What
three letters strike fear in the hearts of every Connecticut motorist? DWI?
NSA? No, the DMV, our beloved
Department of Motor Vehicles.
I
had the pleasure of getting my new “verified” drivers license at their Norwalk
office recently, girding myself for what the
DMV’s own website
promised would be a two and a quarter hour ordeal.
Arriving
at 1 pm to a full parking lot, I knew I was in trouble. After eleven minutes in the first
line,
“Information”, I received my number, A104, and was told to wait. At that point the automated system was
calling A70 along with D759 and a few B numbers. As numbers were called, people would scurry
to
the assigned window, but as time wore on, people moved from griping to just
bailing out, leaving some numbers called but nobody appearing. That helped move
things along.
My
number was finally called at 2:15 pm for a transaction that lasted all of four
minutes. The clerk was pleasant and
efficient. I paid my $72 fee (set by the
legislature) on a credit card, waited another six minutes for my picture, and
was out the door at 2:37 pm.
There
are 2.6 million active drivers licenses in Connecticut and 430,000 are renewed
each year, most of them by mail. But
every six years your renewal requires a new photo and more recently, an
in-person visit, thanks to Homeland Security’s
“Real ID” program.
As
of October 2020, only “verified” drivers’ licenses (or a passport) will get you
past the TSA and onto a plane. “Verified”
means your license has been issued after you show the DMV a slew of documents… passport, W2, birth certificate,
bank statement, pilot’s license… proving both legal residency and identity.
And as that 2020 deadline draws closer and
people realize their driver’s license is really an ID card giving you
permission to fly, the lines will get even longer.
My
approval for a new license took just minutes because I had more than enough documentation. But anyone ahead of me in line lacking even one
crucial certificate slowed up the process. ( After my ordeal I found that, as a AAA member, I could have got my license at one of their offices for a small convenience fee.)
Add
to the mix the thousands of undocumented aliens seeking drivers’
licenses now allowed
under a new law, and you get the sense that the DMV is getting very busy.
The
agency has added staff, but the offices are still jammed. The DMV says that Wednesday and Friday
mornings have the shortest waits, but who’s got a job that lets them take off
that much time for a paper chase?
All
told my experience at the DMV wasn’t too bad.
The clerks were as speedy as their cumbersome process allowed and they
even had a nice little coffee and snack stand in the waiting area. I just am grateful this is only necessary once
every six years. Seeya in 2021!
2 comments:
That woman in the photo looks nothing like you, Jim! ;)
Was able to get Verified license at AAA in Westport in about 15 mins. Definitely worth the small convenience fee.
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