DHS chief takes first steps to building a border wall

DHS picks sites in Arizona, California and Texas to begin building a planned border wall, and also moves to hire thousands of new border agents.

US-Mexico Border wall Nogalez, Az.
 

Homeland Security Secretary John Kelly told top DHS officials to get moving on the initiatives laid out in President Donald Trump's executive orders.

In a Feb. 20 memo, Kelly outlined for the heads of DHS bureaus the shifts in border enforcement and detention of undocumented immigrants, and he offered some of the first detail on plans for a wall spanning the U.S.-Mexico border.

The memo also calls for Customs and Border Protection to hire 5,000 new border patrol agents and 500 Air and Marine Operations agents/officers.

In a Feb. 21 fact sheet about Kelly's memo, DHS said its initial border barrier construction efforts will center on locations near El Paso, Texas, Tucson, Ariz., and El Centro, Calif.

In those locations DHS said it will "build a wall in areas where the fence or old brittle landing-mat fencing are no longer effective."

The Border Patrol, said DHS, is also in the middle of identifying priority areas where CBP "can build a wall or similar physical barrier on the border where it currently does not exist."

In his memo, Kelly advised Acting Undersecretary for Management Chip Fulghum to consult with Acting CBP Commissioner Kevin McAleenan to immediately begin planning, design, construction and maintenance of a wall under current law.

That planning, he said, should include "materials originating in the United States." Those materials, he said, should include "lighting, technology (including sensors), as well as patrol and access roads, along the border with Mexico in the most appropriate locations."