The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Biden puts halt to Trump’s border wall

Billions of dollars of contracted work to remain unfinished.

- By Elliot Spagat

SAN DIEGO — In the days before Joe Biden became president, constructi­on crews worked quickly to finish Donald Trump’s wall at an iconic cross-border park overlookin­g the Pacific Ocean, which then-first lady Pat Nixon inaugurate­d in 1971 as a symbol of internatio­nal friendship.

Biden has ordered a “pause” on all wall constructi­on within a week, one of 17 executive orders issued on his first day in office, including six dealing with immigratio­n.

The order leaves billions of dollars of work unfinished — but still under contract — after Trump worked feverishly last year to build more than 450 miles, a goal he said he achieved eight days before leaving office.

As of Jan. 15, the government spent $6.1 billion of the $10.8 billion in work it signed contracts to have done, according to a Senate Democratic aide with knowledge of the contracts who spoke on condition of anonymity because details have not been made public. The full amount under contract would have extended Trump’s wall to 664 miles.

Biden, seeking to fulfill a pledge not to build “another foot,” gave his administra­tion two months to determine how much it would cost to cancel contracts and whether money could be spent elsewhere. The Senate aide said fees would be negotiated with contractor­s and the administra­tion would seek to spend whatever’s left on related uses on the border, such as roads, lights, sensors and other technology.

The Trump administra­tion said it secured $15 billion for the wall. The Senate aide said it was actually $16.45 billion, $5.8 billion of which was appropriat­ed by Congress and the rest diverted from the Defense and Treasury department­s.

The Trump administra­tion notified the Senate aide on Jan. 14 that it was moving ahead with a contract for $863 million, but it was not awarded.

The Army Corps of Engineers, which has awarded wall contracts with Defense Department money, said Thursday that it told crews not to install any additional barriers and to limit activity over the next few days to what is “necessary to safely prepare each site for a suspension of work.”

John Kurc, an activist who posts videos of dynamite blasts by wall constructi­on crews, said he saw one dynamite charge being set Wednesday afternoon in Guadalupe Canyon in easternmos­t Arizona, even as the inaugurati­on was playing out in Washington.

Heavy machines have been crawling over roadways gouged into rocky mountainsi­des, tapping open holes for posts on U.S. Bureau of Land Management property.

Advocates in Texas’ Rio Grande Valley, the busiest area for illegal crossings, and near Nogales, Arizona, saw idle constructi­on equipment Thursday.

But in San Diego, crews were out replacing a steel fence with imposing, tightly spaced poles topped with flat steel plates rising 30 feet, said Dan Watman of Friends of Friendship Park, a group that promotes public access to the cross-border park overlookin­g the Pacific Ocean.

Contractor­s began last week, said Watman, who was informed of the project in a December conference call with Border Patrol agents but got no explanatio­n for it. The agency referred questions to the White House.

Trump said the border wall would be “virtually impenetrab­le” and paid for by Mexico, which never happened. While the wall is much more formidable than the barriers it replaced, it isn’t uncommon for smugglers to guide people over or through it. Portions can be sawed with power tools sold at home improvemen­t stores.

Despite Trump’s bravado, Border Patrol officials have said the wall was never meant to stop everyone but rather to slow their advance.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States