Posted on 07/08/2005 11:38:55 AM PDT by SwinneySwitch
Sheriffs from Victoria and three nearby counties appealed Thursday to Sen. John Cornyn for federal dollars to help them deal with the flood of illegal immigrants pouring through the area.
"One word can sum this whole thing up: Overwhelming," Goliad County Sheriff Robert De La Garza told Cornyn. "I'm hoping that the federal government will do something for us."
Refugio County Sheriff Earl Petropoulas put it this way: "We don't have the money to do the job."
The senator pledged that he would try to help.
"More funding is a real possibility," he said. "We'd be delighted to try to get you some of those resources."
At the invitation of Victoria County Sheriff T. Michael O'Connor, Cornyn, a Texas Republican, sat down at the Victoria County Sheriff's Office with the four sheriffs, landowners, agriculture representatives and others for a half-hour roundtable discussion on immigration problems.
"I'm here to find out what I can do to support your efforts and take that back to Congress to lead the charge to try to fix our broken border and immigration system," Cornyn said.
The sheriffs said dealing with the illegal immigrants puts a major strain on their staffs, their jails and their departmental budgets.
Petropoulas asked for federal money for equipment, jail costs and additional deputies that could be cross-trained as Border Patrol agents.
The sheriffs and the senator agreed that the Border Patrol is understaffed in the Victoria region. "They're stretched too thin," said Bee County Sheriff Carlos Carrizales Jr.
Sheriff O'Connor said he supported the idea of federal funding to cross-train deputies/Border Patrol officers who could focus on the immigration issue.
O'Connor said if federal funding could be made available to the four counties for cross-trained officers, the counties could join together to form an immigration task force that could respond across the area as needed.
O'Connor also wants a Border Patrol station to be opened in Victoria "to work this very intense area" and is willing to provide space at the sheriff's office for the station.
He displayed a map showing arrows converging on Victoria from major illegal immigrant routes through Laredo, McAllen and Matamoros. He said if a map of the Victoria area were to be marked in all the places illegals have been encountered "it would blacken the map. They're funneling right through here."
The sheriffs also asked for changes in federal policies regarding releasing illegal immigrants turned over to them by local authorities. "It's a catch-and-release program," said O'Connor.
At the end of the discussion, Cornyn said: "This is not the end. This is the beginning of a good working relationship."
The sheriffs seemed encouraged.
"I felt good leaving the meeting," said Goliad's De La Garza. "The senator looked me straight in the eye and told me he's going to help."
O'Connor said afterward that over the last six months since his election he has gone to Washington D.C. and to Houston to speak to federal immigration officials about the help needed in the Victoria area. The officials were receptive, he said, but didn't act. That's when he wrote to Cornyn asking for the meeting.
"Knowledge is power and the more he knows and hears first hand, the more he can articulate to the people in Washington about our concerns," said O'Connor.
During the roundtable discussion, Ned Miester of the Texas Farm Bureau appealed to Cornyn to not take any action that would lead to the closing of the border, saying farmers need the workers who come up from Mexico.
Meister said a Lubbock squash farmer is currently losing up to $10,000 a day because he doesn't have enough pickers to harvest his crop.
Cornyn said the solution isn't to deploy the military or to build a wall, and agreed that some immigrants "do jobs Americans are not always willing to do."
He said a balance must be struck between economic and security needs.
"Today's explosion in London was a reminder that this is still a very dangerous world," the senator said.
Landowner Morgan O'Connor agreed, saying the nature of the immigrants has changed from those simply seeking jobs to a more dangerous element, including drug traffickers, human smugglers, even terrorists.
She said her parents are afraid to be alone at their ranch anymore because of the illegals, and that the family no longer lets its children ride horseback or work alone on the ranch.
O'Connor said the problem has become a constitutional issue because Texans are being deprived of the right to enjoy their property.
Others sitting at the table included John Kaspar, chief deputy in Victoria County; Dale Fowler of the Victoria Economic Development Corp.; David Edwards, a San Patricio County rancher; and Vincent Heard, a rancher in Refugio and Goliad counties.
Several citizens who wanted to attend the meeting, after reading in the paper that it would be an open meeting, were turned away. Cornyn's office had told the Advocate earlier that the meeting would be open to the public. Sheriff O'Connor on Wednesday reported that the meeting would be closed. The Thursday meeting was not open to the public.
Greg Bowen is a reporter for the Advocate. Contact him at 361-580-6519 or gbowen@vicad.com.
He's not even a moderate he's a LIB!!
Migrant laborers. My grandfather was a West Texas farmer until about 50 years ago.. I've heard stories of the Mexican migrants coming through and camping on the land. They would build clay ovens in which to cook their beans and tortillas.
For over a hundred years the migrants would start in the South in the Spring and work their way up through Canada by the Winter and then return to Mexico.
There have never been enough permanent residents to do the American farm work. And I don't think for one second that any of the FReepers complaining about illegals would take a migrant worker's place.
"I'm here to find out what I can do to support your efforts and take that back to Congress to lead the charge to try to fix our broken border and immigration system," Cornyn said.Um, does a Texan really need to go to the border to see what needs to be done?
How do you repel an invading force?
Anyone?
Bueller?
I know about the migrants. There are more illegals now then there was 50 years ago and less farm land. They are out there. I've seen a few of these newer farmers/ranchers fail because they want all new equipment, a new dually truck, and only work 5 days a week for 8 a day so they can hang out or play golf. The work hasn't changed, still back-breaking and demanding and if you don't put it the hours and invest your profit back into the farm you won't make it.
When I was younger and in college I worked cattle ranches every summer and once made the trek up from Oklahoma to Dakota working wheat farms.
"And as long as the Senator thinks this, no measurable progress will be made."
Then the senator is on the side of the Illegal Alien economic terrorists. This will eventually end in a bloodbath while the elites who engineered and promoted the invasion are sitting pretty, reaping the profits from their cheap labor and laughing at the foolish American sheep being sheared to pay for their own demise. Gotta go, Oprah's coming on.
"Chucky Schumer and Hillary were on a rant today about more money for buses and subways security. If the terrorists want to blow up a bus no amount of money or secutiry can stop them. I would much rather spend that money stopping people from walking across the border,"
I'm beginning to think that the idea is to continue the invasion of our country while extorting more funds from the already over-burdened American taxpayer to pay for an ever expanding police state. Shut the hell up and work.
"Gotta go, Oprah's coming on."
I assume this is meant to be an ironic comment?
What? You don't watch Oprah. How do you know what to think?
No out of work Pro-illegals? I guess crime IS an occupation.
This is not 1955, bravosierra!
Rather then take the ones in prison already, I would rather fit the ones who are detained and released now with ankle bracelets and assign them to a farm to work until their deportaion hearings come due.
This is much preferable to letting them wander about and hope the show up at the hearing. Most of the illegals we have in prison are in their for violent crimes and I would not like to see them working on farms.
However, your idea has much merit if applied to the catch and release illegals and I am surprised someone didn't think of it before, maybe they did but I just am not aware of it.
Yours is a better idea...I had forgotten about those..
Jeez, could we possibly make up MORE catagories of illegals?
Protect our borders and coastlines from all foreign invaders!
Be Ever Vigilant!
Minutemen Patriots ~ Bump!
Why not let regular prisoners work in the fields..pay them what the illegals would be paid.
A lot of them don't have any family that will send them money and would willing work for whatever the Agriculture wage is...??4-5 bucks an hour?? that's more "honest"money than a lot of them have ever dreamed of...it is pure BS that americans won't do this work.
Good idea also...
The problem is, your idea is better than mine, and I think they are both pretty good, and help a lot of people.
But, the ACLU would never let it happen. To them, working in the fields would be considered torture, even if it meant an early release, or some money to go to their families...
Meister said a Lubbock squash farmer is currently losing up to $10,000 a day because he doesn't have enough pickers to harvest his crop.
The fact that we have around 12-15 million illegal aliens in our country and farmers still claim that they don't have enough foreign workers to pick the crops shows that many illegal aliens don't want to work in the fields. They would apparently rather work in restaurants, warehouses, hotels, janitorial, construction, etc. Perhaps picking crops is now a job that "Mexicans just don't want to do".
Thanks for summing up the problem and the choices we have to make so concisely. I've been saying that our economy has been warped out of balance for a long time - only a fool claims that the displacement of American labor for illegals and offshore outsourcing is beneficial to our nation's financial health on the strength of a sham (consumers saving a few cents while owner's profits far surpass what they'd gain if held to ethical behavior). Short-term profit at the expense of long-term EVERYTHING else.
Most amusing is how I've been relentlessly attacked by proponents of "Free Trade" who would be better off calling themselves Free-for-all Freebooters. There is nothing free about artificially sustaining an economy with transferred burden on the shrinking middle class while escalating an astronomical deficit. Eventually too few are left able to purchase much of anything while other economies leave us far behind...the inevitable result of starving off the productive class. The Golden Goose is marinating as we speak.
While we are a Capitalist society it is our government's responsibility to ride herd on those who would do harm to our country for their personal enrichment. The fact that those people are the primary providers of campaign funds and cushy post-service boardroom spots tends to eventually overwhelm the best people we send into the beltway.
Maybe it's Constitutional Convention time...
So what's your point?
I don't think for one second that any of the FReepers who support illegal immigration would take a migrant worker's place either.
Hell, if pickin' squash paid $20 an hour, this broad would be in there. (Less the bank can't afford me to work for.)
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