Congress Funds Wall of Hate

Congress Approves $1.6 Billion for Wall of Hate

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This map shows approximate locations where the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) plans to build steel and concrete border walls through communities, farmland and wild areas in South Texas. In its recent Omnibus appropriation, Congress funded construction of 25 miles of solid concrete levee border walls, shown in blue, in Hidalgo County to the tune of $445 million. Another $196 million was granted for an undefined mileage of additional border walls in this area, most likely all or part of the 32 miles proposed for Starr County, shown in yellow. In addition, the bill gives DHS $251 million to build a 14-mile-long second layer of border walls near San Diego, California. Yes, that's a quarter billion dollars to build a second border wall parallel to an existing border wall. Nearly a half billion dollars is also given for replacement of existing border walls, along with $38 million for wall planning and design, and $196 million for so-called "border security technology." The total comes to $1.571 billion.

Click here to read a news story about this, and posted below is the Sierra Club's official statement:

 

WASHINGTON, D.C. -- In a rush to avoid another government shutdown, members of Congress have proposed an omnibus deal that fortunately falls short of Trump’s outrageous requests to fully fund his wall, but still includes $1.6 billion for border walls along the U.S.- Mexico border. A significant portion of the funding is designated for 33 miles of new barriers that can be built as levee-walls or existing “bollard fence. Levee-walls and bollard fences have created flooding disasters in border states, blocked wildlife migration and posed harm to communities.

 

Importantly, a funding limitation specifies that new wall cannot be constructed in the Santa Ana Wildlife Refuge, but unfortunately, still leaves other natural areas like the National Butterfly Center and communities of people in the area at risk.

 

In response, Sierra Club Borderlands Campaign Co-Chair Scott Nicol released the following statement:

 

“This omnibus deal fails to protect Dreamers, while funding a dangerous and divisive border wall that will have detrimental effects on our Southwest communities. While it preserves the Santa Ana Wildlife Refuge for the time being, it still risks people and places nearby. The threats are still very real and will be felt by communities.

 

“This wall is much more than a racist campaign soundbite. It comes with dangerous health and safety waivers. Foregoing these bedrock and bipartisan laws has resulted in flooding in places like Nogales where people lost their lives, the destruction of Native American burial sites and the harm of dozens of endangered species and fragmented habitat. Most concerningly, there is zero accountability or consequence for these outcomes.

 

“It makes no sense to spend nearly $2 billion on an unnecessary and cruel border wall. We will continue to stand against this wall and attacks on immigrants.”