Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

Inspection program cuts border crossing times

US, Mexico officers jointly examining commercial shipments

- By ASTRID GALVAN

NOGALES, Ariz. — Federal authoritie­s say a program that allows U.S. and Mexico officers to jointly inspect commercial trucks heading north has reduced border crossing wait times in Arizona.

U.S. Customs and Border Protection Commission­er Gil Kerlikowsk­e and his Mexican counterpar­t, Ricardo Trevino, said at a news conference on Thursday in Nogales, Arizona, that wait times for certain cargo shipments from Mexico into the U.S. dropped from three to four hours to just 25 minutes.

The pilot program that began last week includes only trucks enrolled in a special anti-terrorism program that allows them to go through expedited inspection­s. The dual-inspection program, which is in a 90-day pilot phase, allows Mexican customs officers who have been screened by U.S. authoritie­s to work in the cargo inspection facility at the Nogales Port of Entry in Arizona. Mexican authoritie­s already inspect outbound trucks before they get to the U.S., meaning the co-inspection­s were cut from two different searches to just one.

“The things we are talking about today are just very important to improve the speed of commerce,” Kerlikowsk­e said. “The unified cargo processing saves time, it saves trade stakeholde­rs money, and that means that cargo, especially produce that is so subject to environmen­tal concerns, moves more quickly.”

Trade with Mexico accounts for billions in profit in the United States. Arizona ports of entry alone facilitate­d $18.1 billion in imports from Mexico to the United States last year, according a report by the Economic and Business Research Center at the University of Arizona’s Eller College of Management.

“The key thing to keep in mind is that both import and exports through our ports of entry can improve the state’s economy,” the program’s director, George Hammond, said. “Mexico is a key trade partner with us.”

A similar operation in Southern California and Laredo, Texas, allows U.S. agents to inspect cargo vehicles from the Mexican side of the border. Kerlikowsk­e said that although it has been in effect in Arizona for only a week, it’s clear the program is already working.

Customs and Border Protection has dedicated a special lane for the companies whose trucks qualify for faster inspection­s. Officers from the United States and Mexico side work side by side to inspect shipments, making sure they are what they’re supposed to be and free of any illegal or dangerous items.

Guillermo Valencia, the chairman of The Greater Nogales and Santa Cruz County Port Authority, said that his organizati­on lobbied Customs and Border Protection to implement the program in Arizona and that it has already reduced wait times.

“I think that the program is gonna work so well that we’re gonna be pressed to expand it. I really think it’s a novel idea,” Valencia said. “It shows how most government­s can work together and collaborat­e on improving the efficiency of the importing.”

The port authority in the past has criticized Customs and Border Protection over low staffing at Nogales ports, especially in the inspection facility. The agency has struggled to attract new officers for its Office of Field Operations since announcing nearly two years ago that it had been allocated 170 new positions in Arizona.

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 ?? ASTRID GALVAN/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? U.S. Customs and Border Protection officer Rachel McCormick, left, and Mexican customs officer Alejandra Galindo demonstrat­e cargo inspection at the Mariposa Inspection Facility at the Nogales Port of Entry in Arizona.
ASTRID GALVAN/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS U.S. Customs and Border Protection officer Rachel McCormick, left, and Mexican customs officer Alejandra Galindo demonstrat­e cargo inspection at the Mariposa Inspection Facility at the Nogales Port of Entry in Arizona.
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