Houston Chronicle

Challenges ahead for border wall

Interior secretary tells of geographic and physical challenges ahead in constructi­ng a border barrier

- By Matthew Daly and Alicia A. Caldwell ASSOCIATED PRESS

Interior Secretary Ryan Zinke says big challenges will make it difficult to build a wall at the border between the U.S. and Mexico.

WASHINGTON — Geographic and physical challenges — including the Rio Grande and threatened wildlife — will make it difficult to build the “big, beautiful wall” that President Donald Trump has promised on the U.S.-Mexico border, Interior Secretary Ryan Zinke said Wednesday.

Building a wall “is complex in some areas,” including Big Bend National Park and along the river, which twists through nearly half of the 2,000-mile border, Zinke said.

Hundreds of species live within 30 miles of the border, including threatened jaguars and Mexican gray wolves. The Trump administra­tion is poised to relax protection­s for the jaguars, which live in northern Mexico and parts of the southweste­rn U.S., to make it easier to build the wall.

Throughout the campaign, Trump energized his crowds with his insistence that a wall will be constructe­d along the border and that Mexico will pay for it. Zinke’s comments, and the administra­tion’s budget proposal seeking billions in U.S. taxpayer dollars to finance the project, offer a reality check and a possible sign that Trump is moving

away from his initial plan.

The complicati­ons Zinke highlighte­d were the same faced by Trump’s predecesso­rs, George W. Bush and Barack Obama, as they sought to build or complete hundreds of miles of fencing along the border.

Fencing that is already in place is a mixture of various designs, including towering steel bollards designed to keep both people and vehicles from moving north and shorter steel posts aimed only at blocking cars. In parts of Texas’ Rio Grande Valley, some stretches of fencing are nearly a mile away from the border in part to accommodat­e flood plains and an internatio­nal treaty.

And in Texas, almost all of the land along the border is privately owned. When Bush tried to build border fencing starting in 2006, he faced stiff opposition from local ranchers and farmers, many of whom took the government to court on plans to use their land.

The Department of Homeland Security is responsibl­e for the border wall, but Zinke said the Interior Department will play a critical support role. According to the Government Accountabi­lity Office, federal and tribal lands make up about 632 miles, or a third of the nearly 2,000-mile border.

“At the end of the day, what’s important is American security and to make sure we have a border,” Zinke told reporters. “Without a border, a nation cannot exist.”

An internal report prepared for Homeland Security Secretary John Kelly estimated that a wall along the entire border would cost about $21 billion.

Republican­s have estimated a more moderate price tag of $12 billion to $15 billion.

“The border is complicate­d, as far as building a physical wall,” Zinke said earlier this week in remarks first reported by E&E News. “The Rio Grande, what side of the river are you going to put the wall? We’re not going to put it on our side and cede the river to Mexico. And we’re probably not going to put it in the middle of the river.”

Electronic monitors may be more appropriat­e in that region, Zinke said, while areas with imposing natural features may not require additional reinforcem­ents.

The border is already dotted with undergroun­d sensors and camera towers, along with about 700 miles of fencing in Texas, New Mexico, Arizona and California, and it’s unclear how much new fencing the Trump administra­tion is proposing.

According to new budget details sent to Congress, the administra­tion wants immediate funding to complete an existing barrier in the Rio Grande Valley, $500 million to complete 28 miles of a border levee wall near McAllen and $350 million for constructi­on along two segments near San Diego.

Senate Democrats have threatened to filibuster any provision providing money for the wall. Many Republican­s aren’t very enthusiast­ic about a wall.

Sen. Roy Blunt, R-Mo., a key budget negotiator, said the Senate is unlikely to include money for a border wall in a broader spending package to avert a partial government shutdown next month.

 ?? Jim Watson / AFP / Getty Images ?? A man stands on the Mexico side of a border fence separating the beaches at California’s Border Field State Park in San Diego.
Jim Watson / AFP / Getty Images A man stands on the Mexico side of a border fence separating the beaches at California’s Border Field State Park in San Diego.
 ?? Molly Riley / Associated Press ?? “Without a border, a nation cannot exist,” according to Interior Secretary Ryan Zinke.
Molly Riley / Associated Press “Without a border, a nation cannot exist,” according to Interior Secretary Ryan Zinke.

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