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washingtonpost.com
October
26, 2006
Bush
Signs U.S.-Mexico Border Fence Bill
By Suzanne Gamboa, The Associated
Press
WASHINGTON -- President Bush wanted an exchange of workers with
Mexico to bring order to the border, but wound up signing a law Thursday
that approves partitioning 700 miles of the United States from its southern
neighbor.
The administration once talked of "orderly migration" - workers entering
the United States and returning to Mexico or other countries when their
jobs were finished. But political realities have replaced phrases like
that with "border security" and plans for fences, surveillance cameras,
unmanned aerial vehicles and watch towers. Bush still wants a guest-worker
program. But the toughest resistance to that idea has come from his own
Republican Party _ and has intensified as the midterm elections have drawn
near.
His White House signing ceremony for the new fence law - just 12 days before
the Nov. 7 elections - gave Republicans something to point to as they try
to convince voters their party would do a better job of cracking down on
illegal immigrants and keeping criminals and terrorists out. "We're modernizing
the southern border of the United States so we can assure the American
people we're doing our job of securing the border," Bush said. The new
law also gives the Department of Homeland Security up to 18 months to achieve
"operational control" of the border, defined as preventing all illegal
entries into the U.S. by land or water.
The bill didn't come with any new funding, and the $1.2 billion that Congress
previously approved is not enough to build the full 700 miles of proposed
double-layer fence. A 14-mile stretch under construction in the San Diego
area is estimated to cost $126.5 million. Costs differ depending on terrain,
environmental issues and whether private property is involved.
Sen. Jon Kyl, R-Ariz., said Congress will add more money each year to erect
the fence. "Within about three years, we should have about 370 miles,"
said Kyl, whose state would be virtually sealed from Mexico through fencing
and other barriers.
Customs and Border Protection Commissioner Ralph Basham said the fence
could take many forms, from chain link to solid wall, depending on where
it is placed. The shape will be determined with the help of Boeing Co.,
which was awarded a $67 million contract to install a high-tech "virtual
fence" along 28 miles in Arizona. "There is a will to get operational control
of the borders and I believe they (lawmakers) are serious about this,"
Basham said. "It's going to mean Congress is going to have to stay serious
about this and continue to fund it."
Skeptics say the money to build the full 700 miles will never materialize
and the bill signing was merely a political gesture. "The president and
this Congress had a historic opportunity to pass a tough but fair immigration
reform plan this year, but instead that chance was squandered by those
Republicans who are more concerned about the ballot box than actually providing
real solutions," said Sen. Edward M. Kennedy, D-Mass, a chief architect
of the Senate legislation Bush had supported.
Bush continues to promote a temporary guest-worker plan. His administration
had been negotiating the proposal with then-Mexican President Vicente Fox
but shoved it into the background after the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks.
The public thinks Democrats can do a better job of handling immigration,
by 44 percent to 37 percent, according to an AP-AOL News poll released
Thursday. But when people are asked specifically about putting a fence
along the border with Mexico, a majority in another recent poll supported
the fence. Polls over the past year show people have mixed feelings about
immigration: They oppose providing illegal immigrants with easy access
to the country but favor providing immigrants fair treatment once here.
A bill passed by the Senate would have allowed immigrants to remain and
eventually become citizens after working, paying fines and back taxes and
learning English. The House approved a separate bill that focused on enforcement
measures such as subjecting those in the country illegally to felony prosecution.
The two chambers failed to meet to negotiate a compromise before recessing
for the elections. The legislation Bush signed was a small portion salvaged
from the House version.
Many Texas farmers and ranchers have land that touches the Rio Grande,
the natural boundary, and fear a fence will cut through their properties
and create an irrigation obstacle. Bobby Sparks, who owns farm land that
touches the river in the town of Progreso, said he's fed up with thieves
coming across the river to steal batteries and other equipment. "If they
put it right on the bank of the river it would cut us off from our water,
we don't want that. Other than that, if they gave me access to my water,
I'm for a fence," Sparks said.
Rick Glancey, executive director of the Texas Border Sheriffs Coalition,
said he hopes law enforcement officials and U.S. Customs and Border Protection
are in charge of determining where the fence goes. "Many bureaucrats in
Washington, D.C., have never seen the rural border and don't understand
the unique problems we face," Glancey said. "Please don't let a policy
wonk in D.C. decide."
Associated Press Writer Lynn
Brezosky
n Harlingen,Texas, contributed to this report.
The fence law is HR6061.
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