
tremble, choir boy, tremble
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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PBC8LeXb_6s
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by james gilbert
yuma sun
june 29, 2019
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The Yuma Sector Border Patrol unveiled a massive tent facility within the compound at the Yuma Station recently that will be used to process and house the unprecedented number of migrant families and unaccompanied children still arriving at the U.S./Mexico border.
“We have Border Patrol facilities that can handle processing and detention, but they are inadequate for this population and the amount of people that we are seeing,” Chief Patrol Agent, Yuma Border Patrol Sector, Anthony J. Porvaznik said in reference to the three stations within the sector. “This new facility is CBP’s commitment to bringing better conditions and more humane treatment to people that are taken into our custody.”
Porvaznik explained that the Yuma Sector, which secures 126 miles of U.S. border from the Imperial Sand Dunes in California to the Yuma-Pima County line, has been operating over capacity because so many migrants are entering the country illegally, turning themselves in to agents and asking for asylum.
The temporary tent facility, which is designed to hold up to 500 migrants, is weatherproofed and climate-controlled and will serve as holding facilities for parents with their children until they are transferred to ICE — or in the case of unaccompanied children, the Department of Health and Human Services — hopefully within 72 hours.
“Overall, this is just a much better space for Border Patrol agents to do their jobs,” Porvaznik said. “It’s also a much safer environment for the children in our custody until we can get them transferred.”
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Border Patrol agents guided members of the media through two of the multiple large “soft-sided” structures, one of which had dozens of mats used for sleeping piled up along one side. a guard shack in the center and a large screen TV connected to a DVD player.
Deputy Patrol Agent in Charge Humberto Guerra, who gave one of the guided tours, explained that there are four tents meant to house 125 migrants each. They are cleaned after each use and large enough for each person inside to have 60 square feet of space.
Another of the tents shown to media was the processing center, which featured several rows of benches, tables filled with computers and other electronic equipment, a row of refrigerators for water and other food items and an area with shelves of storage bins containing new clothing such as socks and underwear, nonperishable snacks and other hygiene supplies.
Upon entering the tent, all of which had fabricated flooring, agent Guerra pointed to a partitioned off area where medical personnel would screen migrants injuries and illnesses, explaining that it is also where every detainee’s intake will be conducted, which included running a records check, conducting interviews and entering their personal information.
Guerra also said the tent has separate shower sections for both men and women, each with multiple stalls, chemical toilets, baby-changing tables and sinks. Two additional trailers, filled with giant washing machines and dryers, will serve as laundry rooms. There were also baby cribs being stored nearby.
Porvaznik said while contract staff will do all the cleaning, laundry, meal preparation, assist with providing security around the premises, and maintenance, only Border Patrol agents will have direct contact with the detainee population.
“To do all the work that is needed we are hiring in the neighborhood of 180 people,” Porvaznik said. “Those are local jobs in the community that pay $18 an hour.”
To deal with the continuous overcrowding occurring within the Yuma Sector, the Border Patrol had to expand into a building and a partially outdoor area within its compound on Avenue A, by converting them into a makeshift detention area and a holding space.
The soft-sided facilities will remain in use as long as the migrant crisis continues along the border.
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yuma_Sun
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old timer chronicle
editor
rawclyde

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by rachel estes
yuma sun
june 24, 2020
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Air Force One touched down on the southwestern side of the country… as U.S. President Donald Trump arrived in Yuma County to commemorate the 200th mile of the border wall system.
Upon his descent from the aircraft, the president was met with salutes from Marine Corps Air Station Yuma Col. David Suggs, Lt. Col. Henry Hortonstine, Lt, Col. James Paxton and Sgt. Maj. David Leikwold before being shuttled to the U.S. Border Patrol Yuma Sector Headquarters for a roundtable briefing on border security with state, local and federal officials.
The president also traveled to San Luis to appraise a new section of border wall near County 22nd Street and the Salinity Canal.
During the roundtable briefing the president declared that the nation is currently experiencing the “lowest number of illegal border crossings in many years.”
“My administration has done more than any other administration in history to secure our southern border,” Trump said. “Our border has never been more secure. Illegal immigration is down 84% from this time last year. Illegal crossings from Central America are down 97%. Nearly 450,000 tons of drugs have been seized this year, and 2,337,000 criminal aliens have been apprehended. We’ve stopped asylum fraud, ended catch-and-release ~ if you look at so many of the different crimes that come through the border, they’re stopped.”
Now at 200 miles, the border wall is “on pace” to have 450 total miles of structure completed by the end of the calendar year, according to Trump, with 50 more miles to be added “almost immediately thereafter.”
In addition to “ground-breaking agreements” with Mexico to station over 20,000 Mexican soldiers on the U.S. border to further amplify border security, Trump said “a lot of progress” has been made with Guatemala, El Salvador and Honduras.
“Now when somebody comes over (the border illegally), whether it’s MS-13 or anybody else, we bring them back and they take them gladly,” he said. “In the previous administration, they didn’t take them at all. They wouldn’t take them ~ they said, ‘You keep them.'”
CLOSING LOOPHOLES
According to Chad Wolf, acting secretary of the Department of Homeland Security (DHS), progress has also been made to close “loopholes that have served as magnets over the last three years” for migrants illegally journeying north to the U.S.
“We’ve entered into a number of game-changing agreements with our northern triangle partners to stem the flow of illegal migrants as well,” Wolf said. “(Trump) specifically demanded Mexico step up their efforts and we’re seeing more and more migrants being turned around at Mexico’s southern border before they reach our own. We’re also addressing the abuse of the asylum system, clamping down on the use of frivolous asylum claims to illegally obtain work authorization here in the U.S. We’re also disrupting and dismantling dangerous cartels by leveraging the unique capabilities of the United States Coast Guard as well as the United States Navy. We’re attacking these criminals where they’re most vulnerable, and that’s at the sea.”
According to Wolf, these strides in border security are largely attributable to the president’s disregard for the “ineffective, conventional wisdom put forth by folks in D.C.” in favor of his own operators’ request for an “effective and lasting border wall system.”
“Border security is Homeland Security, and the first priority of any nation is to ensure the sovereignty by protecting the integrity of its borders,” he said. “You’ve responded by making available over $15 billion to fund this critical capability. Your support of the men and women of DHS and CBP (U.S. Customs and Border Protection) is beyond comparison.”
Echoing Wolf, CBP Acting Commissioner Mark Morgan concurred that border security coequals national security, italicizing the point that rather than a series of steel panels in the ground, the border wall is a complex system affording officials unprecedented capabilities to maximize that security in their sectors.
“It’s just common sense,” Morgan said. “We have to know who and what is coming to our borders and through our borders, and we have to be able to defend that. And with every new mile of new wall system, the operation capacity of CBP ~ specifically border patrol ~ is increased. Our ability to enforce the rule of law has increased, our ability to maintain integrity in the immigration system has increased, our ability to improve border security has increased and our ability to shape and drive the behavior of the cartels has also increased.”
HEALTH SECURITY
According to Trump, the border wall system has also served to mitigate further spread of COVID-19 in the U.S,
“Using our emergency public health authorities, we prevented a coronavirus catastrophe on the southern border, shutting down human smuggling and swiftly returning the crossers,” Trump said. “Without these public health measures, the southern border would be a global epicenter of the viral transmission and if you look at some of the towns on the other side of the wall ~ as an example, in California ~ we have a certain area that is heavily infected on the Mexico side and if we didn’t have a border wall there it would really be a catastrophic situation.”
Echoed by Yuma Mayor Doug Nicholls as he expressed gratitude for the president and DHS assistance in the “big surge of Central American families” the area experienced last year, border security is correlational to community health and wellness.
“If you fast-forwarded that situation to today and those families were coming through with COVID, that would be 5,200 people coming through my community, potentially, with COVID,” Nicholls said during the roundtable. “It’s simple math ~ the wall prevents the number of exposures we can have to COVID.”
VALUE OF PARTNERSHIP
“The men and women of DHS who live here, they’re our residents, they’re our friends, they’re our family members,” Nicholls continued. “It’s a very personal and very poignant fact for us to have those kinds of protections in place.”
Drawing from her experience working on the road in the early 2000s, Yuma Police Chief Susan Smith said the area has seen a “marked decline” in crimes related to undocumented immigrants. This, she noted, is due not only to the enhancement of the border wall system but also to partnerships.
“Yuma County is a very unique community in that all of the law enforcement work is very collaboratively together from our federal, state and local partners,” Smith said during the roundtable. “I hope you get that takeaway when you leave here.”
Initially introduced by Trump as a “great friend” to both the state and the nation, Arizona Gov. Doug Ducey also emphasized the importance of all levels of leadership collaborating to quell illegal border crossings, cartel activity in the U.S. and human trafficking.
“For years Arizonans have heard empty talk about the border, and this is the first administration that has taken action,” said Ducey. “So I want to say how grateful I am for the partnership with Homeland Security, how your border patrol, your customs and border protection and ICE (U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement) have all been helpful, the Army Corps of Engineers ~ not only what they’re doing on the wall but what they’re doing for potential surge capacity around COVID-19 ~ I think shows the best of what’s possible when there’s partnership between the federal government and the state government.”
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original story headline:
President Trump visits Yuma
editor of old timer edition:
rawclyde
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by rafael carranza
arizona republic
may 20, 2020
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CORONADO NATIONAL MEMORIAL ~ Kimberly Lea and Kimberly Knebel hiked around Phoenix for months, carrying weights and monitoring their water use, in preparation to start hiking the first section of the Arizona Trail.
The scenic 800-mile-long route stretches from the Arizona-Utah state line south to the Coronado National Memorial, 4,750 acres of protected mountain landscapes and grassy plains on the Arizona-Mexico border.
That’s where the two women began their journey on Thursday: at Border Monument 102. The historic mile-marker, a worn metal sign, and a rusted, dilapidated barbed-wire fence mark the southern end of the trail.
However, construction crews are slated to replace the barbed wire with concrete footers that will hold 30-foot-tall, 6-inch-thick metal slats that will be spaced four inches apart.
“I think it’s terrible,” Knebel said. “It’s going to ruin the landscape. It’s not going to be pretty. What is up there now, it’s hardly noticeable.”
There’s no timeline for construction here. But 30-foot barriers would dramatically alter the landscape at this remote national park.
The mangled wire delineating the international boundary runs up and down the steep slopes of the Huachuca Mountains. It still allows for sweeping views of the San Pedro Valley, the site where the Spanish expedition led by Francisco Vasquez de Coronado is believed to have entered into the modern-day United States in 1540.
In addition to metal bollard fencing, work crews will install lights and sensors. They’ll also clear a 60-foot-wide swath of land along the mountains to accommodate construction equipment.
Arizona’s borderlands, including pristine areas such as the Coronado National Memorial, have become the epicenter of construction of President Donald Trump’s long-promised wall along the border with Mexico.
Crews are racing to complete a slew of barriers along approximately half of the state’s international border before Election Day, despite the global new coronavirus pandemic.
Contractors are in the process of building 161 miles of barriers along the state’s 372 mile-long border with Mexico. An additional 80 miles of construction are in the pipeline, according to Customs and Border Protection. If all planned projects are finished, the new 30-foot barriers would cover nearly two-thirds of Arizona’s border with Mexico.
Almost all of the ongoing or planned construction is taking place on land the U.S. government owns. That includes national parks, monuments and conservation areas along the border.
Crews already have raised sagueros at Organ Pipe Cactus National Monument near Lukeville and unearthed the wetlands of the San Bernardino National Wildlife Refuge east of Douglas. Sites in the planning stages of construction include some of the most rugged and undisturbed areas of the state such as the Pajarito and Baboquivari Mountains west of Nogales.
“It’s a vision of division,” Lea said.
Farther up the trail, David Mabe disagreed. He spent his Thursday morning at the Coronado National Memorial with his wife Josephine and their two dogs,
“I know these mountains intimately,” he said.
Mabe is a retired U.S. Border Patrol agent and helicopter pilot with U.S. Customs and Border Protection’s air and marine operations. He spent nearly 20 years patrolling the border in southeastern Arizona, on land and from the air.
Even as he admitted that the flow of drugs and humans had slowed down over the years in the area near the memorial, Maybe said the border wall is necessary to keep out drugs and smugglers.
“The border wall, it doesn’t keep good people from coming across. It’s just slowing down people making a lot of money off of people” he said. “And they’re not good people… The smugglers, the drug smugglers, the human smugglers, there is nothing good about those people.”
The border projects are funded by more than $13 billion that the Trump administration redirected from the Defense Department’s 2019 and 2020 budgets to build more fencing along the border.
Acting Homeland Security Secretary Chad Wolf traveled to the Arizona border on May 12 for an aerial tour of construction at Organ Pipe Cactus National Monument, one of several sensitive sites where construction has already started.
Wolf’s visit, his second so far this year, cemented the state’s role as a key piece in the administration’s plans to build the border wall.
The construction has unleashed a torrent of criticism from stakeholders along Arizona’s border, including environmental groups, community organizations and tribal leaders who fear it will destroy important heritage sites near the border and harm wildlife.
“Now the construction is moving into areas without any barrier, which are primarily the most remote, mountainous areas along the Arizona border and some of the best corridors for jaguars and other species,” said Brian Segee, a senior attorney with the Tucson based Center for Biological Diversity.
The group filed another lawsuit on May 12, the same day as Wolf’s visit to Arizona, to stop construction of border barriers, arguing the transfer of funds from the military’s 2020 budget to build the border wall is unlawful. They filed a similar suit for the 2019 funds.
U.S. Customs and Border Protection, the U.S. border agency which Wolf oversees as Homeland Security chief, sought public comments on the latest round of planned projects in Arizona totaling 92 miles according to court records, that will likely be paid for with diverted 2020 budget funds.
The agency waived two dozen cultural and environmental laws in March to speed up the construction in Arizona. The waivers are another sore point with conservationists who worry that bypassing laws such as the Endangered Species Act and the National Environmental Policy Act will harm unique and fragile ecosystems.
Wolf said they’ve also reached out to environmental groups and advocates to “try to accommodate” their concerns. But he made it clear construction would continue regardless.
“At the end of the day, I think the administration has been very clear on this front, which is border security is national security is homeland security,” he said, “So we’re going to secure that border any way we can.”
Where the construction is happening
Customs and Border Protection, the agency managing construction jointly with the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, created a map this month showing active and planned construction sites along the entire length of the U.S./Mexico border.
The map allows users to look up the location, length and construction status for projects that CBP has publicly announced or for which contracts have been awarded. Some of the locations under construction show images of bulldozers and workers erecting the 30-foot barriers.
According to the projects listed in the CBP map, work is underway to complete 161 miles of new barriers in Arizona, replacing mostly dilapidated fencing or existing vehicle barriers. The projects are broken down by the two Border Patrol sectors covering the Arizona/Mexico border, Tucson and Yuma.
The Yuma Sector is smaller; its 132 linear miles of border with Mexico is about half of the Tucson Sector. It’s where most of the construction is taking place. Crews are working on 98 miles of border fencing throughout the sector, while another 10 miles near San Luis are in pre-construction.
In December, crews completed the first border wall project in Arizona under the Trump administration: replacing 22 miles of landing mat fencing with 30-foot bollards in San Luis.
Workers are adding primary and secondary fencing along the Barry M. Goldwater bombing range, replacing vehicle barriers with bollards along the Cabeza Prieta National Wildlife Refuge, as well as along the Colorado River.
The Center for Biological Diversity, which is suing the Trump administration, filmed drone footage of construction in a remote section of Cabeza Prieta. The images show a bulldozer carving out portions of the Tinajas Altas Mountains to flatten the area where the bollard fencing will go.
“Sacrificing this living landscape for a useless border wall is criminal,” said Laiken Jordhal, the group’s borderlands campaign manager. “We can rip the wall down, but we’ll never be able to piece back together the sacred sites and natural history obliterated by Trump’s racist border-wall fixation.”
Wolf, the acting Homeland Security secretary, toured wall construction along the Colorado River, west of Yuma, in January to mark the completion of 100 miles of “new border wall system,” to quote a plaque welded to the site during his visit.
On May 1, Yuma Sector Chief Carl Landrum said via Twitter that crews permanently closed “a glaring gap in infrastructure near San Luis AZ that has been exploited by smugglers for as long as it has existed. It is now more secure than ever!”
Images he attached to the tweet showed before and after photos of the Sanchez Canal, a well-documented crossing area located west of the San Luis port of entry, Cameras have caught smugglers cutting through concertina wire just hours after it was installed near the canal.
Today, bollards welded together form a wall suspended over the canal. The wall has 10 fencing panels that can be raised or lowered with a system of pulleys, the photos show.
Not all construction in the Yuma area has gone smoothly.
In December, the Defense Department Office of the Inspector General announced it would review a $400 million dollar contract awarded to Fisher Sand and Gravel Co. of Dickinson, North Dakota, to build 31 miles of fencing at Cabeza Prieta.
The investigation started amid reports that Trump pushed the Army Corps of Engineers to award Fisher Sand and Gravel a contract even though the company hadn’t met operational requirements and was late and over-budget in building one of eight border wall prototypes in San Diego in 2017.
Blasting draws condemnation
Border wall construction in the Tucson Sector has been more contentious.
CBP’s map shows that construction is underway for 63 miles of fencing in Cochise and Pima counties. Another 69 miles in those two counties, plus Santa Cruz, is in the pre-construction phase. That includes the project at the Coronado National Memorial known as Project Tucson B-6.
Earlier this year, the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers began blasting areas along the Arizona-Mexico border near the San Bernandino refuge in Douglas and Organ Pipe in Lukeville to loosen gravel. They are building sturdier concrete footers to hold the metal bollards.
The detonations at Monument Hill, west of the Lukeville border crossing, drew widespread criticism and condemnation from the Tohono O’odham Nation, who consider the mountain sacred. The tribe is concerned about several sites of cultural significance that are in close proximity to the border fence.
“For us, this is no different from DHS building a 30-foot wall along Arlington Cemetery or through the grounds of the National Cathedral,” Chairman Ned Norries testified before lawmakers in Washington D.C. in February.
CBP said its survey found no cultural or historical sites in the area, and that the blasting was limited to areas that had been previously disturbed.
On May 13, Clark Tenakhongva, the vice chairman for the Hopi Tribe in northern Arizona, sent a strongly worded letter to CBP in response to the agency’s request for public comments.
In the letter, Tenakhongva expressed his tribe’s solidarity with the Tohono O’odham Nation and demanded an immediate halt to the planning and preparations of border wall construction in southern Arizona.
“The Hopi Tribe claims cultural affiliation to earlier identifiable indigenous groups in the American Southwest including the Hohokam cultural group of Southern Arizona,” the vice chairman wrote.
“Since time immemorial, the Hopi Tribe has gained passage to Mexico and the rest of Central America through the Patatkwapi Trail and to this day, maintains its cultural and ceremonial connections to the indigenous groups to the south through this trail,” he added.
Tenakhongva criticized the Homeland Security Department for waiving several laws, including some aimed at preserving Native American graves and other archaeological artifacts, to expedite construction.
“The irreversible damage caused by the project to … ancestral Native American sites and the physical remains of our ancestors is unacceptable,” he wrote.
In southeastern Arizona, construction has continued at the San Bernardino National Wildlife Refuge. It has yet to begin at the San Pedro Riparian National Conservation Area, another ecologically sensitive site set for new barriers. Environmental groups worry new barriers will wall off the San Pedro, the last undammed river in the Southwest, to the detriment of wildlife that use the river corridor to migrate north and south.
‘Completely meaningless excercise’
As the May 15 deadline to submit public comments on the latest round of planned border barriers neared, environmental advocates announced they had gathered and submitted 8,200 comments in opposition to the waivers and to border wall construction.
“Further wall construction would stop wildlife in their tracks, putting animals like box turtles, pronghorn, coatis, pygmy owls and black bears at risk ~ and ending the recovery of iconic species such as jaguar and ocelots in the U.S.,” said Emily Burns, a programs director with Tucson-based conservation group Sky Island Alliance.
It’s unclear if the submissions and input will influence how Customs and Border Protection rolls out construction along the additional 92 miles the agency identified in its waivers. Despite participating in the comment process, conservation and advocacy groups on Friday signed a letter to Wolf and other senior border officials ripping it as a “completely meaningless exercise.”
The Trump administration is moving ahead with its plans to build a barrier in the Coronado National Memorial. Surveyors had marked a spot approximately 60 feet north from Border Monument 102, where the Arizona Trail begins.
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