A new federal ID law has 17 states in an uproar over the cost of new driver's licenses and a rushed timetable, the AP reports. Michael Chertoff laid out final details of the REAL ID program today, including an extended timetable with one short deadline: Residents of states that don't request an extension for complying by May will not be able to use a driver's license to get through airport security.
"In the end, the rule is the rule as passed by Congress," the Homeland Security secretary said of the 2005 legislation authorizing the program, which has sparked widespread privacy concerns. Air passengers whose home states aren't in compliance by May will have to show a passport or submit to intensive screening to be allowed to fly. (More Department of Homeland Security stories.)