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In Eagle Pass, the border crisis is complicated

Living and working by the Rio Grande, Margil Lopez is at the heart of the migrant crisis. Yet it took a trip to the hospital with his father for him to grasp the scale.

“It took us five hours to even see the doctor,” he says.

Why We Wrote This

Residents of Eagle Pass, Texas, live with the border crisis in ways most of the rest of the U.S. does not. They want a secure border. They also want humane treatment of migrants.

For over a year, Eagle Pass has seen more migrant crossings than almost any other U.S. border city.

In an unprecedented venture into immigration enforcement by a state, Texas Gov. Greg Abbott launched Operation Lone Star in 2021. The $4.4 billion initiative has seen state police and National Guard members patrolling the Rio Grande and blockading the river with razor wire and floating buoys buttressed with nets and saw blades.

Meanwhile, Mayor Rolando Salinas issued a disaster declaration last week after thousands of migrants crossed in just two days.

For Eagle Pass residents, the crisis is provoking a complex range of emotions. Border security is a necessary piece of local law enforcement. Many locals, descended from legal immigrants, take umbrage with illegal immigration, and they count U.S. Customs and Border Protection agents as neighbors and relatives. But many residents view the buoy barrier and razor wire as steps too far.

“Nobody wants to take full accountability,” says Mr. Lopez. “It’s just straining the resources of small little towns along the border.”

Living and working less than 2 miles from the Rio Grande, Margil Lopez is at the heart of the United States’ migrant crisis. Yet it took a trip to the hospital, after his father threw his back out, for him to grasp the scale of the crisis in the small town of Eagle Pass, Texas.

“It took us five hours to even see the doctor,” he says.

For over a year, this rural sector of the southern border has seen more migrant crossings than almost any other. The Biden administration has been responding with a combination of carrots and sticks, from creating new legal pathways for certain migrants to continuing a policy of rapidly expelling certain other migrants. But the state of Texas has been responding here as well, and with much more aggression.

Why We Wrote This

Residents of Eagle Pass, Texas, live with the border crisis in ways most of the rest of the U.S. does not. They want a secure border. They also want humane treatment of migrants.

In an unprecedented venture into immigration enforcement by a state government, Texas Gov. Greg Abbott, a Republican, launched Operation Lone Star in 2021. The $4.4 billion border security initiative has seen state police and National Guard members – reinforced by National Guard units from other Republican-led states – patrolling the Rio Grande, arresting migrants who trespass on private property, and blockading the river with shipping containers, razor wire, and floating buoys buttressed with nets and saw blades. 

Operation Lone Star has been controversial since its inception. Public officials and human rights groups have criticized the initiative as inhumane and unlawful. Some rank-and-file service members have objected to the operation as well. Texas is fighting a federal lawsuit seeking to remove the floating barrier.

Meanwhile, migrants have continued to enter Eagle Pass illegally – and recently they’ve done so in large numbers. Mayor Rolando Salinas issued a disaster declaration last week after thousands of migrants crossed into the city in just two days. “It has taken a toll on our local resources, specifically our police force and our fire department,” he told the San Antonio Express-News. 

Adrees Latif/Reuters

Compatriots Douglas and David assist Leon, a migrant from Venezuela, as he carries his disabled cousin Luis in search of an entry point past razor wire, after wading across the Rio Grande into the U.S. from Mexico in Eagle Pass, Texas, Sept. 15, 2023.

For Eagle Pass residents, the crisis is provoking a complex range of emotions. Border security is a necessary piece of local law enforcement here, especially in recent years. Many locals, descended from legal immigrants, take umbrage with illegal immigration, and they count U.S. Customs and Border Protection agents as friends, neighbors, and relatives. Businesses have also benefited from the patronage of state police and the National Guard.

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