CBS/AP/ February 4, 2010, 9:51 AM

Virtual Border Fence in Doubt amid Delays

An ambitious, $6.7 billion government project to secure nearly the entire Mexican border with a "virtual fence" of cameras, ground sensors and radar is in jeopardy after a string of technical glitches and delays.

Having spent $672 million so far with little to show for it, Washington has ordered a reassessment of the whole idea. The outlook became gloomier this week when President Barack Obama proposed cutting $189 million from the venture.

Ultimately, the project could be scaled back dramatically, with the government installing virtual fences along a few segments of the nation's 2,000-mile southern boundary but dropping plans for any further expansion, officials said.

"The worst that happens is that we have a system which gives us some value but we conclude that it's not worth buying any more of it," said Mark Borkowski, the government's director of the project at U.S. Customs and Border Protection.

60 Minutes: Watching the Border - The Virtual Fence
Web Extra: Bad For Taxpayers?
Web Extra: The Virtual Fence

The first permanent segment of virtual fence - a 23-mile stretch near Sasabe, Ariz. - was supposed to be turned over to the Border Patrol by the main contractor, Boeing Co., for testing in January, but the handover has been delayed by problems involving the video recording equipment.

The Bush administration launched the project in 2005 to help secure the border against illegal immigrants, drug smugglers and other intruders. It was conceived as another layer of protection, in addition to thousands of Border Patrol agents and 650 miles of real fences.

The system was supposed to let a small number of dispatchers watch the border on a computer monitor, zoom in with cameras to see people crossing, and decide whether to send Border Patrol agents to the scene. Although there are sensors, cameras and radar at many points along the border, they are not connected to cover large expanses.

Originally, the virtual fence was supposed to be completed by 2011; that date has slipped to 2014, largely because of technical problems.

Among other things, the radar system had trouble distinguishing between vegetation and people when it was windy. Also, the satellite communication system took too long to relay information in the field to a command center. By the time an operator moved a camera to take a closer look at a spot, whatever had raised suspicion was gone.

The Homeland Security Department and Boeing said the early problems were fixed, but other glitches keep popping up. The latest: a software bug that causes video recording devices to lock on to the wrong cameras, hindering agents trying to collect evidence against illegal border-crossers.

Aside from the technical glitches, one of the biggest problems was that no one at the Department of Homeland Security or the engineers at Boeing bothered to ask the people who would actually be using the surveillance system what they wanted or how they wanted the system to work, "60 Minutes'" Steve Kroft reported in January.

"What we didn't do was iterate with them and said, 'Okay. Well, we heard that you'd like to be able to see what's going on the border. How about a little of this?' How about . . . we didn't do that. And that should have happened," Borkowski told "60 Minutes".

Borkowski acknowledged it was a "huge mistake" and that currently he's responsible for it. "And we'll just leave it at that. That's my job now, to fix that."

The government is trying to negotiate a deal with Boeing to let the Border Patrol begin using the first permanent stretch of virtual fence at night while the contractor is still working on it. Otherwise, the Border Patrol might have to wait until late summer or early fall to take control of the section.

In ordering a reassessment of the project on Jan. 8, Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano said that the delays were unacceptable and that the government needs to consider more efficient and economical options. She did not elaborate.

"Americans need border security now - not 10 years down the road," Napolitano said.

As for the possibility of the project being scaled back by government officials, Tim Peters, a Boeing vice president, said: "They really need to come up with the right calculus, and we'll support that answer and look to be their preferred contractor to build whatever portion of what that calculus is."

Both Boeing and the government officials said the technical problems stemmed from an erroneous belief that the first-of-its-kind virtual fence could be put together relatively quickly by tying together off-the-shelf components that weren't designed to be linked.

Borkowski said the government shares blame with the contractor for the delays.

Ira Mehlman, a spokesman for the Federation for American Immigration Reform, which favors tougher immigration enforcement, said the project has suffered from a lack of oversight.

"We didn't get the border security we were promised," Mehlman said.
© 2010 CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report.
18 Comments Add a Comment
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qtc0224 says:
Another perfect example of the "homeland security"/industrial complex that spends massive amounts of taxpayer money from which the taxpayer gets nothing.

There were serious failures of management on this project. Boeing was given too much authority over the project and Customs and Border Protection provided seriously incompetent management and oversight. The various Senior Executive Service (SES) government executives responsible for managing the project did not manage, but rather let Boeing's contractors run the show, at ever increasing costs to the government. Those government executives should be fired. But in the government way of doing things they'll get bonuses and promotions instead.
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RoboBlogger says:
They could always build or dig a moat and supply it with ocean water and put in some sharks for that extra security.
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jxknowles says:
Another financial travesty courtesy of the Bush Administration and the Republicans in Congress. Thanks for mortgaging our children's future with your out-of-control spending and pie-in-the-sky homeland security fiction. Time to roll back a lot of the pork the Senators from Arizona jammed into the Federal budget over the years. Good riddance.
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wmb1957 replies:
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There is real doubt if it was ever meant to be operation. In 2007, it was weeks away from being done. Then glitches. Then trying again. More glitches. Then March of this year more moeny from the stimulus and more glitches.

Even if it had worked, half or more of those here illegally come in legally and overstay. I tend to think it was just done to make people think the government was doing something and then ask for amnesty since "we have fixed illegal immigration".

As it is, this is a good support for stronger enforcement and deportation of those they do catch here, including tracking down visa overstays, and there is no reason to support amnesty now.
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rykatspop says:
Just put up a 75,000 watts fence along the open border. Hold on all you bleeding hearts, I would want signs up everywhere to warn the intruders that we aren't kidding. Besides, why else would anyone be out in those isolated areas to begin with? They're grazing cattle, hiking, bird watching. Right.
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geminispyder-2009 replies:
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Then all the Mexicans have to do is dig under the fence, moron.
texas_liberal replies:
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steal the electricity, ROFL!!!!
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inventagod says:
As Ronnie Rayguns once said - Tear Down The Wall!
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bigoldic says:
How about building a similar wall to separate lobbiest, special interest groups, and Corporations from our elected officials in Washington. Then again theres no wall strong enough to keep those creeps out.
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RoboBlogger says:
This could give the veterans of war jobs that could no longer fight for freedom but rather keep freedom from being imposed upon. No harm in that.
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consciousnes says:
So who has the $672 Million and what did we actually get for it? Probably not much.
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wmb1957 replies:
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$100 million of it was from the stimulus, so supposedly some jobs?
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inventagod says:
The Bu$h Memorial Wall is in trouble???
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overlawed-overtaxed says:
one word--- landmines
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