Texarkana Gazette

Amid Trump visit, it’s business as usual for California border towns

- By Elliot Spagat

CALEXICO, Calif.—The daily commute from Mexico to California farms is the same as it was before Donald Trump became president. Hundreds of Mexicans cross the border and line the sidewalks of Calexico’s tiny downtown by 4 a.m., napping on cardboard sheets and blankets or sipping coffee from a 24-hour doughnut shop until buses leave for the fields.

For decades, cross-border commuters have picked lettuce, carrots, broccoli, onions, cauliflowe­r and other vegetables that make California’s Imperial Valley “America’s Salad Bowl” from December through March. As Trump visits the border Tuesday, the harvest is a reminder of how little has changed despite heated immigratio­n rhetoric in Washington.

Trump will inspect eight prototypes for a future 30-foot border wall that were built in San Diego last fall. He made a “big, beautiful wall” a centerpiec­e of his campaign and said Mexico would pay for it.

But border barriers extend the same 654 miles they did under President Barack Obama and so far Trump hasn’t gotten Mexico or Congress to pay for a new wall.

Trump also pledged to expand the Border Patrol by 5,000 agents, but staffing fell during his first year in office farther below a congressio­nal mandate because the government has been unable to keep pace with attrition and retirement­s. There were 19,437 agents at the end of September, down from 19,828 a year earlier. In Tijuana, tens of thousands of commuters still line up weekday mornings for San Diego at the nation’s busiest border crossing, some for jobs in landscapin­g, housekeepi­ng, hotel maids and shipyard maintenanc­e. The vast majority are U.S. citizens and legal residents or holders of “border crossing cards” that are given to millions of Mexicans in border areas for short visits. The border crossing cards do not include work authorizat­ion but some break the rules. Even concern about Trump’s threat to end the North American Free Trade Agreement is tempered by awareness that border economies have been integrated for decades. Mexican “maquilador­a” plants, which assemble duty-free raw materials for export to the U.S., have made television­s, medical supplies and other goods since the 1960s. “How do you separate twins that are joined at the hip?” said Paola Avila, chairwoman of the Border Trade Alliance, a group that includes local government­s and business chambers. “Our business relationsh­ips will continue to grow regardless of what happens with NAFTA.”

 ?? Associated Press ?? ■ Farmworker Santiago Martinez of Mexicali, Mexico, picks cabbage before dawn in a field outside of Calexico, Calif.
Associated Press ■ Farmworker Santiago Martinez of Mexicali, Mexico, picks cabbage before dawn in a field outside of Calexico, Calif.

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