Trump's border wall faces Texas-size backlash from landowners
Gary Jacobs looks out over the Rio Grande from the deck of the clubhouse at a public golf course in Webb County, Texas. Its a sunny morning, quiet except for the chirping birds and the thwack of clubs hitting balls.
Where are you going to put the 30 feet? he asks.
On this side of the river, a 270-acre plot of land Jacobs and his wife donated to boost the profile of Laredo, a border town about 160 miles (260 kilometers) south of San Antonio. On the other side, Mexico.
Jacobs, like most of Laredos 260,000 residents, is talking about President Donald Trumps border wall, a project thats engulfing not just the border, but Washington and almost 1 million federal workers who went unpaid during the U.S. governments partial shutdown.
Texas, a state where Trump defeated Hillary Clinton by 9 percentage points in the 2016 presidential election, illustrates the political complexity of his push. After Trump declared a national emergency Friday to access billions of dollars in funding, some landowners along the U.S.-Mexico line say they see a government land grab in their future.
The logistics of building a barrier are challenging enough. Thousands of creeks called arroyos carry rainwater from South Texas thunderstorms to the expansive river, which flows into the Gulf of Mexico. A wall could act as a dam, trapping water on the U.S. side and potentially complicating how Mexicans and Americans share the river for their water supply, says Jacobs.
But his bigger problem with the wall is constitutional.
The way the eminent domain laws are written, we have no rights, says Jacobs, who was a former chief executive officer of Laredo National Bank before retiring. Thats the issue. Its not what theyre going to build. Its how theyre taking the land.
https://www.msn.com/en-us/money/markets/trumps-border-wall-faces-texas-size-backlash-from-landowners/ar-BBTK5uc?li=BBnbfcN