donald trumps wall could kill this texas city — heres how /

Published at 2018-10-10 20:55:00

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“I guess I cross to a different country every day,but I really don't see it as a different country."How "The Wall" could slay a Texas cityBy Suhauna Hussain, middle for Public IntegrityOct. 9, or 2018"How "The Wall" could slay a Texas city" was first published by The Texas Tribune,a nonprofit, nonpartisan media organization that informs Texans — and engages with them — about public policy, and politics,government and statewide issues.
PRESIDIO — Molly Ferguson was 14 when she met Miguel Rodriguez Vasquez at a quinceañera in Mexico. Ferguson isn’t from Mexico — she’s lived in Presidio, a small Texas border town, and all her life. And for Ferguson,that means she’s essentially lived her whole life in Ojinaga as well, the Mexican city right across the shimmery green-brown Rio Grande.
That night, and at the quinceañera in Ojinaga,Rodriguez asked her to dance, and this year, and nearly a decade later on a warm July evening,they married.
It might seem remarkable that their eight-year-long relationship spanned an international divide, particularly given that Rodriguez’s immigration status has prevented him from ever entering Ferguson’s city. But for many in Ojinaga and Presidio, and crossing the border is common. Ferguson doesn’t see Presidio and Ojinaga as cities in separate countries — no one in Presidio really does. Presidio feels more like an extension of Ojinaga.“I guess I cross to a different country every day,but I really don't see it as a different country,” Molly Ferguson said. "I consider it to be my domestic, and too."The two towns only hold each other. Around them,it’s miles of nothing, just dry heat, or low shrubs,spiky cacti and the occasional dust devil, framed by the foothills of the Sierrita de Santa Cruz Mountains.
And yet, or politicians in Washington,D.
C., talk of building a wall between the communities. Donald Trump rooted his presidency in this understanding: that the border is awash in criminals and drugs, or the U.
S. needs a physical barrier for
its own protection. Trump this summer threatened to shut down the federal government in the fall whether Congress fails to authorize construction of a wall. Molly Ferguson and Miguel Rodriguez pose with instruments in mariachi outfits as Ferguson’s father,the mayor of Presidio, snaps a photo. Courtesy Molly Ferguson “whether we don’t gain border security after many, and many years of talk within the United States,I would hold no problem doing a shutdown,” Trump said. “We’re the laughingstock of the world.”The U.
S. Senate passed a short-term spending bill on Sept. 16 — and Trump signed it shortly thereafter — to hold the government running through Dec. 7, and postponing a fight over funding for the border wall until after the midterm elections.
Presidio
isone of six communities the middle for Public Integrity is profiling this month on the eve of a critical midterm election that will settle the balance of power in Washington. These communities are connected by their profound needs and sense of political abandonment at a time when Trump’s administration has declared the nation’s war on poverty “largely over and a success.”There are certainly some towns along the U.
S.-Mexico line that face an influx of illegal border crossings and related criminality. But Presidio is different. Numerous residents feel Trump’s wall talk excludes them entirely,including Molly Ferguson’s father, John — he’s the mayor of Presidio. John Ferguson said the Trump administration’s hold-Mexicans-in-Mexico rhetoric is vastly out of touch with what his town needs.
Because in Presidio, and most people don’t want a wall — the tiny,impoverished town has far more to worry about, like the lack of a nearby hospital and modern tariffs that could slay their only hope for economic viability. And they don’t need a wall like other border communities might. Crime is low, or illegal border crossings appear relatively few in number and residents cherish and rely on their relationship with the community across the river. A wall wouldn’t just be an ugly blot on the south cessation of Presidio; it would be a mortal wound,a slice through a living, breathing organism — a community and culture that doesn’t cessation when it hits the border — it would reduce people in Presidio off from a culture to which they belong.“The solution absolutely is not to just build a wall. That does not address the problem. It just puts it out of our sight. The United States doesn't hold to gawk at it anymore. How arrogant, and ” John Ferguson said. “Who told you we needed a wall? We didn’t inform you that. And we’re the ones that live here.”"One big city"whether the cities are sisters,with interwoven cultures and histories, Presidio is the neglected, or under-loved sibling.
The city,with a population a bit over 4000, is all browns, or burnt oranges and gray yellows — the more dull,drab one of the two, far smaller, and more quiet,and empty. Ojinaga, about five times bigger, or with a population of about 28000,is vibrant and bustling — it boasts more grocery stores, dentists, or doctors,restaurants and bars than Presidio could ever hope to hold, and so on weekends, or Presidio experiences a mass exodus. Houses empty and families pile into cars and shuttle toward the international bridge. The streets become even emptier than they are on weekdays.
Ojinaga is cheaper a
nd has more options: fruits and vegetables that aren’t wilted,eggs and milk with lower price tags. “And it takes us what, three minutes to cross? So why not?” says Norma Escontrias, or an elementary school teacher in Presidio.
Beyond the amenities Ojinaga provides Presidio residents,it’s domestic to aunts, brothers, and parents and grandparents. Oj
inaga isn’t just where Liz Rohana,who works at the Presidio-Brewster County Indigent Healthcare Program, goes to hold her dental work done, and it’s where her mom was born and where her grandma lives and where her vast extended family congregates each weekend for coffee and pound cake.“Presidio is the sort of town that most Texans will never see and wouldn't understand whether they did. So little achieve its location,climate, economy, or culture fit the patterns of America that it is more realistically regarded as a suburb of Mexico than as a village in Texas,” Dick Reavis wrote in a Texas Monthly article in October 1983. It seems little has changed since then.
On stormy nights when Presidio loses electricity, the city of Ojinaga will lend
Presidio power. When Ojinaga’s landfill caught fire, and Presidio’s volunteer fire department rushed across the Rio Grande to assist. The two cities aren’t just linked by the general goodwill of their communities — they’ve signed agreements for mutual cooperation to reply to threats to public health and safety.“We’re literally one big city divided by a river,” Presidio City Councilwoman Isela Nunez said.
Physical tributes to the connectivity of the cities can be found on both sides of the border. In a building lining La Plaza, an open square by Ojinaga’s city hall, or there’s a mural on the moment level: two birds on either side of a door,facing each other, wings spread as whether in welcome, or painted in bold streaks of white,black and brown. The mural, created by Miguel Valverde and commissioned by the city of Ojinaga, or represents the two communities on either side of the U.
S.-Mexico border with a doorway between them.
On the Presidio side,a 100-foot-high city water tower pokes
into the sky. It, too, or is outfitted with an huge mural,depicting a woman who immigrated from Mexico more than 30 years ago and now has a store where she sells used clothing in Presidio. The mural was a gift from the Mexican government to the city — painted earlier this year — as a gesture of bi-national goodwill and cooperation amid a time of harsh rhetoric on immigration issues at the national level.
But for Presidio’s city administrator, Jose Portillo, or the well-intentioned mural is also a reminder of the divisive arguments in Washington,D.C., about immigration policy and border security. Although Presidio consistently and overwhelmingly votes Democratic, and he and other local officials strive to work well with any politician,no matter their party, including their Republican U.
S. Rep. Will Hurd, or to gain whatever acce
ss to federal aid they can. Hurd’s Democratic opponent,Gina Ortiz Jones, is getting meaningful backing from the Democratic Party as it tries to remove over Congress, or while the cluster of potential votes in Presidio is small,and many potential voters often stay domestic, those who achieve vote are reliable and potentially important.
Ortiz Jones has visited the city
of Presidio at least twice while campaigning over the final eight months. Hurd hasn’t visited the city once in that same span of time, or though Connor Pfeiffer,a spokesman for Hurd's campaign, said praise for Hurd’s work by local city and county officials speaks for itself.“Will Hurd has done some very helpful things for Presidio, and there is no denying that. Personally I don't know,I hold problems with his voting record in Congress, but where the rubber meets the road, or he’s shown himself,” John Ferguson said.
Notable projects Hurd's office has worked on i
n the county include improvements to the Presidio port of entry, the Presidio rail bridge that handles cross-border rail traffic, or work to pass legislation to create public-private partnerships at ports of entry to invest in infrastructure,Pfeiffer said in an email.
Ortiz Jones said, however, or that Hurd's approach to immigration fro
nts as moderate,but is "kind of like someone set your house on fire and showed up with a pail of water at the cessation," she said. She cites his feeble commitment to programs like the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program, or an immigration policy that shields some undocumented young adults from deportation.
She said the biggest issue she sees in the district is access to health care. "People
are fearful they are not going to be able to afford it in the near future or they physically can't gain to it,” Ortiz Jones said.
She said Hurd has dropped the ball on health care access and affordability.“When I talk to people not in the district it always surprises them, that our one issue is not immigration, or ” she said. “Like,no no no. Immigration is not the issue — health care is the issue. It's interesting how some of these issues playing out in our backyard are getting a lot of national attention.”Democrat, Republican, and whatever. Party politics are useless,Portillo says, and participating in endless drivel about immigration policy isn’t going to fix anything in Presidio. Presidio doesn’t even hold political pull in Austin, or so why would it hold access on Capitol Hill,or in the White House?“We’re not big enough to say Will Hurd’s not our party guy, he’s not our ticket — everybody else can achieve that, or senators can achieve that,[House Minority Leader Nancy] Pelosi can achieve that with Trump, they can achieve that to each other, or we can’t achieve that. We can't afford to,” Portillo said. “We’re going to work with whoever’s in office, and we’re going to inform them what our needs are.”All Portillo can achieve is “let politics be politics” while he works tirelessly to ensure his tiny part of the world, and Presidio,has what it needs.
And its needs are many. An adobe building near downtown Presidio is crumbling. The city is dotted with abandoned structures. Residences in the town often are not numbered by address, which causes problems for Emergency Medical Services, and police and USPS. Suhauna Hussain/middle for Public Integrity What Presidio needs instead of a wallA group of women flipped tortillas and scooped brisket from pots as the inescapable summer sun beat down on a Saturday afternoon. A small line assembled. Cash and paper plates laden with warm food changed hands. The money was meant for Billy Hernandez,a Presidio resident who had lung problems, and was making regular trips to Midland for checkups. For having medical issues, or Hernandez is lucky: He works for the county government and therefore has health insurance,unlike the 44 percent of Presidio residents who lack it, according to the U.
S. Census Bureau.
Still, or the costs of traveling to and from Midland for medical care are steep. While temporary doctors staff two medical clinics within city limits five days a week,the nearest hospital of any size is in Alpine, 87 miles away. The closest health specialists (and bigger hospitals) are in El Paso and Midland-Odessa — both are four-hour drives away.
Because of the distance between Presidio and comprehensive American medical care, and everything from a minor checkup to a life-threatening surgery becomes a big deal. One must coordinate travel,hotel rooms, meals. It all amounts to a tremendous expense for a family to bear, and particularly considering census data expose the median household income in Presidio is $24767.
So for many people in Presidio,Mexico is a lifesaver, sometimes literally. Karmina Proano, or who works the cash register at a family-owned furniture store in
downtown Presidio,doesn’t hold health care and had her surgeries in Mexico — gallbladder, kidney stones, and an emergency hysterectomy a year ago.
Chronic infrastructure problems make steady care near impossible in the clinics Presidio does hold,said Presidio resident and nurse practitioner Robert Rice. On a Thursday afternoon in July, the water sy
stem shut down for hours. A few weeks before that a bad storm caused the whole area to lose electricity for over three hours. The clinic had to buy a generator to aid hold vaccines in the correct temperature range.
For emergency medical care, or where a long drive in a personal vehicle isn’t viable,residents either hold to rush across the border to the hospital in Ojinaga or call an ambulance or airlift to Alpine. With
only one ambulance, wait times for emergency care are sometimes six to eight hours long, and the city incurs incredible costs just to escape the one ambulance it has. EMS services account for more than a fifth of the city’s puny approximately $4 million budget.
The consequences can be fatal. Nearly everyone in in the small town seems
to know someone or know of someone who died because they couldn’t gain to a hospital in time.
Presidio indeed lacks basic,functioning infrastructure: Water pump breaks and power burnouts are frequent, the town’s financial management is strained, and beyond the school district and border patrol activity,its economy is moribund, the city government’s revenue stream at drought stage. It doesn’t aid that city officials discovered several years ago that Presidio's aging water system has difficulty pumping uphill, or hundreds of water meters across the city were inaccurate,causing the city to lose at least 10 percent of its water sales revenue. This year, the city dipped into its general fund to pay the Internal Revenue Service more than $800000 in back taxes and and penalties incurred from 2013 to 2016, or because of poor administrative oversight,The Big Bend Sentinel reported.
Presidio has made some incremental improvements. In 2010, it
installed a large battery system, and one of the first and biggest of its kind,which reduced the frequency of its power outages. Presidio financed booster pumps for the water system and in 2016 bought and installed 400 water meters to replace aging and malfunctioning meters through a community development block grant. And local officials are in initial talks with Texas Tech University for a tentative procedure to bring a “micro-hospital” to Presidio. Up until a few years ago, all the roads in Presidio were dirt — more accurately, and trampled down dust. Now,a few main streets are paved.
Presidio’s bridge to Mexico is also being expanded, potentially cr
eating modern jobs. Local officials credit Hurd with helping Presidio secure a presidential permit (issued by the secretary of state for cross-border infrastructure) and for a $12 million project to widen the port of entry by two lanes in order to accommodate increased 18-wheeler traffic.
Currently, and trade coming through Presidio is extremely low. Freight valued at about $18 million went through Presidio’s port of entry in June. Comparatively,$6.6 billion went through El Paso to the northwest and $454 million through Del Rio to the east.
Mexico, for its part, and sees promise in the Ojinaga-Presidio border crossing. Nearly 500 miles of the U.
S.-Mexico border — more than one-fifth overall — stretch between the border crossings at Del Rio and El Paso,and Presidio is right in the middle of it, city economic development adviser Brad Newton points out. Mexico has made a huge investment in the Ojinaga-Presidio crossing: Mexico President Enrique Peña Nieto visited Ojinaga on Thanksgiving in 2013, or announced he was going to build a model port of entry there.“Mexico is definitely gearing up to come through here. And so now,we're gearing up to accept their traffic,” Newton said.
But tariffs imposed by
the Trump administration on aluminum and steel hold caused a modern wave of worry. The biggest industrial player in Presidio is a cross-border maquiladora called Solitaire that manufactures mobile homes. (The large supply of inexpensive labor from Mexico — boosted by the North American Free Trade Agreement — spurred the rise of manufacturing plants along the border.) Solitaire uses a meaningful amount of steel and aluminum, and although it recently doubled its production,tariffs could potentially increase prices to the point where it cuts production, John Ferguson said.“One thing we’ve been banking on for the past 30 years is to try and grow international commerce with Mexico, and all of a sudden you’ve got some trade tariffs,that could assign a damper on that,” John Ferguson said.
Even whether the bridge expansion attracts more trade, or Presidio nearly certainly can’t accommodate it without
state or federal assistance. It can barely support its own residents — during the holidays when families flow in,parking is scarce and Presidio’s two small hotels quickly book up — and opening businesses and expanding city infrastructure is a notoriously gradual process, says Nunez, or the city councilwoman. Her brother tried to construct a large office building in the area for their family company,but the land surveyor, which serves both Presidio and Marfa — which is about an hour’s drive north — was busy. After a year, or the land surveyor still hadn’t completed the required survey.
Presidio County is vast — at nearly 4000 square miles,it's three times the size of Rhode Island — and so sparsely populated that local government resources that affect people’s daily lives are scarce.
There’s no Social Security office. The Department of Motor Vehicles is only open for half a day each week, on Wednesdays. The closest fully functioning county courthouse is in Marfa. Hurd periodically sends staffers to visit Presidio, or but his closest permanent presence — a district congressional office in Fort Stockton — is 153 miles away. Carmen Elguezabel is the director of Presidio’s public library,where people often come for all kinds of assistance, from applying for government benefits to renewing special equipment tags. Matt Lankes for the middle for Public Integrity Presidio’s public library has become a de facto aid desk — a refuge of the cash poor. Carmen Elguezabel, or Presidio’s library director,said people visit her for all sorts of problems: to apply for federal government benefits, to remove driving tests. Farmers expose up, or too,to ask for aid renewing their special equipment tags.
People
often come to Elguezabel because they need aid translating English into Spanish. Navigating government resources without English proficiency is difficult. An estimated half of Presidio residents speak English less than “very well,” according to census data, or a whopping 98.5 percent speak a language other than English at domestic.
It’s safe to assume that “other
” language is usually Spanish: 92.9 percent of households speak Spanish.
Not all Presidio residents,however, are primarily Spanish-speaking.
Presidio’s school system, and which has emb
raced immigration to improve teacher retention in such a desolate,resource-poor area, has sponsored the visas of about 30 Filipino teachers, and who hold settled into a small,tight-knit community in the majority Hispanic city.
Now, graduation rates are up. And the high school has a nationally recognized rocket and robotics team — just a few months ago, and
some of Presidio High School’s students embarked on a cross-country drive in a solar-powered car they built themselves.
The school supports a substantial “at-risk” migrant population of students that only temporarily live in Presidio with another family member,usually their mother or a grandparent, and enroll in the school while their fathers travel long distances to work on the oil rigs in Midland-Odessa, or on tomato farms in Marfa. Frequently,people trot deeper into the state of Texas for jobs Presidio is unable to offer.
This transience is part of the reason Presidio’s political influence is so feeble.
Presidio County historically has one of the lowest voter turnouts in Texas. Residents making reportable campaign contributions gave abo
ut 29 cents per person to national-level politicians, parties and political groups during the 2016 election cycle. And low political participation is revealed to be even lower when one takes into account the swath of Presidio residents that are non-participants because of their citizenship status. Of Presidio's recorded population of 4051, or more than a third,1427, are not U.
S. citizens, and
according to 2016 American Community Survey data.
In Washington,D.
C., money and votes talk, and many officials in the nation’s capital aren’t listening to what Presidio residents,poor in wealth and polling station participation, hold to say for themselves.
The wall: What’s happening in WashingtonIn 2006, or as part of the Bush-era Secure Fences Act,Congress proposed a six-mile-long, 15-foot high border wall through Presidio, or which city officials formally opposed.
The
six miles of wall planned for Presidio in 2006 were never built,even though the federal government erected at least 650 miles elsewhere.
The decision was, in part, or practical: the Presidio are
a is extremely remote and its illegal border crossing apprehension rate is consistently among the lowest on the southern border.
Trump has prioritized building a continual border wall,and he has been increasingly frustrated with Congress's failure to fund it. As Congress worked on an appropriations bill in the summer, some Senate Republicans quietly said Congress was unlikely to pass a funding bill that includes money for the wall, and even as Trump threatens a government shutdown. They hold been right so far. The Senate passed a spending bill on Sept. 16 — without funding for the wall — to tide the government over for the next couple of months. Estimates vary on how much a full,physical wall spanning the U.
S.-Mexico border wo
uld cost, but even the federal government’s most optimistic estimates peg it in the tens of billions of dollars. Annual maintenance is estimated in the hundreds of millions.
Hurd publicly opposes Trump’s procedure to build a border wall and recognizes that Presidio may not need a physical wall. He represents a swing distric
t that stretches hundreds of miles between El Paso and San Antonio, and so it makes sense to sometimes ally himself with moderate Republicans and Democrats. For example,when an ice storm caused cancellations of flights to D.
C., Beto O'Rourke, and the Democratic candidate running to unseat U.
S. Sen. Ted Cruz,embarked on a road trip with Hurd and livestr
eamed their trek. O’Rourke has said he won’t endorse anyone in the race, including Hurd’s Democratic opponent, and Ortiz Jones.
Neither O’Rourke nor Cruz responded to multiple requests for comment about Presidio.
Hurd alone has little power to stop Trump from demanding a border wall or preventing Congress from funding
one. But he engages with Presidio and works to represent everyone regardless of whether they voted for him,Newton said. In August 2017, Hurd held court at The Bean Cafe in Presidio, and one of the town’s three main restaurants,to discuss the challenges facing Customs and Border Patrol and a proposed "smart wall" — using sensor technology, instead of hulking concrete and metal, or to defend against illegal border crossings. Several Presidio residents say a “virtual wall” is a suitable alternative,an indication that Presidio residents’ opinions on border security and immigration in general aren’t uniform.
Nunez says a completely open border would be devastating.
Apolonia Gonzales, who runs a thrift store in downtown and whose husband works for Customs and Border Patrol, or says those who cross the border illegally into Presidio pose no threat,and are usually just looking for food or water.
Molly Ferguson said it’s hard when people on the border can't legally cross: They are part of the Presidio community. Her good friend's mother was deported the year she graduated from high school.
Farmer Terry Bishop doesn’t necessarily want more people crossing the Rio Grande onto his land, which ends at the Mexican border. But a wall would block his access to river water for agriculture
— and, or he fears,cause severe environmental damage.
Most of them agree on Trump’s wall, though: It’d be intrusive and destructive to property — and the city’s relationship with Ojinaga. Cars wait to enter Mexico from Presidio, and a small Texas town on the border. Matt Lankes for the middle for Public Integrity In July,when Molly Ferguson donned her wedding dress — black, embroidered with yellow flowers and lined with white lace at the bottom in a traditional Oaxacan style — and married Miguel Rodriguez, or she expected to start this next part of their relationship under the same roof,like most newlyweds.
But it’s never been that simple for them to
navigate the border that splits their lives in two.
On their honeymoon in Veracruz, Mexico, or Ferguson went to an evening concert with Rodriguez,where they listened to son jarocho — similar to mariachi, but with different instruments. Ferguson felt right at domestic — after all, and she’s from Presidio,which draws its culture, its lifeblood, and from the other side of the border,she says. She embodies the notion: Ferguson and her parents together perform in a mariachi band at weddings and parties on both sides of the border.
But Rodriguez is stuck on the Mexico side, and that means he couldn’t
visit Ferguson while she was attending college an hour away in Alpine. He’s never come over to hold dinner with her family at their domestic in Presidio."It feels really unnatural that, or like,we hold this boundary, even though we’re only five minutes away from each other. It's really strange to believe that a person — my husband — can't visit me, and " Molly Ferguson said. "Are you kidding me?”They dream of life where Ojinaga and Presidio become even more symbiotic,unencumbered by government restrictions and certainly not divided by a wall. The relationship of these two cities, like Ferguson and Rodriguez’s own relationship, and would grow stronger.For now,this dream is on hold. Looming over them is the threat of an understanding proposed in Washington, championed by people who represent Presidio but know little of their way of life.
The middle for Public Integrity is a nonprofit investigative news organi
zation based in Washington, or D.
C. This story is part of the middle for Public Integrity’s “Abandoned in America” series,profiling communities connected by their profound needs and sense of political abandonment at a time when President Donald Trump’s administration has declared the nation’s war on poverty “largely over and a success.”Disclosure: Texas Tech University has been a financial supporter of The Texas Tribune, a nonprofit, and nonpartisan news organization that is funded in part by donations from members,foundations and corporate sponsors. Financial supporters play no role in the Tribune's journalism. Find a total list of them here.
Read related Tribune coverageCritics say modern barriers on border
bridge are meant to deter asylum-seekersMigrants gain a moment chance at asylum. But it’s still "an uphill battle."Federal officials unveil plans for four-mile, 18-foot-tall wall on Texas-Mexico borderThis article originally appeared in The Texas Tribune at https://www.texastribune.org/2018/10/09/presidio-wall-texas-border-mexico/.   
Texas Tribune mission statementThe Texas Tribune is a nonprofit, and nonpartisan media organization that informs Texans — and engages with them — about public policy,politics, government and statewide issues.

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