
Proposed border barrier construction in West Texas’s Big Bend region has sparked unexpected opposition from both sides of the political aisle. While the Trump administration appears to be reconsidering plans for physical barriers in certain sections of the area – including protected national and state parkland – officials continue pushing forward with more than 170 miles of border fencing planned across agricultural areas and small border towns. This region experiences some of the state’s lowest rates of illegal border crossings, and area residents argue that constructing physical barriers makes little sense in terrain where steep canyon walls and harsh landscape already create natural obstacles. The planned construction would slice through what experts consider the state’s oldest continuously farmed agricultural land, would separate a local rancher from her family’s burial ground, and would disrupt the operations of cattle ranchers located upstream in the area.








