Albuquerque Journal

Work on more border wall starts on 46-mile stretch west of Santa Teresa and Arizona

Funds come through Trump executive order

- BY CEDAR ATTANASIO AND ASTRID GALVAN

SANTA TERESA, N.M. — Work crews in New Mexico and Arizona forged ahead Friday with constructi­on of taller border fencing funded through a national emergency declaratio­n by President Donald Trump.

The work on his hallmark campaign promise involves mostly replacemen­t fencing along a 46-mile stretch of desert west of Santa Teresa and on 2 miles of Organ Pipe Cactus National Monument in Arizona.

At the New Mexico site, about 20 workers placed rebar frames for concrete footers along the path of the wall. A 50-foot crane towered over the site, standing out on the treeless brushland and cracked washes that stretch for miles in every direction.

Workers broke ground between Columbus and Santa Teresa — small towns near ports of entry along the border between New Mexico and the state of Chihuahua, Mexico.

In Arizona, crews were installing 30-foot steel fencing to replace older barriers next to a border crossing known as Lukeville Port of Entry.

Both projects are being funded with money initially allocated to the Defense Department that was redirected by Trump’s executive order.

Use of the money was previously frozen by lower courts while a lawsuit proceeded. Last month, however, the U.S. Supreme Court cleared the way for the use of about $2.5 billion.

A border wall was a keystone of the president’s 2016 election campaign, but Congress has resisted funding all of it. This year it allocated $1.4 billion, but the president wanted much more.

The administra­tion has awarded $2.8 billion in contracts for barriers covering 247 miles, with all but 17 miles of that to replace existing barriers instead of expanding coverage.

Various forms of barriers already exist along about a third of the border.

The constructi­on comes as immigrant apprehensi­ons have fallen sharply over the past two months due to the summer heat and a clamp down in Mexico.

Tens of thousands of people have come to the U.S. over the past year. Most are Central American families with children who turn themselves in to agents instead of trying to dodge them.

Environmen­talists have sued over some of the constructi­on contracts for the fencing, saying the government unlawfully waived dozens of laws so it could build on protected lands.

Conservati­onists say a wall — and its constructi­on— would be detrimenta­l to wildlife habitat and would block the migration of animals such as bighorn sheep and wolves. Two cases are pending in U.S. courts.

“It’s astonishin­g and sad to see Trump’s border wall being built through the most spectacula­r Sonoran desert ecosystem on the planet,” Laiken Jordahl, borderland­s campaigner with the Center for Biological Diversity, said Thursday.

Jordahl hoped the courts would step in to protect Organ Pipe Cactus National Monument.

 ?? CEDAR ATTANASIO /ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Workers break ground on new border wall constructi­on west of Santa Teresa Friday. The wall on the left was built with money allocated by Congress, while the new constructi­on funds come from the Defense Department.
CEDAR ATTANASIO /ASSOCIATED PRESS Workers break ground on new border wall constructi­on west of Santa Teresa Friday. The wall on the left was built with money allocated by Congress, while the new constructi­on funds come from the Defense Department.

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