Posted on 11/18/2002 6:21:51 AM PST by madfly
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AUSTIN The United States could impose sanctions before the end of the year in retaliation for Mexicos failure to honor a water treaty, a federal government official has confirmed. International Boundary and Water Commission Commissioner Carlos M. Ramirez told a state Senate border affairs committee hearing Thursday that he was not at liberty to discuss the State Departments "plans," but did testify on halting the delivery of water to Mexico from the Colorado River. "There are plans that will be put in motion against Mexico," Ramirez said after submitting four-pages of written testimony to the committee chaired by Brownsville state Sen. Eddie Lucio. "Possible sanctions are being discussed in Washington right now but I am not at liberty to say what they are. It is possible they could be imposed before the end of the year." Texas Citrus Mutual Executive Vice President Ray Prewett, who also testified at the hearing, said Rio Grande Valley farmers had learned from experience to take Ramirezs comments with "a pinch of salt." Harlingen Irrigation District General Manager Wayne Halbert agreed and said Ramirez was not routinely "kept in the loop" by the State Department on water treaty negotiations. "We have not heard that a decision has yet been made. If Carlos Ramirez knows about it then the whole world would know about it," Halbert said. Ramirez, a former El Paso mayor who was appointed to the IBWC last year by President Bush, said additional negotiations would take place later this month to "again urge Mexico to commit to a water delivery plan for the coming season." Those negotiations are expected to be headed by Secretary of State Colin Powell at a binational meeting with Mexicos Foreign Relations Secretary Jorge Castaneda and other cabinet members in Mexico City on Nov. 25-26. Tony Garza, the United States newly appointed ambassador to Mexico, is expected to attend the meetings. Lucio, D-Brownsville, called Garzas appointment the "biggest victory" Valley farmers had so far in the long-running dispute. Under a 1944 treaty, Mexico is required to deliver an average of 350,000 acre-feet of water per year to the United States, mostly from the Rio Conchos Basin in Chihuahua. In return, the United States must deliver 1.5 million acre-feet of water per year to Mexico from the Colorado River. While the United States has complied with the treaty, Mexico, claiming extraordinary drought, has been falling increasingly behind in its repayments since 1992. Mexico knows the United States more than 1.5 million acre-feet of water. Prewett, a founder member of Texans for Treaty Compliance, said state officials expect Mexico to make internal water allocation decisions for the coming year "any day now." He said that if there is no consideration of honoring the 1944 treaty, there would be no water left to allocate to the United States. "The next few weeks could be the most critical on this issue that we have seen in the last ten years," Prewett added. Agriculture Commissioner Susan Combs unveiled a map at the hearing showing rich, green, irrigated land in the Delicias district of Chihuahua. Combs said Mexico now has almost three million acre-feet of water in storage in Chihuahua, twice as much as the United States has in its two international dams, Amistad and Falcon. Combs said she was appalled to learn that Mexico had sought funding from the North American Development Bank to build two-foot high "lips" on Chihuahua reservoirs to hold additional water. Improved storage capacity in the state had led to "explosive growth" in Chihuahua agricultural production, Combs said. "What has been particularly galling is the fruit and vegetables coming in from the Delicias district, coming in over the backs of our farmers," Combs said. "To think we have that stuff coming into our H-E-Bs, Fiesta, and other supermarkets is very painful," Combs said after the meeting. Combs again called on the United States government to look at blocking Colorado River water from reaching Mexico and restricting beef imports from Mexico. Jo Jo White, general manager of Mercedes Irrigation District, gave the most impassioned speech of the day, berating President Bush and Gov. Rick Perry for "paying lip service" to the needs of Texas agriculture. In his written testimony, White questioned whether Washingtons refusal to address the treaty violation was due to the fact that South Texas overwhelmingly elects Democrats. "South Texas is still part of the United States and deserves the same protection that any other region in the United States is afforded. Lack in obtaining this legal treaty protection will further lead to the demise of the region," White said. Gordon Hill, general manager of Bayview Irrigation District agreed, claiming Mexico was using "economic and political warfare" against the United States. Newly elected Attorney General Greg Abbott said he would use "any and all legal tools... to get the water we deserve." Jeff Boyd, the attorney generals deputy director of litigation, told the hearing the state would face "very significant legal obstacles" in suing Mexico, Chihuahua or the United States over the treaty. Lucio said the committee heard "excellent testimony" on the best route for pressuring Mexico into repaying the 1.5 million acre-feet of water debt. "However, I intend to continue exploring any legal avenues available to us," Lucio said. |
Maybe it'd help them if we pointed out that we have a whole pot-load of potential lettuce pickers here in California, they already speak mexican and claim to work real cheap!
I wonder if the folks in Washington are concerned about this? Probably not, with the war plans and still partying from the big win this is just one of those things they hope will go away on it's own.
Educate a couple of hundred young energetic people who feel American Patriotism is a finer character asset than Diversity is to an idea like this one. Then these people would need to go face to face with the residents of a small populated rural county and explain how it would work and benefit their them, their kids, and their grandkids.
Right off the bat, I think this project would require the help of the homeschooling community. The young people on College Campuses are deluded by liberal diversity and PC-madness.
BTW this is a Mexican irrigation thread, not Mexican Immigration. I switched topics because this is not being addressed in the media.
Mexico wante to renegotiate both the 1906 and 1944 treaties. They also want to renegotiate the minute agreements of the 1944 treaty that Presidente Salinas signed in contemplation of getting NAFTA thru the US Congress. The US should stay away from renegotiating because both treaties heavily favor the US.
There have got to be many ways, large and small, this could be accomplished. We could do what you suggested - although Ibelieve that then the federal and state governments would decide they could use the military or national guard against us. That is something we would have to know is in the realm of possibility.
I think just a good old fashioned boycott of one industry at a time that is heavy into illegals. Just stop buying one particular product - lettuce or produce unless you know where and how it is produced. Do you know you can live without fresh produce? We did when I was young, in the winter. You can live without eating chicken (now much healthier), etc. I think if we chose one industry at a time, let others know it would be their turn next, it might work.
Now it would have to be coupled with your idea also - except as I said, be prepared for government intervention. Whether we like to admit it or not, our state governments, in some instances, are just extensions of the federal government.
Isn't it illegal to employ illegals? I thought it was. IF so, why don't we also begin reporting all these people. If the INS or whatever agency is involved got thousands and thousands of tips.
Also, how about reporting some of these people to the IRS. I mean the actual employees. You know most don't pay taxes. This would have to be someone who could get to know these people - but that's not too hard to to in a small town. Just report them to the IRS. Probably nothing will be done, as I am assuming the IRS is protecting them - but what if someone was done.
Do you remember when the state of Texas was considering suing the federal government because of the increased cost of educating the illegals in border schools? What ever happened to that? I think that is when Texas passed the Robin Hood bill.
I actually think, however, the amnesty bill is going to be pushed through congress so fast you better not blink because I think President Bush knows the people are fed up and the elections are over and he can do what he likes. People have short memories and they will forget by 2004.
Great idea and well conceived.
Don't you live in Texas? What part? Just generally speaking--
How long will it be before the UN decides that any treaty that strongly favor a 'powerful country' is illegal?
The sheriff in every county is the top LEO. The feds cannot tell him what to do regarding what laws to enforce or not enforce, that is up to the citizens. The feds that work in "his" county get their concealed weapons permits from the sheriff. He can revoke them in a heartbeat.
I owned a ranch in Lamar County then sold out and moved to Nevada to be closer to the kids.
Good idea. Sounds like a plan. Fox is too full of himself. He seems to think the US needs him more than he needs the US...when the truth is that it's the other way around. In addition to halting water delivery, the US ought to hand out severe financial penalties for American companies that relocate to Mexico.
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