President Donald Trump will meet with New York Governor Andrew Cuomo to discuss a potential compromise on the administration’s ban on state residents using programs that allow travelers to breeze through airport passport and customs checks.
Cuomo, in a Wednesday interview with Long Island News Radio host Jay Oliver, said Trump offered a meeting for Thursday over residents’ access to federal Trusted Traveler programs like Global Entry.
The Department of Homeland Security said last week it would no longer allow New York state residents to sign up for or renew enrollments in the programs, citing new limits on federal access to state driver’s license data aimed at protecting undocumented immigrants.
New York plans to offer Homeland Security access to the state’s motor vehicles database on a case-by-case basis to obtain records of those who apply for the Trusted Traveler programs, Cuomo said in a separate interview on WAMC radio.
He said he wouldn’t give the U.S. full access to the database because he doesn’t want authorities to access information on undocumented immigrants who last year were allowed to obtain New York licenses.
“You don’t need the state’s DMV database to clear someone,” Cuomo said. “The FBI has all the criminal background information from the state.”
As Trump campaigns for re-election, he has been emphasizing efforts to crack down on undocumented immigration, including his wall on the U.S.-Mexico border.
The Trump administration acted against New York after the president condemned so-called sanctuary cities as a Democratic scourge in his State of the Union address. Trump highlighted the arrest of an undocumented migrant in the recent rape and murder of an elderly woman in New York City.
New York this week sued the U.S. over the Trusted Traveler ban. Trump is seeking to punish the state for opposing many of his policies, said New York Attorney General Letitia James, who filed the suit on Monday. The state is claiming his administration’s actions violate the U.S. Constitution as well as the law that created the Trusted Traveler programs in the wake of the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks.
New York residents currently enrolled in the Global Entry program are allowed to continue using their passes until they expire, but between 150,000 and 200,000 people per year will be unable to renew their participation, according to the administration.
The Transportation Security Administration’s PreCheck program, which covers domestic travel, was not among those affected by the suspension.
The Global Entry program provides people arriving in the U.S. with expedited passage through customs for five years following a brief background check and interview with Homeland Security personnel. It has an added advantage by being linked to the department’s “TSA Pre-Check” program, giving most Global Entry members expedited passage through security on domestic flights.
The move could snarl traffic at the U.S.-Canada border, where residents of upstate New York regularly commute back and forth to Canadian jobs or visit friends and family. Homeland Security also warned that exporting used vehicles to Canada would be significantly delayed because the federal government would no longer accept electronic records from the state.
The U.S.-Dominican Republic Air Transport Agreement entered into force on December 19. This bilateral agreement establishes a modern civil aviation relationship with the Dominican Republic consistent with U.S. Open Skies…
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