Skip to Content
Subscribe | Donate | Advertise

Chertoff’s Border Fence Mega-Waiver

March 27th, 2008 at 7:15 pm

(Update below)

We don’t usually write about rumors but this one has too many implications for what remains of our civil liberties to ignore. We have received a few emails and calls today about the possibility that Homeland Security Secretary Michael Chertoff may post notice in the Federal Register Friday that he is going to waive all environmental rules to build the border wall in South Texas. The waiver may blanket Texas or the entire Southern border from California to Texas in a giant mega-waiver.

Chertoff has that ability thanks to Congress and the Real ID Act of 2005. He has already waived environmental rules in California and Arizona to put the border wall on the fast track. His goal is to have 670 miles of fence built along the Southern border by December 31, 2008. In an Observer blog last week, we wrote about lawsuits filed by Sierra Club and Defenders of Wildlife challenging Chertoff’s imperial powers.

We called Homeland Security in Washington D.C. in an attempt to get confirmation on the waiver. A spokesperson for the agency Amy Kudwa would not confirm a waiver in the pipeline, and said Homeland Security had no announcements today about a waiver.

Next we called Noah Kahn, a refuge program manager for Defenders of Wildlife, in Washington D.C.. Kahn said he had heard several credible rumors swirling around D.C. in the last few days about a waiver in the pipeline.

“It would not surprise me if there is a Real ID waiver coming soon because Chertoff has a history of waiving laws and it’s no secret that the border wall is not appropriate for a wildlife refuge,” Kahn says. “We have heard the waiver could be coming Friday which is a day typical for these kinds of press announcements since it is the end of the week and the press won’t be paying as much attention.”

Kahn says he thinks a waiver in Texas is more likely than a sea-to-shining-sea waiver from California to Texas. “That would be an even more unnecessary abuse of power,” he said.

The current mood in Congress is lukewarm when it comes to stopping the construction of the border wall. “It’s not politically palatable to oppose the border wall in an election year,” he says. “Those in Congress who are against the wall are remaining silent about it, because as long as it is linked with illegal immigration they don’t want to touch it.”

While the Real ID act allows Chertoff to waive federal laws, it will be interesting to see how the waiver impacts constitutional law. Dr. Eloisa Tamez and several other Texas landowners are currently fighting to keep their land from being condemned by Homeland Security. They assert that Chertoff is violating their right to due process under the fifth amendment of the Constitution.

Update

No sign of a waiver being filed today (Friday) in the Federal Register. A good source in Washington D.C. shared some important information that language was passed in the appropriations bill restricting any funding for the fence until 15 days after notice is published in the Federal Register.  We’ll keep you posted if we hear anything from Washington. Also, thanks to Jay J. Johnson-Castro, Sr, of Border Ambassadors for sounding the alarm about the possibility of an impending waiver in the pipeline.

by Melissa del Bosque

One Response to “Chertoff’s Border Fence Mega-Waiver”

  1. A Fool’s Folly: Chertoff’s Mega Waiver | Texas Observer Blog says:

    […] I wrote in an earlier blog last Friday, both Defenders of Wildlife and Sierra Club expected as much from Chertoff and company. […]

Leave a Reply

Commenting Policy - The Texas Observer encourages feedback and discussion, but all comments are moderated. We will try to be diligent in approving comments, but we can't guarantee they will appear immediately. Comments that are excessively offensive, profane, or off-topic will not be published. HTML tags are limited to basic formatting and hyperlinks.

Subscribe Now

Authors

Archives

Categories

Receive Observer blog posts via e-mail

Skip to Main Navigation