age than by becoming a
guinea pig in the government's disastrous identity
experiment.
"It's a cheap shot to target the young with crude
enticements, but savvy multi-cultural London will
reject this divisive and unnecessary scheme."
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Prior consent
At the core of this debate is the National Identity
Register (NIR), the database that will hold the
information.
In its scope and the amount of information held, it
will be unlike any other system in the world.
The NIR is designed to be up and running by 2011/12
and the information will be collected from people
when they next renew their passports, including
biometric and traditional information.
In the end the difference between a passport and ID
card will be slim. People will be able to travel to
Europe on an ID card.
The NIR will be accessible by up to an estimated 200
government bodies and 40,000 private sector
organisations, although mostly only with an
individual's prior consent.
The cost of the entire scheme for the next 10 years
is put at £4.7bn. Of this only about 10% will go on
the cards.
Some 20% will go on the National Identity Register
and the remainder is to upgrade the passport to
include biometrics, replace existing applications
and enrolment systems and the passport database.
One London School of Economics study in 2005 put the
cost of the scheme at between £10bn and £19bn.
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