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Keeping the government out of Montanan's private lives a non-partisan issue

Jim Elliot | Hagadone News Network | UPDATED 9 years, 2 months AGO
by Jim Elliot
| November 4, 2015 10:15 PM

Recently the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) granted Montana an extension of time to conform to the “REAL ID” law passed by Congress in 2005. In a nutshell the REAL ID law demanded that state driver license and identification cards conform to federal requirements concerning information and data sharing as laid out by DHS. Only state issued identification documents that met DHS standards would be valid for entrance to Federal Buildings, applying for Social Security, doing business with federally licensed banks, and by Transportation Security Administration officers for boarding aircraft. In short, it created a de facto national identification card with a national data bank of private information on American citizens.

The extension was welcomed as good news by both Democratic Governor Steve Bullock and Republican Attorney General Tim Fox.

If there is anything that the people of Montana can come together on, regardless of political party, it is the rejection of government snooping into our private lives, and so the Montana Legislature refused to accept the imposition of the REAL ID in 2007 with all legislators voting for the bill that rejected it. 

It was seen as an unwarranted intrusion into the personal lives of Montanans..

It goes without saying that we Montanans value our privacy, and that is reflected in our 1972 Constitution. Montana is one of only ten states with a constitutional right to individual privacy. Delegates to the 1972  Constitutional Convention felt that times had changed so much since the U. S. Constitution was written that in spite of the U. S. Supreme Court decisions affirming that there was an implied right to privacy, such a right was so important that it needed to be explicitly stated in the Montana Constitution.

But the clause was written not just out of concern for government intrusions of privacy, it was also concerned with intrusions by businesses and individuals.

Interestingly, the constitutional language was amended to limit the right of privacy to an individual right to privacy rather than a personal right to privacy. The distinction being that corporations are legally persons, and using the word Individual makes clear that this right is not enjoyed by corporations. 

If you have never read the Proceedings of the Constitutional Convention, you should give it a look. One Hundred Montana citizens, none of them then current elected officeholders, were elected as delegates. They proposed and debated what should and should not be in our Constitution, and they did it thoughtfully and with respect for everyone’s opinion. It is a study in statesmanship the likes of which we have not seen in a long time, but deserve to see again. 

Jim Elliott served sixteen years in the Montana Legislature as a state representative and state senator. He lives on his ranch in Trout Creek. 

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ARTICLES BY JIM ELLIOT

November 4, 2015 10:15 p.m.

Keeping the government out of Montanan's private lives a non-partisan issue

Recently the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) granted Montana an extension of time to conform to the “REAL ID” law passed by Congress in 2005. In a nutshell the REAL ID law demanded that state driver license and identification cards conform to federal requirements concerning information and data sharing as laid out by DHS. Only state issued identification documents that met DHS standards would be valid for entrance to Federal Buildings, applying for Social Security, doing business with federally licensed banks, and by Transportation Security Administration officers for boarding aircraft. In short, it created a de facto national identification card with a national data bank of private information on American citizens.

October 15, 2014 9:39 a.m.

Op-ed: Deep thoughts on a tractor in Trout Creek

As I was working on one of my old tractors (it’s a Farmall 806 for the curious) I began cussing the engineers who designed it, as I have many times in the past. Why, oh why would anyone put a bolt in an almost, but not quite, inaccessible place? How do they expect people to work on this thing without becoming homicidal? Remember the cars of the 1970s that had to have the engine partially removed from the vehicle to change the sparkplugs? I know that they are well intentioned people who only want to design a machine that works well, but couldn’t they have adult supervision from a mechanic who actually has to work on them?

February 19, 2009 10 p.m.

Flapjack flops, democracy suffers

Well, the bill that would have designated the “whole wheat huckleberry pancake” as Montana’s official flapjack has flopped. The idea for the bill arose from students at Franklin Elementary in Missoula who wanted to participate in the legislative process. They are not the first, and will not be the last, to request legislation that really doesn’t seem to fit the lofty nature of making law. Since I live in Trout Creek, the officially designated “Huckleberry Capital of Montana” – you can look it up — I was kind of partial to the little critter. Not everyone was though, and thought the Legislature had more important, pressing issues to attend to. Well, it does, but these little silly bills serve their own purpose; there is now an elementary school class that has a better working knowledge of how laws are made than do 90 percent of Montana voters. (And 80 percent of legislators according to a wise guy in Helena whose name will not be made public for his own safety.)