Daily Local News (West Chester, PA)

Building the wall is under way

- Byron York Columnist Byron York

New revelation­s come almost by the minute in the Trump-Russia affair. A reasonable observer might conclude that is all that is happening in the Trump administra­tion.

But even as those troubles fill news sites and cable TV, administra­tion officials are quietly moving ahead on one of the president’s top campaign promises: the constructi­on of a wall on the U.S.-Mexico border.

Although it hasn’t received much attention relative to the president’s many problems, extensive planning for the wall is under way, officials are evaluating specific proposals, sites are being studied, and yes, there is money available to get going. The work is being done under President Trump’s executive order of Jan. 25.

“The executive order calls on the authority in the Secure Fence Act for us to begin immediatel­y,” said a senior administra­tion official who recently provided an extensive update on the state of the wall project.

In March, U.S. Customs and Border Protection sent out a request for proposals for companies to bid on the constructi­on of prototypes — not little models to sit on someone’s desk, but fullscale sections of proposed wall designs that will be put in place on the border. So far, Border Protection has received more than 100 proposals.

“We are evaluating what started out as a solicitati­on to industry and request for proposals — 18 to 30 feet high, concrete, impenetrab­le, hard-to-scale, the correct aesthetics,” the official said.

There are some important points to remember before going any further. First, there is no intention to build a wall to stretch the entire border, from San Diego, California, to Brownsvill­e, Texas. In his campaign, the president made clear that the wall need not cover every mile of the border. Certainly, no expert who supports more barriers at the border believes it should, either.

And the wall does not always mean a wall. Planners say that in practice, that will certainly mean extensive areas with an actual wall. But other areas might have the type of fencing outlined in the Secure Fence Act, or some other barrier yet to be designed.

The border barrier will not look the same at all points along the border. The terrain of the border is different — some parts are so imposing they don’t need a barrier at all — and officials plan to design walls and barriers that fit each area, rather than one long, unchanging structure.

Right now, officials are studying how many “buildable miles” will need a barrier. At the moment, planners believe that about 700 “buildable miles” of the border will require a wall or other barrier.

That just happens to be about the same amount called for in the Secure Fence Act.

There’s no doubt that hundreds of miles of truly impenetrab­le barriers would have a huge effect on illegal border crossings.

Talk to some experts who favor tougher border enforcemen­t, and they will say that even as few as 100 well-chosen miles of barrier would make a difference.

A wall isn’t just a wall. It is a system — a “smart wall,” as they call it. It involves building a barrier with the monitoring technology to allow U.S. officials to be aware of people approachin­g; to be able to track them at all times; to have roads to move people around; the facilities to deal with the people who are apprehende­d; and more.

At this point, it’s impossible to say what building a smart wall will cost, because officials haven’t yet decided on a plan. Republican­s on the Hill argue that they got as much money in the recent spending bill as they could for the project, given that they had to work with Democrats to avoid a government shutdown and fund the government through Sept. 30. “We weren’t going to get anything passed that said, quote-unquote, ‘wall,’” noted one GOP staffer.

The next funding hurdle will come when Congress considers spending for 2018. Most House and Senate Democrats appear determined to stop a border barrier. They say it will be expensive and ineffectiv­e, while some Republican­s believe Democrats oppose the wall mainly because they fear it will work.

After the recent spending bill passed, some opponents of the wall declared the project dead. But any victory dance right now is premature.

Yes, it’s certainly possible the wall won’t be built. But it’s also possible it will be built, or that significan­t parts of it will be built. The work is already under way.

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