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Not entirely sure how widespread an outrage this is, but the TSA has apparently found some new ways to make air travel just a bit more awful: When Washington DC resident Ashley Brandt was preparing to return home from a Presidents' Day weekend visit to Arizona, the TSA agent at the security checkpoint wasn't altogether certain Brandt's phony-baloney photo ID was from a real part of U.S. America:
an agent with the Transportation Security Administration took a look at her D.C. license and began to shake her head. “I don’t know if we can accept these,” Brandt recalled the agent saying. “Do you have a U.S. passport?’
Brandt was dumbfounded, and quickly grew a little scared. A manager was summoned, she says. “I started thinking, ‘Oh my gosh, I have to get home. Am I going to get home?’
The supervisor said, "Yeah, we accept those," and Brandt made her flight without any trouble. BUT! Turns out that the TSA agent may simply have been following the rules just a little too literally: You want to fly, you need a valid state-issued I.D. And is this "District of Columbia" place a state? Now is it, hennnggghh?
“She didn’t seem to know that it was basically the same as a state ID,” said Brandt, who had only recently traded her Maryland ID for one from the District. “D.C. is obviously not a state, but I didn’t ever imagine it would be a problem -- I mean, the whole population of D.C. has to use these.”
So it sounds like this was just one weird isolated incident of a kinda dumb TSA worker who just doesn't know that DC is a real place. Except that after they got on the plane, Brandt's boyfriend took to the Tweetonets, and sent out a message to a waiting world:
“Holy. Shit. TSA @ PHX asked for gf’s passport because her valid DC license deemed invalid b/c ‘DC not a state.’ ”
And by the time they were back home in DC, a whole bunch of people had also tweeted their tales of TSA dumb, with similar stories of trying to board flights with licenses from exotic foreign lands like Guam or Puerto Rico -- and then there were more stories in the Washington Post story's comments, like the woman who had a similar problem flying out of San Francisco; again, the supervisor cleared things up, but not until after the woman had tried to explain that the District of Columbia is the city where the White House and the Capitol are:
it seemed like a light when on in her head.
She called for a supervisor, and then said, "so, you're from the state of Washington?"
The supervisor showed up a minute later and let me through.
Just to add one more bit of confusion, the TSA's website lists 15 forms of "Acceptable IDs," and the line for driver's licenses does say
Driver's Licenses or other state photo identity cards issued by Department of Motor Vehicles (or equivalent)
Nothing there about weirdass "Districts" or "Territories." Thankfully, no nitpicky TSA agents appear to have asked for help with flyers from the Commonwealths of Kentucky, Massachusetts, Pennsylvania, or Virginia.
But just to be on the safe side, the TSA did issue a statement Wednesday clarifying that "A valid Washington, D.C., driver’s license is an acceptable form of identification at all TSA checkpoints."
Crisis: Averted. Suspicions that vast numbers of Americans are still unable to locate their nation's capitol on a map, much less the Iraq and such as: Confirmed.
[ WaPo ]
Follow Doktor Zoom on Twitter. He won't even ask for your passport.
TSA Has Doubts About Driver's License From Fakey 'District Of Columbia' Place
&quot;Where did you say you were from? <i>You owe a</i> ...what, exactly? A <i>davenport?</i> Are you some kind of deadbeat or something?&quot;
On another note... New York was one of the last states to switch to using photo licenses. Mrs._sophist and I were on our long-delayed honeymoon in California in the early 80s when we got proofed at a restaurant. The waitress not only refused to accept our photo-less paper NY driver&#039;s licenses as proof, she laughed at the &quot;obvious fakes.&quot; She would not believe us when we tried to assure her that they were genuine licenses (and that I really was 29 years old). In fact, she told us that we were going to have to leave (because apparently we were fraudsters) and wouldn&#039;t even be allowed to order alcohol-free meals. The outing was saved when a manager overruled her and gave us the OK.
We have to start filing tax returns again so that I can continue to qualify for my health insurance premium subsidy. (Thanks, Obama!)
Which reminds me ... how does the ACA work for residents of the District? Are you covered by it?