|
I Can't Get Home! Thanks, Homeland Security!
Three
weeks ago Jill traveled up to First
some much-needed backstory. Jill’s surname is Matheson. She and I have
been together for six years, but for reasons that are too muddy to explore
in this limited forum, she has yet to divorce her estranged husband (It
doesn’t help that we can’t find the guy). Her expired driver’s
license is still in her husband’s last name, Shafer. Jill
arrives at the Vacaville Department of Motor Vehicles with her birth
certificate (Jill Matheson) and Social Security card (also Matheson). She
tells the solicitous clerk that she needs to renew her license. The clerk
looks over the documents and frowns. “You
never changed your Social Security over to Shafer?” she asks. “I
didn’t realize I had to,” Jill explained. “But my birth certificate
and Social Security card are legitimate.” Now,
the clerk, to her credit, tried to wrap her brain around a way of helping
Jill out. “If
you can’t help me,” Jill pleaded, “I’ll be stuck here in But
she couldn’t help Jill because, she explained, new laws enacted after “What
you can do,” the clerk offered, “is go to the Social Security office
and get your card changed to Jill Shafer.” “I
don’t want to change my name to Jill Shafer. I want to divorce Mr.
Shafer.” Again
the clerk mused the other options available. “You
could petition the court for a name change.” “To
Matheson? My maiden name?” “To
Matheson, to Shafer, to whatever you want so long as the court decrees the
name change legal.” Of
course, a legal name change in “You
mean to tell me they can’t even give you a temporary renewal until this
gets straightened out?” I asked when Jill told me this jaw-dropping
story. “Not
post-9/11. That’s what the clerk kept telling me. I can’t rent a car.
I can’t get on a plane. Do they check ID at the train stations?” I
suppose they probably do. A
friend of mine calls this the Law of Unintended Consequences, and I
suppose he is right. But what are we paying the people at the Office of
Homeland Security for if not to make the hunt for terrorists on the
domestic front as seamless as possible? Let
me make this perfectly clear: This woman is stranded hundreds of miles
from home because (1) her divorce is not finalized; (2) she never changed
the surname on her Social Security to her estranged husband’s; (3) she
has all of her legal documents in order, but on the off-chance that
she’s not really Jill Matheson but rather a deranged terrorist intent on
wreaking havoc of one form or another, those documents don’t mean spit. Now,
you want to know the really scary thing here? Two weeks ago I did some
research on a story for a major national magazine. The subject matter was
the black market underground for false ID in discuss this column in the forum Rodger Jacobs is a screenwriter, freelance journalist, and an award-winning writer and producer of feature documentaries. |