The Arizona Republic

Crews chop cottonwood trees at San Pedro River to clear border wall path

- Erin Stone Environmen­tal coverage in The Arizona Republic and on azcentral.com is supported by a grant from the Nina Mason Pulliam Charitable Trust.

A week after more than a thousand people gathered at the Hereford Bridge over the San Pedro River to protest constructi­on of a border wall, crews cut down five cottonwood trees, raising alarms among residents and activists.

Jeff Sturges and his wife, Elizabeth Lopez, hiked to the area on Monday. They spent hundreds of hours in prior weeks organizing the protest to protect the river. When they arrived at the internatio­nal boundary, they found trees felled and two Cochise County dumpsters full of debris.

“It sure was dishearten­ing to see everything ignored like that,” Sturges said in a phone interview. He shared photos of the scene with The Arizona Republic.

Many people are concerned that wildlife migration, sensitive habitats, undevelope­d landscapes and limited water resources will be irreparabl­y harmed because the government waived dozens of federal environmen­tal and cultural protection laws that typically trigger thorough studies before constructi­on took place.

The loss of the trees underscore­s concerns about constructi­on at the San Pedro, which flows northward from Sonora, Mexico, across the border into Arizona. Activists and locals fear that any additional infrastruc­ture in the floodplain could effectivel­y dam the river.

During the summer monsoon, the river swells into a wide deluge, carrying with it debris, trees, trash and other objects. Just a few weeks ago, debris and mud could be seen pushed up against some of the Normandy-style barriers that currently mark the internatio­nal boundary in the floodplain.

Border Patrol removes these barriers during the monsoon to prevent flooding and debris buildup and agents monitor the river crossing 24 hours a day.

“Anybody with common sense will know any structure that is built to restrict human movement will also restrict animal movement and also cause some devastatin­g problems when whole trees wash down the river,” Sturges said.

Plans call for a concrete culvert to be built at the river where it crosses the border, though Customs and Border

Protection, the agency that oversees border security, would not confirm further design details.

In an email to The Republic, the agency said it will remove fewer than 10 trees “in order to provide safe clearance for constructi­on equipment that will be used for new border wall constructi­on in this area.” About a dozen trees had been marked for removal several months ago.

In a press release, a Cochise County spokespers­on said the county was not aware the dumpsters were being used for the border infrastruc­ture project until Tuesday morning.

The County’s Public Works Department had contracted the dumpsters for yard waste at the Coronado National Memorial visitor center, according to the press release. After arriving at the visitor center on Monday, the driver was redirected to the San Pedro River for the border fence project, according to the release.

“Cochise County has not been contracted or communicat­ed with by any federal agencies to assist with the border fence project,” a county spokespers­on said in a press release. “The County has no jurisdicti­on with regards to projects built on federally owned land and has not been consulted on this issue.”

Last week, Bureau of Land Management field staff met with representa­tives from Customs and Border Protection and the US Army Corps of Engineers, the agency overseeing the constructi­on contractor, to discuss the contractor’s plans to remove trees in the Roosevelt Reservatio­n, a 60-foot-wide easement owned by the federal government along the border.

The Bureau of Land Management oversees the San Pedro Riparian National Conservati­on Area, which is hemmed along the border by the Roosevelt easement at the San Pedro River crossing.

“CBP will continue to consult with the Bureau of Land Management to identify measures that avoid or minimize environmen­tal impacts to this area, to the greatest extent possible,” the agency wrote in a statement.

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