Border wall prototypes a first small step
on Trump campaign promise
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[October 24, 2017]
By Heather Somerville
San Diego (Reuters) - Nine months after
President Donald Trump took office, the first tangible signs of progress
on one of the central promises of his campaign have appeared along the
U.S. border with Mexico.
A couple of miles (km) from the bustling Otay Mesa border crossing in
San Diego, eight towering chunks of concrete and steel stand as high as
30 feet (9 meters) tall against the sky, possible models for what Trump
has promised will one day be a solid wall extending the full length of
the southern border, from California to Texas.
Whether any of the eight different prototypes, constructed over the last
month, become part of an actual wall remains highly uncertain.
The U.S. Congress has so far shown little interest in appropriating the
estimated $21.6 billion it would cost to build the wall.
Still, border patrol officials on Monday welcomed the momentum on
Trump's pledge, which generated a groundswell of voter support that
helped elect him to office.
"Our current infrastructure is well over two decades old," Roy
Villareal, deputy chief patrol agent of the U.S. Border Patrol's San
Diego sector, said during a tour with media organizations on Monday
morning. "Is there need for improvement? Absolutely."
Currently, 654 miles (1,052 km) of the 1,900-mile (3,058-km)border with
Mexico is fenced, with single, double or triple fences. The second line
of fencing in San Diego, about 18 feet (5.50 m) tall, has been breached
nearly 2,000 times in the last three years, Villareal said.
Even if Trump's wall never gets funded, Villareal said, the border
patrol might incorporate one or more of the new wall designs as it
replaces worn sections of the existing fence.
Six contractors from across the country were selected to build the eight
prototypes, all of which will be completed this week.
The builders paid attention to aesthetics in their bid to win lucrative
contracts. One wall segment features deep-blue steel and another has a
brick facade, standing in sharp contrast to the area's existing border
fence, a ramshackle structure of corrugated steel left over from the
Vietnam War.
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Prototypes for U.S. President Donald Trump's border wall with Mexico
are shown near completion in this picture taken from the Mexican
side of the border, in Tijuana, Mexico, October 23, 2017.
REUTERS/Jorge Duenes
In late November, a private company, which border patrol officials
declined to name, will begin a 30- to 60-day process of testing the wall
prototypes to determine how easy they would be to climb over or dig
beneath.
The final selection could be a combination of the prototype designs,
Villareal said.
While solid, concrete walls have a daunting presence, they might have an
adverse effect on some border patrol activities, since agents would not
be able to see potential crossers approaching the wall.
"It's not so much the size of the wall, it's the ability to see whether
it's 10 people or 30 people with ... rifles," said Rowdy Adams, a former
border patrol agent who left the agency in 2011 after 30 years. "It's
important to see that and set your response plan in place."
Two of the eight prototypes have a see-through design.
Environmentalists have warned that a solid wall would prevent wildlife,
including a dwindling population of federally protected ocelots, from
crossing.
A concrete wall may also prove challenging to build without
participation from some of the world's largest concrete suppliers.
Mexico's Cemex and Switzerland's LafargeHolcim told Reuters they were
not participating in projects associated with the wall.
(Reporting by Heather Somerville; Editing by Sue Horton, Rosalba O'Brien
and Sandra Maler)
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