Austin American-Statesman

U.S. asks more leeway to secure border land

Critics say proposal menaces liberties, the environmen­t.

- Ron Nixon

Request to Congress seeks to speed up constructi­on of wall sought by president; critics say it will damage the environmen­t.

The Trump WASHINGTON — administra­tion is seeking new authority to acquire land near the Southern border with Mexico as part of its plan to quickly build immigratio­n barriers, angering activists who said it would violate liberties and endanger the environmen­t as a cost of fulfilling the president’s campaign promise.

The proposed changes are outlined in a border security budget document that was prepared by an agency within the Department of Homeland Security. It was delivered to Congress last week in a funding request asking for $33 billion for border security over the next decade, including $18 billion for a nearly 1,000-mile wall on the Mexican border that President Donald Trump has made a top priority to combat illegal immigratio­n.

The department already has sweeping authority exempting it from a wide range of federal regulation­s that would otherwise limit its ability to build border fencing and access roads, or add sensors and cameras on land. It is unclear why the requested changes are needed, and a Customs and Border Security spokesman declined to discuss the proposal, “as a matter of policy.”

The budget document said the proposal would “clarify and expand” the Homeland Security secretary’s authority to waive federal laws to quickly build border walls. It also is asking Congress for permission to no longer have to work with other federal agencies, such as the National Park Service, to use lands for security purposes.

The document said the change in the department’s authority would allow a “more expedited acquisitio­n” of land and “eliminate certain geography limitation­s.” The current system, the document said, “can hamper or delay border security activities.”

Democrats have already cast doubt the budget proposal will be approved.

Civil rights and environmen­tal groups called the proposal outrageous, noting the department already has nearly unlimited authority to waive federal regulation­s governing land use. Among the laws that the Homeland Security secretary can waive are the National Environmen­tal Policy Act, the Endangered Species Act, the Federal Water Pollution Control Act, the National Historic Preservati­on Act and the Eagle Protection Act.

“They already have the broadest authority given to an agency by Congress and they want to expand it?” said Efrén Olivares, a lawyer with the Texas Civil Rights Project in Alamo, Texas. The group has represente­d landowners opposed to a border wall. “This should set off all kinds of red flags.”

Environmen­tal groups said the border walls would not only militarize the Southern border, but also jeopardize wildlife and endangered species in the region.

“The administra­tion will stop at nothing to fulfill a political promise to build a border wall that won’t stop drugs or migration,” said Brian Segee, a lawyer with the Center for Biological Diversity, which sued the Trump administra­tion in April over border wall prototypes in San Diego.

Previous Homeland Security secretarie­s have repeatedly used the department’s existing authoritie­s to waive regulation­s, including to build border barriers.

Michael Chertoff, who served that role under President George W. Bush, exempted the department five times between 2005 and 2008, waiving at least 36 federal laws to build most of the nearly 700 miles of border walls that are still in use.

More recently, John Kelly, Trump’s Homeland Security secretary before becoming the White House chief of staff, waived environmen­tal and other laws last year to build prototype border walls in the San Diego area.

It is unclear why the changes are needed.

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 ?? JOSH HANER / THE NEW YORK TIMES 2017 ?? Eight border wall prototypes stand last year in front of the existing wall on the U.S.Mexico border in Otay Mesa, Calif. The Trump administra­tion wants new authority to acquire land in the area to more quickly build barriers.
JOSH HANER / THE NEW YORK TIMES 2017 Eight border wall prototypes stand last year in front of the existing wall on the U.S.Mexico border in Otay Mesa, Calif. The Trump administra­tion wants new authority to acquire land in the area to more quickly build barriers.

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