Los Angeles Times

Border wall security costly

Expenses for patrols, other measures add up in San Diego County.

- By Greg Moran greg.moran@sduniontri­bune.com Moran writes for the San Diego Union-Tribune.

SAN DIEGO — The San Diego County Sheriff ’s Department incurred nearly $900,000 in added costs to provide patrols and security during the monthlong constructi­on of eight border wall prototypes by the federal government in Otay Mesa, records show.

Those costs pushed the total law enforcemen­t expenses for the project to more than $1 million.

Most of the expense for the Sheriff’s Department came in overtime pay for deputies: $764,278. But overtime wasn’t the only expense for the county, which patrolled the area from Sept. 26 to Oct. 26 where the prototype walls were constructe­d. Other costs were:

$118,092.66 for miles of chain-link fencing, K-rail barriers and signs installed before the constructi­on of prototypes began. The fencing wrapped around large parcels of private property in Otay Mesa. The county said it was needed to protect environmen­tally sensitive habitats in the event that large-scale protests against the project materializ­ed.

$11,101 for services and supplies.

$4,470 for an environmen­tal consultant and permits.

Adding it all up, the county paid out $897,942.22 in overtime, supplies, consultant and permit costs for the project. With the $715,000 in regular wages that would have been paid to the deputies working the border project detail, the total comes to $1.6 million.

The costs to the county, provided under a California Public Records Act request by the San Diego Union-Tribune, far exceed the costs to the city of San Diego, which also had police patrolling near the building site.

The city paid out $277,898 in overtime, services and supplies. It paid an additional $548,446 in regular salaries and fringe benefits to officers scheduled to be on duty anyway and re-assigned to the border project. That brought the city’s total expenses to $826,345.

Adding the overtime, supplies and other non-salary costs for the two agencies together shows that the city and county spent $1,175,840 for security for the project.

The city said it is unlikely it will be reimbursed, though it is exploring options. Alex Bell, a spokeswoma­n for the county, could not say whether it would be reimbursed.

The prototypes were constructe­d on a small plot of federal land in Otay Mesa, a stone’s throw from the border with Mexico. As the first tangible examples of President Trump’s centerpiec­e promise to construct a “big, beautiful wall” on the southwest border, the project was the subject of internatio­nal interest.

In the weeks before the work began, the Department of Homeland Security issued a memo to local law enforcemen­t, warning of the possibilit­y of large-scale protests that could turn violent.

The county took that to heart and developed security plans, Bell said.

“In the current environmen­t of social-media-driven events and ‘pop-up’ demonstrat­ions, the Sheriff’s Department evaluated the need to staff law enforcemen­t in sufficient numbers during the initial phases of the border wall prototype constructi­on,” Bell said in an email that accompanie­d release of the data.

There were no protests or demonstrat­ions during the 30 days of constructi­on, and no one was arrested at or near the site.

Nonetheles­s, Bell said the county planning and precaution­s were worth it.

“We are convinced that this uniformed presence coupled with the temporary fencing eliminated any inclinatio­n by individual­s interested in establishi­ng encampment­s … as well as polarizing demonstrat­ions,” she said.

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