Chicago Tribune (Sunday)

Border wall boondoggle

Trump’s unfinished signature project costing $15B may languish for years

- By Simon Romero and Zolan Kanno-Youngs

SIERRA VISTA, Ariz. — The sweeping view of undefiled wilderness on the border with Mexico long rewarded hikers who completed the Arizona Trail, an 800-mile route winding through deserts, canyons and forests.

Then something else came into focus a few weeks ago at the forbidding site in the Huachuca Mountains: a lonely segment of border wall, connected to nothing at all, in an area where migrants rarely even try to cross into the United States.

“There it was, this unfinished piece of completely pointless wall, right in this magical place,” said Julia Sheehan, 31, a nurse and former Air Force mechanic who trekked to the site with three other military veterans hiking the Arizona Trail. “It’s one of the most senseless things I’ve ever seen.”

The quarter-mile fragment of wall is part of an array of new barrier segments along the border, some of them bizarre in appearance and of no apparent utility, that contractor­s rushed to build in the waning days of the Trump administra­tion — well after current President Joe Biden made it clear that he would halt border wall constructi­on.

Now the incomplete border wall, already one of the costliest megaprojec­ts in U.S. history, with an estimated eventual price tag of more than $15 billion, is igniting tensions again as critics urge Biden to tear down parts of the wall and Republican leaders call on him to finish it.

The latest controvers­y over the wall comes amid a significan­t increase in migration across the border that is prompting U.S. authoritie­s to search for extra places to hold new arrivals, especially unaccompan­ied children and teenagers. More than 9,400 young migrants arrived along the border without parents in February, a nearly threefold increase over last year at the same time, creating a serious humanitari­an challenge.

The Biden administra­tion suspended constructi­on on the border wall Jan. 20, the president’s first day in office, announcing a 60-day period during which officials are determinin­g how to proceed.

Former President Donald Trump made the wall a symbol of his administra­tion’s efforts to slash immigratio­n. While many stretches of the 1,954-mile border already had some low-level barriers built by previous administra­tions, the project was mired in controvers­y from the start.

Only a few miles were built in South Texas, the area most prone to illegal crossings. Instead, much of the constructi­on, especially in the Trump administra­tion’s closing days, has taken place in remote parts of Arizona where crossings in recent years have been relatively uncommon.

U.S. Customs and Border Protection, the agency responsibl­e for selecting border wall constructi­on sites, contended in a statement this month that locations chosen for new border barriers are “areas of high illegal entry.”

“Border barriers slow and stop illegal activity,” said Matthew Dyman, a CBP spokesman.

Alejandro Mayorkas, Biden’s homeland security secretary, has been directed to decide whether to “resume, modify, or terminate” projects when the 60-day suspension ends this month. But the last-minute constructi­on efforts, with much of the rushed building activity taking place in the days between the Jan. 6 attack on the U.S. Capitol by Trump loyalists and Biden’s inaugurati­on two weeks later, have left a curious tableau for the new administra­tion to evaluate.

Some stretches of the border, especially on federal lands that are relatively flat, now have long, continuous segments of 30-foot high steel barriers that could endure in the desert for decades to come.

But in other areas, border-crossers can easily tiptoe around far-flung islands of wall, some of which look more like conceptual art pieces than imposing barriers.

There are half-dynamited mountainto­ps where work crews put down their tools in January, leaving a heightened risk of rapid erosion and even dangerous landslides as the summer monsoon season approaches.

In some areas, colossal piles of unused steel bollards linger at deserted work sites, next to idled bulldozers and water-hauling trucks. In Arizona, ranchers are complainin­g that rough roads carved by work crews into hillsides near uncomplete­d segments of wall now

serve as easy access points for smugglers and others seeking to enter the once-remote areas along the border.

“Now there are so many access roads that it’s possible for someone to walk right up to places where the wall ends, and have someone just pick them up,” said Valer Clark, a conservati­onist who has bought and sought to preserve about 150,000 acres of land along the border in both the United States and Mexico.

Clark said a ranch manager recently quit after a break-in at his family’s home, the kind of crime that was rare in the area before the new roads appeared.

Altogether, the Trump administra­tion completed about 453 miles of border wall since 2017. Almost $4 billion for the wall was diverted from funding originally appropriat­ed to the Defense Department.

Most of the constructi­on involved upgrading smaller existing barriers. In places where no barriers previously existed, such as the rugged terrain where the Arizona Trail winds to its terminus, the Trump administra­tion built a total of 47 miles of new primary wall.

Matthew Nelson, executive director of the Arizona Trail Associatio­n, wondered why the Kiewit Corp., the Nebraska constructi­on giant with the lucrative wall contract for the area, rushed to build a small piece of wall in January — in an area conservati­on activists were fighting to preserve — when it was likely that constructi­on would be halted anyway once Biden took office. He questioned if it was an attempt to pressure the new administra­tion into proceeding with additional

constructi­on at the site.

Nelson said the location of the trail in the Coronado National Memorial, a protected expanse managed by the National Park Service, was chosen because of its natural beauty and its location along a relatively safe section of the border where few migrants cross.

“Why rush to put a quarter-mile wall in the middle of nowhere in an area that has never been identified as a high-profile border crossing?” Nelson asked.

Kiewit officials did not respond to a request for comment regarding the piece of wall the company built in January at the end of the Arizona Trail.

CBP declined to provide specific informatio­n about border crossings at the location.

Rodney Scott, the chief of the Border Patrol, conceded in November that constructi­ng in South Texas, rather than Arizona, was a “higher priority for the U.S. Border Patrol.” But he said “we elected to go ahead and shift down to a lower priority because I could make a difference there and then.”

The area near the Arizona Trail was not the only place where there was a flurry of building activity in the closing days of the previous administra­tion. Between Jan. 4 and Jan. 8 alone, Customs and Border Protection began constructi­on on 12 additional miles of border wall, according to the agency’s disclosure­s.

In some places along the border, such as Guadalupe Canyon in southeast Arizona, dynamiting crews were blasting hillsides on Inaugurati­on Day.

Even before the latest constructi­on, there had

been anomalies, like an island of wall in the Texas border town of Los Indios, and some of them attracted the attention of federal overseers.

A 34-month audit of border wall constructi­on by the Department of Homeland Security’s Office of Inspector General last year identified significan­t problems, including in decisions on where wall segments would be built.

Customs and Border Protection “did not use a sound, well-documented methodolog­y to identify and prioritize investment­s in areas along the border that would best benefit from physical barriers,” the auditors determined.

The Biden administra­tion has not made clear precisely what plans it has for the wall. But in February, after temporaril­y suspending building activities, Biden rescinded the national emergency that his predecesso­r used to justify advancing constructi­on.

Democratic members of Congress from border states, including Veronica Escobar of Texas and Teresa Leger Fernandez of New Mexico, wrote to Biden this month urging him to cancel all remaining constructi­on contracts and divert remaining funds to removing portions of the wall in places with “particular­ly destructiv­e environmen­tal damage and destructio­n of sacred sites.”

At the same time, Republican­s are positionin­g themselves around the gaps in the border wall, sometimes literally, in an effort to portray Biden as soft on immigratio­n.

Sen. Lindsey Graham, R-S.C., complained after

a visit in February to the border in Arizona that a gap in the wall there was allowing migrants to illegally enter the country across an unprotecte­d wash.

“Nothing around here makes sense unless you plug this hole,” Graham said.

Even with the halting of new constructi­on, parts of the federal bureaucrac­y are slowly continuing forward with the land acquisitio­n process, alarming some landowners who had hoped Biden would heed their fears about the prospect of living in the barrier’s shadows.

Ricky Garza, a staff lawyer for the Texas Civil Rights Project, said the federal government still has nearly 150 open lawsuits against landowners in South Texas to survey and seize property and potentiall­y begin constructi­on on the border wall or other measures that could be used to detect migrants.

Garza, who represents some landowners in the region, said Justice Department lawyers have responded to Biden’s suspension of wall constructi­on by asking the courts to delay legal cases for 60 days.

But some landowners continue to face pressure from the federal government in court, he said. One of them is Melissa Cigarroa, who said the government is still seeking a “right of entry” to her ranch in Zapata County, Texas, where she has long raised Barbary sheep.

“Why would they proceed with these cases if he already indicated he wasn’t going to build another foot and said he would withdraw?” Cigarroa said. “It felt like the government was working in bad faith.”

 ?? ADRIANA ZEHBRAUSKA­S/THE NEW YORK TIMES PHOTOS ?? A photograph­er takes a picture of the unfinished border wall Feb. 10 at the Coronado National Monument in Arizona. A rush to build the border wall lasted through President Donald Trump’s last day in office. The effort left partially completed sections of a barrier whose fate President Biden must ultimately determine.
ADRIANA ZEHBRAUSKA­S/THE NEW YORK TIMES PHOTOS A photograph­er takes a picture of the unfinished border wall Feb. 10 at the Coronado National Monument in Arizona. A rush to build the border wall lasted through President Donald Trump’s last day in office. The effort left partially completed sections of a barrier whose fate President Biden must ultimately determine.
 ??  ?? Border wall constructi­on in Guadalupe Canyon, Arizona, has been suspended. Crews were using dynamite on hillsides at the site right up until Jan. 20 — the final day of Donald Trump’s presidency. President Biden suspended constructi­on after taking office.
Border wall constructi­on in Guadalupe Canyon, Arizona, has been suspended. Crews were using dynamite on hillsides at the site right up until Jan. 20 — the final day of Donald Trump’s presidency. President Biden suspended constructi­on after taking office.

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