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Glenn Hurowitz

Glenn Hurowitz

Posted: October 24, 2007 11:21 AM

Big Balls, Bigger Wall, Chertoff Lies, Wildlife Die


Homeland Security Secretary Michael Chertoff announced yesterday that he's going to just waive the Endangered Species Act, the Toxic Waste Disposal Act, the National Environmental Policy Act, and the Migratory Bird Treaty Act (among many others) in order to plough ahead with building a wall along the Arizona-Mexico border in the San Pedro Riparian National Conservation Area. He repeated his rationale that the wall could be good for the environment because migrants leave behind trash:

But there are also environmental reasons to stop illegal crossings in the SPRNCA. Illegal entrants leave trash and high concentrations of human waste, which impact wildlife, vegetation and water quality in the habitat. Wildfires caused by campfires have significantly damaged the soil, vegetation, and cultural sites, not to mention threatened human safety.

As anyone who's spent any time along the border (or really, anywhere on the planet) can attest, this statement is a complete lie. A little pile of trash in the wilderness might be unsightly, but it has nowhere near the effect a giant, honking, double layered concrete wall has (um, which, is, I think, a little more unsightly, if that's the standard we're going by). Since when is a wall a solution to trash anyway? I think usually, Mr. Chertoff, the way people clean up trash is by PICKING IT UP. What jaguars and bobcats and Sonoran pronghorn anetelope and ocelots need is not a trash-free wilderness, but a wilderness that doesn't cut them off from the breeding populations on the other side of the border. Increased Bush administration border activity and the climate crisis have already reduced populations of the endangered Sonoran Pronghorn Antelope from 500 to below 25.

Oh, and by the way, no one actually thinks the wall will keep any illegal immigrants out. The Border Patrol itself admits that it only slows people down by 3 to 4 minutes. That's probably 60 seconds if the person has a ladder. And they think there are 40 or more tunnels under the wall. And more than 40 percent of illegal immigrants don't get here by sneaking across the border: they just overstay their visas.

Here's a tiny, little, eensy-weensy silver lining to this announcement: the Sierra Club responded aggressively to it with a national news release and deserves a lot of credit for doing so. As I chronicled in my recent investigation in Grist, the Sierra Club and many other environmental groups have been shy about fighting the border wall for fear of getting tangled up in the polarized immigration issue. They've apparently decided that the time for shyness is gone and the time for fighting is here - and that this issue could make the border region America's new environmental heartland. Also, NRDC has jumped in, albeit with a blog post.

More than 150 miles of the wall have already been built; because Congress gave Chertoff the authority to waive any environmental law that gets in the way of building the wall, the only chance to stop all 700 miles of border wall is through an act of Congress. Arizona Congressman Raul Grijalva has introduced a bill that would give some moderately increased protections to the border region. Unfortunately, because of the lack of work on the bill, it has only 21 cosponsors and only 4 who don't live in the border region. And it's unclear exactly how much Grijalva's bill would do even if passed - Senate Democrats are using $3 billion in funding for border security (including 700 miles of fencing) as bait for Republican votes on the Homeland Security bill (the funding was approved 95-1, with even the Senate's usual environmental champions lining up unanimously behind it, showing that they weren't even considering the huge environmental consequences). It will take House Speaker Nancy Pelosi standing up to defend the wildlife and people to keep that funding out of the final House-Senate conference.

During a recent trip to the Rio Grande Valley, Pelosi did tell Texans that the wall was "a terrible idea," but the Democratic leadership has a terrible record of caving whenever the right wing gets riled up about something as they are about immigration - even though many if not most immigration opponents (including Minutemen) either don't care or oppose the wall.

We need Congress to act quickly so that more of the wall isn't built. You can email your members of Congress here and ask them to cut off funding for the wall.

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02:07 PM on 10/26/2007
Most Americans do want the border fences, and they are not using concrete. It is reported that 80% of Americans want a fence, need a fence, and demand a fence. Trouble is, the illegals are not just visiting relatives in California, nor just taking jobs that Californians don't want, they have spread into other states where they do not meld into the population. Some states do not have a Spainish speaking population and find the presence of the Latina population as costly, demanding special needs, change neighborhoods drastically, and most cases they are breaking our laws just by being here. When our government won't listen to it's majority of the population and do not protect our country, it makes life very unpleasant for the people who do not necessarily want their way of life changed by another country or it's citizens. Why can't states who want to participate in the Latina invasion have a green border around their state on the map, and, states who do not want to entertain them, have a red border around their state on the map? No one wants to hurt another human's feelings, but if our government enforced the border and our laws, we wouldn't even be seeing these people at all...they would have never made it to our state.
03:19 PM on 10/24/2007
What works in a city will not work in rural areas. I spend alot of time down in SE Arizona, it is a wild and empty landscape, one of the last places for mountain lions, panthers, antelope, and other big land mammals. This will be devastating to the wild populations who may be cut off from water and food supplies, potential genetic diversity, and their traditional range.

We could use drones, cameras and other high tech solutions. It is estimated that 19,000 people use this route. Well, keep the wildlife corridors open and monitor the people by other, more successfull means. Janet Neopolitano, the Governor of Arizona, is right when she said if we build a 10 foot fence, they will bring an 11 foot ladder......or dig a tunnel.

Conservatives and liberals need to think about all the options, be flexible and brainstorm to find the best solution for any given location.
01:28 PM on 10/24/2007
This is wrong because there was no debate.
THE FEDERAL GOVERNMENT HAS NO RIGHT TO CLAIM THIS ISSUE.
They have no right granted to them to do this. This is an OUTRAGE!

We have a constitution. We must read it.

Please read the following bill and ask your reps to support it.
It is an important bill.

http://www.prisonplanet.com/articles/october2007/201007Freedom.htm
12:28 PM on 10/24/2007
Wasn't it only a year or two ago that we were told this wall would "never be built" because there was "no funding" for it?

How thoroughly have we been lied to this time? Who twisted whose arms to come up with the funding? Who refused to see or report what was happening under their very noses?

What else that we have been assured "will never happen" - IS happening?
12:10 PM on 10/24/2007
I'm pretty sure it's not a "double layered concrete wall".

I'm also sure that ***millions of pounds of garbage*** has a far greater negative impact than fencing.

Even the Los Angeles Times has noted the problem:

"At Cabeza Prieta National Wildlife Refuge, 2 1/2 million pounds of garbage is scattered through broad valleys and desert arroyos every year, according to Roger DiRosa, the refuge manager."

And, the Sierra Club is not a trustworthy source: they received $100 million from someone who told them that if they opposed immigration they'd never receive another dime.

And, the fence has worked wonders in San Diego, and I'm sure the supposed BP statements above are taken out of context. The claim that the fence won't work fails to recognize the deterrent effect.

Let me suggest doing much more research, and doing much less enabling of the Mexican government and crooked businesses who want cheap labor.
02:48 PM on 10/24/2007
The author didn't mention anything about amnesty for illegals. The truth is that the fence doesn't work. Any kid in your neighborhood will tell you that. If they don't hop it in San Diego they will just do it elsewhere. Cutting nature off from itself can and will have extremely negative consequences. There was a great example in the book "The World Without Us" which describes a fence cutting off the forest in one of the Baltic countries with the forest in Russia. Fences cause damage. This is not an either or proposition. If we can put a man on the moon we should be able to keep illegals out without tearing up our environment.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Wilson33
11:50 AM on 10/24/2007
"Oh, and by the way, no one actually thinks the wall will keep any illegal immigrants out. The Border Patrol itself admits that it only slows people down by 3 to 4 minutes..."

It's ironic how you state, as fact, that Chertoff lied with his statement, but then you say this. THIS is a complete lie, and you state it as fact.

Just ask San Diego how much their numbers have gone down since the wall is complete there.

You are a propagandist with an agenda. To save wildlife over American lives. Typical liberal logic...