Santa Fe New Mexican

President’s border wall risks us all

MY VIEW KEVIN BIXBY AND DARYL T. SMITH

- Kevin Bixby is executive director of the Southwest Environmen­tal Center in Las Cruces. Daryl T. Smith is a retired public health profession­al in Albuquerqu­e.

While New Mexicans are being asked to take extraordin­ary precaution­s to slow the spread of the coronaviru­s pandemic, the Trump administra­tion and its contractor­s continue to build the border wall, wasting federal resources and putting the lives of New Mexicans at risk.

At dozens of job sites along the border from California to Texas, workers from around the country still converge every day to work together in close quarters building the wall. They stay at local hotels and patronize local businesses, potentiall­y infecting local residents and putting a strain on border communitie­s whose focus now is on survival.

The fact that border wall constructi­on hasn’t slowed in the face of an unpreceden­ted national health crisis might seem irresponsi­ble, but it’s not surprising. There is a lot of money at stake for a handful of well-connected companies racing to complete lucrative contracts that might be canceled if a Democrat becomes president.

For example, Houston-based SLSCO is currently building 46 miles of new border wall in New Mexico’s Luna and Doña Ana counties under a $789 million contract, part of more than $1.5 billion total it has received in border wall contracts to date, according to the

Washington Post. Barnard Co. and its affiliate BFBC, both out of Bozeman, Mont., have landed contracts worth more than $1 billion to build new walls in Arizona and New Mexico.

But it is Albuquerqu­e’s own Southwest Valley Constructo­rs — a Kiewit Co. subsidiary that didn’t exist before 2017 — that has won the biggest prize so far, raking in nearly $1.8 billion to build the border wall in its short but profitable existence. Last month its workers were filmed dynamiting Native American burial sites to build the border wall in Arizona.

At the moment it is engaged in erecting new walls on private land in Texas seized by eminent domain, as well as installing new walls in southeast Arizona that will close off some of the last remaining trans-border corridors for jaguars and Mexican wolves, slicing

through the San Bernardino National Wildlife Refuge.

Behind all of this frenzy of wall building is President Donald Trump’s obsession to finish 500 miles of new border wall by 2021. To date, his administra­tion has amassed more than $18 billion to build the wall, most of it diverted from the military. If all goes as planned, when the last dollar is spent and the last contract completed, the entirety of California and New Mexico, most of Arizona and a good chunk of Texas will be sealed off with new 30-foot steel bollard walls.

It’s bad enough that the Trump Administra­tion continues to recklessly spend obscene amounts of money to fulfill the president’s campaign promise that could be used instead to fight the coronaviru­s pandemic. The money being spent on building the border wall in New Mexico, for example, would have paid for more than 15,000 advanced ventilator­s at $50,000 each.

But it’s worse when you consider that every mile of border wall installed under the Trump administra­tion has been accomplish­ed using an obscure legal authority that has allowed the president to ignore the Endangered Species Act, Safe Drinking Water Act and dozens of other laws to expedite constructi­on of the wall, causing irreparabl­e harm to border wildlife, the environmen­t and communitie­s.

In normal times, the border wall is a costly undertakin­g, and — as most Americans believe, according to polls — unnecessar­y. But these are far from normal times. The danger posed by COVID-19 to our communitie­s, our families and our lives cannot be ignored. It’s time to pull the plug on building the border wall.

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