[Congressional Record Volume 156, Number 35 (Thursday, March 11, 2010)]
[House]
[Page H1341]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
MANAGING THE BORDER
The SPEAKER pro tempore. Under a previous order of the House, the
gentleman from Utah (Mr. Bishop) is recognized for 5 minutes.
Mr. BISHOP of Utah. Mr. Speaker, you know, we, as Americans, have a
responsibility to protect our environment and to protect our homeland,
and unfortunately we are failing at both.
Our border patrol has done a wonderful job in the urban areas of this
country; however, in rural areas, where the United States Federal
Government owns about 40 percent of the land from California to Texas,
we seem to not be doing quite as well, and that now becomes the prime
area where evil groups like drug cartels and human traffickers and
potential terrorists are now entering into this country.
The rules, the regulations, and our interpretations of the law are
prohibiting our Border Patrol from actually fulfilling their functions.
We have gaps, not only gaps in the fence, but gaps in our virtual
fence, gaps in our monitoring that allow these groups to have open
access--drug cartels, human trafficking cartels, potential terrorists--
undetected and unfettered into this country.
Secretary Salazar is currently at the border. On Saturday, he will be
at the Chris Eggle Visitors Center. Chris Eggle is a Border Patrol
agent who was shot and killed in the line of duty at Oregon Pipe
National Monument back in August of 2002. He was pursuing a drug cartel
hit squad who had fled across these open areas into the United States
after committing a string of murders in Mexico.
These people we are talking about who are illegally coming into this
country are those who are bringing massive amounts of illegal drugs
into this country, who are involved in human trafficking--illegally
coming into this country--who are involved in unthinkable acts of
aggression, and especially violence against women.
We have wilderness law protection that is supposedly there to protect
the sanctity of the land; unfortunately, in some of our laws or
interpretation of those laws about wilderness area we are actually
opening up this land to some of those evil people who are coming
across. And in so doing, they are destroying the wilderness
characteristics we are trying to protect. What it means is that we are
destroying that which we wish to protect.
Therefore, I am asking Secretary Salazar for four items in his visit
when he sees firsthand the problems we have on our southern border.
Number one, I am asking him to end the Department of the Interior's
requirement that the Department of Homeland Security must negotiate
access and seek permission before entering onto Interior lands to
enforce the law and secure the border.
Two, I want him to acknowledge that Department of the Interior
policies have contributed to severe environmental damage and
destruction by hampering Homeland Security from fulfilling their job to
stop organized crime, drug and human traffickers, and potential
terrorists from crossing the border through protected natural areas.
Three, I want him to stop impeding Border Patrol access to public
lands, including wilderness areas, for the purpose of siting and
building electronic surveillance.
And, four, I want to end the Department of the Interior's practice of
extorting mitigation funds from Homeland Security. Money appropriated
for border security should only be spent on making our borders secure,
not diverted to unrelated Interior spending projects.
To secure our borders, we must do so to stop the evils of drug
traffic, human trafficking, and potential terrorism. Common sense tells
us that should be our goal; common sense tells us we should agree to
that particular goal.
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