The Wall of Stupid

Discussion in 'Politics' started by exGOPer, Jan 2, 2019.

  1. Cuddles

    Cuddles

    https://www.washingtonpost.com/immi...2943f2-99de-11ea-b60c-3be060a4f8e1_story.html
    Trump’s preferred construction firm lands $1.3 billion border wall contract, the biggest so far

    A North Dakota construction firm that has received backing from President Trump has now secured the largest border wall contract ever awarded, a $1.3 billion deal to build 42 miles of black-painted fencing through the rugged mountains of southern Arizona.


    The company that won the contract, Fisher Sand and Gravel, has been repeatedly lauded by the president in White House meetings with border officials and military commanders, the result of a long and personalized marketing pitch to Trump and ardent supporters of his barrier project.

    After its initial bids for border contracts were passed over, the company and its CEO, Tommy Fisher, cut a direct path to the president by praising him on cable news, donating to his Republican allies and cultivating ties to former Trump adviser Stephen K. Bannon, GOP Senate candidate Kris Kobach and other conservative figures in Trump’s orbit.

    Fisher’s first and only other major border contract, for $400 million, is under review by the Defense Department inspector general after Democratic lawmakers raised concerns about improper White House influence on the procurement process. The inspector general’s office confirmed Tuesday that the audit is ongoing.

    ‘He always brings them up’: Trump tries to steer border wall deal to North Dakota firm

    The new award to Fisher carries an average cost of more than $30 million per mile of border barrier, more expensive than other contracts for Trump’s wall. The project has morphed from a 2016 campaign promise into one of the largest federal infrastructure projects in U.S. history.

    The Arizona Daily Star first reported the Fisher contract, which has not been announced by the Defense Department or Customs and Border Protection.

    The 42-mile span of border south of Tucson where Fisher will build presents significant engineering complexities, with steep terrain and water crossings, including the Santa Cruz River basin, which floods during summer “monsoon” storms, according to border officials and the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, which oversees the project. One official with knowledge of the contract said Fisher’s bid was the lowest for construction along that particular span.

    Swelling the price tag further was a design change from the president requiring the barrier to be painted black, adding about $1.2 million per mile, according to government contracting estimates obtained this month by The Washington Post.

    Raini Brunson, a spokeswoman for the Corps of Engineers who confirmed the contract was awarded to Fisher, said contract amounts are determined by a range of factors.

    “Each project cost is contingent upon its unique characteristics such as geotechnical, topographical, hydrological and hydraulic, underground utilities, final real estate access, and the cost of materials and labor,” Brunson said in an email.

    The $1.275 billion contract — Tucson Package 3 — consists of “a series of projects within a geographical area with more complex terrain,” Brunson added. Under Army Corps of Engineers procurement rules, the contract went to the lowest-priced technically acceptable bidder, she said.

    Trump has brought up Fisher in White House border wall meetings again in recent weeks, when he directed border officials and the Corps of Engineers to paint the steel barrier black, a design change that would add at least $500 million to the overall cost.

    Trump order to paint border wall black could drive up cost $500 million or more

    The president has told aides that the darker color will absorb more solar radiation and scorch the hands of any would-be border jumpers who try to climb the fence. Engineers say the black paint will increase long-term maintenance costs and will boost the metal’s ability to retain heat by less than 10 percent.

    The White House did not respond to a request for comment on the Fisher award Tuesday. Attorneys for the company did not respond to an inquiry, and U.S. Customs and Border Protection referred questions to the Corps of Engineers.

    Rep. Bennie Thompson (D-Miss.), the chairman of the House Homeland Security Committee, blasted the contract in a statement to The Post, noting that the Pentagon inspector general’s audit is not yet complete and that the country is in the grips of a pandemic and economic crisis.


    “It speaks volumes to the administration’s lack of transparency that they didn’t announce this award — the largest ever — and we continue to learn about contracts to companies without a proven track record from the media,” Thompson said. “Given the coronavirus pandemic and the ongoing investigation into Fisher, the administration should pause construction and contracting decisions until the investigation has concluded favorably and it is safe to resume nonessential construction projects.”

    The section of border where Fisher will build is between Nogales, Ariz., and the Buenos Aires National Wildlife Refuge, an area that has long been an active smuggling corridor. The contract also includes a portion east of Nogales where the Santa Cruz River traverses the border. Such water crossings have required the installation of specialized storm gates that can be left open during summer months to prevent the structure from being torn down by flash floods.

    While the contract awarded to Fisher is the single-largest award to date, another firm, Southwest Valley Constructors Co., a subsidiary of federal contracting giant Kiewit, has received multiple awards worth more in total, records show.

    A CBP official familiar with the area said building a barrier will be “a challenge” and that the higher cost for the contract was likely the result of its “remoteness, rugged terrain and logistical challenges.” The official was not authorized to discuss the Fisher award publicly and spoke on the condition of anonymity.

    Tommy Fisher’s enthusiastic support for the president, and Fisher’s unconventional promotional efforts, have made his company a darling for some of the president’s most ardent supporters
    . It also has made it a target for Democratic lawmakers.

    Sen. Kevin Cramer (R-N.D.), a close ally of the president’s, urged him to hire Fisher while sharply criticizing the Corps of Engineers for passing over the company. Tommy Fisher donated to Cramer’s Senate campaign, appeared with Cramer as he ran for office and was Cramer’s personal guest at Trump’s State of the Union address last year. Cramer did not respond to a request for comment Tuesday.

    Fisher has paid lobbying firm Odney more than $100,000 since 2017 while trying to secure border wall contracts, records show. North Dakota-based Odney also worked for Cramer during his 2018 Senate run.

    While bidding on government border wall contracts, Fisher has built border barriers on private land for the activist group We Build the Wall, in some cases purchasing the land himself, according to court filings. The group’s advisory board is led by Bannon, Kobach, Blackwater USA founder Erik Prince and other conservative personalities. Its president, Brian Kolfage, frequently taunts and spars with environmental groups and immigrant advocates on social media.

    “ANOTHER HUGE WIN! Congrats Tommy Fisher!” Kolfage wrote on Twitter. “It’s clear you built @WeBuildtheWall the best border wall ever on the US border and now you’re being rewarded for your hard work.”

    Fisher sued the Army Corps of Engineers last year when the company was not selected to be one of the preapproved firms eligible to bid on border wall contracts, claiming the process was unfair. Cramer spoke to the president about Fisher and at one point held up a White House budget office nominee to compel the Army Corps to disclose information about the bidding process that it said would violate procurement rules.

    The company was subsequently added to the pool of eligible bidders, and once its foot was in the door, it could outbid competitors.

    As part of Fisher’s marketing push, the company has claimed it can build the barrier faster and for less money, using a signature technique that deploys a fleet of excavators to install elongated segments of steel bollards into the ground and hold them in place until they are secure, instead of relying on conventional bracing methods.

    Trump has made the barrier project a major theme of his reelection pitch, and Department of Homeland Security officials say crews are still on track to deliver on the president’s promise to complete nearly 500 miles of new fencing by the end of the year. They have finished at least 187 miles so far, according to the most recent figures from CBP.

    The Trump administration has allocated more than $15 billion for the project to date, but only about one-third of that has been appropriated by lawmakers. The White House has diverted most of the rest of the money from military construction projects and counternarcotics programs.
     
    #321     May 19, 2020
  2. Cuddles

    Cuddles

    Damn Donnie, should've taken Nancy's deal. Now you're broke w/o a wall and gotta keep accepting undocumented back into the DACA program.
     
    #322     Jun 18, 2020
    Tony Stark likes this.
  3. Tony Stark

    Tony Stark

    The great dealmaker.Nobody makes deals better than him.
     
    #323     Jun 19, 2020
  4. userque

    userque

    Enjoy another of my favorites:

     
    #324     Jun 27, 2020
  5. Cuddles

    Cuddles

    #325     Jul 12, 2020
  6. Cuddles

    Cuddles

     
    #326     Aug 11, 2020
    JohnnyMargin likes this.
  7. Cuddles

    Cuddles

    https://www.bloomberg.com/news/arti...l-on-mexico-border-crossings-may-finance-wall
    Trump Says ‘Toll’ on Mexico Border Crossings May Finance His Wall
    President Donald Trump said his administration may impose a “toll” on cars crossing into the U.S. from Mexico to finance construction of his promised wall on the southern border.



    “They’re going to pay at the border, at the gate, cars going through, we’re going to do a toll -- or we may do a toll,” Trump said during an event in Yuma, Arizona, where he touted construction of the wall.



    The president has long faced criticism that he has failed to meet a campaign promise to make Mexico pay for the border wall. He has instead redirected billions of dollars from the Pentagon to finance construction, sparking a legal fight with the U.S. House, which did not authorize the spending.



    “Mexico is paying for the wall, yeah,” he said in answer to a reporter’s questions about the claim Mexico would finance construction. Mexican officials have said they will never pay for the wall.



    He and other officials at the Yuma event declined to say how much the toll would be, and moments later Trump said “we may do it as a tax, money being sent into Mexico” -- a reference to his occasional suggestion that the U.S. may tax remittances to the country.
     
    #327     Aug 18, 2020
  8. Cuddles

    Cuddles

    Donald will not be upstaged

     
    #328     Aug 20, 2020
  9. exGOPer

    exGOPer

    Bannon will get a wall, the one he's gonna be behind.
     
    #329     Aug 20, 2020
  10. Cuddles

    Cuddles

     
    #330     Aug 21, 2020