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House Committee To Look At Whether Environmental Laws Impede Border Patrol

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Border Patrol agents on horseback/U.S. Customers and Border Protection

While Border Patrol agents patrol on horseback, ATV, 4WD trucks, via helicopters, and use drones to monitor the U.S. borders, a House subcommittee wants to determine whether environmental laws and regulations hamper their ability/U.S. Customs and Border Protection

Eight years after the U.S. Government Accountability Office concluded, after a year's study, that environmental laws were not hampering Border Patrol efforts, a House of Representatives subcommittee plans to revisit the matter.

The House Subcommittee on Oversight and Investigations, chaired by U.S. Rep. U.S. Rep. Bruce Westerman, R-Arkansas, will examine The Costs of Denying Border Patrol Access: Our Environment and Security on Thursday. No witness list or accompanying documents were listed on the committee notice last week.

Back in 2011, U.S. Rep. Rob Bishop, a Republican from Utah who today chairs the Natural Resources Committee that oversees the oversight subcommittee, introduced legislation to "prohibit the Secretaries of the Interior and Agriculture from taking action on public lands which impede border security on such lands."

The bill went nowhere. But as drafted, it would have exempted the Border Patrol from adhering to the National Environmental Policy Act, or the Wilderness Act, or the Endangered Species Act, or any number of other measures ranging from the Federal Water Pollution Control Act and the Clean Air Act to the Archaeological Resources Protection Act and the Coastal Zone Management Act.

And, in theory, if the measure had passed and been enacted the Border Patrol would not have to consult with the National Park Service before erecting towers, building fences, or cutting new roads for access into units of the National Park System that lie within a 100-mile-wide corridor along the country's borders -- the southern border with Mexico, the northern border with Canada, or the West or East coasts.

Rep. Bishop also had asked the Government Accountability Office to determine whether the various environmental and Park Service regulations impede the Border Patrol from securing the country's borders from terrorists, drug runners, and illegal immigrants. 

Back in 2010, a Government Accountability Office report concluded that the rugged terrain in the Southwest, not environmental laws, was the greatest impediment to Border Patrol agents working to secure the U.S.-Mexico Border/BLM

In 2010, after a nearly year-long review, the GAO determined that while environmental regulations at times slowed Border Patrol operations in the Southwest, a strong majority of agents-in-charge "reported that the overall security status of their jurisdiction is not affected by land management laws."

A far greater problem, the agents-in-charge told the GAO investigators, is the lay of the land in the Southwest. And while "four patrol agents-in-charge reported that delays and restrictions negatively affected their ability to achieve or maintain operational control," the GAO reported, "they have either not requested resources to facilitate increased or timelier access or have had their requests denied by senior Border Patrol officials, who said that other needs were greater priorities for the station or sector."

A separate report released that year, Interagency Cooperation on U.S.-Mexico Border Wilderness Issues, written by Kirk Emerson, PhD, concluded that the Border Patrol was managing to work with land-management agencies under the existing regulatory framework to accomplish their tasks.

"After a slow start and much trial-and-error, cooperation among federal departments and agencies charged with protection of the border and wilderness areas has been improving in the past few years," added Ms. Emerson, a consultant based in Tucson, Arizona.

"Departmental leadership has issued several policy directives and put in place organizational mechanisms that have created a framework for collaboration and conflict resolution among the departments and their respective agencies on the ground."

Back in 2012, park superintendents told the Traveler that they had a good working relationship with the Border Patrol.

“My staff and I, we actually have a pretty good working relationship with the Border Patrol here," Chip Jenkins, then North Cascades National Park superintendent, said. "They are a constant presence in the park. They have a boat on Ross Lake, they are routinely patrolling through the campgrounds, they are routinely on the trails here. They’re on the highway.

“Our rangers meet with the Border Patrol as well as other agencies on a monthly basis to discuss and coordinate activities," Superintendent Jenkins went on. "We coordinate and cooperate when things are going on in the field and radio frequencies and what not. From my understanding from talking with the (Border Patrol) commander of the Blaine (Washington) sector, things are working. There’s not anything broken, at least we’ve not heard from the Border Patrol that they consider that things are not working.”

The same sentiment was expressed by Glacier National Park's superintendent at the time, Chas Cartwright.

More recently, Park Service staff at Organ Pipe Cactus National Monument told the Traveler that they worked very closely with the Border Patrol to help them gain as much access as they needed in the 517-square-mile park that hugs the U.S.-Mexico border.

With funding from Homeland Security, Organ Pipe Cactus staff and Border Patrol agents pored over maps of the national monument to decide which illegal travel routes gouged out of the landscape would remain, and which would be erased. Complicating the effort was the fact that 95 percent of the park is official wilderness. In theory, all of the routes should have been removed, but visitor safety dictated that some remain.

“In order to restore those routes, we had to work with Homeland Security because we don’t want to restore routes they need," said Brent Range, Organ Pipe Cactus's superintendent in April 2017 when Traveler visited the park. "We want them to have maximum access down here. We need for them to have the access. That keeps the park safer, cleaner for the visitor, for the resource, for the staff, for everybody that comes here.”

At the time Kevin Dahl, the National Parks Conservation Association's senior program manager in Arizona, called the effort "a success, and shows great inter-agency cooperation."

This past February 3 Reps. Bishop and Westerman spent time along the border and came home with concerns about its security.

“The security of the United States is our utmost priority,” said Rep. Westerman in a release. “Unfortunately, bureaucrats in Washington have made securing our southern border unnecessarily difficult, if not impossible. Environmental rules and regulations are ignored by drug smugglers, human traffickers, and others intent on harming Americans. Illegal border crossings through federally owned lands destroys vital endangered species’ habitat, increases erosion, and leaves behind mountains of trash and debris.  Ironically, the very same burdensome regulations prevent the U.S. Border Patrol from executing its mission: stopping illegal crossings of our border. This visit was eye opening and will inform my work on the Subcommittee on Oversight and Investigations going forward.”

From his viewpoint, Rep. Bishop said, "“Our Border Patrol agents need access to federal lands in order to do their jobs. Under the status quo, that access is being denied. It is unacceptable when it can take months for federal law enforcement to get permission to fill cross-border drug tunnels or to repair an access route to apprehend human traffickers.”

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one of the virulent racist xenophobes in the modern era to hold public office.

Only in your mind Rick.  Must really bug you that he is living there rent free. LOL


I think it is well established that, for a variety of reasons, illegal border crossings decreased during the Obama Presidency.  Here is one example which may help explain why, countering President Trump's assertions that the Border was wide open prior to his taking office.  During the Bush years, I frequently worked holiday weekends with the BLM and the Border Patrol, at the Southern portion of the Imperial Sand Dunes in Southern California.  Where the dunes cross the border, the boundary was marked by occasional obelisks, and was wide open.  Drug runners used dune buggies to cross the border, mixing in with the recreational crowds.  Last year, I visited this area for the first time in a while, and there is now a high standard border wall through the dunes.  It was constructed during the Obama years.  I'm not saying that everything one Party does is right, and the other Party does everything wrong, but all too often political grandstanding and over-simplification get in the way of the facts.


I think it is well established 

Not.  The reported numbers show higher deportation but that is only because the definition was changed during the Obama administration. Still waiting for your solutions. 

 


"It has nothing to do with color, unless you think color defines whether someone acts legally or illegally."

But one person we all know too well has made it very clear what he thinks about that . . . .


Really Lee?  Who?

 


Lee - He is trying to pretend that Trump is not a racist. It is a self-evident truth to all those who are not a sympathizer.

 


Oh I see, Mexicans are flooding across the boarder and Canadians aren't because Trump is a racists.  Back to your normal operating procecure.  Facts are against you so call people names and make baseless accusations.  What is your solution for illegal immigration?  Or are you fine with that.  I am listening for the crickets.

 


That's great - once again convoluting what others say to suit your ends with the best of them. You are saying that Trump is not a racist. Most of America is uncomfortable with white supremicists in the White House, but as always, you chart your own course. Go away.


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