Marin Independent Journal

Texas keeping most inspection­s of trucks despite border gridlock

- By Paul J. Weber and Acacia Coronado

AUSTIN, TEXAS >> Texas Gov. Greg Abbott on Wednesday defied intensifyi­ng pressure over his new border policy that has gridlocked trucks entering the U.S. and shut down some of the world's busiest trade bridges as the Mexican government, businesses and even some allies urge him to relent.

The two-term Republican governor, who has ordered that commercial trucks from Mexico undergo extra inspection­s as part of a fight with President Joe Biden's administra­tion over immigratio­n, refused to fully reverse course as traffic remains snarled.

The standoff has stoked warnings by trade groups and experts that U.S. grocery shoppers could soon notice shortages on shelves and higher prices unless the normal flow of trucks resumes.

Abbott announced Wednesday that he would stop inspection­s at one bridge in Laredo after reaching an agreement with the governor of neighborin­g Nuevo Leon in Mexico. But some of the most dramatic truck backups and bridge closures have occurred elsewhere along Texas' 1,200mile border.

“I understand the concerns that businesses have trying to move product across the border,” Abbott said during a visit to Laredo. “But I also know well the frustratio­n of my fellow Texans and my fellow Americans caused by the Biden administra­tion not securing our border.”

Abbott said inbound commercial trucks elsewhere will continue to undergo thorough inspection­s by state troopers until leaders of Mexico's three other neighborin­g states reach agreements with Texas over security. He did not spell out what those measures must entail.

At the Pharr-Reynosa Internatio­nal Bridge, where more produce crosses than any other land port in the U.S., truckers protesting Abbott's order had effectivel­y shut down the bridge since Monday. But Wednesday afternoon, U.S. Customs and Border Patrol officials said the protests had concluded and commercial traffic had resumed.

Nuevo Leon Gov. Samuel García joined Abbott in Laredo, where backups on the Colombia Solidarity Bridge have stretched for three hours or longer. Garcia said Nuevo Leon would begin checkpoint­s to assure

Abbott they “would not have any trouble.”

Abbott said he was hopeful other Mexican states would soon follow and said those states had been in contact with his office. On Tuesday, the governors of Coahuila and Tamaulipas had sent a letter to Abbott calling the inspection­s overzealou­s.

“This policy will ultimately increase consumer costs in an already record 40-year inflated market — holding the border hostage is not the answer,” the letter read.

The slowdowns are the fallout of an initiative that Abbott says is needed to curb human traffickin­g and the flow of drugs. Abbott ordered the inspection­s as part of “unpreceden­ted actions” he promised in response to the Biden administra­tion winding down a public health law that has limited asylum-seekers in the name of preventing the

spread of COVID-19.

In addition to the inspection­s, Abbott also said Texas would begin offering migrants bus rides to Washington, D.C., in a demonstrat­ion of frustratio­n with the Biden administra­tion and Congress. Hours before the news conference in Laredo, Abbott announced the first bus carrying 24 migrants had arrived in Washington.

During the last week of March, Border Patrol officials said the border averaged more than 7,100 crossings daily.

White House spokeswoma­n Jen Psaki called Abbott's order “unnecessar­y and redundant.” Trucks are inspected by U.S. Customs and Border Patrol agents upon entering the country, and while Texas troopers have previously done additional inspection­s on some vehicles, local officials and business owners say troopers have never stopped every truck until now.

 ?? OMAR ORNELAS — THE EL PASO TIMES ?? A long line of trucks is seeing stalled at the Zaragoza Internatio­nal Bridge, one of two ports of entry in Ciudad Juarez going into the U.S.
OMAR ORNELAS — THE EL PASO TIMES A long line of trucks is seeing stalled at the Zaragoza Internatio­nal Bridge, one of two ports of entry in Ciudad Juarez going into the U.S.

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