Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Travel crackdown slows U.S.-Mexico traffic

- ELLIOT SPAGAT

SAN DIEGO — A crackdown on nonessenti­al travel from Mexico during the coronaviru­s pandemic has created bottleneck­s at the border, with drivers reporting waits of up to 10 hours to get into the United States.

An employee at a company that provides support for businesses with Mexican operations saw the huge lines Sunday night from his home in Tijuana. A U.S. citizen, he lined up at midnight for his 8 a.m. shift Monday in San Diego and still arrived 90 minutes late.

“I hope that it’s just startup fits and starts and that it will be a little more streamline­d down the road,” said Ross Baldwin, the man’s boss and president of Tacna Services Inc.

U.S. citizens and legal residents cannot be denied entry under a partial ban that the Trump administra­tion introduced in March to prevent the spread of the coronaviru­s. Going to work, school and medical appointmen­ts are deemed essential travel but going to shop, dine or socialize is not.

Andrea Casillas, who works at a Bed Bath & Beyond store in San Diego and lives in Tijuana because it’s less expensive, waited for four hours Monday.

“There is a price to pay [for commuting from Mexico], but it should be reasonable,” Casillas said. “This is going too far.”

The crackdown comes after the Customs and Border Protection agency said it surveyed about 100,000 travelers coming from Mexico by car or on foot and found 63% of U.S. citizens and legal residents traveled for reasons that were not essential.

The agency on Friday began redirectin­g staff members at 14 larger crossings in California, Arizona and Texas to get people through quickly on weekday mornings, when essential travel is heaviest, leading to big backups on the weekends.

On Tuesday, traffic was unusually light, with pedestrian­s wearing masks and keeping a short distance from one another. Weekend and weeknight delays are expected to grow, affecting people going to the beach or restaurant­s. Waits soared across the border last weekend, with California crossings hit hardest.

The measures don’t apply on the Canadian border, which is also subject to the nonessenti­al travel ban. Air travel isn’t affected.

Lines that snaked through Tijuana streets last weekend were the longest that many residents had seen, posing challenges for drivers desperate for a bathroom break.

Tijuana police said some people ran out of a gas in line. An 87-year-old woman died of a heart attack in her car as she waited Sunday to get through the nation’s busiest border crossing, in San Diego.

Angry people stuck in traffic lit up social media, posting photos and videos taken from their cars. One of them, Yadir Melendrez, said he waited five hours to cross for work Monday.

“The crossing is being slowed down to exasperate people on vacations or non-essential trips!” he wrote in a text message. “The bad thing is that those of us who go to work get hurt!”

Before the pandemic, about 200,000 people a day entered the U.S. at California crossings with Mexico, according to the Customs and Border Patrol agency . The daily average plunged to about 70,000 people after the ban was announced in March but has since climbed to about 120,000.

The agency is emphasizin­g public-health considerat­ions.

“We need people to think twice about nonessenti­al travel and to ask themselves if the travel is worth risking their lives and the lives of others,” spokesman Rusty Payne said.

Christophe­r Landau, U.S. ambassador to Mexico, said many people are crossing the border to visit family members, shop or dine out.

“Such irresponsi­ble behavior is exacerbati­ng the health crisis,” he wrote on Twitter.

“There is a price to pay [for commuting from Mexico], but it should be reasonable. This is going too far.”

— Andrea Casillas, who works at a Bed Bath & Beyond in San Diego and lives in Tijuana

 ?? (AP/Elliot Spagat) ?? People wait in line in Tijuana, Mexico, to enter the United States on Tuesday at San Diego’s San Ysidro border crossing.
(AP/Elliot Spagat) People wait in line in Tijuana, Mexico, to enter the United States on Tuesday at San Diego’s San Ysidro border crossing.

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