Los Angeles Times

The next step for wall

With prototypes of proposed barrier now completed, examining will begin after concrete dries.

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SAN DIEGO — The U.S. government announced Thursday that prototypes for President Trump’s proposed border wall have been completed and will be subjected to punishment to test their mettle — by workers wielding sledgehamm­ers, torches, pickaxes and battery-operated tools.

The testing could lead to officials concluding that elements of several designs should be merged to create effective walls, said Ronald Vitiello, U.S. Customs and Border Protection’s acting deputy commission­er.

Results of the testing will dictate future wall constructi­on, which has not yet been funded by Congress. The testing won’t start for at least a month because some concrete in the wall prototypes still needs to dry.

Vitiello told reporters that workers during the 30to 60-day testing period will try to answer basic questions: “Can it be climbed? Can it be dug under? Can it withstand cutting tools?”

Why were the prototypes built?

The U.S. has 654 miles of single-layer fence along the 1,954-mile border with Mexico, plus 51 miles of doubleand triple-layer fence. This summer, the government picked six companies to build models to guide future constructi­on.

The models are spaced about 30 feet apart, a few steps from a fence made from old steel airstrip landing mats separating San Diego from Tijuana.

Contractor­s were awarded $300,000 and $500,000 for each model and had a month to build them.

What do the prototypes look like?

Each reaches the maximum allowed height of 30 feet or close to it — significan­tly higher than existing walls. Vitiello said the height was what struck him most on his tour Thursday.

The concrete walls are solid, preventing agents from seeing through them and into Mexico. Others are made of thick metal poles. Some are topped by round tubes, which are less vulnerable to grappling hooks.

One requiremen­t is for the walls to be “aesthetica­lly pleasing” from the U.S. side. What happens next?

Trump has asked Congress for $1.6 billion for the first installmen­t of the wall. It would replace 14 miles in San Diego and build 60 miles in Texas’ Rio Grande Valley, the busiest corridor for illegal crossings.

It’s unclear to what extent Trump will weigh in on the selection, and Vitiello said he didn’t know whether the president would visit the site. Trump has expressed interest in including solar panels, which are not part of any of the prototypes.

Three lawsuits — one filed by California's Democratic attorney general, Xavier Becerra — seek to block constructi­on, claiming the administra­tion oversteppe­d its authority by waiving environmen­tal reviews and other laws.

A hearing on the administra­tion’s request to dismiss the lawsuits is scheduled for Feb. 9 before U.S. District Judge Gonzalo Curiel, a target of Trump’s scorn for his handling of complaints against the now-defunct Trump University.

 ?? Elliott Spagat Associated Press ?? PROTOTYPES are studied Thursday. The results of rigorous testing will dictate future constructi­on.
Elliott Spagat Associated Press PROTOTYPES are studied Thursday. The results of rigorous testing will dictate future constructi­on.

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