Los Angeles Times

Border barrier project completed

Funding for Trump’s wall is still in question, but a two-mile stretch of fence gets updated.

- By Kate Morrissey

SAN DIEGO — Constructi­on workers last week put up the final panel of a new border barrier in Calexico, Calif., a project touted by President Trump as the first part of his promised wall between Mexico and the U.S.

Almost two years into Trump’s presidency, Congress has so far avoided funding a full-f ledged border wall. The approximat­ely $1.6 billion in funding that has been awarded to border constructi­on has focused on replacemen­t barrier projects with restrictio­ns about the type of structures that could be built with the money.

That meant that the Trump administra­tion couldn’t build barriers that resemble the wall prototypes that were erected last year near the border.

Whether the Calexico barrier is actually part of Trump’s promised wall has been heavily debated since the project was announced in February.

The estimated $18-million project replaced just over two miles of a 1990s barrier made of steel Vietnam War-era military aircraft landing mats with 30-foot bollards — poles placed close together to restrict entry but allow people on either side to see through.

Department of Homeland Security officials previously called existing border barriers “fences,” but after constructi­on began in Calexico, they began to refer to both old and new structures as part of a “border wall” and, more recently, a “border wall system.”

Gloria Chavez, chief of the El Centro sector of the U.S. Border Patrol, said the new Calexico barrier is “a solid first step in strengthen­ing our border security posture.”

“The border wall will greatly enhance our agents’ ability to detect and arrest those entering the country illegally,” Chavez said, adding that she believes it will also have a positive effect on the surroundin­g border communitie­s.

Planning for the barrier replacemen­t project began in 2009, but funding and constructi­on came under the Trump administra­tion.

The only characteri­stic the new structure shares with Trump’s border wall prototypes is its height. At 30 feet, it towers over older fencing in the El Centro sector, which at the highest rises to about 20 feet.

Six of the eight prototypes don’t fit one of the Border Patrol’s main criteria for new constructi­on — being able to see through the barrier to better respond to crossing attempts and improve agent safety. According to a recent report from the Government Accountabi­lity Office, Customs and Border Protection also determined that all of the prototypes would present constructi­on challenges.

The Calexico structure is one of several going up along the Southwest border this year. Workers recently completed 20 miles of border barrier in Santa Teresa, N.M., a project that began in April.

Constructi­on crews are also working to replace 14 miles of landing-mat barrier along the San Diego-Tijuana border. According to Border Patrol Agent Tekae Michael, workers have completed about 6 ½ miles of that project, which began in June.

Border Patrol Agent Justin Castrejon said at least one person has already been injured and hospitaliz­ed after falling from the new, taller structure while trying to climb over it.

Environmen­tal activists have raised objections to border barrier constructi­on, saying it disrupts habitats and migration patterns of a variety of animals, including endangered species.

On Wednesday, the Department of Homeland Security announced that it would waive environmen­tal impact assessment requiremen­ts for a constructi­on project in the Rio Grande Valley sector in Texas, the sector that currently sees the highest number of illegal border crossings.

“The Rio Grande Valley is one of the most spectacula­r and biological­ly important landscapes in the country,” said Laiken Jordahl, borderland­s campaigner for the Center for Biological Diversity. “Every acre is irreplacea­ble. We’ll do everything in our power to stop this destructio­n.”

The organizati­on sued over similar waivers that DHS put in place for Calexico and San Diego constructi­on. A federal judge sided with the Trump administra­tion, and the Center for Biological Diversity is appealing that decision.

A tweet from the El Centro sector announcing the end of constructi­on promised more border infrastruc­ture improvemen­ts in 2019.

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

 ?? Nelvin C. Cepeda San Diego Union-Tribune ?? SHOWN in September, the $18-million project replaced a corrugated steel fence in Calexico with 30-foot bollards that allow agents to see through to the other side.
Nelvin C. Cepeda San Diego Union-Tribune SHOWN in September, the $18-million project replaced a corrugated steel fence in Calexico with 30-foot bollards that allow agents to see through to the other side.

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