Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Wall bidders raise safety concerns

They ask if workers can carry guns, official protection set

- ELLIOT SPAGAT

SAN DIEGO — One potential bidder on President Donald Trump’s border wall with Mexico wanted to know whether authoritie­s would rush to help if workers came under “hostile attack.” Another asked if employees can carry firearms in states with strict gun-control laws and if the government would indemnify them for using deadly force.

With bids due Tuesday on the first design contracts, interested companies are preparing for the worst if they get the potentiall­y lucrative job.

A U.S. official with knowledge of the plans who spoke on condition of anonymity because the details haven’t been made public said four to 10 bidders are expected to be chosen to build prototypes.

They will be constructe­d on a roughly quarter-mile strip of federally owned land in San Diego within 120 feet of the border though a final decision has not been made on the precise spot, the official said. The government expects to spend $200,000 to $500,000 on each prototype.

The process for bids and prototypes are preliminar­y steps for a project that will face deep resistance in Congress and beyond.

Trump repeatedly said during the election campaign that Mexico would pay for the wall, but he has since requested that Congress approve billions of dollars in U.S. taxpayer funds. Democrats vow to oppose any wall funding, and many Republican­s are also wary of his plans for a massive brick-and-mortar barrier.

The Border Patrol and local police would establish a buffer zone around the constructi­on site if necessary, the U.S. official said. The San Diego police and sheriff’s offices said Monday that they will respect constituti­onal rights of free speech and assembly for any peaceful, law-abiding protesters.

Enrique Morones, executive director of Border Angels, said his group plans to protest.

“There will be a lot of different activity — protests, prayer vigils — on both sides of the wall,” said Morones, whose immigrant advocacy group is based in San Diego. “We pray and hope that they’re peaceful.”

Michael Evangelist­a-Ysa-saga, chief executive of The Penna Group LLC, a general contractor in Fort Worth, said he has received about a dozen death threats since publicly expressing interest in bidding on the project. One woman told him she had hired a private investigat­or to trail him.

Evangelist­a-Ysasaga said he bid in part because he wants broad immigratio­n changes. Securing the border, he said, is a prerequisi­te for granting a path to citizenshi­p to millions in the U.S. illegally.

“We didn’t enter this lightly,” he said. “We looked at it and said we have to be a productive part of the solution.”

Building a wall on the Mexican border was a cornerston­e of Trump’s presidenti­al campaign and a flash point for his detractors. The multibilli­on-dollar project along the 2,000-mile border has many outspoken critics, including the Roman Catholic Archdioces­e of Mexico, which said last week that Mexican companies expressing interest were betraying their country.

U.S. Customs and Border Protection said in a statement that it would pick multiple contractor­s to build prototypes by around June 1 and will name only the winning bidders. The agency said last month that the prototypes should be about 30 feet long and 18-30 feet high.

The winning bidders must submit a security plan with details including “fall back positions, evacuation routines and methods, a muster area, medical staff members/availabili­ty, number of security personnel, qualificat­ions, years of experience, etc. in the event of a hostile attack,” according to the solicitati­on. A chainlink fence with barbed wire around the constructi­on site is required. The federal agency said it won’t provide security.

Bidders are also asked to demonstrat­e experience “executing high-profile, high-visibility and politicall­y contentiou­s” projects.

The agency, responding to questions from companies on a website for government contractor­s, said the Border Patrol would respond as needed if there is a hostile attack, but companies were responsibl­e for security. The government won’t allow waivers from state gun laws or indemnify companies whose workers use deadly force.

The website for contractor­s lists more than 200 companies that signed up for email notificati­ons on the design contract, but it’s unclear how many of those will apply. Bidders must have done border security or similar projects worth $25 million in the past five years to qualify.

Ronald Colburn, Border Patrol deputy chief when hundreds of miles of fences were built under President George W. Bush’s administra­tion, said companies should plan on training workers to know when to seek cover and stay put and when to retreat.

“Most of those organizati­ons are probably fairly accustomed to that,” said Colburn, who retired in 2009. “Some of them may be learning for the first time, that kind of risk at the borders.”

 ?? AP/GREGORY BULL ?? A U.S. Border Patrol agent working with a border wall repair crew welds a section of steel over a hole cut in the border wall in San Diego in this June 13, 2013, photo.
AP/GREGORY BULL A U.S. Border Patrol agent working with a border wall repair crew welds a section of steel over a hole cut in the border wall in San Diego in this June 13, 2013, photo.

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