Border and Enforcement News
A
coalition of
"Sadly
the US Department of Homeland Security has repeatedly ignored TBC’s pleas for
cooperation and coordination among federal, state and local governments in order
to foster smart, effective border security measures," said Eagle Pass Mayor
Chad Foster, the coalition’s chairman, adding that they entered into the
lawsuit by Cameron County landowners "to protect the interests of
communities across Texas and to minimize the impact the border wall will have on
our environment, culture, commerce, and quality of life."
The TBC believes that DHS is focused solely on the construction of border
fencing without acknowledging concerns about the effect it would have on both
the environment and the "binational way of life" on the border.
Homeland
Security spokeswoman Laura Keehner has steadfastly maintained that there be
"no ambiguity about the department’s top priority…securing the
homeland," adding that the department has "championed" a
combination of traditional fencing an manpower to reach the goal.
The
Secure Fence Act of 2006 initially called for the construction of 745 miles of
double-layered fencing along the 2,000-mile U.S.-Mexico border.
DHS scaled back this estimate down to their current plan of 370 miles of
fencing and vehicle barriers.
*****
More
than 280 workers accused of being illegal immigrants were arrested this month by
federal agents at five plants belonging to Pilgrim’s Pride, a major
chicken-processing company, The New York
Times reports. The roundup was
the largest immigration enforcement effort at a workplace this year.
The arrests are part of a ever-intensifying strategy by Immigration and
Customs Enforcement (ICE) officials to bring federal charges against any
unauthorized immigrant workers caught purchasing or using Social Security
numbers to obtain work. Justice
Department officials said they would bring criminal identity theft charges
against many of those arrested.
ICE
officials said that over 100 workers were arrested at each of the company’s
two plants in
*****
The Washington
Post reports that his past week, the
Homeland
Security Secretary Michael Chertoff linked the effort to enforcing the
nation’s recent changes in immigration laws, accusing airline carriers of
delaying cooperation on the issue for commercial reasons.
"if we don’t have US-VISIT air exit by this time next year, it
will only be because the airline industry killed it," Chertoff said
recently. "We have to decide
who is going to win this fight. Is
it going to be the airline industry, or is it going to be the people who believe
we should know who leaves the country by air?"
The
initiative has been seen as many in the airline industry as an unreasonably
costly and burdensome measure. Doug
Lavin, regional vice president for the international Air Transport Association,
which represents major
In
response to DHS’ slow response to implementing US-VISIT, Congress last year
set a June 2009 deadline for DHS to collect fingerprints from departing air
passengers in a law to implement recommendations of the 9/11 Commission.
Otherwise, the government cannot expand the Visa Waiver Program to
include more nations, a move which it believes could negatively affect tourism
to the