Published: 12.31.2007
Border fence buildup seems to be working
ARTHUR H. ROTSTEIN
The Associated Press
Call it cause and effect.
With attention riveted in Arizona during 2007 on border security over illegal immigration, drug smuggling and potential terrorist infiltration, federal authorities responded with a spree of fence-building and high-tech surveillance.
The construction included both old-fashioned fences and the new, high-tech virtual variety, plus vehicle barriers and remote-controlled aircraft equipped with eyes in the sky.
And there are signs that the buildup is having an impact, particularly in far southwestern Arizona.
In the Border Patrol's Yuma sector, which covers roughly Arizona's westernmost 110 miles of border, apprehensions of illegal immigrants plunged dramatically. They were down 68 percent during fiscal 2007 over the previous year - from more than 118,000 to only about 38,000.
By comparison, totals in the Tucson sector for the fiscal year, which ended Sept. 30, dipped by 4 percent to 378,000 from 392,000.
In the Tucson sector, covering the rest of the state's southern border, Border Patrol spokesman Jose Gonzalez said marijuana seizures soared by 46 percent. He said the dipping numbers of arrests show that fewer migrants are crossing and agents are able to spend more time on smuggling operations.
The year began and ended with decisions by the nation's Homeland Security chief to waive environmental laws, enabling prompt construction of steel barricades along parts of the Arizona border.
In January, Secretary Michael Chertoff's waiver of a series of laws, from the Endangered Species Act to the Federal Water Pollution Control Act and the National Environmental Policy Act, allowed for quick construction of so-called bollard-style vehicle barriers along the Barry M. Goldwater Range in far southwestern Arizona.
In late October, Chertoff issued a similar waiver, using the authority that Congress granted in 2005, to ensure construction of a stretch of primary fencing and bollards across most of a revered riparian area in the state's southeastern reaches.
As of the end of September, approximately 85 miles of pedestrian fencing and 72 miles of vehicle barriers were standing in Arizona, Customs and Border Protection figures show. At least seven more miles were completed by the end of the calendar year.
Next year will see an even bigger building boom on the border.
Homeland Security expects to build an additional 225 miles of pedestrian fence and 200 miles of vehicle barriers across the border with Mexico by the end of 2008. That will bring the total along the nearly 2,000-mile border to 670 miles.
The new fencing is part of a three-pronged investment in border security, Gonzalez said.
The other two parts are increased use of new technology and greater manpower, with the fencing a critical part.
"If we have ... miles of fences erected, there's not going to be as much traffic there, so we can concentrate on areas where there still is traffic," Gonzalez said.
For nearly a decade, Arizona's 377-mile border has been the most active corridor along the U.S. boundary with Mexico for illicit entry by smugglers, illegal immigrants and drug traffickers. In turn, federal authorities have made boosted efforts to ramp up resources - both infrastructure and manpower.
A Border road has been created or improved, allowing for easier fence and barrier maintenance and better response times from Border Patrol agents.
In urban areas, stadium-style lights and cameras have been installed atop tall towers to provide greater surveillance. And notably, near the San Luis port of entry close to the Colorado River, the so-called primary fencing along the border has been supplemented by a second layer of tall mesh fencing north of the roadway. And east of the port of entry, it's even backed up by a chain-link fence with barbed wire on top.
Other beefed-up security measures include new fences and vehicle barriers near border crossings.
And an experimental "virtual fence" made up of nine 98-foot towers was built a few miles north of the border at Sasabe.
The towers are topped with an array of sophisticated cameras, radars, sensors and communications gear designed to detect and help border agents detect and track crossers.
In addition to the ground-based cameras and sensors, Customs and Border Protection's air and marine division has had two unmanned and unarmed aircraft flying along the Arizona-Mexico border to watch for border intruders.
"By having more technology and agents free we can better secure our nation's border," Gonzalez said.
Subscribe to the Tucson Citizen

http://www.tucsoncitizen.com/daily/local/72800.php