The completion of an eight-year construction project at the Mariposa Land Port of Entry, Nogales, AZ, was recently marked with a ribbon-cutting ceremony.
The project was designed to increase traffic flow at the border, update facilities and accommodate new Customs and Border Protection inspections procedures.
The port now is able to inspect about 4,000 trucks per day through eight primary commercial booths and 56 secondary commercial inspection bays, and non-commercial travel is expedited through 12 primary booths and 24 secondary personal vehicle inspection spaces,.
Northbound pedestrian processing walkways and inspection facilities were constructed as part of the project along with five booths and two processing facilities for southbound inspections.
The project has doubled the capacity of the port of entry, said Will Brooks, director of field operations for Customs and Border Protection.
“It will help facilitate legitimate travel and trade as well as be an economic gain to the Arizona communities it serves as well as to the nation,” he said.
Lance Jungmeyer, president of the Nogales-based Fresh Produce Association of the Americas, said the community “got a big jolt in the arm (from) this $220-million project.” For produce operations, “This is where you want to be,” he said, especially for companies whose distribution base is west of the Mississippi. The next challenge, he said, is to increase staffing and improve access on the Mexican side of the border.
The project was sorely needed, said Bruce Bracker, chairman of the board of directors of the Greater Nogales-Santa Cruz County Port Authority. “We started with a port that was designed for 500 trucks a day crossing 1,800 trucks,” he said. With the redesigned port, “We have a facility that’s designed for 4,000 trucks a day.”
Mexican produce crossing the border at Nogales – grossing about $3600 to Chicago.