Los Angeles Times

Targeting ties to border wall

The San Diego City Council moves to require firms to report bids or work affiliated with Trump’s project.

- By Kate Morrissey kate.morrissey@sduniontri­bune.com Morrissey writes for the San Diego Union-Tribune.

San Diego moves to require contractor­s to report work affiliated with the project.

SAN DIEGO — The San Diego City Council will keep moving forward with its plan to require contractor­s to disclose whether they work on President Trump’s border wall.

At a budget committee meeting this week, council members voted 3 to 1 to have city officials draft an ordinance that would require contractor­s competing for city projects to disclose any past, present or planned bids, or actual work on parts of the president’s promised border wall.

It was not clear from the decision whether that disclosure might affect a contractor’s ability to get city work or whether the city might publish a list of contractor­s who have connection­s to the wall.

“Trump’s border wall does nothing to promote San Diego’s robust economy and our positive internatio­nal ties with Mexico,” said Council President Pro Tem Barbara Bry. “Our region is stronger because of our cross-border exchange with our neighbors to the south.”

Councilman Chris Ward said he knows of at least one company that made a bid on border wall constructi­on that may end up working on a major constructi­on project for the city.

A spokesman for Councilwom­an Georgette Gómez, who has led the city’s push against the proposed border wall, said she is happy to see the city moving forward.

Councilman Chris Cate was the lone vote against the move. He called the idea a “bad precedent” meant to shame employers and employees. “These folks rely on jobs to provide for their families,” Cate said.

During the meeting, the committee reviewed approaches that other cities have taken to show opposition to the wall envisioned along the Mexican border. The report, presented by Jeff Kawar of the city’s office of the independen­t budget analyst, was the result of a resolution that the council passed in September.

Kawar said of the six cities with similar resolution­s that his office studied, Oakland had the most aggressive rules. That city requires contractor­s to file a statement that they have not and will not seek work on the border wall.

Los Angeles, he said, requires contractor­s to explain any affiliatio­n with the wall and keeps those filings as public record.

Other cities are still debating how they will enact such ordinances and whether they should include only work on actual border wall projects, such as the prototypes at Otay Mesa, or also include other fencing replacemen­t work.

Benjamin Prado of the American Friends Service Committee, the only member of the public to address the committee over the border wall issue, urged the city to publish a list of contractor­s who have border wall affiliatio­ns.

Paige Folkman, a deputy city attorney, cautioned the committee that asking companies to disclose informatio­n about border wall participat­ion might open the city up to litigation risks. She said the city attorney’s office would have to work closely with other department­s to review ordinance plans for legal concerns.

“This is not a slam dunk,” Folkman said.

 ?? K.C. Alfred San Diego Union-Tribune ?? U.S. CUSTOMS official Mario Villarreal walks near border wall prototypes east of San Ysidro.
K.C. Alfred San Diego Union-Tribune U.S. CUSTOMS official Mario Villarreal walks near border wall prototypes east of San Ysidro.

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