(video at source link)

Monday, November 21st 2016, 9:17 pm PST
Monday, November 21st 2016, 10:00 pm PST
By Derek Staahl

NOGALES, MEXICO (KPHO/KTVK) -
Dan Bell’s cattle ranch is just north of the Arizona-Mexico border, right near the spot where the tall bollard-style fencing through Nogales ends and a short, barbed-wire cattle fence begins. It makes the area a hotspot for illegal border crossers, he said, along with something else this year: wildfires.

There have been five wildfires on ZZ Cattle Corporation’s sprawling ranch in 2016, Bell said, the most they’ve had since 2011 when more than a dozen fires tore through.

Bell suspects many of these fires, including one that charred a few acres last week, were sparked by people crossing the border illegally.

“Some of them were started as warming fires for groups that were coming through, and they didn't extinguish the fire,” he said. “We had a few that were diversionary fires, where Border Patrol was probably getting ready to make an apprehension and some fires were lit.”

Others were set by people signaling for help, he said.

As the election of Donald Trump heats up the focus on border security, some ranchers along the border like Bell are hoping the president-elect’s efforts to curb illegal border crossings will help snuff out some of these wildfires.

“It’s definitely an issue for us. And there’s been issues in Douglas and Sierra Vista with fires there as well,” he said.

People in southern Arizona are split, however, on whether Trump’s proposed border wall would help.

“It’s a huge deterrent I would say,” said Art Del Cueto, president of the local Border Patrol union in the Tucson Sector.

“I can tell you that agents feel easier to do their job in areas where there is more fencing or there are walls,” he said.

On the other side of the wall debate, there’s Santa Cruz County Sheriff Tony Estrada.

“It's not going to make a vast difference,” Estrada said about the wall.

Estrada said there have been more than 110 smuggling tunnels discovered in the Nogales, Ariz. area over the last two decades.

“There is no buffer zone between ourselves and our neighbors. We are back to back, so that allows for opportunities,” he said. “No matter how high, how long, and how difficult, determined people will find a way to come in.”

At least 2,467 fires were reported from 2006 through 2010, according to a study by the Government Accountability Office, and 86 percent were caused by “human activity.” The study noted that some wildfires were caused by illegal border crossers, but said it’s hard to gauge the scope because few fires were investigated fully.

During that span, only 77 fires were investigated. Illegal border crossers were identified as the suspected source in 30 of those cases.

Rancher Dan Bell said he’s in favor of more border fencing where appropriate, but there are other security features he finds more important: roads.

“I think that's key; getting agents closer to the border. Deploying them closer to the border where they can be a stopping force,” he said. “To do that we're going to need to get some better access along the border, and bring in some more road infrastructure.”

Until then, fires just come with the territory.

http://www.tucsonnewsnow.com/story/3...ewer-wildfires