Migrants walk along concertina wire on the U.S. side of the border in Texas. (Photo by Paul Ratje, The New York Times) |
Eagle Pass is home to a border patrol station, but the town is not equipped to handle the number of people crossing. "Many [immigrants] are in urgent need of medical attention when they arrive — help that is only available through a city that is already straining to meet the needs of its own 28,000 residents," Sandoval writes. "The city has had to assign one of its five ambulances full-time to transport injured migrants from the river's edge."
Eagle Pass, Texas (Wikipedia maps) |
Texas has "long been at the center of U.S. immigration policy," Sandoval adds. "But the area has turned into a key point of friction this year between Republican leaders and the Biden administration, as Gov. Greg Abbott of Texas openly defied federal authority and set up state law enforcement patrols, concertina wire and floating buoys along the border in a bid to keep new migrants out of the state."
In January, the flow of immigrants into Eagle Pass slowed, but some of the efforts hurt the town's economy. "The recent closure of an international crossing known locally as Bridge 1 crippled a local economy that benefits from a steady stream of Mexicans who legally cross every day to eat at restaurants, fill their gas tanks and commute to work," Sandoval reports. "The closure over the holiday season cost the city about $1 million, Rolando Salinas Jr., the mayor of Eagle Pass, said."
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