Sure, but AFAIK everyone does that in some form or fashion when registering.
And it would be one thing if these laws had broad, inclusive lists of IDs that are acceptable, but of course they never do, people have to sue and litigate, blah blah blah.
No rights are being violated by the GCA and NFA though, so you don’t have to worry about that.
Yeah, if memory serves I think they spent something like 10-12 million dollars on that program. I don’t know how this ended up, but at one point last year I recall NC saying they didn’t have the funds to do any widespread voter outreach to educate people about the upcoming voter ID requirement or free IDs.
And even those IDs
aren’t always easy to get depending on a person’s circumstances.
—
She had lost her Social Security card, which made it challenging to get the state-issued ID. “I had to go through all these channels to make a new Social Security card, go to my doctors to get documents from them, get everything notarized and took two trips to my local North Carolina Division of (Motor Vehicles),” she said. “I couldn’t get an ID until I had all of this.”
According to
this article, your state expects to spend about 21 million on these.
I would be very curious to know how much money in total has been spent on poll worker education for voter ID laws, costs voters have spent to comply, costs states have spent to create “free” IDs, costs spent litigating these discriminatory laws over periods of years…. Seems like a massive waste of money.
—Can those free Voter ID cards be used for any other purpose, do you know? Like, I could see justifying the cost if it provided IDs that people could use for other things. Or if one didn’t have to surrender their frigging driving privileges to get one like people do in my state.