Houston Chronicle Sunday

Right-wing group clearing riverbanks to build wall

Agency calling for halt in work pending engineerin­g study

- By Nick Miroff

A right-wing group led by Stephen Bannon and prominent allies of President Donald Trump has been bulldozing the banks of the Rio Grande to erect a privately funded border fence along the water’s edge despite lacking permits to build on the internatio­nal flood plain in Texas.

We Build the Wall plans to install a 3½-mile “water wall” and paved road on private land immediatel­y adjacent to the river, which serves as the U.S.-Mexico boundary. Constructi­on activity along the riverbanks is tightly regulated under internatio­nal treaties because structures can exacerbate flood damage and alter the course of the river channel.

The Internatio­nal Boundary Water Commission, which issues permits to build in the channel, has asked the group to suspend constructi­on, submit a detailed engineerin­g study and withdraw its excavators and other heavy equipment from the river levees.

Brian Kolfage, president of We Build the Wall, said his group is barreling forward anyway, newly emboldened by praise for its work from senior Homeland Security Department officials.

“Who else loves the fresh smell of diesel in the morning when we’re building the wall?” Kolfage wrote on Twitter, posting videos of the banks of the Rio Grande scraped bare by graders and bulldozers. “Does it look like we were told stop? NOPE! Burning & Churning suckers.”

In Kolfage’s tweets and the online monologues of “Foreman Mike,” the group’s project manager, We Build the Wall also continues to serve as an elaborate trolling exercise for Trump’s critics and a showcase for the company hired to perform the work, North Dakota-based Fisher Industries. The private land in Mission, where the group is building the structure, was acquired by Tommy Fisher, the company’s CEO, Foreman Mike said.

“The people of Texas are rising up because We Build the Wall and Fisher Industries are going forward with this build,” shouted Foreman Mike, real name unknown, in another video. “Don’t listen to these freaks!” he says of the group’s opponents.

Nearby is the National Butterfly Center, a 100-acre nature preserve that claims to have the country’s highest concentrat­ion of the insects. The foundation that runs the preserve is suing to stop the Trump administra­tion from building a barrier through its land, making it a target for the president’s supporters.

We Build the Wall fashions itself as a grassroots organizati­on collecting hundreds of thousands of micro-donations. Its leadership page displays an allstar cast of conservati­ve culture warriors, led by Bannon, Trump’s former adviser and the co-founder of Breitbart News.

Kris Kobach, the immigratio­n hard-liner and former Kansas secretary of state, is the group’s general counsel. Blackwater USA founder Erik Prince, retired baseball pitcher Curt Schilling and ex-GOP Congressma­n Tom Tancredo are board members.

According to its website, the group has collected nearly $25 million in private donations and pledges, with plans to build at least 35 miles of barriers at up to 10 locations along the U.S.-Mexico border in support of Trump’s mission to seal it off to migrants. Jennifer Lawrence, a spokespers­on for We Build the Wall, did not respond to a request for comment about the group’s project and questions about the solidity of its hydrologic­al modeling.

Fisher Industries has bid repeatedly on billions of dollars in government border wall contracts under Trump, but the Army Corps of Engineers has not chosen the company for the work, even though the president has personally encouraged military and Homeland Security officials to hire the business.

Tommy Fisher, the CEO and a Republican donor, has claimed in repeat appearance­s on Fox News that he can build the wall faster and cheaper using patented techniques.

Those appear to include what Kolfage presented in a rendering of the Rio Grande project depicting what he called a “water wall” that would place the structure right next to the river, instead of on higher ground along the levees, where the Corps typically builds.

“The water wall is the first of its kind, and will be the first high tech smart border wall that is built near the water,” Kolfage wrote in another post. “This is the 21st century let’s start building civil projects like it is! No flood or storm will affect this wall!”

The Internatio­nal Boundary Water Commission (IBWC) has yet to be convinced of that. Created by a 1970 U.S.-Mexico treaty to manage the river, the agency requires detailed hydrologic­al modeling for major projects in the flood plain to determine whether a proposed structure will deflect or obstruct the path of the river during a flood. Such diversion of the river’s waters can alter the contours of the border itself, said Sally Spener, U.S. secretary for the commission.

“The river channel does move naturally, but we want to make sure it does not move as a result of constructi­on activity by humans that creates a deflection,” Spener said.

Fisher Industries submitted a hydrology report to the IBWC in late October before it began work on the project. The study consisted of six pages of slides that appeared to have been produced with basic paint-and-draw software.

The first page, labeled “typical cross section,” showed a pool of blue water with a tree and grass on one side labeled “United States” and the same tree and grass on the opposite bank, labeled “Mexico.”

Fisher project engineer Greg Gentsch wrote in the report that by stripping the vegetation from the banks and paving them with a road, the project will improve the flow of the Rio Grande.

“A less obstructed and well maintained riverbank will lower the flood elevation since there will be less obstructin­g vegetation on the banks in the floodway,” the report states.

Spener said a project of the magnitude proposed by We Build the Wall would require a “technical report at least a couple hundred pages in length,” as well as modeling studies calculatin­g hydraulic effects with a “grid-by-grid” analysis to show the structure’s potential effects on different segments of the channel during flooding.

“Once the model is completed, it should be summarized in a technical report to include a descriptio­n of findings, tables, maps and the models with the calculatio­ns,” she said.

An attorney for the IBWC sent a letter to Kobach and Gentsch asking the group to suspend constructi­on and submit a more sophistica­ted study.

The group has criticized the way federal agencies are building the new barriers and insist that their privately funded initiative would be better.

 ?? Associated Press file photo ?? Workers install new border wall sections near San Diego in January. In Texas, a group called We Build the Wall plans to install a 3½-mile section of barrier on private land in Mission.
Associated Press file photo Workers install new border wall sections near San Diego in January. In Texas, a group called We Build the Wall plans to install a 3½-mile section of barrier on private land in Mission.
 ??  ?? Brian Kolfage is president of the We Build the
Wall group.
Brian Kolfage is president of the We Build the Wall group.

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