Should Homeland Security build a permanent immigration checkpoint at Tubac?

Yes 53 %
No 38 %
I don't know 9 %

Total number of votes: 47

http://www.tucsoncitizen.com/ss/local/85890.php

Related storyat the link:

Permanent checkpoint on I-19 in the works?
SHERYL KORNMAN
Tucson Citizen
The Army Corps of Engineers sent letters early this month to property owners in the Tubac area asking for three months of access to their property for an "I-19 checkpoint project."
The letters said the engineers would do surveys and "other work" on the private property.
Property owners in the area, about 25 miles north of the Arizona-Mexico border, were assured that no immigration checkpoint would be built until a Government Accountability Office study was completed.
Curtis Rogers, a 15-year Tubac property owner, who received a letter, said Tuesday he is "appalled that the government is moving forward with this."
Property owners said a temporary Border Patrol checkpoint in the area has driven illegal immigrants onto their property after smugglers dropped them off so they could make their way around the checkpoint.
Rep. Raúl Grijalva, D-Ariz., whose congressional district is just north of the area, said Tuesday the letters to the property owners are "very disrespectful to the process" and a "violation of the trust people had with the Department of Homeland Security."
"Homeland Security always said they wanted a permanent checkpoint. Now it appears they're moving ahead. People in my district don't want it," Grijalva said.
Democratic Rep. Gabrielle Giffords, whose district takes in the proposed checkpoint, released a statement Tuesday afternoon saying she was "alarmed to learn that the Army Corps of Engineers was sending letters to my constituents regarding an environmental assessment process for a permanent checkpoint on Interstate 19."
"After more than a year of community collaboration and negotiations with the Border Patrol, we agreed that planning for a permanent checkpoint would not begin until this occurred," she said.
She said the Department of Homeland Security and the Border Patrol's Tucson sector informed her that the Army Corps "made a mistake" and a decision on the placement of a permanent checkpoint on I-19 has not been reached.
"An interim checkpoint will be built and studied prior to public discussions regarding a permanent structure," she said.