Halliburton Subsidiary Gets Contract to Add Temporary Immigration...

rs

Dagobah Resident
http://www.nytimes.com/2006/02/04/national/04halliburton.html?8br

Whenever I see these "conspiracy theory" news items, I always look in "mainstream" media for an equivalent source of the story to see how the propaganda is being played. It only took a second to stumble on this from the NY Times:

---------

Halliburton Subsidiary Gets Contract to Add Temporary Immigration Detention Centers

Article Tools Sponsored By
By RACHEL L. SWARNS
Published: February 4, 2006

WASHINGTON, Feb. 3 — The Army Corps of Engineers has awarded a contract worth up to $385 million for building temporary immigration detention centers to Kellogg Brown & Root, the Halliburton subsidiary that has been criticized for overcharging the Pentagon for its work in Iraq.

KBR would build the centers for the Homeland Security Department for an unexpected influx of immigrants, to house people in the event of a natural disaster or for new programs that require additional detention space, company executives said. KBR, which announced the contract last month, had a similar contract with immigration agencies from 2000 to last year.

The contract with the Corps of Engineers runs one year, with four optional one-year extensions. Officials of the corps said that they had solicited bids and that KBR was the lone responder.

A spokeswoman for Immigration and Customs Enforcement, Jamie Zuieback, said KBR would build the centers only in an emergency like the one when thousands of Cubans floated on rafts to the United States. She emphasized that the centers might never be built if such an emergency did not arise.

Then why did we award the contract now?!?!?! Also, if suddenly a whole bunch of Cubans show up on the shores of Florida, isn't it a bit late to get started? (Particularly given the "efficiency" of Government Contracts).
"It's the type of contract that could be used in some kind of mass migration," Ms. Zuieback said.

Like from where? I did not know that we had this serious influx of immigrants from Canada. So that is one border. Howabout Mexico? No, wait they aren't immigrants, they are cheap labor, so that takes care of the southern border. Perhaps they will drop from the sky. So to speak. Perhaps we need to prepare these centers for August/September of 2006...
A spokesman for the corps, Clayton Church, said that the centers could be at unused military sites or temporary structures and that each one would hold up to 5,000 people.

OK, get out our calculators. These centers are for times of extreme stress and are not intended to be comfortable. No master suite, no jacuzzi, no GE Monogram stove, just rooms with beds, collective sanitary facilities and mass meal service. Lets say that you will spend $10,000 per person. (BTW, I think that such a budget is extremely generous compared to what is likely, but stick with me.) This means that one center would cost $50 Million and a $385 Million contract could build 6 centers to house 30,000 people, with $35 Million just dissappearing into thin air (Yeah, like that has never happened...). If we instead assume $1,000 per person it raises the population to 300,000 people, something on the order of a Katrina scale. (Not everyone who fled Katrina was willing to accept a government handout, some had access to their own resources and support). This ain't no Cuban boat exodus.
"When there's a large influx of people into the United States, how are we going to feed, house and protect them?" Mr. Church asked. "That's why these kinds of contracts are there."

Yeah, like we have shown this huge obligation to feed house and protect large number of immigrants in the past...
Mr. Church said that KBR did not end up creating immigration centers under its previous contract, but that it did build temporary shelters for Hurricane Katrina evacuees.

and these two factoids relate, just exactly... <i>HOW</i>?
Federal auditors rebuked the company for unsubstantiated billing in its Iraq reconstruction contracts, and it has been criticized because of accusations that Halliburton, led by Dick Cheney before he became vice president, was aided by connections in obtaining contracts. Halliburton executives denied that they charged excessively for the work in Iraq.

Mr. Church said concerns about the Iraq contracts did not affect the awarding of the new contract.

Representative Henry A. Waxman, Democrat of California, who has monitored the company, called the contract worrisome.

"With Halliburton's ever expanding track record of overcharging, it's hard to believe that the administration has decided to entrust Halliburton with even more taxpayer dollars," Mr. Waxman said. "With each new contract, the need for real oversight grows."

Quick, look... over... there... Pay no attention to the man behind the curtain, yeah, that's it, the big problem is the possibility of (shock! surprise!) overcharging in a Government Contract.
In recent months, the Homeland Security Department has promised to increase bed space in its detention centers to hold thousands of illegal immigrants awaiting deportation. In the first quarter of the 2006 fiscal year, nearly 60 percent of the illegal immigrants apprehended from countries other than Mexico were released on their own recognizance.

Domestic security officials have promised to end the releases by increasing the number of detention beds. Last week, domestic security officials announced that they would expand detaining and swiftly deporting illegal immigrants to include those seized near the Canadian border.

Advocates for immigrants said they feared that the new contract was another indication that the government planned to expand the detention of illegal immigrants, including those seeking asylum.

"It's pretty obvious that the intent of the government is to detain more and more people and to expedite their removal," said Cheryl Little, executive director of the Florida Immigrant Advocacy Center in Miami.

Ms. Zuieback said the KBR contract was not intended for that.

Then it is intended for... what?
"It's not part of any day-to-day enforcement," she said.

She added that she could not provide additional information about the company's statement that the contract was also meant to support the rapid development of new programs.

Halliburton executives, who announced the contract last week, said they were pleased.

"We are especially gratified to be awarded this contract," an executive vice president, Bruce Stanski, said in a statement, "because it builds on our extremely strong track record in the arena of emergency management support."

like we demonstrated in Katrina?!?!?
 
I mean, obviously they're for concentration camps. When martial law gets instituted they're going to need more prison space, what better way to round up all the "disruptors" and throw them into a camp?
 
Back
Top Bottom