Pubdate: Sun, 10 Jun 2001
Source: Quad-City Times (IA)
Copyright: 2001 Quad-City Times
Contact:  http://www.qctimes.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/857
Page: A10

GOVERNORS GATHER IN MEXICO TO DISCUSS BORDER CONCERNS

Proposals Include Migration Issues, Drug Legalization

TAMPICO, Mexico--U.S. and Mexican border governors gathered here Friday in 
a meeting that bubbled with provocative proposals to solve problems ranging 
from critical shortages of energy and water to drug trafficking and 
immigration.

Arizona Gov. Jane Dee Hull pushed a "foreign guest worker program" as a way 
of eliminating the kind of desert tragedy that cost 14 Mexicans their lives 
in her state last month. Smugglers who led migrants into the desert were 
"deserving of the death penalty," she said.

New Mexico's Gary Johnson touted his campaign to legalize marijuana. The 
idea failed to garner unanimous support among the governors but won 
approval for an academic commission to study drug addiction as a "health, 
not a criminal, problem."

"You don't go from an arrest 'em, lock 'em up situation to legalization 
overnight," Johnson said in an interview. "But every governor here is at 
least willing to look at some middle ground."

The declaration issued at the meeting's close was devoid of bold 
initiatives, dealing mostly with agricultural questions, border crossings 
and vague environmental goals. Absent were specific proposals on changing 
immigration or drug laws, by far the highest profile border issues.

The governors are aware that it is the federal government, not the states, 
that is responsible for policies on drugs, immigration and energy. 
Moreover, governors strive to avoid creating controversy in meetings 
designed mainly to generate goodwill.

But when asked individually, governors prove only too willing to express 
opinions, some of which go against the grain politically.

Fernando Canales Clariond of Nuevo Leon, for example, said the Mexican 
Constitution should be amended to allow greater foreign involvement in 
energy exploration, a nervy proposal in a country where national 
sovereignty is wrapped up in the state-run oil monopoly, Pemex.

Tamaulipas Gov. Tomas Yarrington, the meeting's host, and Sonora Gov. 
Armando Lopez Nogales both proposed radical steps, possibly some sort of 
state of emergency, to alert both nations to the scarcity of water in the 
border area.

"There needs to be some regional scheme because the water is the common 
denominator that ties us all together," Lopez said. "We need to see water 
for the urgent issue that it is."

Of 10 border governors--four on the U.S. side and six from Mexico--only 
California's Gray Davis was absent from this year's meeting.

The reason Davis begged off, California officials said, was his total 
absorption in the state's electricity crisis.

Hull's idea to create a new type of temporary guest worker permit as a 
means of stemming the rising toll of migrant deaths reflects immigration's 
high priority in any binational discussion.

Fourteen Mexicans died of dehydration last month in 115-degree heat in the 
Arizona desert more than 35 miles from the nearest highway, Hull said. 
Desert deaths have risen as tightened border patrols in urban areas have 
sent migrants farther into wilderness areas to make border crossings.

"The problem of migration has touched us in a profound way not seen 
before," Hull told reporters.

President Bush, in a taped greeting to the governors, said he and Mexican 
President Vicente Fox have met several times to find ways to, among other 
things, ensure "safe and orderly migration." That language was hailed by 
some Mexicans here as a sign that U.S. resistance to a more open border is 
crumbling.
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MAP posted-by: Keith Brilhart