June 14, 2007, 4:16PM
McCain dismisses concerns of border landowners


By APRIL CASTRO Associated Press Writer
© 2007 The Associated Press


SAN ANTONIO — Republican presidential candidate John McCain said Thursday he supports a U.S.-Mexico border fence and dismissed landowners' concerns that it would cut off their access to water from the Rio Grande.

The Arizona senator said he "hopes they would have access to water and other things, but the farmers in my state are very upset because the constant trafficking of people across their land.

"It destroys their land and their crops, so ranchers in my state very much want the movement of people across their land to stop," said McCain, considered a top-tier candidate in the Republican primary. "And I think that they would do a great deal in order to prevent that from continuing to happen."

McCain, a co-sponsor of a bipartisan immigration overhaul struggling for support in Congress but backed by President Bush, was in Texas Thursday for a fundraiser at the home of San Antonio attorney and longtime Republican donor John Steen.

One critic of a border fence said that it might make sense in Arizona, but in Texas, "it's crazy."

"The biggest issue that we have with the fence is the fact that the bulk of the Rio Grande, the land on the river bank in Texas, is in private property," said Eddie Aldrete, vice chairman of the Texas Border Coalition and a senior vice president of International Bank of Commerce in San Antonio.

"If you put up a physical structure and it's on a cattle ranch how do cows get to their primary drinking source? If you're a farmer and it's an irrigation source, how do you get to your primary irrigation source?"

Congress last year passed a law requiring some 700 miles of fencing along the 2,000-mile U.S.-Mexico border. Of the $1.2 billion Congress approved, at least $400 million has been released. The Department of Homeland Security has said it is committed to erecting 370 miles of fencing by the end of 2008.

Earlier in the day, Bush announced an attempt to revive McCain's immigration bill with a compromise to dedicate money from certain fees to beef up border security. The measure fell short of the support needed to pass last week, and the compromise is an attempt to appease conservatives who are opposed to a provision that would legalize up to 12 million unlawful immigrants.

"I think it will help," McCain said. "I don't know exactly how many votes, but we are certainly doing everything we can to try to get this legislation back up before we go on our Fourth of July recess," he said.

If the immigration overhaul is not adopted before Congress recesses, "it's going to be very difficult if not impossible to resurrect it," he said.

http://www.chron.com/disp/story.mpl/ap/tx/4890889.html