Yuma Sun

Many ways to secure border, Ducey says

-

PHOENIX — Arizona Gov. Doug Ducey says building a wall isn’t the only way to provide security along the U.S.-Mexico border.

One of the four U.S. governors whose states share a boundary with Mexico, Ducey says solid walls, fences, law enforcemen­t officers on the ground and advanced technology are all tools the United States can draw from to protect the country from illegal drugs and human traffickin­g entering from the south.

“I don’t think it’s one thing and not the others,” Ducey said on the eve of Arizona’s 2019 legislativ­e session, during a brief interview in his office that touched on numerous issues.

The Republican governor was careful not to comment directly on President Donald Trump’s current demand that Congress fund his long-promised border wall as a partial government shutdown sparked by the standoff drags on. Arizona’s trade with Mexico is a big part of Ducey’s economic program and he’s never been enthusiast­ic about Trump’s insistence on a physical wall as a primary way to provide border security.

Instead, Ducey said a “combinatio­n of factors” is needed to make the internatio­nal boundary more secure, a “border wall where necessary, a physical barrier, a fence, technology, surveillan­ce, boots on the ground, a focus on the bad guys.”

Ducey made border security a key issue of his 2018 campaign for re-election, and during his first term created the multi-agency Arizona Border Strike Force to focus on border area crime, especially drug smuggling.

He noted that two-thirds of Arizona’s border already has some kind of wall or other physical barrier, but “there are other places where you go and walk right across ... and to me that’s a real concern.”

“Whatever we have is going to need to be surveilled in some fashion. There are many places where surveillan­ce is lacking or missing,” said Ducey.

“Technology can be incredibly helpful,” he said. “So much has changed in the last 10 years around technology, drones, satellite informatio­n.”

Asked whether there is a crisis on the border, the governor said: “If the definition of a crisis is something that is unstable and where there is danger, we certainly have that. Look at the drug traffickin­g and human smuggling and child sex traffickin­g.”

Speaking earlier about the legislativ­e session opening Monday, Ducey identified Arizona’s water future as the top issue.

“We want to work with the Legislatur­e to pass the drought contingenc­y plan,” he said. “It’s important, and it’s urgent.”

He also named school safety another key issue in a state that so far has been spared from any mass shootings on campus.

Ducey said Arizona must take a proactive approach to protecting its schools from such attacks by keeping weapons out of the hands of unstable people and even putting armed guards on campus.

But he drew the line at arming teachers, saying: “I want to see teachers teaching.”

The governor said funding for the 20 percent pay raise package he approved for teachers would be a priority in the state’s upcoming budget and that “we are halfway there.” Teachers ended a six-day walkout last year after Ducey signed the package.

 ?? Buy this photo at YumaSun.com FILE PHOTO BY RANDY HOEFT/YUMA SUN ?? U.S. BORDER PATROL YUMA SECTOR, DEPUTY CHIEF PATROL AGENT CARL LANDRUM (left) talks with U.S. Department of Homeland Security Sec. Kirstjen Nielsen (third from left) and Arizona Gov. Doug Ducey during a visit to the U.S.-Mexico border at San Luis in April.
Buy this photo at YumaSun.com FILE PHOTO BY RANDY HOEFT/YUMA SUN U.S. BORDER PATROL YUMA SECTOR, DEPUTY CHIEF PATROL AGENT CARL LANDRUM (left) talks with U.S. Department of Homeland Security Sec. Kirstjen Nielsen (third from left) and Arizona Gov. Doug Ducey during a visit to the U.S.-Mexico border at San Luis in April.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States