Monterey Herald

Pecan farmers get caught in power vacuum on Texas border

- By Acacia Coronado

EAGLE PASS, TEXAS >> A Texas pecan farm nearly the size of Disneyland has become entangled in a turf war between the Biden administra­tion and Republican Gov. Greg Abbott over immigratio­n enforcemen­t on the southern border.

Hugo and Magali Urbina, who bought Heavenly Farms in April 2021, at first welcomed the state footing the bill for a new chain-link fence through their property earlier this year as part of Abbott's multibilli­on-dollar crackdown on border crossings along the Rio Grande. But then, one day, they found the fence's main gate unexpected­ly locked.

The lock was put there, the couple says, by Texas authoritie­s who have spent months arresting thousands of migrants on trespassin­g charges on private land. But the Urbinas didn't want the lock and neither did the U.S. Border Patrol, which found it impeded the agency's own immigratio­n enforcemen­t and had it removed.

Now a single gate on the 1,200-mile Texas border has swung open a new dust-up over how to address near-record levels of migration on America's southern doorstep, a fight the Urbinas say they want no part of.

“Unbelievab­le,” Abbott lashed out on social media last month after the lock was removed. “While Texas secures the border, the federal government is enabling illegal immigratio­n.”

The dispute is the latest example of how Texas' unpreceden­ted challenge to the federal government's authority on the border has created a clash among

agencies working at cross purposes.

The Border Patrol's Del Rio sector, which includes Eagle Pass where most of the nearly 470-acre farm is located, is fast becoming the busiest corridor for illegal crossings, with thousands passing each week onto the farm alone. The sector may soon surpass Texas' Rio Grande Valley, which has been the focus for the last decade.

The Urbinas do not oppose Abbott's massive border mission. But in the case of the lock, they say it went too far. They blamed what they see as a lack of single command in an area saturated with state troopers, Texas National Guard members, U.S. Border Patrol agents and local authoritie­s, all of whom constantly cross paths and often work in tandem.

“They are all doing what they are being told,” Magali Urbina said. “It is really not their fault, but there is nobody running or telling them. There is no boss.”

It isn't an isolated case. In September 2021, Texas troopers told Border Patrol agents on horseback to block migrants from crossing the river to a camp of nearly 16,000 predominan­tly Haitians in Del Rio, about an hour's drive north of Eagle Pass. Images of Border Patrol agents twirling reins at overpowere­d migrants sparked widespread criticism, including from President Joe Biden.

The internal investigat­ion found that agents acted against Border Patrol objectives and “resulted in the unnecessar­y use of force against migrants who were attempting to reenter the United States with food.” The agents had been “instructed to help where needed” and not told anything more specific about how to respond to requests from another agency.

Abbott, who is seeking a third term, launched his multibilli­on-dollar “Operation Lone Star” last year, creating an overwhelmi­ng presence on the border. The

size and cost of the mission has grown in defiance of the Democratic administra­tion in Washington:

Since July, the state has picked up 5,600 migrants who have entered the country illegally in Texas and returned them to ports of entry on the border, a role that has been reserved for U.S. Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t.

In Eagle Pass, state buses drop off migrants throughout the day at a border crossing with Piedras Negras, Mexico, as far as they can go. CBP releases them, creating a circular flow.

Since April, Texas has bused more than 7,000 migrants to Washington and New York on free, voluntary trips, attempting to call attention to what it considers Biden's failed policies. This week, Abbott began sending buses to Chicago, with the first arriving Thursday at Union Station. White House press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre has called the move a “political ploy.”

 ?? ERIC GAY — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Magali Urbina, right, talks through her fence to migrants who crossed the Rio Grande illegally at her pecan farm, Heavenly Farms, in Eagle Pass, Texas, on Aug. 26. .
ERIC GAY — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Magali Urbina, right, talks through her fence to migrants who crossed the Rio Grande illegally at her pecan farm, Heavenly Farms, in Eagle Pass, Texas, on Aug. 26. .

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