San Diego Union-Tribune

HALT TO WALL BUILDING COULD SAVE $2.6B

Biden has pledged to end Trump’s $15 billion border barrier project

- BY JOSH DAWSEY & NICK MIROFF WASHINGTON Dawsey and Miroff write for The Washington Post.

The U.S. government would save about $2.6 billion if President-elect Joe Biden halts constructi­on on the border wall project on his first day in office, according to U.S. Army Corps of Engineers estimates reviewed by The Washington Post.

Biden told reporters this summer that he would not build “another foot” of the border barriers that became a symbol of the Trump presidency and one of the most expensive federal infrastruc­ture projects in U.S. history. But the financial implicatio­ns of a decision to stop work — including the costs to the government it may incur — have not been publicly disclosed.

U.S. Army Corps commanders met with members of the Biden transition team last week to discuss the border wall project, corps spokeswoma­n Raini Brunson said. She declined to comment on the estimates reviewed by The Post, referring additional questions to the president-elect’s office.

“We cannot speculate on what the final cost estimates for undelivere­d work would be nor speculate about what actions a White House Administra­tion may or may not take,” Brunson said in a statement.

Biden’s transition team did not immediatel­y respond to a request for comment Wednesday.

The Trump administra­tion ob

tained about $15 billion for the barrier project, enough to complete 738 miles of new fencing, according to U.S. Customs and Border Protection. About one-third of the $15 billion was provided by Congress through the standard appropriat­ions process; Trump took the rest from Department of Defense counternar­cotics programs and military constructi­on accounts.

The U.S. Army Corps estimates show that there will be about $3.3 billion in unused funds in the project’s accounts on Jan. 21. Army Corps officials have had meetings in recent weeks about how to end the contracts and about what can be done legally and when.

While the Biden administra­tion will have the ability to terminate or modify contracts with the constructi­on firms building the barrier, those companies will be able to bill the government for “de

mobilizati­on” fees that cover the withdrawal of crews, materials and equipment from the border. Those fees are projected to add up to about $700 million, according to the estimates.

The Army Corps also priced out a third option that would not add more linear miles to the barrier but allow companies to complete the roads, sensors and other “attributes” that are part of the contracts. CBP officials have long insisted that the barrier is part of a “system” that includes powerful detection technology and roads that allow patrol agents to respond faster to incursions.

Of the $1.6 billion remaining in Department of Homeland Security money for the project — one of the funding sources — the government would be able to save $1.1 billion by completing these ancillary features, estimates show, compared with $1.46 billion by freezing the project entirely. The Biden administra­tion has not said whether it would consider completing those elements of the project, or bring everything to a screeching halt.

The president-elect’s agenda calls for an immediate end to the national emergency declaratio­n that allowed Trump to “siphon federal dollars” from defense budgets, according to the transition team’s website.

“Building a wall will do little to deter criminals and cartels seeking to exploit our borders,” Biden’s plan says. “Instead of stealing resources from schools for military children and recovery efforts in Puerto Rico, Biden will direct federal resources to smart border enforcemen­t efforts, like investment­s in improving screening infrastruc­ture at our ports of entry, that will actually keep America safer.”

Constructi­on crews along the border have been working around the clock in multiple locations to build the barriers as fast as possible before Biden takes office, anticipati­ng that the project’s days are numbered. Environmen­tal and conservati­on groups who oppose the project have expressed outrage that crews continue to bulldoze and demolish sensitive desert and mountain regions, altering the landscape as they clear a path for barriers they will not have time to install.

U.S. Customs and Border Protection acting commission­er Mark Morgan told reporters this week that Biden’s pledge to stop work would be a “waste of taxpayer money” adding up to “billions.”

 ?? CAROLYN VAN HOUTEN THE WASHINGTON POST ?? Border Patrol Agent Joe Curran looks at fence constructi­on in in Lukeville, Ariz., in January.
CAROLYN VAN HOUTEN THE WASHINGTON POST Border Patrol Agent Joe Curran looks at fence constructi­on in in Lukeville, Ariz., in January.

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