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- <text id=94TT1650>
- <title>
- Nov. 28, 1994: Immigration:The Unwelcome Mat
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
- Nov. 28, 1994 Star Trek
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- IMMIGRATION, Page 35
- The Unwelcome Mat
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p> As the Proposition 187 debate roars, the U.S. begins an intensive
- effort to seal off a 2,000-mile border
- </p>
- <p>By S.C. Gwynne/Nogales--With reporting by Laura Lopez/Mexico City and Elaine Shannon/Washington
- </p>
- <p> If Californians believed they were settling an issue when they
- approved Proposition 187 by a 59% to 41% vote, they were wrong.
- The battle has spread to the courts and the marketplace. Last
- week a federal judge in Los Angeles temporarily blocked the
- state from implementing most provisions of the measure, which
- would deny services to illegal aliens, on the grounds that it
- may violate their civil rights. At the same time, the threat
- of a grass-roots boycott of California spread across North America,
- as groups ranging from the World Boxing Council to the National
- Association of Hispanic Journalists said they would retaliate
- by taking their business elsewhere.
- </p>
- <p> All the furor over Proposition 187, however, has obscured an
- anti-immigration campaign that may have just as much impact,
- but far sooner. Attorney General Janet Reno has decided to try
- to virtually seal off the 2,076-mile border with Mexico to illegal
- crossers. The U.S. Border Patrol has long maintained it could
- accomplish this if given a chance, but the patrol has always
- been underfunded and understaffed.
- </p>
- <p> Now the agency is getting its chance. The campaign started with
- successful experiments in the Border Patrol sectors in El Paso,
- Texas, and San Diego. Operation Hold the Line, which began a
- year ago in El Paso, has brought a 72% reduction in arrests,
- which are considered the most accurate bellwether of the number
- of illegal crossings. In the San Diego area, where half of all
- illegal immigrants into the U.S. sneak through the jagged canyons
- and urban alleys, a two-year tightening effort culminating in
- Operation Gatekeeper in October has reduced the number of arrests
- 30%. Inspired by these statistics, the Justice Department unveiled
- a plan to accomplish what many considered unimaginable only
- a few years ago: reduce the number of illegals crossing the
- border 90% during the next three years.
- </p>
- <p> Though the timing of Reno's decision was clearly intended to
- help California Democrats in the November elections, most of
- whom opposed Proposition 187, it was more than just a campaign
- promise. The money is already flowing: $236 million has been
- allocated to the southwestern border for 1995, an increase of
- 25% from 1994. An additional 1,010 agents will soon be deployed,
- bringing the total to more than 5,000. Helicopters, night-vision
- scopes, ground sensors and computers are being brought in at
- unprecedented levels. When equipment has not been delivered,
- because of the glacial government procurement process, Reno
- has personally borrowed gear from the Pentagon.
- </p>
- <p> Yet, short of building a Chinese wall, some skeptics wonder
- whether the U.S. can really seal off a border that consists
- largely of four-strand barbed wire and the Rio Grande, and includes
- the barren deserts around Yuma, Arizona; the thick evergreen
- brush near McAllen, Texas; two ocean ports; and several mountain
- ranges. The Border Patrol insists it can do so, in part because
- of that very terrain. The vast majority of crossings now take
- place in and around urban areas. The crackdowns in San Diego
- and El Paso rely on enhanced technology, fences and manpower
- over short stretches of mostly urban zones, forcing immigrants
- to choke points in much rougher country. "If we can begin to
- deal with more crossers in canyons and rugged terrain," says
- Tucson, Arizona, sector chief Ronald Dowdy, "then we are playing
- on home court and by our rules. As the distances they must travel
- to get to transportation become larger, we become much more
- effective."
- </p>
- <p> But illegal crossers are inventive; already there is evidence
- that they are probing the border for weak points. A surge of
- new crossings has been observed in places like Campo, California,
- to the east of San Diego, and Sunland Park, in the western part
- of El Paso. In Nogales, Arizona, arrests are up 51% from last
- year. "We're seeing a lot more folks from Baja California, who
- normally would cross through San Diego, and people from Chihuahua,
- who would usually cross in El Paso," says Nogales border agent
- F. D. Gunter. To cope with this surge, the Tucson sector is
- getting 100 new agents, along with night-vision scopes, helicopters,
- computers and other equipment.
- </p>
- <p> Some of the toughest areas to control are in the brushy landscapes
- near the Texas border towns of Laredo, Del Rio and McAllen,
- which have not been promised any additional agents or equipment.
- "We have not heard about this plan, and to date we have received
- nothing," says McAllen border agent Mario Garcia, whose area
- covers 280 miles of river, 19 counties and 17,000 sq. mi., are
- all policed by 395 agents.
- </p>
- <p> Another threat to the plan comes from Mexico, which has seemingly
- few intentions to cooperate. Says Fernando Estrada Samano, a
- National Action Party deputy: "We will not stop migrant workers
- from looking for a better quality of life in the U.S." Social
- strains are already being felt on the Mexican side of the border.
- In Tijuana, where much of its floating population of 15,000
- migrant workers found itself stranded, petty crime has risen
- 10% since Operation Gatekeeper began. Thousands of workers who
- used to commute to jobs in El Paso to work are now without wages
- and have little hope for future employment.
- </p>
- <p> The larger problem is that tight control over the southwestern
- U.S. border, along with the potential impact of Proposition
- 187, creates entirely new categories of problems. It will almost
- certainly place enormous hardships on the Mexican population,
- which will in turn create diplomatic strains between two countries
- working hard to make the North American Free Trade Agreement
- succeed. It also stands to devastate agriculture in states like
- California, which rely on illegal immigrant labor to bring in
- the harvest. All of which suggests that, even if it is possible
- to shut down the border with Mexico, reaching that goal may
- be far from the political slam dunk it seemed to be in the campaign
- season. While cutting off illegal immigration may save some
- money in social services, the price will be the loss of a labor
- pool that the U.S. has long taken for granted.
- </p>
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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