Las Vegas Review-Journal

Letting Mexican travelers into Arizona would solve this crisis

- Tim Steller Tim Steller is a columnist for the Arizona Daily Star.

There’s the crisis everyone thinks is happening on the border, and then there’s the crisis that people living in U.S. border towns are experienci­ng.

It’s the latter one they really want fixed, but the former one is getting most of the attention.

And they’re related in complicate­d ways.

The so-called crisis everyone knows about is the alleged “surge,” “wave,” “flood,” or “tsunami” — pick your aquatic-disaster metaphor — of people arriving at the Arizona-mexico border. No matter how many times Attorney General Mark Brnovich claims it on Fox Business Channel, that’s not such a big deal in Arizona. It’s more of a south Texas thing.

That hasn’t stopped Gov. Doug Ducey from exploiting the perception of a migration crisis to the hilt. He and Gov. Greg Abbott of Texas penned a hair-raising letter June 10 begging governors of other states to send their police officers as emergency assistance.

“On behalf of Texas and Arizona, we respectful­ly but urgently request that you send all available law-enforcemen­t resources to the border in defense of our sovereignt­y and territoria­l integrity.”

Sheriffs Chris Nanos of Pima County and David Hathaway of Santa Cruz County told me there’s no need for out-of-state officers patrolling borders in their counties.

But they actually could be useful — if we had them help out at the ports of entry.

The ports are the source of the real border crisis suffered by borderland residents. Since March 2020, 16 long months, the ports of entry have been closed to nonessenti­al travel. In other words, Mexican nationals with visas who want to go shopping or visit family can’t simply cross the border as usual.

The same isn’t true in the opposite direction. U.S. citizens can travel freely into Mexico and return home. The result of blocking Mexican visitors has been economic devastatio­n in downtown Nogales. Morley Avenue, for decades a lively shopping street, is deserted.

David Moore Jr., owner of David’s Western Wear on Morley, said business has been down about 80%. That’s because much of their business came from Mexican visitors taking a simple trip across the line for shopping. Now that customer base is gone.

“We have people from Tucson or Phoenix who go to see their relatives in Mexico,” he said. “They’ll stop and buy stuff occasional­ly, to take into Mexico.”

The effects reach to Tucson, where malls and stores already suffering from the turn to online shopping during the pandemic also lost some of their most dedicated shoppers, the ones who came regularly from Mexico.

This is the problem that border-town residents and, more recently, their political representa­tives are begging to fix.

U.S. Reps. Raúl Grijalva and Ann Kirkpatric­k, who represent the entire Arizona-mexico border, have written letters in recent weeks asking the feds to lift the closure.

Grijalva told me Friday he would like the emergency declaratio­n that justifies banning nonessenti­al visitors to be lifted to accommodat­e a more regional approach.

“Lift the emergency order and let the local authoritie­s look at the issue,” he said. “Let the regions do it.”

Gov. Ducey has also acknowledg­ed the need to keep boosting cross-border commerce. He visited Jaime Chamberlai­n’s new cooling warehouse in Nogales on June 16 and heard of the need for a reopened border.

Sen. Mark Kelly visited Nogales July 2 and heard about it. Sen. Kyrsten Sinema’s office helped arrange a meeting of the Arizona District Export Council last Thursday, and that’s where some of the complicati­ons became clearer.

Several attendees explained to me that the Title 42 public health emergency declaratio­n actually complicate­s reopening the border.

Since March 2020, Title 42 has been used to justify removal of most of the people who cross the border between ports of entry.

The political logic of Title 42 expulsions also keeps the ports closed. In other words, if pandemic conditions allow the ports of entry to be reopened for nonessenti­al travel, then Title 42 expulsions probably aren’t justified by the pandemic either. But there are also practical concerns, as Chamberlai­n explained to me Friday.

“If we open the border to nonessenti­al travel, there are going to be some challenges,” he said. “I think there will be a tremendous rush to come across the line, to go to Tucson and to Phoenix. A lot of people are chomping at the bit to travel and do business.”

He wants to see a phased reopening, with the ports reopening to visitors first, then other border policies loosening later.

Frankly, it’s overdue: If American nationals can cross into Mexico despite the pandemic, then Mexican nationals with visas can cross into the U.S. Beyond that, the pandemic precaution­s we require are up to us, and can be customized as the situation changes.

That would start to solve the real crisis afflicting Arizona’s border-town residents.

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