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Special Report: Tester talks security at the southern border

Posted at 3:20 PM, Mar 29, 2019
and last updated 2019-03-29 17:58:04-04

McALLEN, TX – US Senator Jon Tester (D-MT) recently made his first trip to the southern border to see some of the challenges being faced by U.S. Customs and Border Protection as an influx of people continue to come into the country from Mexico illegally.

Sen. Tester will help decide how much money the government should spend on the agencies that protect the border as the ranking member of the Senate Appropriations Homeland Security sub-committee.

He spent time with Border Patrol agents and visited a detention center in McAllen, Texas, where hundreds who have entered the country illegally were being held.

He also toured one of the ports of entry where thousands of vehicles and people cross into the country each day.

Tester Border Security
Sen. Tester will help decide how much money the government should spend on the agencies that protect the border as the ranking member of the Senate Appropriations Homeland Security sub-committee. (MTN News photo)

And the Democrat met with farmers and landowners who are concerned that the wall would cut off their property and doubt how effective it would be.

President Trump has declareda national emergency over the situation on the border to try and get his wall built. Tester said after visiting the border that he still doesn’t think that would be necessary or cost-effective.

“I see most of that being done with technology and manpower. In the places where the wall is necessary, go ahead and build it,” Sen. Tester said.

“But I’m telling you there is a better and more cost-effective way of doing this and if we listen to the people are on the border and those are doing customs and protection. I think we can find agreement and move forward in a way that makes sense for this country.”

Border Patrol
What to do about the crisis on the US-Mexico border and those who cross illegally has become a divisive political issue. (MTN News photo)

Sen. Tester also flew to Coast Guard Island in Alameda, Calif., to see the work the U.S. Coast Guard is doing patrolling borders and meet with top officials.

“I think that is where the Coast Guard is really impacting the conversation about the border. It’s about interdicting drugs to the sea. Those are the enablers that are the push factors that make people make decisions to send their kids north to try and enter the United States,” said Admiral Karl Schultz, Commandant for the United States Coast Guard.

Both the U.S. Coast Guard and U.S. Customs and Border Patrol fall under the Department of Homeland Security.

-Russ Riesinger reporting for MTN News