Biden to Resume Construction of Section of President Trump’s Border Wall in Texas: Report

Fox News reporter Bill Melugin reported Wednesday evening on Special Report that the Biden administration will resume construction of a 13.4 mile section of President Trump’s border wall in the Rio Grande Valley in Texas.

File screen image.
Melugin posted about his report to Twitter, “BREAKING: .@FoxNews has confirmed via the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers that construction on a 13.4 mile stretch of border wall in the Rio Grande Valley will *RESUME* after pressure from local residents & politicians. The Biden admin previously halted all wall construction in Jan.”
https://twitter.com/BillFOXLA/status/1392611420068528128
https://youtu.be/7C5_h77IhfU?t=1300
Sen. Ted Cruz (R-TX) had recently sent a letter to Biden urging completion of a stretch of unfinished border wall in Hidalgo County due to concerns about a level wall system that was part of the border wall construction that was also left unfinished. With flood season approaching, Cruz called on Biden to finish that part of the wall. Cruz’s spokeswoman Erin Perrine posted about the letter Wednesday evening in response to the Fox report.


Cruz letter (footnotes at source):

Dear President Biden:
Your decision to halt levee wall construction when you halted border wall construction has left hundreds of thousands of residents vulnerable in the Rio Grande Valley (RGV). We have heard from Hidalgo County officials and residents that as hurricane and flooding season soon approaches, the unfinished border wall levee system in Hidalgo County is a matter of urgent public safety. They have been emphatic—remediating the levee wall system should be an emergency priority. We urge you to allow the RGV Border Patrol Sector to complete and reinforce the compromised and unfinished levee system in Hidalgo County immediately—a measure that is strongly supported by local residents and leaders across the political spectrum.
In 2019, the U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP) began construction on approximately 24 miles of levee wall system in Hidalgo County, Texas to protect against flood damage that plagues the region. CBP partnered with the United States Army Corps of Engineers (USACE) to award a contract to build 11 miles of new levee system, and the levee system construction project was funded by CBP’s Fiscal Year 2019 appropriation.4 The levee design plans were approved by the International Boundary and Water Commission (IBWC) and USACE.
Initially, in order to accommodate border wall construction, the levee system was modified. However, when your administration halted border wall construction this January, it also halted construction on the levee wall system in Hidalgo County, leaving that system not only unfinished but compromised. Currently, there are approximately 14 miles of work area in Hidalgo County that are either incomplete or compromised. This exposes residents to uncovered trenches, rebar, and construction materials. It also cuts off or limits many Hidalgo County residents’, businesses’, and irrigation districts’ access to their property.
But the largest threat by far to public safety is the upcoming hurricane season. The RGV knows all too well the catastrophic effects of flooding. In June 2018, the Valley experienced a “great” flood. Made vulnerable by its generally flat terrain and proximity to the warm gulf waters, the Valley experienced flash flooding precipitated by heavy tropical rainfall, leading to flooded streets and thousands of emergency rescues. The flooding is estimated to have resulted in at least $250 million of damage, including damage to over 20,000 Texan residences and businesses. The RGV was struck again in June of 2019 with record-setting rainfall in certain areas. Streets were again flooded, homes and businesses devastated. The U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development, in response, committed $240 million to the repair of homes, businesses, and infrastructure. And last year, the RGV was hit with prolific rainfall, including up to 18 inches in some spots.
While residents of the Rio Grande Valley have suffered through devastating tropical storms in recent years, this year’s hurricane season is already shaping up to have busier tropical storm activity than normal. Hurricane expert, Dr. Philip Klotzbach of Colorado State University, released this year’s seasonal hurricane forecast with a predicted 17 named storms, 8 hurricanes, and 4 major hurricanes for 2021—rates notably higher than the averages from 1981–2010. 11 Texas is expected to be hard-hit with a forecasted 75% chance of being impacted by a tropical storm, 49% chance of being hit by a hurricane, and a 21% chance of a major hurricane hitting the state. These rates are considerably higher than the typical hurricane season rates in Texas of 58%, 35%, and 14% respectively.
With a forecasted busy hurricane season fast-approaching, border wall levee construction must commence immediately in Hidalgo County. In response to the heightened flood risk this year, over 14 miles of the levee system need immediate remediation. The compromised levee poses severe risk to over 200,000 county residents once flooding begins. Simply put, the effects of hurricane season will be atastrophic in Hidalgo County if the levee system is not remediated.
Independent of the border wall’s significant success in decreasing illegal immigration, shoring up the levee system will provide desperately needed safety and security to Americans in the Rio Grande Valley. Your administration should not allow its opposition to a border wall to prevent building a levee wall that is critical to the people of the Rio Grande Valley. We urge you to authorize the RGV Border Patrol Sector to immediately commence levee construction.

UPDATE: Confirmed by the Army Corps of Engineers, “In support of CBP’s border infrastructure program, USACE has resumed DHS-funded design & construction support on approx. 13.4 miles of levee in the Rio Grande Valley that were partially excavated or at various levels of construction when work on the wall was paused for review.”


UPDATE 2: USACE confirms the focus is only on levee wall construction, “To be clear, wall construction remains paused to extent permitted by law. Per DHS, we’ve started critical work to repair the Rio Grande Valley’s flood levee, which was excavated to make way for border wall. This remediation work will not involve expanding border barrier.”

 

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