Border Fence Project Surpasses 500-Mile Mark

Arizona Free Press
← Back to Our Top Stories
Pedestrian, Vehicle Fence Installed Along the Border in California, Arizona, New Mexico and Texas Washington - The Department of Homeland Securitys U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP) announced that fence construction along the southern border has surpassed the 500-mile mark. As the result of a comprehensive operational analysis, the U.S. Border Patrol determined the need for tactical infrastructure including fencing, patrol roads, and lighting at locations along the U.S.-Mexico border in order to impede illegal cross-border activity. CBP has worked diligently to meet the Congressional mandate and the departments goal to build roughly 670 miles of fencing. CBPs Secure Border Initiative (SBI) Program Management Office (PMO) oversees the deployment of technology and tactical infrastructure construction at the border, which was authorized by the Secure Fence Act of 2006. The SBI program was established by the department in early 2007 to carry out the Congressional mandate. SBI program efforts remain focused on infrastructure, the development and deployment of surveillance technology on both the southern and northern borders, and the funding of carrizo cane eradication research in Laredo, Texas. Fence Facts as of December 12, 2008 Total Miles of Completed Pedestrian Fence: 278 * California 91.3 miles * Arizona 127.8 miles * New Mexico 14.2 miles * Texas 44.6 miles Total Miles of Completed Vehicle Fence: 248 * California 19.8 miles * Arizona 151.6 miles * New Mexico 76.2 miles * Texas 0.04 miles SBI bases infrastructure projects on the recommendations of Border Patrol leadership and frontline agents informed by decades of experience on the geographically diverse southwest border. Since May 2007, CBP has conducted extensive discussions with state and local stakeholders, including landowners, about fence placement. As part of these outreach efforts, CBP has contacted more than 600 landowners, residents, and officials through town hall meetings, community open houses, and a door-to-door campaign to ensure that the local perspective was heard. Securing our nations borders requires a combination of tactical infrastructure, technology, and personnel. In addition to efforts to build physical barriers, CBP has deployed an unprecedented number of unmanned aerial vehicles, cameras, sensors, radar, and infrared equipment and has exceeded the goal of hiring and deploying more than 18,000 Border Patrol agents.