|
Texas A&M-area ranchers erect ladders to protect investment
From Staff Reports
The Battalion (Texas A&M)
06/19/2006
(U-WIRE) COLLEGE STATION, Texas Ryan Saenz lives close enough to see Mexico from the roof of his house and said he used to watch illegal immigrants come through his back yard as they crossed the border.
"We would see illegals running through our back yard, and my sister and I would have to run inside," said Saenz, a junior political science major at Texas A&M.
An increasing problem for residents along the Texas-Mexico border is the damaging of ranch and home fences caused by illegal immigrants searching for places to cross. A few Texas ranchers tired of costly repairs have installed an easier route over the U.S.-Mexican border ladders.
"It's an attempt to get them to use the ladders instead of tearing the fences," said Scott Pattinson, who owns one of a group of ranches known as La Copa. La Copa is just south of a U.S. Border Patrol highway checkpoint that went up 75 miles from the border several years ago, sending migrants through the brambly scrub of nearby ranches instead.
Some immigrants walk for hours or days to skirt the checkpoints in temperatures hovering around 100 degrees. Their feet have worn visible paths through a forest of cactus and mesquite otherwise thick enough to conceal them from Border Patrol helicopters overhead and agents only a few hundred yards away.
The paths lead from one ripped-down section of fencing to another. Texas ranches can be so large it could be days before owners notice the hole in the fence, long after the livestock possibly escapes.
"We would find pieces of clothes hanging on the barbed wire, and they would cut the fence line with wire cutters," Saenz said.
While cutting down the fences can be a hindrance to ranchers and homeowners wanting to protect their land, it can also be dangerous to those crossing the border.
"One almost died at the hospital in town because he had severe cuts on his leg from barbed wire," Saenz said. "People in that area find dead bodies of illegal aliens out in their ranch, in the middle of nowhere. It happens all the time."
Paul Johnson protects his 2,700-acre exotic game ranch of zebras, scimitar-horned oryx and wildebeests with about 10 miles of high wire fence, and joined his neighbors in placing ladders along the way.
Border Patrol agent J. Kicklighter, who was patrolling the privately owned land this week, said he couldn't blame the ranchers for trying to protect their investment.
But apparently some immigrants think the ladders are too good to be true.
"They ignore it a lot," Johnson said. "They're afraid that they're monitored by the Border Patrol."
Johnson plans to take the ladders down, worried about the message he's sending.
"I think what it does is give a signal that we are wanting them to cross there, don't mind the crossing, and that kind of magnifies the problem," he said.
Rancher Michael Vickers never liked the ladder idea and instead has ringed his fence with 220 volts of electricity.
"I've had a dose of it myself, it's not fun," he said. "That's just my attitude; why make it easier for them to trespass?"
Copyright ©2006 The Battalion via UWire
[ Back to Student Voices ]
|