Border Security Cuts Eyed
Photo: Contractors install giant sections of fence near Calexico, Calif, along the border with Mexico in September 2007. Under the president's scale back on border security, the existing 643 miles of border fence would be maintained, but no new barriers would be built. (By Jack Gruber, USA Today)• The Border Patrol, which doubled to 20,000 agents during the Bush administration, would lose 180 agents through attrition. Border staffing would stay the same.
• A "virtual" fence of pole cameras and sensors aimed at stopping illegal immigrants, drug smugglers and terrorists on the U.S.-Mexican border, faces a $225 million cut from $800 million last year. That would delay implementation while a review of the fence, plagued by technical problems, is done.
• Five of the Coast Guard's 13 elite Maritime Security and Safety Teams (MSST), created since 2001 to protect waterfront cities, would be eliminated. Obama is proposing cuts in New York City, San Francisco, Anchorage and King's Bay, Ga.
• The existing 643 miles of concrete-and-steel border fence would be maintained but no new barriers would be built.
Photo: U.S. Border Patrol agent Gabriel Pacheco walks back to his vehicle along the border fence with its concertino wire topping in Nov. 2008 in San Diego. Under the president's scale back on border security, the existing 643 miles of border fence would be maintained, but no new barriers would be built. (By Lenny Ignelzi, AP)
In the wake of the failed attempt to blow up an airplane bound for Detroit on Dec. 25, Obama's budget for next year calls for $371 million for 500 more body scanners, 275 more canine teams and an unspecified number of new air marshals.
Former Homeland Security department policy chief Stewart Baker says in paying for more aviation security, the White House "has decided that some of the border defenses are more expendable. ... We're taking some risks there."
http://www.usatoday.com/news/washington/2010-02-04-border-security-budget_N.htm