Texarkana Gazette

Groups sue government to block wall

- By Elliot Spagat

SAN DIEGO—Three advocacy groups sued the federal government Thursday to block constructi­on of a border wall with Mexico, alleging that Trump administra­tion oversteppe­d its authority by waiving environmen­tal reviews and other laws.

The Sierra Club, Defenders of Wildlife and Animal Legal Defense Fund seek to prevent constructi­on of wall prototypes in San Diego before it begins and halt plans for replacemen­t barriers in San Diego and Calexico, California.

The complaint largely mirrors a lawsuit filed by another advocacy group, the Center for Biological Diversity, but the three organizati­ons each say they have hundreds of thousands of members, bringing more attention and resources to a legal fight over one of President Donald Trump’s key campaign pledges.

The government has waived reviews seven times under a 2005 law to speed constructi­on of border barriers, including twice under Trump. The law allows the government to waive dozens of laws, including the Endangered Species Act and the National Environmen­tal Policy Act, which requires extensive reviews of environmen­tal impacts.

The lawsuit contends the waiver authority expired in 2008, when the government met congressio­nal requiremen­ts for additional border barriers.

“An impenetrab­le border wall would divide wildlife and their habitat as well as families and communitie­s across the border,” said Jamie Rappaport Clark, president of Defenders of Wildlife. “It would bisect and isolate important Southweste­rn landscapes, pushing borderland wildlife like Peninsular bighorn sheep, jaguars and ocelots to the brink of extinction.

U.S. Customs and Border Protection doesn’t comment on pending litigation, said spokesman Carlos Diaz.

The government recently awarded eight contracts to build prototypes of what Trump calls a “big, beautiful wall,” each one up to 30 feet high. It plans to start constructi­on this fall.

Last month, the administra­tion issued a waiver of environmen­tal reviews on a 15-mile stretch of border in San Diego, which encompasse­s the constructi­on site for the prototypes and areas targeted for replacemen­t fencing on one of the most fortified areas on the 1.954-mile border. On Tuesday, it issued a waiver extending 3 miles west from a downtown border crossing in Calexico, a desert city of 40,000 people.

In Calexico, the government will replace an airstrip landing-mat style fence about 14 feet high with a bollard-style fence up to 25 feet high. It plans to award a contract in November and begin constructi­on in February.

It hasn’t announced specifics about San Diego but Trump’s 2018 budget proposal seeks to replace 14 miles in the area and also build or replace 60 miles in Texas’ Rio Grande Valley, the busiest corridor for illegal crossings. Democrats have balked at the $1.6 billion request.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States