Albuquerque Journal

450 miles of border wall by next year? It starts in Ariz.

Critics say barrier is a useless tool

- BY ASTRID GALVAN ASSOCIATED PRESS

YUMA, Ariz. — On a dirt road just feet from a dry section of the Colorado River, a small constructi­on crew is putting up a towering border wall that the government hopes will reduce — for good — the flow of immigrants who cross the U.S.Mexico border illegally.

Heavy equipment rumbles and beeps before it lowers 30-foot-tall sections of fence into the dirt. “Ahí está!” — “There it is!” — a Spanish-speaking member of the crew says as the men straighten the sections into the ground. Nearby, workers pull dates from palm trees not far from the cotton fields cars pass on the drive to the border.

South of Yuma, the tall brown bollards rising against a desert sky will replace much shorter barriers meant to keep out cars, not people.

This 5-mile section of fencing is where President Donald Trump’s most salient campaign promise — to build a wall along the entire southern border — is taking shape.

The president and his administra­tion said this week that the plan is to build 450 to 500 miles of fencing along the nearly 2,000-mile border by the end of 2020, an ambitious undertakin­g funded by billions of defense dollars earmarked for things like military base schools, target ranges and maintenanc­e facilities.

Two other Pentagon-funded constructi­on projects in New Mexico and Arizona are underway, but some are skeptical that so many miles of wall can be built in such a short amount of time. The government is up against last-minute constructi­on hiccups, funding issues and legal challenges from environmen­talists and property owners whose land sits on the border.

The Trump administra­tion says the wall — along with more surveillan­ce technology, agents and lighting — is key to keeping out people who cross illegally.

Critics say a wall is useless when most of those apprehende­d turn themselves in to Border Patrol agents in the hope they can be eventually released while their cases play out in immigratio­n court.

In Yuma, the defense-funded section of tall fencing is replacing shorter barriers that U.S. officials say are less efficient.

It comes amid a steep increase since last year in the number of migrant families who cross the border illegally in the Yuma area, often turning themselves in to Border Patrol agents. Many are fleeing extreme poverty and violence, and some are seeking asylum.

So far this year, Border Patrol agents in the Yuma sector have apprehende­d over 51,000 family units. That’s compared with just over 14,500 the year before — about a 250% increase.

The Yuma sector is the third-busiest along the southern border, with officials building a temporary, 500-person tent facility in the parking lot of the Border Patrol’s Yuma headquarte­rs in June.

 ?? MATT YORK/ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Government contractor­s erect a section of Pentagonfu­nded higher border wall Tuesday south of Yuma, Arizona.
MATT YORK/ASSOCIATED PRESS Government contractor­s erect a section of Pentagonfu­nded higher border wall Tuesday south of Yuma, Arizona.

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