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3/20/13, "DHS tells Congress it still can’t measure border security," Washington Times, Stephen Dinan
"Top Homeland Security officials told Congress
on Wednesday that they still don’t have a way to effectively measure
border security — a revelation that lawmakers said could doom the
chances for passing an immigration legalization bill this year.
Three years after the Obama administration
scrapped the previous yardstick, which measured miles of the border
under “operational control,” top Customs and Border Protection officials
told Congress that the new measure they’re working on won’t be ready for public use any time in the near future.
The announcement stunned lawmakers on both sides of the aisle, who
said that without a way to measure border security, they may not be able
to convince voters to accept a new legalization.
“You do not want the Department of Homeland Security to be the stumbling block to comprehensive immigration reform for this country, and it could happen. So get in the game,” said Rep. Candice S. Miller, Michigan Republican and chairwoman of the House’s border security subcommittee.
Customs and Border Protection is working on what it calls the Border Control Index, which members of Congress had thought would be the new measure. But Mark Borkowski, who heads the agency’s technology innovation office, said that’s not what they’re planning.
“I don’t believe we intend, at least at this point, the BCI would be a tool for the measure you’re intending,” he said.
Border security is a major sticking point in negotiations over immigration.
In 2007, the last time the Senate
debated immigration, the bill failed in part because voters didn’t
believe the government was serious enough about gaining control of the
border....
President Obama has said the border is now more secure than it’s ever been. But without an official yardstick, it’s tough to measure that.
The
U.S. Border Patrol used two measures in the past. One was to track the
number of people agents apprehended — a figure that has been dropping in
recent years, which the Border Patrol said likely means fewer people
trying to cross. But apprehensions actually ticked up in 2012,
suggesting an increase in the illegal flow.
The other measure was
operational control, which measured how many miles of border the agency
thought it could reasonably detect and apprehend most illegal crossings.
In 2010, the last time the figure was reported, a government audit
found just 44 percent of the border was under operational control.
When
they scrapped the operational control yardstick, Homeland Security
officials said they would have a new one ready in 2012. A year later,
members of Congress said they’re still waiting....
Drug seizures are up dramatically, which signals an increase in smuggling across the border.
Rep.
Ron Barber, Arizona Democrat, urged the Border Patrol to get the input
of ranchers and townspeople along the border before it finalizes its new
border security yardstick.
“When I talk to ranchers, for example,
and they tell me they are unsafe on their land and they can’t go to
town without taking their children with them … then we are not secure,
from their perspective,” he said. “It’s a matter of where you are and
what you’re facing.” via Free Republic
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