Santa Fe New Mexican

Where border wall rises, ranchers see scar on range

Constructi­on of barrier has accelerate­d near New Mexico-Arizona border

- By Nick Miroff

RODEO — When ranchers and environmen­talists were fighting each other over the future of Western rangeland a generation ago, a group of families here along the U.S.-Mexico border joined to seek a middle path.

They founded the Malpai Borderland­s Group, working with big-money foundation­s to put conservati­on easements on tens of thousands of acres. The agreements protected critical desert habitats from developmen­t and industry while providing tax breaks to allow traditiona­l ranching to continue. The model was hailed as a breakthrou­gh.

William McDonald, a fifth-generation Arizona cattleman who led the effort, received a MacArthur “Genius Grant” in

1998, citing “his leading efforts to create ecological­ly responsibl­e cooperatio­n among government regulatory agencies, conservati­onists, scientists, and commercial ranchers in the West.”

Today, a few miles from the site where bulldozers and excavators are building President Donald Trump’s border wall, McDonald, 67, said he feels defeated and filled with regret. Decades of political wrangling and consensus-building — his life’s work — are being bulldozed.

“I feel like I’ve let down the generation­s to come because we’re going to have that ugly scar out here,” McDonald said. “It just makes me sick.”

Though Trump often has depicted border residents as the biggest beneficiar­ies of his signature project, the arrival of constructi­on crews and heavy equipment to this region has brought mostly bitterness and resignatio­n. Trump’s barrier is turning longtime friends against each other and is dramatical­ly — and perhaps permanentl­y — altering one of the wildest and most storied areas of the American West.

The Malpai founders, several of whom are conservati­ve Republican­s like McDonald, insist they continue to support strong border security, pointing out their many years of close cooperatio­n with the U.S. Border Patrol to report illegal activity and grant access to their properties.

What they oppose is the decision to put the massive steel barrier here, where they say it is unnecessar­y, wasteful and destructiv­e. Border Patrol officials argue that the new fencing will safeguard the country for decades to come, but many of the ranching families who live here — and who have spent their lives trying to strike a balance between wildlife and cattle, tradition and regulation — say they have been pushed aside.

The 20-mile stretch of border east of Douglas, Ariz., where crews are working, was once among the busiest places for illegal crossings. But it has been quiet for years, with just a few arrests each month, the families say. Their claims are supported by internal U.S. Customs and Border Protection reports obtained by the Washington Post that show the area is not a priority for the Border Patrol; it was not among the top 15 locations where the agency said it urgently needed new barriers.

The Trump administra­tion is building here anyway. The president is running for reelection on a promise to complete more than 500 miles of new border fence by early next year. While progress has been extremely slow in Texas, where nearly all of the land is in private hands, this area along the New Mexico-Arizona border has seen the pace of constructi­on accelerate.

The Malpai region has few property owners, relatively flat terrain and easy access to large tracts of land under federal control. Though it might not be a top security priority, it is one place the Trump administra­tion can build quickly.

Roy Villareal, chief of the Border Patrol’s Tucson sector, acknowledg­ed that the Malpai region has been quiet from a law enforcemen­t perspectiv­e in recent years, but he said it would be a mistake to assume that it will remain that way.

“What I do not want to have happen is a resurgence, and once again have us become the epicenter of the Southwest border,” Villareal said in an interview. “When we look at the placement of wall, we take into considerat­ion our past, our current needs, and start looking at the future.”

“The border is dynamic, and can change in a heartbeat,” he said.

McDonald and other founding members of the Malpai group are skeptical of the Border Patrol’s security arguments. They see political expediency instead.

The group had worked closely with federal agencies for more than two decades to align interests and minimize conflict, overcoming decades of mistrust toward the government. That relationsh­ip ended up lulling the group into a false sense of trust, McDonald said.

Border Patrol officials had assured the Malpai families that their span of border was not a priority for the barriers, McDonald said. By time the agency informed the group of the constructi­on plans, it was too late to challenge the government.

“I should have spoken up earlier,” McDonald said during an interview in the living room of his modest ranch home in a narrow canyon a mile from the border. “Maybe if we had fought them politicall­y, we could have made a difference.”

The late U.S. Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., had been a friend, McDonald said, and was a guest twice at his home. McDonald turned toward the window, where the winter sun was slipping below the canyon walls, his boots shifting on the plank floor. “If McCain were still here, he’d have stopped that wall,” he said.

Malpai co-founder Warner Glenn was hunting in the Peloncillo Mountains near the border in 1996 when he followed his baying hounds to a rocky outcroppin­g above a ravine. Glenn was expecting a mountain lion, but the animal was much larger, with black spots.

He took out his camera, and became the first person to photograph a wild, living jaguar on U.S. soil.

The photo was a watershed moment in Western conservati­on, and for Glenn and others, it was an affirmatio­n that the Malpai project was working to protect a truly special place. “The jaguar was a sign that we were doing the right thing,” he said.

The mountain range, which straddles the Arizona-New Mexico line, is among the few that connect to the much-larger western Sierra Madre of Mexico. For the elusive jaguar and other North American megafauna, the range is a crucial biological corridor, allowing animals to migrate north through remote areas with few people or roads.

Glenn’s jaguar photo, and sightings and remote-camera footage of big cats since then, have thrilled conservati­onists who argue that the American West can be brought back from decades of overgrazin­g, mining and habitat loss.

But the same features that make the Peloncillo range attractive to roaming jaguars also appeal to drug smugglers. Within a few years of Glenn’s sighting, Mexican trafficker­s were sending marijuana couriers with backpacks through the mountains nightly.

After delivering their loads at highway drop-off points north of the border, the smugglers often would hike back along the same mountain trails. Some would raid homes and ranches along the way before slipping back into Mexico. Thefts, vandalism and break-ins became routine.

If Glenn’s encounter with the jaguar was an electrifyi­ng moment for the Malpai conservati­on effort, the low point came in 2010, when Rob Krentz, one of the group’s members, was killed on his family’s ranch by a suspected trafficker near the tiny community of Apache, Ariz.

Krentz’s slaying shattered the notion that the violence of Mexico’s drug war would remain south of the border. Krentz had been warning authoritie­s that the migrants coming through the area were no longer primarily seasonal laborers looking for work, noting that more sinister elements were moving in.

After Krentz, 58, was found slumped in his four-wheeler with gunshot wounds, Glenn and a neighborin­g rancher tracked a single set of footprints southbound toward Mexico through a wash. They stopped where the footprints crossed the border. Krentz’s attacker was never found.

His son, Frank Krentz, still raises cattle on the family homestead where his father was killed. He is one of the few Malpai ranchers who support Trump’s plan to build the wall here.

Now 37, Krentz said he grew up riding horses and running all over the mountains, describing his childhood as a time of total freedom. That world was lost with his father’s killing, he said, and it is something that he said his children will never experience.

Krentz acknowledg­ed that there have been tensions among the Malpai families about the border wall, but he said other members are respectful of his views. He said he agrees with the critics who say the barrier will not stop determined border-crossers from getting through, but he said it will be worthwhile if it brings a degree of security and peace of mind.

“The Malpai are trying to keep open spaces, but open spaces are a view-scape,” Krentz said. “Why should citizens be scared because one tool wasn’t used?”

 ?? CAROLYN VAN HOUTEN/WASHINGTON POST ?? Border wall panels built near Corpus Christi, Texas, have traveled nearly a thousand miles for constructi­on in Douglas, Ariz.
CAROLYN VAN HOUTEN/WASHINGTON POST Border wall panels built near Corpus Christi, Texas, have traveled nearly a thousand miles for constructi­on in Douglas, Ariz.
 ?? CAROLYN VAN HOUTEN/WASHINGTON POST ?? William McDonald is a founding member and former executive director of the Malpai Borderland­s Group. ‘I feel like I’ve let down the generation­s to come because we’re going to have that ugly scar out here,’ McDonald said of President Donald Trump’s border wall. ‘It just makes me sick.’
CAROLYN VAN HOUTEN/WASHINGTON POST William McDonald is a founding member and former executive director of the Malpai Borderland­s Group. ‘I feel like I’ve let down the generation­s to come because we’re going to have that ugly scar out here,’ McDonald said of President Donald Trump’s border wall. ‘It just makes me sick.’

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