Porterville Recorder

Constructi­on begins to replace border wall in San Diego

- By ELLIOT SPAGAT

SAN DIEGO — The federal government began work Wednesday on replacing border wall in California, the first wall contract awarded in the Trump administra­tion outside of eight prototypes that were built last year in San Diego.

Customs and Border Protection is replacing a little more than 2 miles in downtown Calexico, a sliver of the president's plan for a "big, beautiful wall" with Mexico. A barrier built in the 1990s from recycled metal scraps and landing mat will be torn down for bollard-style barriers that are 30 feet high, significan­tly taller than existing walls.

The administra­tion is seeking $18 billion to extend the wall. Efforts to pay for it as part of a broader immigratio­n package that would include granting legal status for people who came to the county as young children failed in the Senate last week.

In November, SWF Constructo­rs of Omaha, Nebraska, won a contract for $18 million to replace wall in Calexico, about 120 miles east of San Diego. It encompasse­s an area bisected by the New River, where smugglers are known to guide people through polluted waters. The project, which includes a bridge over the river, is expected to take 300 days.

The administra­tion cleared the way for constructi­on in September by waiving dozens of environmen­tal and other reviews in Calexico. A 2005 law exempted it from environmen­tal reviews if the Homeland Security secretary deems a wall to be in national security interests, including the National Environmen­tal Policy Act, Clean Air Act and Endangered Species Act.

The Trump administra­tion has also issued waivers to build in San Diego and Santa Teresa, New Mexico. George W. Bush's administra­tion issued the previous five waivers, allowing the government to quickly extend the wall to nearly onethird of the border without legal challenges that can block constructi­on or cause major delays.

 ?? U.S. CUSTOMS AND BORDER PROTECTION PHOTO PROVIDED BY ?? In this 2016 file photo, a Border Patrol agent shows the path of a tunnel that crosses the U.s.-mexico border near Calexico. The federal government has started work on a border wall in California to replace a decades-old decaying barrier.
U.S. CUSTOMS AND BORDER PROTECTION PHOTO PROVIDED BY In this 2016 file photo, a Border Patrol agent shows the path of a tunnel that crosses the U.s.-mexico border near Calexico. The federal government has started work on a border wall in California to replace a decades-old decaying barrier.

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