Arizona's Closed Federal Parkland is a No-Man's Land
The number of illegal immigrants and drug
smugglers crossing through this magnificent national parkland in southern
Arizona has "decreased significantly" in the last four years, park officials
say. But there's a dark cloud to this silver lining: To make it happen, the
refuge had to close a sliver of this slice of heaven to the quarter-billion
American taxpayers who own it -- essentially creating a no-man's-land on which
only drug smugglers, gun-runners, human traffickers and the Border Patrol agents
who track them down dare to tread. And with rival Mexican drug gangs gunning
each other down less than 50 miles away, the chance that the closed portion of
the wildlife refuge will reopen in the foreseeable future appears to be between
slim and none. For the time being, officials say, this public land will be
closed to the public. In 2006, the refuge manager at the time, Mitch Ellis, saw
that the smugglers and drug-runners were winning, and his solution was to close
3,500 acres of this 118,000-acre natural habitat. He cited increased violence in
the area due to “border-related” activities, including assaults on law
enforcement officers and migrants, as the reason for the closure. Back then,
says Sally Gall, the park's acting refuge manager, it was estimated that as many
as 4,000 people a day were crossing illegally into the U.S. from Mexico,
tramping across public land that's home to nearly 330 species of animals and
hosts up to 40,000 visitors annually. Tom Kay, 68, whose Jarillas Ranch features
more than four miles of border fence and shares its western boundary line with
the Buenos Aires refuge, estimated that up to 400 illegal immigrants walk onto
his 15,000-acre land every day. But after years of never locking his door or
removing keys from vehicles, Kay has found it necessary to change his ways. “I
gotta lock the barn up now,” he said. “If I don’t, I wake up and find people in
the hay."...more
And Bingaman's S.1689 would designate a quarter of a million acres as wilderness on or near our border with Mexico. If the bill becomes law, "no-mans land" is heading our way.
And Bingaman's S.1689 would designate a quarter of a million acres as wilderness on or near our border with Mexico. If the bill becomes law, "no-mans land" is heading our way.
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