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United States Government Accountability Office: 
GAO: 

Testimony: 

Before the Subcommittee on National Parks, Forests, and Public Lands, 
Committee on Natural Resources, and the Subcommittee on National 
Security, Homeland Defense, and Foreign Operations, Committee on 
Oversight and Government Reform, House of Representatives: 

For Release on Delivery: 
Expected at 9:30 a.m. EDT:
Friday, April 15, 2011: 

Southwest Border: 

Border Patrol Operations on Federal Lands: 

Statement of Anu K. Mittal, Director:
Natural Resources and Environment: 

GAO-11-573T: 

GAO Highlights: 

Highlights of GAO-11-573T, a statement before the Subcommittee on 
National Parks, Forests, and Public Lands, Committee on Natural 
Resources, and the Subcommittee on National Security, Homeland 
Defense, and Foreign Operations, Committee on Oversight and Government 
Reform, House of Representatives. 

Why GAO Did This Study: 

from Mexico into the United States over the last 5 years along the 
U.S. southwestern border, the Border Patrol has nearly doubled the 
number of agents on patrol, constructed hundreds of miles of border 
fences, and installed a variety of surveillance equipment. About 40 
percent of these border lands are managed by the Departments of the 
Interior and Agriculture, and coordination and cooperation between 
Border Patrol and land management agencies is critical to ensure 
national security. As requested, this statement summarizes GAO’s 
findings from two reports issued on southwest border issues in the 
fall of 2010. The first report, GAO-11-38, focused on the key land 
management laws that Border Patrol must comply with and how these laws 
affect the agency’s operations. The second report, GAO-11-177, focused 
on the extent to which Border Patrol and land management agencies’ law 
enforcement units share threat information and communications. 

What GAO Found: 

When operating on federal lands, Border Patrol must comply with the 
requirements of several federal land management laws, including the 
National Environmental Policy Act, Wilderness Act, and Endangered 
Species Act. Border Patrol must obtain permission or a permit from 
federal land management agencies before agents can undertake 
operations, such as maintaining roads and installing surveillance 
equipment, on federal lands. To fulfill these requirements, Border 
Patrol generally coordinates with land management agencies through 
national and local interagency agreements. The most comprehensive 
agreement is a 2006 memorandum of understanding between the 
Departments of Homeland Security, Agriculture, and the Interior that 
is intended to guide Border Patrol activities on federal lands. 

Border Patrol’s access to some federal lands along the southwestern 
border has been limited because of certain land management laws, 
according to 17 of 26 patrol agents-in-charge that GAO surveyed. For 
example, these patrol agents-in-charge reported that implementation of 
these laws had resulted in delays and restrictions in their patrolling 
and monitoring operations. Specifically, 14 patrol agents-in-charge 
reported that they had been unable to obtain a permit or permission to 
access certain areas in a timely manner because of the time it takes 
for land managers to conduct required environmental and historic 
property assessments. The 2006 memorandum of understanding directs the 
agencies to cooperate and complete, in an expedited manner, all 
compliance required by applicable federal laws, but such cooperation 
has not always occurred. For example, when Border Patrol requested 
permission to move surveillance equipment, it took the land manager 
more than 4 months to conduct the required historic property 
assessment and grant permission, but by then illegal traffic had 
shifted to other areas. Despite the access delays and restrictions 
experienced by these stations, 22 of the 26 patrol agents-in-charge 
reported that the overall security status of their jurisdiction had 
not been affected by land management laws. Instead, factors such as 
the remoteness and ruggedness of the terrain have had the greatest 
effect on their ability to achieve operational control in these areas. 
Four patrol agents-in-charge reported that delays and restrictions had 
affected their ability to achieve or maintain operational control, but 
they either had not requested resources for increased or timelier 
access or their requests had been denied by senior Border Patrol 
officials because of higher priority needs of the agency. 

Information sharing and communication among the agencies have 
increased in recent years, but critical gaps remain in implementing 
interagency agreements. Agencies established forums and liaisons to 
exchange information; however, in the Tucson sector, agencies did not 
coordinate to ensure that federal land law enforcement officials had 
access to threat information and compatible secure radio 
communications for daily operations. GAO found that enhanced 
coordination in these areas could better ensure officer safety and a 
more efficient law enforcement response to illegal activity along the 
southwest border. 

What GAO Recommends: 

This statement contains no new recommendations. In its 2010 reports, 
GAO made several recommendations to the Departments of Agriculture, 
Homeland Security, and the Interior to help expedite Border Patrol’s 
access to federal lands and recommended that the agencies take actions 
to improve communication and information sharing. The departments 
concurred with GAO’s recommendations in those reports. 

View [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-11-573T] or key 
components. For more information, contact Anu K. Mittal at (202) 512-
3841 or mittala@gao.gov. 

[End of section] 

Chairman Chaffetz, Chairman Bishop, Ranking Member Tierney, Ranking 
Member Grijalva, and Members of the Subcommittees: 

I am pleased to be here today to participate in your joint hearing on 
Border Patrol operations on federal lands along the southwestern 
border. Enhancing the security of the nation's border with Mexico has 
emerged as a significant policy issue, particularly on federal lands, 
where illegal cross-border activity threatens not only people but also 
natural resources. In the mid-1990s, the U.S. Border Patrol increased 
its personnel and resources in large urban areas along the United 
States-Mexico border to curtail illegal human and narcotics 
trafficking. With this strategy, Border Patrol successfully reduced 
illegal border crossings in places like San Diego, California, and El 
Paso, Texas. Border Patrol's strategy puts a high priority on border 
enforcement in urban and populated areas, which can divert large 
concentrations of illegal traffic to federal lands and other remote 
areas where vast landscapes and often rugged terrain may take days to 
cross--giving agents more time to detect undocumented aliens and make 
apprehensions. 

The remoteness and harsh conditions found across much of the 
southwestern border, however, have not deterred illegal traffic as 
much as expected. Instead, it has increased substantially since the 
mid-1990s on federal lands managed by the Departments of the Interior 
and Agriculture, whose borderlands encompass over 40 percent of the 
1,900 miles of southwestern border in Arizona, California, New Mexico, 
and Texas. In response to the increase in illegal traffic on federal 
lands along the southwestern border, over the last 5 years, Border 
Patrol has nearly doubled the number of its agents on patrol, 
constructed hundreds of miles of pedestrian fences and vehicle 
barriers, and installed surveillance equipment on and near federal 
lands. Border Patrol and land management agency officials recognize 
that Border Patrol's presence can help protect natural and cultural 
resources on federal lands by deterring undocumented aliens, and they 
have stated that interagency coordination is therefore needed in the 
southwestern borderlands region.[Footnote 1] 

This testimony will cover (1) the key land management laws Border 
Patrol operates under and how it coordinates responsibilities under 
these laws with land management agencies, (2) how Border Patrol 
operations are affected by these laws, and (3) the extent to which 
Border Patrol, Interior, and Forest Service law enforcement units 
operating in these areas are sharing threat information and 
communications. This statement is based on two GAO reports published 
in October and November 2010.[Footnote 2] We conducted our work in 
accordance with generally accepted government auditing standards for 
each engagement. 

Background: 

The southwestern borderlands region contains many federally managed 
lands and also accounts for over 97 percent of all apprehensions of 
undocumented aliens by Border Patrol. Over 40 percent of the United 
States-Mexico border, or 820 linear miles, is managed by Interior's 
land management agencies and the Forest Service.[Footnote 3] Each of 
these land management agencies has a distinct mission and set of 
responsibilities, which are, respectively, managing federal land for 
multiple uses, such as recreation, minerals, and the sustained yield 
of renewable resources; conserving the scenery, natural and historical 
objects, and wildlife of the national park system; preserving and 
enhancing fish, wildlife, plants, and their habitats; and managing 
resources to sustain the health, diversity, and productivity of the 
nation's forests and grasslands to meet the needs of present and 
future generations. 

Border Patrol is organized into nine sectors along the southwestern 
border. Within each sector, there are stations with responsibility for 
defined geographic areas. Of the 41 stations in the borderlands region 
in the 9 southwestern border sectors, 26 have primary responsibility 
for the security of federal lands, according to Border Patrol sector 
officials.[Footnote 4] Apprehensions of undocumented aliens along the 
southwestern border increased steadily through the late 1990s, 
reaching a peak of 1,650,000 in fiscal year 2000. Since fiscal year 
2006, apprehensions have declined, reaching a low of 540,000 in fiscal 
year 2009. This decrease has occurred along the entire border, with 
every sector reporting fewer apprehensions in fiscal year 2009 than in 
fiscal year 2006. The Tucson Sector, however, with responsibility for 
central and eastern Arizona, continues to have the largest number of 
apprehensions.[Footnote 5] Border Patrol shares with land managers 
data on apprehensions and drug seizures occurring on federal land, 
providing such information in several ways, including in regularly 
occurring meetings and e-mailed reports. 

Border Patrol measures its effectiveness at detecting and apprehending 
undocumented aliens by assessing the border security status for a 
given area. The two highest border security statuses--"controlled" and 
"managed"--are levels at which Border Patrol claims the capability to 
consistently detect entries when they occur; identify what the entry 
is and classify its level of threat (such as who is entering, what the 
entrants are doing, and how many entrants there are); effectively and 
efficiently respond to the entry; and bring the situation to an 
appropriate law enforcement resolution, such as an arrest.[Footnote 6] 
Areas deemed either "controlled" or "managed" are considered by Border 
Patrol to be under "operational control."[Footnote 7] 

The volume of undocumented aliens crossing federal lands along the 
southwestern border can overwhelm law enforcement and resource 
protection efforts by federal land managers, thus highlighting the 
need for Border Patrol's presence on and near these lands, according 
to DHS and land management agency officials. The need for the presence 
of both kinds of agencies on these borderlands has prompted 
consultation among DHS, Interior, and Agriculture to facilitate 
coordination between Border Patrol and the land management agencies. 
The departments have a stated commitment to foster better 
communication and resolve issues and concerns linked to federal land 
use or resource management. 

Border Patrol Responsibilities under Key Land Management Laws and 
Coordination with Land Management Agencies: 

When operating on federal lands, Border Patrol has responsibilities 
under several federal land management laws, including the National 
Environmental Policy Act of 1969, Wilderness Act of 1964, and 
Endangered Species Act of 1973. Under these laws, Border Patrol must 
obtain permission or a permit from federal land management agencies 
before its agents can undertake certain activities on federal lands, 
such as maintaining roads and installing surveillance equipment. 
Because the land management agencies are responsible for ensuring 
compliance with land management laws, Border Patrol and the land 
management agencies have developed several mechanisms to coordinate 
their responsibilities. The most comprehensive of these is a national- 
level agreement--a memorandum of understanding signed in 2006 by the 
secretaries of Homeland Security, the Interior, and Agriculture-- 
intended to provide consistent principles to guide their agencies' 
activities on federal lands. At the local level, Border Patrol and 
land management agencies have also coordinated their responsibilities 
through various local agreements. 

Several Land Management Laws Govern Border Patrol Operations on 
Federal Lands: 

Under key federal land management laws, Border Patrol, like all 
federal agencies, must obtain permission or a permit from the 
appropriate federal land management agency to conduct certain 
activities--such as road maintenance--on federal lands.[Footnote 8] 
These land management laws include, but are not limited to, the 
following: 

* National Environmental Policy Act of 1969.[Footnote 9] Enacted in 
1970, the National Environmental Policy Act's purpose is to promote 
efforts that will prevent or eliminate damage to the environment, 
among other things. Section 102 requires federal agencies to evaluate 
the likely environmental effects of proposed projects using an 
environmental assessment or, if the projects would likely 
significantly affect the environment, a more detailed environmental 
impact statement evaluating the proposed project and alternatives. 
Environmental impact statements can be developed at either a 
programmatic level--where larger-scale, combined effects and 
cumulative effects can be evaluated and where overall management 
objectives, such as road access and use, are defined--or a project 
level, where the effects of a particular project in a specific place 
at a particular time are evaluated. If, however, the federal agency 
determines that activities of a proposed project fall within a 
category of activities the agency has already determined has no 
significant environmental effect--called a categorical exclusion--then 
the agency generally does not need to prepare an environmental 
assessment or an environmental impact statement. The agency may 
instead approve projects that fit within the relevant category by 
using one of the predetermined categorical exclusions, rather than 
preparing a project-specific environmental assessment or environmental 
impact statement.[Footnote 10] 

* National Historic Preservation Act of 1966.[Footnote 11] The 
National Historic Preservation Act provides for the protection of 
historic properties--any prehistoric or historic district, site, 
building, structure, object, or properties of traditional religious 
and cultural importance to an Indian tribe, included, or eligible for 
inclusion in, the National Register of Historic Places. For all 
projects receiving federal funds or a federal permit, section 106 of 
the act requires federal agencies to take into account a project's 
effect on any historic property. In accordance with regulations 
implementing the act, Border Patrol and land management agencies often 
incorporate compliance with the National Historic Preservation Act 
into their required evaluations of a project's likely environmental 
effects under the National Environmental Policy Act. Thus, the agency 
or agencies must determine, by consulting with relevant federal, 
state, and tribal officials, whether a project or activity has the 
potential to affect historic properties. The purpose of the 
consultation is to identify historic properties affected by the 
project; assess the activity's adverse effects on the historic 
properties; and seek ways to avoid, minimize, or mitigate any of those 
effects. 

* Wilderness Act of 1964.[Footnote 12] The Wilderness Act of 1964 
provides for federal lands to be designated as "wilderness areas," 
which means that such lands are to be administered in such a manner 
that will leave them unimpaired for future use and enjoyment and to 
provide for their protection and the preservation of their wilderness 
character, among other goals. If Border Patrol proposes to patrol or 
install surveillance equipment on federal land that has been 
designated as wilderness, the agency must comply with the requirements 
and restrictions of the Wilderness Act of 1964, other laws 
establishing a particular wilderness area, and the relevant federal 
land management agency's regulations governing wilderness areas. 
[Footnote 13] Section 4 of the act prohibits the construction of 
temporary roads or structures, as well as the use of motor vehicles, 
motorized equipment, and other forms of mechanical transport in 
wilderness areas, unless such construction or use is necessary to meet 
the minimum requirements for administration of the area, including for 
emergencies involving health and safety. Generally, the land 
management agencies have regulations that address the emergency and 
administrative use of motorized equipment and installations in the 
wilderness areas they manage. For example, under Fish and Wildlife 
Service regulations, the agency may authorize Border Patrol to use a 
wilderness area and prescribe conditions under which motorized 
equipment, structures, and installations may be used to protect the 
wilderness, including emergencies involving damage to property and 
violations of laws.[Footnote 14] 

* Endangered Species Act of 1973.[Footnote 15] The purpose of the 
Endangered Species Act is to conserve threatened and endangered 
species and the ecosystems upon which they depend. Under section 7 of 
the act, if Border Patrol or the land management agencies determine 
that an activity Border Patrol intends to authorize, fund, or carry 
out may affect an animal or plant species listed as threatened or 
endangered, it may initiate either an informal or a formal 
consultation with the Fish and Wildlife Service--which we refer to as 
a section 7 consultation--to ensure that its actions do not jeopardize 
the continued existence of such species or result in the destruction 
or adverse modification of its critical habitat. The agencies are to 
initiate informal consultation if they determine that an activity may 
affect--but is not likely to adversely affect--a listed species or 
critical habitat. 

National and Local Agreements Facilitate Coordination of 
Responsibilities among the Agencies: 

To help implement key federal land management laws, Border Patrol and 
the land management agencies have developed several mechanisms to 
coordinate their responsibilities, including a national-level 
memorandum of understanding and local agreements. The national-level 
memorandum of understanding was signed in 2006 by the secretaries of 
Homeland Security, the Interior, and Agriculture and is intended to 
provide consistent principles to guide the agencies' activities on 
federal lands along the U.S. borders.[Footnote 16] Such activities may 
include information sharing; placing and installing surveillance 
equipment, such as towers and underground sensors; using roads; 
providing Border Patrol with natural and cultural resource training; 
mitigating environmental impacts; and pursuing suspected undocumented 
aliens off road in wilderness areas. The memorandum also contains 
several provisions for resolving conflicts between Border Patrol and 
land managers, such as directing the agencies to resolve conflicts and 
delegate resolution authority at the lowest field operations level 
possible and to cooperate with each other to complete--in an expedited 
manner--all compliance that is required by applicable federal laws. 

We found several instances where Border Patrol stations and land 
management agencies have coordinated their responsibilities through 
use of this national-level memorandum of understanding. For example, 
Border Patrol and land managers in Arizona used the 2006 memorandum of 
understanding to set the terms for reporting Border Patrol off-road 
vehicle incursions in Organ Pipe Cactus National Monument, as well as 
for developing strategies for interdicting undocumented aliens closer 
to the border in the Cabeza Prieta National Wildlife Refuge and 
facilitating Border Patrol access in the San Bernardino National 
Wildlife Refuge. In addition, we found that guidance provided by the 
2006 memorandum of understanding has facilitated local agreements 
between the Border Patrol and land management agencies. For example, 
for the Coronado National Forest in Arizona, Border Patrol and the 
Forest Service developed a coordinated strategic plan that sets forth 
conditions for improving and maintaining roads and locating helicopter 
landing zones in wilderness areas, among other issues. 

We also found that several other mechanisms have been used to 
facilitate interagency coordination. For example, Border Patrol and 
Interior established interagency liaisons, who have responsibility for 
facilitating coordination among their agencies. Border Patrol's Public 
Lands Liaison Agent program directs each Border Patrol sector to 
designate an agent dedicated to interacting with Interior, 
Agriculture, or other governmental or nongovernmental organizations 
involved in land management issues. The role of these designated 
agents is to foster better communication; increase interagency 
understanding of respective missions, objectives and priorities; and 
serve as a central point of contact in resolving issues and concerns. 
Key responsibilities of these public lands liaison agents include 
implementing requirements of the 2006 memorandum of understanding and 
related agreements and monitoring any enforcement operations, issues, 
or activities related to federal land use or resource management. In 
addition, Interior established its own Southwest Border Coordinator, 
located at the Border Patrol Tucson Sector, to coordinate federal land 
management issues among Interior component agencies and with Border 
Patrol. The Forest Service also established a dedicated liaison 
position in the Tucson Sector to coordinate with Border Patrol, 
according to Forest Service officials. In addition to these liaison 
positions, a borderlands management task force provides an 
intergovernmental forum in the field for officials, including those 
from Border Patrol, the land management agencies, and other state and 
local governmental entities, to regularly meet and discuss challenges 
and opportunities for working together. The task force acts as a 
mechanism to address issues of security, safety, and resources among 
federal, tribal, state, and local governments located along the border. 

Land Management Laws Have Limited Border Patrol's Access in Some 
Areas, but Most Agents-in-Charge Reported No Effect on Their Stations' 
Border Security Status: 

Border Patrol's access has been limited on some federal lands along 
the southwestern border because of certain land management laws, 
according to patrol agents-in-charge in the borderlands region. 
Specifically, patrol agents-in-charge at 17 of the 26 stations that 
have primary responsibility for patrolling federal lands along the 
southwestern border reported that when they attempt to obtain a permit 
or permission to access portions of federal lands, delays and 
restrictions have resulted because they had to comply with land 
management laws. Despite these delays and restrictions, patrol agents-
in-charge at 22 of the 26 Border Patrol stations reported that the 
border security status of their area of operation had not been 
affected by land management laws. 

More Than Half of Border Patrol Stations Reported That Land Management 
Laws Have Affected Their Access on Federal Lands: 

Patrol agents-in-charge of 17 of 26 stations along the southwestern 
border reported that they have experienced delays and restrictions in 
patrolling and monitoring portions of federal lands because of various 
land management laws. 

Implementation of the National Environmental Policy Act and the 
National Historic Preservation Act Have Caused Delays: 

Patrol agents-in-charge at 14 of the 26 Border Patrol stations along 
the southwestern border reported experiencing delays in getting a 
permit or permission from land managers to gain access to portions of 
federal land because of the time it took land managers to complete the 
requirements of the National Environmental Policy Act and the National 
Historic Preservation Act. These delays in gaining access had 
generally lessened agents' ability to detect undocumented aliens in 
some areas, according to the patrol agents-in-charge. The 2006 
memorandum of understanding directs the agencies to cooperate with 
each other to complete, in an expedited manner, all compliance 
required by applicable federal laws, but such cooperation has not 
always occurred, as shown in the following examples: 

* Federal lands in Arizona. For the Border Patrol station responsible 
for patrolling certain federal lands in Arizona, the patrol agent-in-
charge reported that it has routinely taken several months to obtain 
permission from land managers to move mobile surveillance systems. The 
patrol agent-in-charge told us that before permission can be granted, 
land managers generally must complete environmental and historic 
property assessments--as required by the National Environmental Policy 
and National Historic Preservation acts--on roads and sites needed for 
moving and locating such systems. For example, Border Patrol requested 
permission to move a mobile surveillance system to a certain area but 
by the time permission was granted--more than 4 months after the 
initial request--illegal traffic had shifted to other areas. As a 
result, Border Patrol was unable to move the surveillance system to 
the locale it desired, and during the 4-month delay, agents were 
limited in their ability to detect undocumented aliens within a 7-mile 
range that could have been covered by the system.[Footnote 17] The 
land manager for the federal land unit said that most of these lands 
and the routes through it have not had a historic property assessment, 
so when Border Patrol asks for approval to move equipment, such 
assessments must often be performed. Moreover, the federal land 
management unit has limited staff with numerous other duties. For 
example, the unit has few survey specialists who are qualified to 
perform environmental and historic property assessments. Thus, he 
explained, resources cannot always be allocated to meet Border Patrol 
requests in an expedited manner. 

* Federal lands in New Mexico. In southwestern New Mexico, the patrol 
agents-in-charge of four Border Patrol stations reported that it may 
take 6 months or more to obtain permission from land managers to 
maintain and improve roads that Border Patrol needs on federal lands 
to conduct patrols and move surveillance equipment. According to one 
of these patrol agents-in-charge, for Border Patrol to obtain such 
permission from land managers, the land managers must ensure that 
environmental and historic property assessments are completed, which 
typically entails coordinating with three different land management 
specialists: a realty specialist to locate the site, a biologist to 
determine if there are any species concerns, and an archaeologist to 
determine if there are any historic sites. Coordinating schedules 
among these experts often takes a long time, according to a Border 
Patrol public-lands liaison. For example, one patrol agent-in-charge 
told us that a road in his jurisdiction needed to be improved to allow 
a truck to move an underground sensor, but the process for the federal 
land management agency to perform a historic property assessment and 
issue a permit for the road improvements took nearly 8 months. During 
this period, agents could not patrol in vehicles or use surveillance 
equipment to monitor an area that illegal aliens were known to use. 
The patrol agent-in-charge told us that performing such assessments on 
every road that might be used by Border Patrol would take substantial 
time and require assessing hundreds of miles of roads.[Footnote 18] 
According to federal land managers in the area, environmental and 
historic property specialists try to expedite support for Border 
Patrol as much as possible, but these specialists have other work they 
are committed to as well. Moreover, the office has not been provided 
any additional funding to increase personnel to be able to dedicate 
anyone in support of the Border Patrol to expedite such requests. 

For some of the stations, the delays patrol agents-in-charge reported 
could have been shortened if Border Patrol could have used its own 
resources to pay for, or perform, environmental and historic property 
assessments required by the National Environmental Policy Act and 
National Historic Preservation Act, according to patrol agents-in- 
charge and land managers with whom we spoke. On the Coronado National 
Forest, agency officials told us that Border Patrol and the Forest 
Service had entered into a cooperative agreement whereby in some 
situations Border Patrol pays for road maintenance and the necessary 
environmental and historic property assessments. According to two 
patrol agents-in-charge, the development of the Coronado National 
Forest coordinated strategic plan has helped the agencies shorten the 
time it takes to begin road maintenance because it allows Border 
Patrol to use its resources and therefore begin environmental and 
historic property assessments sooner.[Footnote 19] The Coronado 
National Forest border liaison added that without this agreement, 
Forest Service would have been unable to meet Border Patrol's road 
maintenance needs in a timely fashion. 

In other situations, using Border Patrol resources to pay for or 
perform road maintenance may not always expedite access; instead, land 
managers and Border Patrol officials told us that a programmatic 
environmental impact statement should be prepared under the National 
Environmental Policy Act to help expedite access. For example, some 
patrol agents-in-charge, such as those in southwestern New Mexico, 
told us that to conduct environmental and historic property 
assessments on every road that agents might use, on a case-by-case 
basis, can take substantial time and require assessing hundreds, if 
not thousands, of miles of roads. Moreover, when agents request to 
move mobile surveillance systems, the request is often for moving such 
systems to a specific location, such as a 60-by-60-foot area on a 
hill. Some agents told us, however, that it takes a long time to 
obtain permission from land managers because environmental and 
historic property assessments must be performed on each specific site, 
as well as on the road leading to the site. As we stated earlier, 
National Environmental Policy Act regulations recognize that 
programmatic environmental impact statements--broad evaluations of the 
environmental effects of multiple Border Patrol activities, such as 
road use and technology installation, in a geographic area--could 
facilitate compliance with the act. By completing a programmatic 
environmental impact statement, Border Patrol and land management 
agencies could then subsequently prepare narrower, site-specific 
statements or assessments of proposed Border Patrol activities on 
federal lands, such as on a mobile surveillance system site alone, 
thus potentially expediting access.[Footnote 20] 

In our October 2010 report, we recommended that to help expedite 
Border Patrol's access to federal lands, the agencies should, when and 
where appropriate, (a) enter into agreements that provide for Border 
Patrol to use its own resources to pay for or to conduct the required 
environmental and historic property assessments and (b) prepare 
programmatic National Environmental Policy Act documents for Border 
Patrol activities in areas where additional access may be needed. The 
agencies concurred with this recommendation. 

Wilderness Act Restrictions Have Affected Access to Federal Lands: 

Patrol agents-in-charge for three stations reported that agents' 
access to some federal lands was limited because of restrictions in 
the Wilderness Act on building roads and installing infrastructure, 
such as surveillance towers, in wilderness areas. For these stations, 
the access restrictions lessen the effectiveness of agents' patrol and 
monitoring operations. However, land managers may grant permission for 
such activities if they meet the regulatory requirements for emergency 
and administrative use of motorized equipment and installations in 
wilderness areas. 

Land managers responsible for two wilderness areas are working with 
Border Patrol agents to provide additional access as allowed by the 
regulations for emergency and administrative use. For example, at the 
Cabeza Prieta National Wildlife Refuge, Wilderness Act restrictions 
have limited the extent to which Border Patrol agents can use vehicles 
for patrols and technology resources to detect undocumented aliens. 
The patrol agent-in-charge told us that the refuge has few roads and 
having an additional east-west road closer to the border would give 
Border Patrol more options in using its mobile surveillance system to 
monitor significant portions of the refuge that are susceptible to 
undocumented-alien traffic. Additionally, the patrol agent-in-charge 
told us that better access could benefit the natural resources of the 
refuge because it could lead to more arrests closer to the border-- 
instead of throughout the refuge--and result in fewer Border Patrol 
off-road incursions. The refuge manager agreed that additional Border 
Patrol access may result in additional environmental protection, and 
he is working with Border Patrol to develop a strategy at the refuge 
that would allow Border Patrol to detect and apprehend undocumented 
aliens closer to the border. Further, the refuge manager in February 
2010 gave permission for Border Patrol to install an SBInet tower on 
the refuge, which may also help protect the wilderness area. 

On the other hand, a land manager responsible for the Organ Pipe 
wilderness area has denied some Border Patrol requests for additional 
access and determined that additional Border Patrol access would not 
necessarily improve protection of natural resources. The patrol agent- 
in-charge of patrolling Organ Pipe, told us that when Border Patrol 
proposed placing an SBInet tower within the monument to help enable 
agents to detect undocumented aliens in a 30-square-mile range, the 
land manager denied the request because the proposed site was in a 
designated wilderness area. Instead, Border Patrol installed the tower 
in an area within the monument that is owned by the state of Arizona. 
At this site, however, the tower has a smaller surveillance range and 
cannot cover about 3 miles where undocumented aliens are known to 
cross, according to the patrol agent-in-charge, thus lessening Border 
Patrol's ability to detect entries compared with the originally 
proposed site. In addition, the patrol agent-in-charge explained that 
because of the tower's placement, when undocumented aliens are 
detected, agents have less time to apprehend them before they reach 
mountain passes, where it is easier to avoid detection. According to 
the land manager, Border Patrol did not demonstrate to him that the 
proposed tower site was critical, as compared with the alternative, 
and that agents' ability to detect undocumented aliens would be 
negatively affected. 

Endangered Species Act Requirements Have Affected Patrols of Federal 
Lands: 

Patrol agents-in-charge at five Border Patrol stations reported that 
as a result of consultations required by section 7 of the Endangered 
Species Act, agents have had to adjust the timing or specific locales 
of their ground and air patrols to minimize the patrols' impact on 
endangered species and their critical habitats. Although some delays 
and restrictions have occurred, Border Patrol agents were generally 
able to adjust their patrols with little loss of effectiveness in 
their patrol operations. For example, for a Border Patrol station 
responsible for patrolling an area within the Coronado National 
Forest, the patrol agent-in-charge reported that a section 7 
consultation placed restrictions on helicopter and vehicle access 
because of the presence of endangered species. Nevertheless, the 
patrol agent-in-charge told us the restrictions, which result in 
alternative flight paths, do not lessen the effectiveness of Border 
Patrol's air operations. Moreover, according to the Forest Service 
District Ranger, since the area's rugged terrain presents a constant 
threat to agents' safety, Border Patrol agents have been allowed to 
use helicopters as needed, regardless of endangered species' presence. 
[Footnote 21] In another instance, a patrol agent-in-charge told us 
that the Border Patrol wanted to improve a road within the area to 
provide better access, but because of the proposed project's adverse 
effects on an endangered plant, road improvement could not be 
completed near a low point where water crossed the road. Border Patrol 
worked with Forest Service officials to improve 3 miles of a Forest 
Service road up to the low point, but the crossing itself--about 8 
feet wide--along with 1.2 miles of road east of it was not improved. 
According to the patrol agent-in-charge, agents still patrol the area 
but must drive vehicles slowly because of the road's condition east of 
the low point. 

Similarly, for the Border Patrol station responsible for patrolling 
the San Bernardino National Wildlife Refuge, the patrol agent-in-
charge told us that vehicle access has been restricted in the refuge 
because vehicle use can threaten the habitat of certain threatened and 
endangered species. Since establishment of the refuge in 1982, locked 
gates have been in place on the refuge's administrative roads. 
[Footnote 22] But Border Patrol station officials told us that in the 
last several years, with the increase in the number of agents assigned 
to the station, they wanted to have vehicle access to the refuge. The 
terms for vehicle access had to be negotiated with the refuge manager 
and the refuge manager agreed to place Border Patrol locks on refuge 
gates and to allow second-level Border Patrol supervisors, on a case- 
by-case basis, to determine whether vehicle access to the refuge is 
critical.[Footnote 23] If such a determination is made, a Border 
Patrol supervisor unlocks the gate and contacts refuge staff to inform 
them that access was granted through a specific gate. The patrol agent-
in-charge told us that operational control has not been affected by 
these conditions for vehicle access. 

Most Agents Reported That Land Management Laws Have Had No Effect on 
Operational Control: 

Despite the access delays and restrictions reported for 17 stations, 
most patrol agents-in-charge told us that the border security status 
of their jurisdictions has not been affected by land management laws. 
Instead, factors other than access delays or restrictions, such as the 
remoteness and ruggedness of the terrain or dense vegetation, have had 
the greatest effect on their abilities to achieve or maintain 
operational control. While four patrol agents-in-charge reported that 
delays and restrictions resulting from compliance with land management 
laws had negatively affected their ability to achieve or maintain 
operational control, they had either not requested resources to 
facilitate increased or timelier access or had their requests denied 
by senior Border Patrol officials, who said that other needs were 
greater priorities for the station or sector. 

Most Stations' Border Security Status Has Been Unaffected by Land 
Management Laws: 

Patrol agents-in-charge at 22 of the 26 stations with jurisdiction for 
federal lands along the southwestern border told us that their ability 
to achieve or maintain operational control in their areas of 
responsibility has been unaffected by land management laws; in other 
words, no portions of these stations' jurisdictions have had their 
border security status, such as "controlled," "managed," or 
"monitored," downgraded as a result of land management laws. Instead, 
for these stations, the primary factor affecting operational control 
has been the remoteness and ruggedness of the terrain or the dense 
vegetation their agents patrol and monitor. Specifically, patrol 
agents-in-charge at 18 stations told us that stark terrain features-- 
such as rocky mountains, deep canyons, and dense brush--have 
negatively affected their agents' abilities to detect and apprehend 
undocumented aliens. For example, a patrol agent-in-charge whose 
station is responsible for patrolling federal land in southern 
California told us that the terrain is so rugged that Border Patrol 
agents must patrol and pursue undocumented aliens on foot; even all-
terrain vehicles specifically designed for off-road travel cannot 
traverse the rocky terrain. He added that because of significant 
variations in topography, such as deep canyons and mountain ridges, 
surveillance technology can also be ineffective in detecting 
undocumented aliens who hide there. Similarly, patrol agents-in-charge 
responsible for patrolling certain Fish and Wildlife Service land 
reported that dense vegetation limits agents' ability to patrol or 
monitor much of the land. One agent explained that Border Patrol's 
technology resources were developed for use in deserts, where few 
terrain features obstruct surveillance, whereas the vegetation in 
these areas is dense and junglelike. 

The majority of patrol agents-in-charge also told us that the most 
important resources for achieving and maintaining operational control 
on federal lands along the southwestern border are (1) a sufficient 
number of agents; (2) additional technology resources, such as mobile 
surveillance systems; and (3) tactical infrastructure, such as vehicle 
and pedestrian fencing. For example, in the remote areas of one 
national wildlife refuge, a patrol agent-in-charge told us that even 
with greater access in the refuge, he would not increase the number of 
agents patrolling it to gain improvements in operational control. 
Instead, he said, deploying additional technology resources, such as a 
mobile surveillance system, would be more effective in achieving 
operational control of the area because such systems would assist in 
detecting undocumented aliens while allowing agents to maintain their 
presence in and around a nearby urban area, where the vast majority of 
illegal entries occur. His view, and those of other patrol agents-in- 
charge whom we interviewed, is underscored by Border Patrol's 
operational assessments--twice yearly planning documents that stations 
and sectors use to identify impediments to achieving or maintaining 
operational control and to request resources needed to achieve or 
maintain operational control.[Footnote 24] In these assessments, 
stations have generally requested additional personnel or technology 
resources for their operations on federal lands. Delays or 
restrictions in gaining access have generally not been identified in 
operational assessments as an impediment to achieving or maintaining 
operational control for the 26 stations along the southwestern border. 

Four Stations Reported That Their Security Status Had Been Affected by 
Land Management Laws: 

Of the 26 patrol agents-in-charge we interviewed, 4 reported that 
delays and restrictions in gaining access to federal lands had 
negatively affected their ability to achieve or maintain operational 
control. However, 2 of these stations have not requested any 
additional resources as part of Border Patrol's operational 
assessments and the other two that did request additional resources 
were denied these requests because of other higher agency priorities. 
For example, the patrol agent-in-charge responsible for a land unit in 
southwestern New Mexico told us that operational control in a remote 
area of his jurisdiction is partly affected by the scarcity of roads. 
Having an additional road in this area would allow his agents to move 
surveillance equipment to an area that, at present, is rarely 
monitored. However, according to a supervisory agent for the sector, 
station officials did not request additional access through Border 
Patrol's operational assessments for this additional road, and land 
managers in this area told us they would be willing to work with 
Border Patrol to facilitate such access, if requested. 

Similarly, the patrol agent-in-charge at a Border Patrol station 
responsible for patrolling another federal land unit in Arizona 
reported that his ability to achieve operational control is also 
affected by a shortage of east-west roads in the unit. He told us that 
some of his area could potentially reach operational control status if 
there was an additional east-west road. In this case, the Border 
Patrol station did request an additional east-west road from the land 
management agency, but the land manager denied the request because the 
area is designated as wilderness, according to the patrol agent-in- 
charge.[Footnote 25] As a result of this denial, the patrol agent-in- 
charge did not pursue a request for resources through the Border 
Patrol's operational assessment. The land manager told us that he 
would be willing to work with Border Patrol to facilitate additional 
access if it could be shown that such access would help increase 
deterrence and apprehensions closer to the border. 

For the other two stations reporting that federal land management laws 
had negatively affected their ability to achieve or maintain 
operational control, Border Patrol sector or headquarters officials 
had denied the stations' requests for resources to facilitate 
increased or timelier access--typically for budgetary reasons. For 
example, one patrol agent-in-charge reported that 1.3 miles of border 
in her area of responsibility are not at operational control because, 
unlike most other border areas, it has no access road directly on the 
border. Further, she explained, the rough terrain has kept Border 
Patrol from building a road on the border. Instead, a road would need 
to be created in an area designated as wilderness. According to the 
patrol agent-in-charge, her station asked Border Patrol's sector 
office for an access road, and the request was submitted as part of 
the operational requirements-based budgeting program. As of July 2010, 
the request had not been approved because of budgetary constraints, 
according to the agent-in-charge. In addition, another patrol agent-in-
charge told us, few roads lie close to the river that runs through his 
area of responsibility. As a result, his agents have to patrol and 
monitor nearly 1 mile north of the international border, much closer 
to urban areas. According to officials with Border Patrol's relevant 
sector office, they have been using the operational assessments for 
several years to request an all-weather road, but approval and funding 
have not been granted by Border Patrol's headquarters. 

Federal Agencies Reported That Information Sharing and Communication 
Had Improved, but Additional Coordination Is Needed to Close Critical 
Gaps: 

Information sharing and communications among Border Patrol, Interior, 
and Forest Service have generally increased over the last several 
years, according to Border Patrol and federal land law enforcement 
officials in the Tucson sector, but critical gaps remained in 
implementing interagency agreements. As we stated earlier, DHS, 
Interior, and Agriculture had established the 2006 a memorandum of 
understanding in part to facilitate the exchange of threat information 
on federal lands;[Footnote 26] and a 2008 memorandum of understanding 
among these agencies established a common secure radio encryption key 
for communicating information on daily operations.[Footnote 27] The 
lack of early and continued consultation among agencies to implement 
these agreements has resulted in critical information-sharing gaps 
that compromise officer safety and a timely and effective coordinated 
law enforcement response to illegal activity on federal lands. 

Specifically, Border Patrol officials in the Tucson sector did not 
consult with federal land management agencies before discontinuing 
dissemination of daily situation reports that federal land law 
enforcement officials relied on for a common awareness of the types 
and locations of illegal activities observed on federal borderlands. 
Implementation of the 2006 memorandum of understanding's requirement 
for DHS, Interior, and Agriculture to establish a framework for 
sharing threat information could help ensure that law enforcement 
officials operating on federal lands have access to threat information 
they consider necessary to efficiently and effectively complete their 
missions. 

In addition, DHS, Interior, and Agriculture officials did not 
coordinate to ensure that all federal law enforcement partners could 
monitor secure radio communications regarding daily operations on 
federal lands in the Tucson sector. Specifically, in 2009 Border 
Patrol changed the secure radio encryption key used by Border Patrol 
agents in the Tucson sector to communicate on daily operations without 
consulting with Interior or Agriculture. In order to remedy the 
communication challenges, Border Patrol headquarters issued guidance 
in April 2010 instructing that secure radio communications of 
information regarding daily operations should be switched from the new 
encryption key back to the common encryption key compatible with 
Interior and Agriculture. However, since the Border Patrol's April 
2010 guidance applies only to the Tucson sector, secure radio 
compatibility problems could persist in other Border Patrol sectors. 

In our November 2010 report, we recommended that DHS, Interior, and 
Agriculture take necessary action to ensure that personnel at all 
levels of each agency conduct early and continued consultations to 
implement provisions of the 2006 memorandum of understanding, 
including the coordination of threat information for federal lands 
that is timely and actionable, and the coordination of future plans 
for upgrades of compatible radio communications used for daily law 
enforcement operations on federal lands.[Footnote 28] The agencies 
concurred with these recommendations. 

In January 2011, Customs and Border Protection issued a memorandum to 
all Border Patrol division chiefs and chief patrol agents emphasizing 
the importance of Interior and Agriculture partnerships to address 
border security threats on federal lands. This action is a positive 
step toward implementing our recommendations and we encourage DHS, 
Interior, and Agriculture to take the additional steps necessary to 
monitor and uphold implementation of the existing interagency 
agreements in order to enhance border security on federal lands. 

Chairman Chaffetz, Chairman Bishop, Ranking Member Tierney, Ranking 
Member Grijalva, and Members of the Subcommittees, this concludes my 
prepared statement. I would be pleased to answer any questions that 
you may have at this time. 

GAO Contacts and Acknowledgments: 

For further information about this testimony, please contact Anu K. 
Mittal at (202) 512-3841 or mittala@gao.gov. Contact points for our 
Offices of Congressional Relations and Public Affairs may be found on 
the last page of this statement. Richard Stana, Director; Elizabeth 
Erdmann, Assistant Director; Lucinda Ayers, Assistant Director; Nathan 
Anderson; and Richard P. Johnson also made key contributions to this 
statement. 

[End of section] 

Footnotes: 

[1] The borderlands region encompasses the area extending from the 
United States-Mexico border north to 100 miles. 

[2] GAO, Southwest Border: More Timely Border Patrol Access and 
Training Could Improve Security Operations and Natural Resource 
Protection on Federal Lands, [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-11-38] (Washington, D.C.: Oct. 19, 
2010); and GAO, Border Security: Additional Actions Needed to Better 
Ensure a Coordinated Federal Response to Illegal Activity on Federal 
Lands, [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-11-177] 
(Washington, D.C.: Nov. 18, 2010). 

[3] Land management agencies include the Bureau of Land Management, 
Fish and Wildlife Service, and National Park Service within Interior, 
and the Forest Service within Agriculture. 

[4] Depending on size and location, individual federal borderlands may 
fall within one or more stations' area of patrol responsibility and 
across one or two sectors. 

[5] Targeted enforcement efforts in other Border Patrol sectors in 
previous years caused a shift in illegal cross-border activity to the 
Tucson Sector, according to Border Patrol officials. The Congressional 
Research Service has stated that the overall borderwide decline in 
apprehensions is likely due to a combination of decreased 
opportunities for work in the United States and increased enforcement 
at the border. Congressional Research Service, Border Security: The 
Role of the U.S. Border Patrol, RL32562 (Washington, D.C., 2010). 

[6] Border Patrol is developing a new method for classifying an area's 
border security status to be used in Fiscal Year 2012. 

[7] Border Patrol classifies an area's border security status as one 
of five levels: An area is considered "controlled" when Border Patrol 
can deter or detect entries at the border, and continual, real-time 
surveillance and enforcement activities result in a high probability 
of immediate apprehension at the border. An area is considered 
"managed" when sufficient Border Patrol resources are available to 
deter or detect entries in time to apprehend, although not always at 
the immediate border, and sufficient resources exist to fully 
implement the sector's border control strategy and tactics. An area is 
considered "remote/low activity" when the sector has not defined 
issues affecting Border Patrol and has not developed a meaningful 
Border Patrol strategy. An area is considered "low-level monitored" 
when detection or apprehension is inhibited by a lack of resources or 
infrastructure. An area is considered "monitored" when the probability 
of detection is high, but the ability to respond is limited because 
the terrain is remote and rugged, Border Patrol has limited resources, 
or both. 

[8] Third parties, including Border Patrol, generally cannot undertake 
any road activities, except for public access, without a permit from a 
land management agency, and that permit would need to be consistent 
with the applicable land and resource management plans, which govern 
road construction, access, maintenance, and decommissioning. 

[9] Pub. L. No. 91-190 (1970), codified at 42 U.S.C. § 4321-4347. 

[10] For a project to be approved using a categorical exclusion, the 
agency must determine whether any extraordinary circumstances exist in 
which a normally excluded action or project may have a significant 
effect. Border Patrol has numerous categorical exclusions in place, 
including, for example, installation and operation of security 
equipment at existing facilities to screen for or detect dangerous or 
illegal individuals and routine monitoring and surveillance 
activities, such as patrols, investigations, and intelligence 
gathering. 

[11] Pub. L. No. 89-665 (1966), codified as amended at 16 U.S.C. §§ 
470 to 470x-6. 

[12] Pub. L. No. 88-577, codified at 16 U.S.C. §§ 1133-1136. 

[13] While a few of the wilderness areas along the United States-
Mexico border were designated in the 1964 act, most were established 
later. In one case, the law establishing the area specifically 
addressed border security: the Arizona Desert Wilderness Act of 1990 
established the Cabeza Prieta Wilderness Area in the Cabeza Prieta 
National Wildlife Refuge and stated that the land's designation as 
wilderness must not preclude or otherwise affect border operations in 
accordance with any existing interagency agreement. 

[14] The National Park Service does not have general regulations 
governing administration of wilderness areas in national parks. 
Instead, each Park Service unit administers its wilderness areas in 
accordance with a wilderness management plan that it develops and the 
National Park Service's Wilderness Management Policy. Under the 
policy, administrative use of motorized equipment or mechanical 
transport is authorized only (1) in emergency situations--for example, 
homeland security and law enforcement--involving the health or safety 
of persons actually within the area or (2) if the unit's 
superintendent determines it to be the minimum requirement needed by 
management to achieve the purposes of the wilderness area. Determining 
the minimum requirement is a two-step process that first determines 
whether the proposed management action is appropriate or necessary for 
administration of the area as wilderness and does not cause a 
significant impact to wilderness resources and character and then 
determines the techniques and types of equipment needed to ensure that 
impacts on wilderness resources and character are minimized. 

[15] Pub. L. No. 93-205 (1973), codified as amended at 16 U.S.C. §§ 
1531-1544. 

[16] Mobile surveillance systems perform a 180-degree sweep every 10 
seconds. 

[17] Department of Homeland Security, Department of the Interior, and 
U.S. Department of Agriculture, Memorandum of Understanding on 
Regarding Cooperative National Security and Counterterrorism Efforts 
on Federal Lands along the United States' Border (Washington, D.C., 
March 2006). 

[18] The federal land management agency does not always approve access 
for the entire road needed to reach requested areas; for example, the 
agency may in some cases perform environmental and historic property 
assessments only at the location where Border Patrol wants to put the 
surveillance equipment. 

[19] The one outstanding issue, one agent-in-charge explained, is for 
the land management agencies to more clearly define all roads that 
Border Patrol can maintain. According to the Coronado National Forest 
road manager, special use permits will soon be issued for the roads 
Border Patrol needs, and the roads will be mapped and identified for 
Border Patrol. 

[20] As part of the contract for tactical infrastructure maintenance 
and repair--a fiscal year 2011 contract for the maintenance and repair 
of vehicle and pedestrian fences, among other things, along the 
southwestern border--Border Patrol is developing a list of what roads 
it needs for access to fencing. In developing this list, Border Patrol 
officials told us they will identify what roads have had environmental 
and historic property assessments. For those roads that have not been 
assessed, Border Patrol plans to prepare a programmatic environmental 
impact statement under the National Environmental Policy Act. Border 
Patrol headquarters officials told us this document will include many--
but not all--roads in the borderlands region. According to Border 
Patrol headquarters officials, they met with all land managers of land 
units along the border in July 2010 to discuss with them what roads 
will have environmental and historic property assessments. 

[21] Forest Service regulations authorize the Chief of the Forest 
Service to prescribe conditions under which motorized equipment, 
installations, and structures may be used in emergencies involving the 
health and safety of persons. 

[22] The 2006 memorandum of understanding states that Border Patrol 
may operate motor vehicles at any time on existing public and 
administrative roads or trails and in areas previously designated by 
the land management agency for off-road vehicle use, provided that 
such use is consistent with presently authorized public or 
administrative use (emphasis added). 

[23] Second-level Border Patrol supervisors are field operations 
supervisors. At least one such supervisor is on duty during each shift. 

[24] This national process, known as the operational requirements-
based budgeting process and occurring twice each year, was developed 
to help Border Patrol determine how and where to allocate additional 
agents, technology, and infrastructure. 

[25] The 2006 memorandum of understanding directs the parties to 
cooperate with each other to identify methods, routes, and locations 
for Border Patrol operations that will minimize impacts to natural, 
cultural, and wilderness resources resulting from Border Patrol 
operations while facilitating needed Border Patrol access. 

[26] Department of Homeland Security, Department of the Interior, and 
U.S. Department of Agriculture, Memorandum of Understanding Regarding 
Cooperative National Security and Counterterrorism Efforts on Federal 
lands along the United States' Border (Washington, D.C.: March 2006). 

[27] Department of Homeland Security, Department of the Interior, and 
Department of Agriculture, Memorandum of Understanding Regarding 
Secure Radio Communication (Washington, D.C.: July 18, 2008). 

[28] [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-11-177]. 

[End of section] 

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