The Department of Homeland Security has new wall projects planned in almost 100 miles of Arizona borderlands. But one section slated for Native American land near Yuma is being reconsidered.
The Cocopah Indian Tribe spans around 6,500 acres just south of Yuma. The tribe has historic ties to the Colorado River there. Access to the river could have been severed by the Trump administration's border wall.
Now a new court document submitted by federal attorneys May 20 eliminates funding for the 7-mile stretch that would have crossed through tribal land.
Dan Millis of the Sierra Club said this is a positive move to protect tribal resources, but he said communities are still being left out of planning.
"This wall is being planned by faraway places by people who are just looking at maps on flat screens, that have no idea where the Native American tribes live, where the water flows across the border," he said.
Earlier this year the Trump administration diverted $3.8 billion in Pentagon funding to the border wall. The court document said the Department of Defense will not use its funds on the section because of difficult terrain and high building costs.
AZPM reached out to Customs and Border Protection for comment. In an email, an agency spokesperson said the Department of Defense is now expected to fund approximately 155 miles of border wall, but that mileage could fluctuate until all contracts have been awarded. The spokesperson also said the agency is in communication with the Cocopah Indian Tribe about the project.
This article was updated May 29 to include a Customs and Border Protection response to questions from AZPM.
By submitting your comments, you hereby give AZPM the right to post your comments and potentially use them in any other form of media operated by this institution.