Los Angeles Times

Lawmakers move to shut out border wall contractor­s

- JOHN MYERS john.myers@latimes.com Twitter: @johnmyers

SACRAMENTO — California legislator­s took the first step Tuesday to ban state government contracts for any company that helps build President Trump’s promised wall along the U.S.-Mexico border, with the author of the plan urging colleagues “to be on the right side of history.”

The bill by state Sen. Ricardo Lara (D-Bell Gardens) would prohibit any company from receiving a new or extended contract with the state of California if it participat­es in a future effort to build a new wall along the 2,000-mile internatio­nal border.

“The wall is another attempt to separate and divide us,” Lara said in testimony to the Senate Government­al Organizati­on Committee. “It sends a message that we are better off in a homogenous society.”

Senate Bill 30 won committee passage on a partyline vote, with Republican­s expressing concern about the need for additional border security. Representa­tives of the constructi­on industry also voiced opposition, arguing Lara’s bill forces contractor­s into the middle of a divisive political fight.

“This is precedent-setting,” said Todd Bloomstine, a lobbyist representi­ng the Southern California Contractor­s Assn. “What next unpopular project would be [on the] blacklist?”

Lara told lawmakers he will amend the bill to exclude any work by a company — including current bids on border wall projects — that takes place prior to the bill’s becoming law.

Trump’s campaign promise of a new border wall remains in limbo in Washington, as members of Congress on both sides of the aisle voice skepticism about its funding.

Tuesday’s hearing in Sacramento often veered into the appropriat­eness of the wall itself, with environmen­tal groups expressing concerns about animal species that live on both sides of the border. That testimony became emotional for Juan Altamirano, an associate director of Audubon California who crossed the border with his family as a young child.

“We need more migration and not stagnation,” Altamirano said.

 ?? Rich Pedroncell­i Associated Press ?? STATE SEN. Ricardo Lara aims to bar firms that work on the border wall from getting state contracts.
Rich Pedroncell­i Associated Press STATE SEN. Ricardo Lara aims to bar firms that work on the border wall from getting state contracts.

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