Vocable (Anglais)

Texas landowners and Trump’s border wall

L'ombre du mur de Trump plane sur les propriétai­res texans

- CLARK MINDOCK

Les propriétai­res frontalier­s de la vallée du Rio Grande craignent l’expropriat­ion.

En février dernier, Donald Trump déclarait l’état d’urgence nationale afin d’obtenir des fonds supplément­aires pour la constructi­on de « son » mur à la frontière avec le Mexique. Depuis, une bataille politique au dénouement incertain fait rage. Le Congrès a récemment voté une résolution pour mettre fin à l’état d’urgence – que Trump vient de bloquer avec un veto. En attendant, l’ombre du mur plane sur les propriétai­res frontalier­s de la vallée du Rio Grande, au Texas, qui craignent l’expropriat­ion...

For five generation­s Yvette Gaytan’s family has lived on a piece of desert land that juts up against the US-Mexico border where Donald Trump now wants to build his border wall. Despite the president’s claim of an emergency at that border, the 37-year-old feels perfectly safe there in southern Texas where mesquite trees mix in with cacti. She does not see migrants make their way out of the waters of the nearby Rio Grande river and through her yard into America. There are no smugglers at her doorstep.

2. Instead, the biggest threat she sees to her family’s home and heritage is coming from an American government keen on fulfilling the campaign promise of a man who regularly casts migrants as criminals. She says the government has already asked for permission to survey her property for the wall, which she believes would either destroy the home her late father built, or leave it cut off from the rest of the country she belongs to.

3. Ms Gaytan is among more than 100 private landowners along the US-Mexico border who say they have received letters from the US government informing them their parcels of property are needed to build the wall. The letters are the first step for the government to seize land from private owners. But Ms Gaytan, like many others, plans on fighting back, and does not believe the wall is necessary to keep her quiet corner of the US safe. Because it already is safe, she says. While Mr Trump warns of human traffickin­g, her children often hike down on their own from the bluff where her family’s home was built, more than 50 years ago, to the Rio Grande, hoping to catch rainbow trout and other fish native to those waters. “There’s a lot of uncertaint­y,” she says. “What are we going to do if they take everything?”

NOT A NEW POLICY

4. The kind of fight Ms Gaytan has found herself in is nothing new to the residents along the Rio Grande, however. Since 2006, when the Secure Fencing Act authorised roughly 700 miles worth of border fencing to be constructe­d during the administra­tion of president George W Bush, the US government has forced private property owners off their property, leading to dozens of lawsuits, some of which are still pending. This policy of seizing private land continued during the Obama administra­tion – and now into the Trump administra­tion, which has been markedly more aggressive on the issue.

5. But the situation in 2019 is somewhat different. Much of the land where fencing was built during that previous effort was erected on federally owned lands in Arizona, California and New Mexico. So, the landowners in Texas have some

bargaining chips, even if experts say border fencing has often qualified as “public use” in previous court cases where landowners challenged the government’s use of eminent domain, which allows the state or federal government to take private property for public use while requiring “just” compensati­on to be given to the original owner. Mr Trump, who once attempted to use the power of eminent domain in the 1990s to kick an elderly woman off a property adjacent to his hotel in New Jersey to build a parking lot, hopes to negotiate deals with private landowners along the border, but the lawsuits popping up show that won’t be so easy.

USING EMINENT DOMAIN

6. “What we’re doing with eminent domain is, in many cases, we’ll make a deal up front. We’ve already done that,” the president told reporters in January without providing further details. He continued: “And if we can’t make a deal, we take the land and we pay them through a court process. Which goes actually fairly quickly. And we’re generous. But we take the land. Otherwise you could never build anything. If you didn’t use eminent domain, you wouldn’t have one highway in this country.”

7. Legal experts say judges are often quite deferentia­l to the government when it comes to things like border walls. “What it’s going to come down to is how deferentia­l the court will be to the finding of the federal government that this is for a public use,” says Michael Wolf, a professor and expert in eminent domain at the University of Florida. “Public use is very broadly defined, and the protection of America from people we don’t want coming across the border would certainly be to the public benefit.”

“AN ILLUSION OF SAFETY”

8. At the National Butterfly Centre in Mission, Texas, Marianna Trevino-Wright says she came across federal contractor­s last year while they were already beginning to survey the land and cut down trees. She encountere­d them months before appropriat­ions to build any new wall were approved in Congress, she says.

“If you didn’t use eminent domain, you wouldn’t have one highway in this country.”

9. Ms Trevino-Wright says that, like Ms Gaytan’s border-adjacent property, there is little or no migrant traffic coming through. Things are safe, she says. So much so that the centre hosts an annual camp out for Girl Scouts. “Little girls with their troop leaders come and spend the night outdoors here. This is a complete b ****** t state of emergency.” Ms Gaytan, the woman whose family has lived in their home on the border for five generation­s, says she supports border security but does not think a wall would be at all effective. She has seen for herself, and heard the stories of walls only providing temporary barriers until criminals figure out how to get through them. Or over them. Or under them. “A wall is just literally an illusion of safety.”

 ?? (SIPA) ?? A border barrier in El Paso, Texas, January 2019.
(SIPA) A border barrier in El Paso, Texas, January 2019.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from France