President
Donald Trump’s promise to use existing funds to begin immediate construction of
a wall on the U.S.-Mexico border has hit a financial roadblock, according to a
document seen by Reuters.
The rapid
start of construction, promised throughout Trump’s campaign and in an executive
order issued in January on border security, was to be financed, according to
the White House, with “existing funds and resources” of the Department of
Homeland Security.
But so far,
the DHS has identified only $20 million that can be re-directed to the
multi-billion-dollar project, according to a document prepared by the agency
and distributed to congressional budget staff last week.
The document
said the funds would be enough to cover a handful of contracts for wall
prototypes, but not enough to begin construction of an actual barrier. This
means that for the wall to move forward, the White House will need to convince
Congress to appropriate funds.
An internal
report, previously reported by Reuters, estimated that fully walling off or
fencing the entire southern border would cost $21.6 billion – $9.3 million per
mile of fence and $17.8 million per mile of wall.
Trump has
said he will ask Congress to pay for what existing funds cannot cover and that
Mexico will be pressured to pay back U.S. taxpayers at a later date.
Republican
House Speaker Paul Ryan has said he will include funding for a border wall in
the budget for next fiscal year. He has estimated the cost to be between $12
billion and $15 billion.
Many
Republican lawmakers have said they would vote against a plan that does not
offset the cost of the wall with spending cuts.
In the
document it submitted to Congress, the DHS said it would reallocate $5 million
from a fence project in Naco, Arizona, that came in under budget and $15
million from a project to install cameras on top of trucks at the border.
The
surveillance project was awarded to Virginia-based Tactical Micro, but was held
up due to protests from other contractors, according to the DHS document.
Tactical Micro could not be reached for comment.
The DHS only
searched for extra funds within its $376 million budget for border security
fencing, infrastructure and technology, so it would not have to ask for
congressional approval to repurpose funding, according to the document.
Contractors
cannot begin bidding to develop prototypes until March 6 but more than 265
businesses already have listed themselves as “interested parties” on a
government web site.
Source: NAN
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