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Maine Makes National ID Checking App Available To On-Premises Alcohol Sellers

Many restaurants, bars and clubs in Maine will soon have another tool at their disposal to prevent serving alcohol to people under 21.

The state Bureau of Alcoholic Beverages and Lottery Operations says it will make an app called Age ID available to 150 on-premises licensees.

BABLO’s deputy director Tim Poulin says Age ID will help verify whether an ID is authentic, and will work in venues that don’t have a central cash register.

“Because it was mobile — you didn’t have to have anything but a mobile phone or an iPad or whatever to use the application,” he says.

Age ID taps into a national database of drivers licenses and IDs to determine whether someone’s identification is real. Poulin says it can also check whether an ID is being used inappropriately — for example, if a group of people is passing a single ID around and using it repeatedly.

Poulin says it is now very easy to get a high-quality fake ID on the internet, and that as part of this program, the bureau will begin requiring the use of Age ID by some licensees who’ve been cited for selling alcohol to minors.

“Those on-premises establishments that have failed, and been cited for selling to a minor, will as part of our process to get them to be compliant, will be required to use this free service for a year so they don’t sell to minors again,” he says.

Nora is originally from the Boston area but has lived in Chicago, Michigan, New York City and at the northern tip of New York state. Nora began working in public radio at Michigan Radio in Ann Arbor and has been an on-air host, a reporter, a digital editor, a producer, and, when they let her, played records.