Senate committee advances $20M for border fencing despite environmental and community objections

Arizona Senate Military Affairs and Border Security Committee · February 2, 2026

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Summary

SB 11‑57, a $20 million appropriation to reimburse localities for supplemental fencing along the southern border, received a do‑pass recommendation (4‑3) after testimony highlighted both security needs and harms to wildlife and communities.

The committee voted to advance Senate Bill 11‑57, which would appropriate $20 million from the FY2027 general fund to the Department of Public Safety to reimburse local jurisdictions that install supplemental fencing or walls in high‑crossing border areas.

Sponsor advocates argued gaps remain along the border and that targeted fencing and high‑tech solutions are appropriate in high‑crossing areas. ‘‘We’ve now secured the border. However, there are still gaps,’’ a sponsoring senator said, urging a nonpartisan approach to addressing those crossing points.

Environmental advocates and local commenters urged rejection. Sandy Barr, director of the Sierra Club's Grand Canyon chapter, told the committee that additional barriers and concertina wire cause harm to wildlife, waterways and cross‑border communities and urged investment in people rather than more physical barriers.

Public testimony included strongly worded opposition from community members and an emotional exchange between a commenter and senators that briefly disrupted the hearing and prompted a decorum ruling from the chair.

The committee adopted a do‑pass recommendation for SB 11‑57 by a 4‑3 vote. The bill proceeds to the Senate floor, where senators indicated further debate is likely on environmental impacts and priorities.