Archive for May, 2009

Border Wall at Hidalgo Pumphouse and World Birding Center, Sunday 24 May 2009

Wednesday, May 27th, 2009

Last week we interviewed elected officials who hold office around Hidalgo County about the combined border wall–levee structure that passes through the majority of the county. ?One construction site that has been a focal point for this study is the Hidalgo Pumphouse and World Birding Center in the town of Hidalgo. ?The renovation of the Pumphouse and the creation of a world birding center are part of larger project undertaken in Hidalgo to transform the area, making it more attractive for tourists and residents alike. ? The border wall project bisects the pumphouse/world birding center, so in our conversations with elected officials we were keen to learn about their interaction with DHS during the construction process. We learned that DHS was responsive to the concerns of elected leaders. ?For instance, they agreed to include a large gate in the wall at the pumphouse-birding center so that people would still be able to traverse their hike and bike trails. ?From what we understand, there will be a border patrol gaurd at the gate, but s/he will be under orders not to ask for papers when individuals cross through the gated area. ? ?The gate will be closed when the center does at the end of the day. ?We also learned that the visitors will not be able to see the border wall from the north side of the property. DHS will build ground up around it so that it looks like a green hill–or something that looks as though it came from mother nature. ?The view from the south side, however, will not be scenic or blend into the surrounding landscape.

Margaret wants to shift the tone of this blog to a more personal level. ?On our trip on Sunday, we ran across a couple of border patrol agents walking along the property. ?They were young and polite (unlike agents we ran across at other places along the border wall that we visited on Sunday) and armed. ?Margaret still finds it shocking to be walking around a birding center with her two young children and see heavily armed men, or –for that matter–in a Subway buying a sandwich and see another two heavily armed men ordering sandwiches. ?Margaret sees the pistols and bullet proof vests and becomes nervous. These armed men are not police. It is not their job to protect her from criminals. ?Their job is immigration. ? Why do they need to be wearing pistols in public places? ?It’s one thing for an agent to be out in the bush by him/herself but driving around in towns in SUV’s and buying sandwiches–are the arms necessary in such places?

Below we include some photos from the pumphouse of the wall and where we think that the gate might be located.

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Pipes that take water from canal (once Rio Grande)

Old pipes that would have been used to transport the pumped water from the Rio Grande (this canal was the Rio Grande until a hurricane in 1933 re-routed the river) to other parts of Hidalgo County.

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Border Wall Forces the Closure of Sabal Palms Audubon Sanctuary

Monday, May 11th, 2009

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On Saturday morning, we attended a final event in celebration of the Sabal Palms Audubon?Sanctuary whose official last day will be?Friday 15 May 2009. ?Audubon decided to close The Sabal Palms Sanctuary primarily due to the construction of the border wall. ?DHS plans to build the wall north of the Sanctuary, making access to the park difficult. ?The location of the Sanctuary is north of the Rio Grande, providing another reminder that U.S. residents have increasingly limited access to land on the southside of the border wall. ?This proposed construction reminds us, once again, that DHS’s inability to provide transparency in the process of the border wall construction hinders the everyday movement and lives of U.S. citizens. ?This lack of transparency makes planning incredibly difficult.?? Not to mention that during these hard economic times, the loss of jobs and revenue from tourism that these parks generate effects the quality of life for residents and workers in the Rio Grande Valley.??? According the Sierra Club, DHS will not provide compensation for damage and devaluation that the border wall construction brings to properties adjacent?and often times on?their construction sites.? DHS also leaves completely uncertain the basic issue of access to property.

The Sabal Palms Sanctuary is a significant place for a variety of reasons. To us, the foremost is that it is one of the last remaining places where residents and visitors can glimpse what this region looked like before farming and ranching stripped the land of its trees:? imagine a forest of palms.? Rather than heat parching desolate tracts of land with outposts of mesquite, this land once stood thick with native palms trees.? The trees were so dense that when you looked up, you couldn??t see the sun, just palm fronds. ?You would hear the sounds of those fronds shaking in the breeze.? It felt more like a rain forest in Costa Rica than the flatlands of soil that you see today.? The density of the palms is why some of the first Europeans to visit this region named the Rio Grande ??Rio de las Palmas?? (River of the Palms).

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The other two places where you can see the palm forests will also be located behind the border wall.