The border crossing in a remote Arizona community was a passage for thousands of workers, families and businesses in the region who relied on it every day.
PHOENIX, Ariz. — A remote Arizona border crossing that was shuttered last month to help strained immigration authorities cope with a surge in migrants in the nearby desert will reopen this week, U.S. Customs and Border Protection said Tuesday evening. The agency did not explain why it had decided to reopen the crossing, and it did not say whether there had been any recent shift in the daily arrival of hundreds of migrants who unlawfully slip through gaps in the border wall in the deserts before
Roughly 2,000 to 3,000 people a day crossed north, according to the US Department of Transportation. The next-closest crossing is several hours away by car.
The Mexican Consulate in Nogales is fine-tuning the details of a new effort it plans to launch next spring: walking through remote and rugged regions of Santa Cruz County in
The Mexican Consulate in Nogales is fine-tuning the details of a new effort it plans to launch next spring: walking through remote and rugged regions of Santa Cruz County in