Hey, Maybe Los Federales Could Secure The Bridges That Cross The Border

How can they secure the border, when they cannot secure a bridge. And, by bridge, I mean

On each side of a towering West Texas stretch of the $2.4 billion border fence designed to block people from illegally entering the country, there are two metal footbridges, clear paths into the United States from Mexico.

The footpaths that could easily guide illegal immigrants and smugglers across the Rio Grande without getting wet seem to be there because of what amounts to federal linguistics. While just about anyone would call them bridges, the U.S.-Mexico group that owns them calls them something else.

“Technically speaking it’s not a bridge, it’s a grade control structure,” said Sally Spener, spokeswoman for the International Boundary and Water Commission, which maintains the integrity of the 1,200-mile river border between the U.S. and Mexico. The structures under the spans help prevent the river — and therefore the international border — from shifting.

Technically speaking, take a look at the photo in the story, or the one above. Because

Whatever they’re called, there are fresh sneaker tracks on the structures — indicating they’re being used as passages into the country.

After a private meeting with Rio Grande Valley police chiefs Thursday, Texas Gov. Rick Perry said news of the unsecured footbridges did not surprise him.

“This is a long border,” Perry said. “It’s been discouraging that there’s something as obvious (as the bridges) and the federal government hasn’t addressed it.”

And, it is completely ignored. KRGV, out of the Rio Grande Valley in Texas, did a story on this same thing back in May (of this year?), which is where the picture of those two illegals came from.

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