View Full Version : US-Mexico border fence nearly finished


country_cowboy1966
01-27-2009, 04:53 PM
The fence along the U.S.-Mexico border is mostly finished.

Customs and Border Protection spokesman Lloyd Easterling says that 601 miles (967 kilometers) of the project had been completed as of a week ago.

Easterling says 69 miles (111 kilometers) of the fence still must be built to meet the goal set during the Bush administration.

In December, then President-elect Barack Obama said he wanted to evaluate border security operations before he considers whether to finish building the fence under his administration.

Easterling said the Obama White House has not told Homeland Security to stop building the fence.

Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano has said a fence alone will not stop illegal immigration along the 2,000-mile (3200-kilometer) border. About half of the fence has been built in Arizona, where Napolitano was governor.

The overall plan for security on the Southwest border -- set by the Bush administration -- includes additional Border Patrol agents, more enforcement of immigration laws, the fence and a high-tech "virtual fence" using surveillance technology.

At her Senate confirmation hearing, Napolitano said there is a role for fencing around urban areas. "It helps prevent those who are crossing illegally from blending immediately into a town population," Napolitano told senators.

Officials have said the border security improvements -- like the fence -- are working, and fewer people are trying to illegally cross from Mexico into the United States. Some of that can be attributed to economic woes and fewer jobs in the U.S.

The fence has been controversial since its inception and has faced several lawsuits, none successful so far.

Congress authorized the fence in 2005 to help secure the border and slow illegal immigration. Lawmakers also gave the Homeland Security secretary the power to waive federal laws, such as environmental protections, when erecting the fence. Obama, as a senator, voted for the project.

Congress has set aside $2.7 billion for the fence since 2006. There's no estimate how much the entire system -- the physical fence and the technology -- will cost to build, let alone maintain.

The Sept. 11, 2001 terrorist attacks revived the immigration debate and advanced the idea of a border fence. Intelligence officials have said gaps along the Southwestern border could provide opportunities for terrorists to enter the U.S.

Boeing Co. has the contract for the technology portion of the fence, as well as for some construction work. The company's contract for the technology expires this year.

mefnikk
01-27-2009, 05:18 PM
This fence will go down in history as a waste of taxpayer money. Mark my words...

1munchie
01-27-2009, 05:29 PM
This fence will go down in history as a waste of taxpayer money. Mark my words...

it would be an option to negotiate a legal option to cross over...but how can there be no attempt to placate those that see the whole issue as something that needs some semblance of control?