The Denver Post

Border wall to go up in national monument and wildlife refuge

- By Astrid Galvan and Nomaan Merchant

PHO E NIX» The U.S. government plans to replace barriers through 100 miles of the southern border in California and Arizona, including through a national monument and a wildlife refuge, according to documents and environmen­tal advocates.

The Department of Homeland Security on Tuesday once again waived environmen­tal and dozens of other laws to build more barriers at the U.S.-Mexico border.

Funding will come from the Defense Department after the emergency declaratio­n that President Donald Trump signed this year after Congress refused to approve the amount of border wall funding he wanted.

Barriers will go up at Organ Pipe Cactus National Monument, a vast park named after the unique cactus breed that decorates it, and Cabeza Prieta National Wildlife Refuge, which is largely a designed wilderness home to 275 wildlife species. The government will also build new roads and lighting in those areas.

Environmen­tal advocates who have sued to stop the constructi­on of the wall say this latest plan will be detrimenta­l to the wildlife and habitat in those areas.

“The Trump administra­tion just ignored bedrock environmen­tal and public health laws to plow a disastrous border wall through protected, spectacula­r wildlands,” said Laiken Jordahl, who works on border issues at the Center for Biological Diversity.

The Department of Homeland Security did not respond to a request for comment.

At Organ Pipe Cactus National Monument, row after row of cactuses decorate 516 square miles of land that once saw so much drug smuggling that more than half the park was closed to the public. But illegal crossings in that area dropped off significan­tly in the past several years, and the government in 2015 reopened the entire

Democrats may fund parts of Trump’s $4.5B border request.

Congressio­nal Democrats are signaling a willingnes­s to include major elements of President Donald Trump’s $4.5 billion request for humanitari­an and security needs on the U.S.-Mexico border in an unrelated, widely backed disaster aid bill that appears to finally be breaking free of a partisan logjam.

Democratic aides said Tuesday that Trump’s request for additional Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t detention beds is off the table, but that Democrats are willing to fund care for more than 360,000 migrants apprehende­d since October.

The addition of border funding to the long-sought hurricane and flood aid measure — which ballooned to $19.1 billion during a House floor debate Friday — adds a tricky element to the overdue disaster bill. Democrats are particular­ly agreeable to Trump’s $2.8 billion request to house and care for Central American migrants that are seeking asylum from violence in their home countries of Guatemala, Honduras and El Salvador, but the details are nettlesome.

The goal is to reach a House-Senate agreement that could finally speed the bill through the Senate, where Democrats upset over aid to Puerto Rico filibuster­ed a GOP plan last month. The House would then vote to send the legislatio­n to Trump for his signature. monument for the first time in 12 years.

While Arizona has seen an increase in border crossers over the last year, most are families who turn themselves in to Border Patrol agents. The number of drugs that agents seize in the state has also dropped significan­tly.

But the government is moving forward with more border infrastruc­ture.

The waivers the department issued Tuesday are vague in their descriptio­n of where and how many miles of fencing will be installed. The Center for Biological Diversity says the plans total about 100 miles of southern border in both Arizona and California, near Calexico and Tecate.

In Arizona, constructi­on will focus on four areas of the border and will include the replacemen­t of waist-high fencing meant to stop cars with 18- to 30-foot barriers that will be more efficient at stopping illegal crossings.

The government has already demolished refuge land in the Rio Grande Valley of Texas, and constructi­on is set to begin any day. On one section of the Lower Rio Grande Valley National Wildlife Refuge, crews have used heavy constructi­on equipment to destroy a mix of trees, including mesquite, mulberry and hackberry. Those trees protect birds during the ongoing nesting season.

According to plans published last year, the cleared land will be filled in and a concrete wall will be installed, with bollards measuring 18 feet installed on top.

After months of public outcry, Congress forbade U.S. Customs and Border Protection from building in the nearby Santa Ana wildlife refuge or the nonprofit National Butterfly Center. But it didn’t stop money from going to wall constructi­on in other refuge lands, nor did it stop the government from building in otherwise exempted land due to the emergency declaratio­n, said Marianna Trevino Wright, the butterfly center’s director.

“They’re going to have to protect us in every single spending bill going forward, and they have to protect us against the state of emergency,” Wright said. “And this administra­tion has made it clear ... that they don’t want any exemptions.”

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