We still have decaying nuclear material off the west coast and Tijuana has been flooding the border with polluted water for years now so anything more will just cause additional strain and more beach closures / illness.
The tijuana situation is pretty untenable when you view it less along internatial border lines and more along metro region lines with SD and TJ being part of one megacity. They very much are a megacity in practice.
Now imagine the flack that would happen if you say took the Bronx and subject it to border security checkpoints and let the people have materially significantly worse sewer and other living conditions. People would call it a travesty and a dark mark on nyc as a whole for allowing such a thing to happen to its own people.
Yet over in SD that very situation happens with all the commuters and trade that goes on between there and TJ. And people don’t bat an eye to it, if only to blame TJ for the sewer situation.
The US gov has allocated money and resources to help build infrastructure on the Mexico side. King Groceries is obviously delaying it though.
People do view this as a major issue but comparing it to the Bronx when it’s in another country drastically oversimplifies the issue. I’m sure many people would be unhappy for the US gov to spend money on Mexico…
Noone said "SD is broke", can we have a good-faith discussion please?
It's not a question of the Fed "helping", it is a federal issue, just as much as TX, FL, AZ etc. spending federal money on any other transborder matter. The sewage is caused by Mexico (not SD) and affects as far up as LA, and it's a federal and foreign-policy issue as much as a local issue for the SoCal counties.
I don't know much about SoCal water treatment, here's a useful explanation [0] + infographic [1] from EPA.
As to arguing that a couple of hundred million in federal funding to do something useful that improves both SD and TJ (quality-of-life, tourism, watersports, etc.) is unthinkable, compare to the waste in the ICE budget for FY 2025: $10.5 billion, several billions of which is being spent on privatized prisons for unnecessarily holding people up to 18 mths (when Congress could simply e.g. expand H-2A/B visas for the agricultural/manufacturing/services workers which the US is dependent on). TJ is essentially the outsource manufacturing hub on the US's doorstep, and will be increasingly so when some manufacturing moves back to N America (e.g. from China), we might as well constructively engage with reality. Really this decision should be non-partisan and a no-brainer.
But without annexing TJ, you can’t force that money to be spent correctly or for anti-pollution laws to be enforced. Mexico has more than enough money to solve this issue, the problem is that they don’t want to.
I would guess it should be more about cooperation on the problems and maybe some money needing to flow from the richer side to the poorer, and the poorer side agreeing to some policies.
Annexing wouldn't work because a new city would pop up along the new border. The border is the attraction.
Now imagine the flack that would happen if you say took the Bronx and subject it to border security checkpoints and let the people have materially significantly worse sewer and other living conditions. People would call it a travesty and a dark mark on nyc as a whole for allowing such a thing to happen to its own people.
Yet over in SD that very situation happens with all the commuters and trade that goes on between there and TJ. And people don’t bat an eye to it, if only to blame TJ for the sewer situation.