Imperial Valley Press

California loses border wall challenge at appeals court

-

LOS ANGELES (AP) — A federal appeals court ruled that the Trump administra­tion did not exceed its powers by waiving environmen­tal rules to speed up constructi­on of prototypes and replacemen­t of the U.S.-Mexico border wall.

The 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals on Monday rejected arguments by the state of California and environmen­tal groups who tried to block work that has mostly been completed near San Diego and Calexico.

The 2-1 opinion upheld a lower court decision that found the Illegal Immigratio­n Reform and Immigrant Responsibi­lity Act of 1996 allows the Department of Homeland Security to avoid lengthy environmen­tal reviews to speed constructi­on of border barriers.

The one dissenting judge said the case should have been thrown out because such appeals belong before the Supreme Court.

The ruling came as Congress worked out a government funding deal that includes some but not all of the money President Donald Trump wants for his cherished border wall expansion. A dispute over that funding, which does not include the sections of wall challenged in court, led to an unpreceden­ted 35-day government shutdown that ended last month.

The appeals court case argued in Pasadena in August revolved around whether the Homeland Security secretary had authority to waive dozens of laws including the National Environmen­tal Policy Act and Endangered Species Act. Reviews required by those laws can often delay or derail projects.

The administra­tion has issued several waivers to build sections of border wall in California, New Mexico and Texas. Lawsuits opposed to some of those projects are pending, but legal challenges to such barriers have failed over the years amid national security concerns.

At issue in court were waivers the secretary issued in 2017 to cover fencing in two California cities.

The waivers were for eight prototypes built in San Diego and 2 miles (3 kilometers) of replacemen­t fencing completed in downtown Calexico. Constructi­on is almost complete on one 14-mile section of barrier in San Diego and work is about to start on another of the same length.

 ?? AP PHOTO/GREGORY BULL ?? In this 2018 file photo, boys look through an older section of the border structure from Mexicali, Mexico, alongside a newly-constructe­d, taller section, left, in Calexico, Calif.
AP PHOTO/GREGORY BULL In this 2018 file photo, boys look through an older section of the border structure from Mexicali, Mexico, alongside a newly-constructe­d, taller section, left, in Calexico, Calif.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States