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Politics : ILLEGAL IMMIGRATION THE FIGHT TO KEEP OUR DEMOCRACY

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From: bentway10/1/2007 10:39:26 AM
   of 3197
 
This sprawling US Army base located at the edge of El Paso and skirting the border with Mexico is undergoing a major expansion that heavily relies on Mexicans for its construction.

Amid growing controversy in the United States over immigration -- legal and illegal -- the military is using foreign labor to build the base.

The expansion will also mean a population boom and a big infusion of cash for the poor city of El Paso, separated by the Rio Grande from Ciudad Juarez, Mexico.

But who will build the new barracks and offices at Fort Bliss, and the shopping malls and restaurants outside the base?

"All those homes and shopping malls are built by us Mexicans," said bus driver Mario Encinas, a native of Mexico who works at Fort Bliss.

"With real documents or not, we are the ones that do that work here and across the United States," Encinas told AFP, noting that he works on base "with real documents."

Fort Bliss is currently home to the army's Air Defense Artillery School and to several Patriot Missile batteries. But over the next several years most of the missile specialists will move to Fort Sill, Oklahoma, and Bliss will become home to the First Armored Division, which is relocating from Germany.

The changes will see the population at the 4,500 square kilometer (1.12 million acres) site more than double, from 14,122 to more than 30,000 by 2011.

New barracks, family housing and offices are needed, as are new sites for vehicle and weapons repair and maintenance.

"It's a 2.6 billion dollar expansion project, the largest current expansion of any military outpost in America," said Clark McChesney, director of the Fort Bliss Transformation Office.

The base expansion is also seen as a key for economic development in El Paso, the largest US city on the border with Mexico with a population of one million -- 80 percent Hispanic, overwhelmingly of Mexican origin.

El Paso is also one of the poorest cities in the United States, were the average annual family income is just over 30,000 dollars a year, low by US standards.

"The economic impact for El Paso will be 22 billion dollars, because of the increase of soldiers and the expansion in this base, between 2005-2013," McChesney said.

The city is expecting the Bliss expansion to indirectly create thousands of jobs off-base at shopping malls, restaurants, and myriad retail and service outlets.

El Paso and Ciudad Juarez (population 1.5 million) make a vast megalopolis separated by the Rio Grande river, which marks the border. The cities are linked by five bridges.

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