Think you all will enjoy this article....it's another perfect example of the sense of ENTITLEMENT that is too often exhibited by those from across the border when it comes to America. If you have a leak, and the leak gets bad enough, you fix it...right? Not if Mexico has it's way....seems a canal that supplies water to San Diego has been leaking for decades, and now that there is a plan to repair the problem, Mexico wants to cry foul as they would lose their FREE SOURCE OF WATER!

Border Fight Focuses on Water, Not Immigration
Sandy Huffaker for The New York Times
Farmers near Mexicali have long relied on seepage from the All-American Canal to irrigate their fields. More Photos >

http://www.nytimes.com/2006/07/07/us/07 ... ref=slogin

By RANDAL C. ARCHIBOLD
Published: July 7, 2006
CALEXICO, Calif. — For more than 100 years, as their names imply, Calexico and its much larger sister city, Mexicali, south of the border, have embraced each other with a bonhomie born of mutual need and satisfaction in the infernal desert.

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Slide Show: On the Mexican Border, a Fight Over Water

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The pedestrian gate into Mexico clangs ceaselessly as Mexicans lug back bulging bags from Wal-Mart and 99 Cent Stores in Calexico. The line into the United States slogs along, steady but slower, through an air-conditioned foyer as men and women trudge off to work and, during the school year, children wear the universal face that greets the coming day.

Now, the ties that bind Calexico and Mexicali are being tested as a 20-year dispute over the rights to water leaking into Mexico from a canal on the American side is reaching a peak. Though the raging debate over illegal immigration in the United States has not upset border relations here, some say the fight over water could affect the number of Mexicans who try to cross here illegally.

To slake the ever-growing thirst of San Diego, 100 miles to the west, the United States has a plan to replace a 23-mile segment of the earthen All-American Canal, which the federal government owns and the Colorado River feeds, with a concrete-lined parallel trough.

The $225 million project would send more water to San Diego, by cutting off billions of leaked gallons — enough for 112,000 households a year — that have helped irrigate Mexican farms since the 1940's.

But Mexican farmers and their advocates say the lined canal would effectively turn off the spigot for 25,000 people, including 400 farmers whose wells rely on the seepage that has helped turn the powdery fields east of Mexicali, an industrial city, into one of the biggest Mexican producers of onions, alfalfa, asparagus, squash and other crops.