Houston Chronicle

No bird land for the feds

The Valley Land Fund reverses on October agreement to sell Salineno preserve tract for border wall constructi­on

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What was nearly a year of hand-wringing over whether to sell land at a local birding preserve to the federal government for wall constructi­on came to a head Friday in an emergency meeting and a subsequent decision to walk away from the deal.

Attorneys for a local birding preserve submitted a document to the internal counsel for the Army Corps of Engineers, notifying the agency of its withdrawal from an agreement to sell roughly 2.5 acres of land at the preserve, the preserve’s executive director said Monday.

The letter, sent by Valley Land Fund’s attorneys, notified the government of the longtime organizati­on’s intent to pull out of the deal to sell the land in Salineno, known around the world for the birding preserve there.

Debralee Garcia-Rodriguez, the executive director, said she took issue with Customs and Border Protection officials who confirmed the sale of the land in a news release on Nov. 6. Stating that though an agreement was in place, the sale was not final as no money or deed had been exchanged.

She said the board agreed in late October — 11 to 1 — to sell the land in what she said was the hardest decision the board has had to make in nearly a decade.

The decision came after nearly a year of discussion­s about what to do with respect to the government’s attempt at land acquisitio­n at the birding center.

She said the board is made up of people on different sides of the political spectrum, but said she believed it made its decision based on what was in the best interest of the preserve and not based on personal politics.

On Friday, a day after news of the sale broke and amid public outcry, Valley Land Fund’s board of directors — which has four officers and eight members — convened with attorneys via Zoom to again discuss the sale, ultimately leading to the vote reversing the late October decision.

Garcia-Rodriguez, who has been the target of attacks online after word of the decision was made public, does not have a vote and is tasked with executing the decisions made by the board of directors. She has been the executive director with the conservati­on group since 2012.

The lifelong nonprofit executive and Rio Grande Valley native said the initial decision to sell the land, which was more than 10 months in the making, was a long and difficult decision thatwas only made after taking stock of all options available and after numerous attempts to delay the Corps’ efforts to close a deal on the land.

She said government officials first made contact with the preserve in January after identifyin­g a portion of land they wanted to use for the constructi­on of an enforcemen­t zone, related to constructi­on of a border wall.

“…(Government officials) wanted a small sliver of land, a portion of the property, the most valuable of the tract. It’s actually where our caretakers, (U.S. Fish and Wildlife staff ) reside, and all the action, the birding action happens,” the executive director said.

Garcia-Rodriguez said that after pushing back on selling even this sliver of land, roughly less than an acre in size, Corps officials made it clear to VLF that they would eventually pursue a lawsuit to condemn the land and take it from the preserve.

The preserve’s executive director said after that considerin­g everything that would go into not selling to the government, including the legal ramificati­ons, resources on hand, the fact that the adjacent land was government­owned, and the organizati­on’s long standing core mission — to preserve beautiful lands in the Rio Grande Valley — they felt selling the land to the government was the best path to continuing the group’s main mission.

“The sense was that if the U.S. government was going to take our land, they were going to take our land,” she said.

“But if you’re going to take (our) land, you’re going to have to pay for it. If the sale would have gone through, that would have been a very sad day for everybody.”

Garcia-Rodriguez said that although they recognized the utter disappoint­ment of having to sell what she characteri­zed as a “special piece of land” to the government, the thinking at the time was they would use the money from the sale to find another piece of land that would not be behind a barrier, and help continue the organizati­on’s legacy.

On Saturday, when asked about the preserve’s intention to walk away from the land deal, a CBP spokespers­on said the agency had not yet received any formal communicat­ion related to the board’s decision.

 ?? Cuate Santos / Laredo Morning Times ?? Zapata County officials expressed concern about the effect a border wall would have on the San Ygnacio Bird Sanctuary, and a local birding preserve in Starr County has pulled out of a wall deal.
Cuate Santos / Laredo Morning Times Zapata County officials expressed concern about the effect a border wall would have on the San Ygnacio Bird Sanctuary, and a local birding preserve in Starr County has pulled out of a wall deal.

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