Pubdate: Tue, 09 Nov 1999 Source: Everett Herald (WA) Copyright: 1999 The Daily Herald Co. Contact: http://www.heraldnet.com/ KEEP BORDER PATROLS WHERE THEY BELONG Northern border patrols are operating at dangerously low levels. And Immigration and Naturalization Services keeps making the situation worse. These officers help assure illegal immigrants, drugs and criminals don't flow freely from Canada to the U.S. The officers would like to do more, but their budget has been held so tight, they don't even have enough staff to guard the border during the night. That's like Everett police only patrolling the city during the day. Gov. Locke, Sen. Patty Murray, Reps. Jack Metcalf, Doc Hastings and George Nethercutt Jr. have pled to INS to rectify this abysmal situation. Congress even appropriated money for INS to hire 1,000 new officers for all of the country's border. But they haven't been hired. Instead, INS is taking valuable northern border officers from their stations and shipping them down to Douglas, Ariz. to help stave off illegal immigrants. The entire northern border from the Pacific to the Atlantic Ocean is patrolled by 289 border officers. In comparison, the southern border is watched by 8,200 officers. The officers sent from the north aren't making a bit of difference in Arizona. But their absence in their home border offices is causing major rift and danger. There is a lot of evidence that links the death of Washington State Patrol trooper James Saunders to the loss of northern border officers. The alleged murderer had been under the watch of a border patrol officer in the Tri-Cities, before that officer was transferred to the south. INS Commissioner Doris Meissner and Attorney General Janet Reno will surely get earfuls on this subject when they visit Seattle for their annual commissioners' conference this month. Up until now, Meissner has been good at giving lip service to the border patrols, and giving them temporary reprieves from being transferred to Arizona. But, according to Keith Olson, president of the officers' National Border Patrol Council based in Ferndale, after the attention dies down, the transfers always start up again. The criminals are on to the INS. They know that they can thwart the law by flying into Canada and driving south. There are motion detectors along the border, but they are useless if there is no one to respond. INS must look for other ways to solve problems on the southern border. Stripping the northern border will only make things worse. - --- MAP posted-by: Jo-D