The Columbus Dispatch

Texas landowners digging in against wall

- By Nomann Merchant

HIDALGO, Texas — As President Donald Trump traveled to the border in Texas to make the case for his $5.7 billion wall, landowner Eloisa Cavazos says she knows firsthand how the project will play out if the White House gets its way.

The federal government has started surveying land along the border in Texas and announced plans to start constructi­on next month. Rather than surrender their land, some property owners are digging in, vowing to reject buyout offers and preparing to fight the administra­tion in court.

“You could give me a trillion dollars and I wouldn’t take it,” said Cavazos, whose land sits along the Rio Grande, the river separating the U.S. and Mexico in Texas. “It’s not about money.”

Trump arrived Thursday in Mcallen, a city of 143,000 that is on the busiest part of the border for illegal crossings. He toured a section of the border and said “a lot of the crime in our country is caused by what’s coming through here.”

He added: “Whether it’s steel or concrete, you don’t care. We need a barrier.”

Congress in March funded 33 miles of walls and fencing in Texas. The government has laid out plans that would cut across private land in the Rio Grande Valley. Those in the way include landowners who have lived in the valley for generation­s, environmen­tal groups and a 19th century chapel.

Many have hired lawyers who are preparing to fight the government if, as expected, it moves to seize their land through eminent domain.

The opposition will intensify if Democrats accede to the Trump administra­tion’s demand to build more than 215 new miles of wall, including 104 miles in the Rio Grande Valley and 55 miles near Laredo.

Legal experts say Trump likely cannot waive eminent domain — which requires the government to demonstrat­e a public use for the land and provide landowners with compensati­on — by declaring a national emergency.

With part of the $1.6 billion Congress approved in March, U.S. Customs and Border Protection announced it would build 25 miles of wall along the flood-control levee in Hidalgo County, which runs well north of the Rio Grande.

Congress did not allow constructi­on of any of Trump’s wall prototypes. But the administra­tion’s plans call for a concrete wall to the height of the existing levee, with 18-foot steel posts on top. CBP wants to clear 150 feet in front of any new constructi­on for an “enforcemen­t zone” of access roads, cameras, and lighting.

The government sued the local Roman Catholic diocese late last year to gain access for its surveyors at the site of La Lomita chapel, which opened in 1865 and was an important site for missionari­es who traveled the Rio Grande Valley by horseback.

It remains an epicenter of the Rio Grande Valley’s Catholic community, hosting weddings and funerals, as well as an annual Palm Sunday procession that draws 2,000 people.

The chapel falls directly into the area where CBP wants to build its “enforcemen­t zone.”

The diocese said it opposes a border wall because the barrier violates Catholic teachings and the church’s responsibi­lity to protect migrants, as well as the church’s First Amendment right of religious freedom. A legal group from Georgetown

University has joined the diocese in its lawsuit.

The Cavazos family’s roughly 64 acres (0.25 square kilometers) were purchased by their grandmothe­r 60 years ago.

They rent some of the property to tenants who have built small houses or brought in trailers, charging some as little as $1,000 a year. They live off the earnings from the land and worry that a fence would deter renters and turn their property into a “no man’s land.”

On the rest of the property are plywood barns, enclosures for cattle and goats, and a wooden deck that extends into the river, which flows serenely east toward the Gulf of Mexico. Eloisa’s brother, Fred, can sit on the deck in his wheelchair and fish with a rod fashioned from a long carrizo reed plucked from the riverbank.

Surveyors examined their property in December under federal court order. The family hasn’t yet received an offer for their land, but their lawyers at the Texas Civil Rights Project expect a letter with an offer will arrive in the coming weeks.

“Everybody tells us to sell and go to a better place,” Eloisa Cavazos said. “This is heaven to us.”

 ?? [JOHN L. MONE/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS] ?? Father Roy Snipes sometimes takes his boat along the Rio Grande to his church, La Lomita Chapel. Part of the church land in Mission, Texas, could be seized by the federal government to construct additional border wall and fence lines.
[JOHN L. MONE/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS] Father Roy Snipes sometimes takes his boat along the Rio Grande to his church, La Lomita Chapel. Part of the church land in Mission, Texas, could be seized by the federal government to construct additional border wall and fence lines.

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