The Governors of the states of Baja
California, Chihuahua, Coahuila, Nuevo Leon, Sonora
and Tamaulipas of the United Mexican States, and the
Governors of the states of Arizona, California, New
Mexico and Texas of the United States of America,
meeting in the city of Torreon, Coahuila on July 14
and 15, 2005,having analyzed, in the framework of the
XXIII Conference of the United States-Mexico Border
Governors, the topics relating to Agriculture, Water,
Science and Technology, Border Crossings, Economic
Development, Education, Energy, Environment, Health,
Border Security and Tourism; and
WHEREAS
The United States of America and the
United Mexican States are two sovereign and
independent nations, each with its own clear identity;
These sovereign nations share a
border of nearly two thousand miles, as well as common
values and a vision for the prosperity of the border
region;
The United States-Mexico border
region is one of the most dynamic regions of the
world, where the border is not a line that divides our
countries but a bond that unites us and invites us to
work together for mutual benefit;
Current international conditions
have magnified the strategic role of the border region
and compelled us to cooperate more fully than ever
with both federal governments to ensure greater
security and efficiency on the border;
The border states recognize that the
positive impact on the economy and global
competitiveness of the region will be defined by the
development of joint strategies to enhance
competitiveness through the development of human
capital and construction of scientific and
technological capacity;
The ten states comprising the United
States-Mexico border region have collaborated through
the institution of the Border Governors Conference for
over two decades;
The border states , united as never
before by common interests and open dialogue, are
determined to seize this opportunity to achieve
unprecedented bilateral cooperation;
The border states reaffirm their
commitment to open economies and social advancement
for the benefit of the inhabitants of the region;
The frequent work meetings held
between the governments of the border states have made
it possible to establish a mechanism for ongoing
dialogue and consultation, as well as a close working
relationship among the border Governors;
The relationship among the border
Governors continues to generate cooperation between
the states, for the prosperity and improvement of the
quality of life for the inhabitants of the region;
We, the border Governors, endorse this
Joint Declaration and hereby adopt the following
topics of significant importance toward the
development of the border region:
AGRICULTURE
- Develop and conduct a binational
conference on animal and plant pests and disease
and agroterrorism to promote biosecurity, the
exchange of educational information and guidelines
to allow sharing of best management practices.
- Develop acceptable food safety
quality assurance measures to be used by producers
and processors alike in both countries.
- Collaborate on a three-pronged
approach to childhood nutrition, emphasizing
nutritious diets, nutritional education and
innovative methods of delivering nutritious foods
to schools.
WATER
- Establish a one-year work program
among the ten border states, providing an
opportunity to each state to express issues,
identify and promote water related initiatives and
the permanent exchange of data and information
regarding surface and ground water along the
border, emphasizing the extreme phenomena of
drought and water excess, which also facilitates
the interpretation and implementation of
international agreements and treaties on the
subject.
SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY
- Strengthen capacity-building for
research, innovation and commercialization to
support economic development within the region.
- Utilize existing resources to
promote building a strong base of professionals
specialized for science and technology
competitiveness promoting the creation of a
technical consultative council focused on
investigation and development of the border.
- Encourage the establishment of a
program that can benefit from the existing
resources of each border state to facilitate
collaborative research and transfer of technology.
BORDER CROSSINGS
- Promote the expansions of the
Free and Secure Trade (FAST) and the Secure
Electronic Network for Traveler’s Rapid
Inspection (SENTRI) programs and extend the
validity of the SENTRI cards for five years,
similar to NEXUS, a U.S.-Canada program.
- Request that the U.S. Department
of State limit the application of Executive Order
13337 to new border crossings and to projects at
existing crossings that change the scope of the
crossing. Request that the U.S. Department of
State exempt all homeland security projects (e.g.,
FAST Lane and SENTRI Program) at existing border
crossings from the requirement for a Presidential
Permit. Also request that the U.S. Department of
State initiate a formal inter-agency process to
develop specific criteria and policies regarding
the applicability and implementation of Executive
Order 13337 and that it consult with border states
during this process.
- Request the review of the federal
mechanism authorization on new border crossings to
increase its efficiency.
- That Federal Motor Carrier Safety
Administration (FMCSA) and border states
commercial vehicle inspectors work together, as
needed, to establish the best approach to
conducting inspections at border crossings so as
to minimize dual inspections and streamline the
inspection process.
- Request the United States
Government to provide alternative reasonable means
of identification instead of only passports that
will be required for land entry for U.S. citizens
coming from the border area with Mexico .
- Request the Bureau of Customs and
Border Protection (CBP) coordinate its five year
capital investment program (related to Mexico )
with the United States-Mexico Border Master Plan
initiative.
ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT
- Organize, coordinate and
establish the first Binational Border Business
Encounter, in order to link interstate products
and services suppliers, promote strategic
alliances and increase added value among small and
medium border companies.
- Create and promote a catalogue
that contains the requirements to initiate a
business in the border region, in order to
establish a confident regulatory framework for
border enterprises.
- Strengthen the regional economic
information system through the promotion and
updating of the website by its members.
EDUCATION
- Strengthen the operation of the
Education Border Committee as a promoting
organization of continuous educational improvement
and cultural, scientific and technical development
of the border States .
- Strengthen the teaching of the
English language in public elementary schools in
the Border States of Mexico, with the aid of
resources from the Federal Mexican Government, and
the border states of the United States of America
work to enhance English language instruction for
students with limited proficiency in English to
the extent permitted by law in each respective
State.
- Send a communiqué to the Mexican
federal government recognizing its effort which
supports 50 per cent of the budget in the English
program of the schools of the border states , and
to request the integration of the respective
commission in coordination with the Ministry of
Hacienda to obtain the release of said resources.
ENERGY
- Continue developing the State of
Border Energy Report related to border energy
facilities. Update the future energy requirements
and establish a regulatory framework for energy
projects in both sides of the border.
- Develop programs to improve the
efficient use of energy, intensify the development
of projects of renewable energy resources, and
support schemes that allow an appropriate and
timely exploration and exploitation of natural gas
in Burgos basin.
- Protect the binational air basins
while developing energy projects along the border,
and develop and update a chart that shows the
amount of electric energy and natural gas that
crosses the border, in coordination with the
environment work table on issues of mutual
interest.
ENVIRONMENT
- Advance the production of Ultra
Low Sulfur Diesel Fuel (ULSDF) for airquality and
public health by encouraging the Mexican Congress
toaccelerate planned investments for modernization
at Mexican Petroleum(PEMEX) refineries, thereby
facilitating the introduction of this cleaner
burningdiesel fuel throughout the border region.
- Implement and promote
comprehensive waste management programs throughout
the US-Mexico border region, including a strategy
for state-to-state and transboundary information
exchange on waste management. Economic
instruments, such as the creation of environmental
funds or the introduction of a “Green Seal”,
will be considered as an aid to develop pollution
prevention and environmental remediation programs.
- Request the Mexican Congress and
Mexican Border State Congresses to promote
legislation to have used vehicles –both legally
imported vehicles and regularized vehicles–
comply with Mexican federal and state emission
standards as a prerequisite for registration.
- Request that authorities of both
countries assist in ensuring compliance of vehicle
emission laws.
WILDLIFE
- To protect one of the most
ecologically diverse regions in the world but most
impacted by the North American Free Trade
Agreement (NAFTA) cross-border activities, endorse
introduction and passage in the U.S. Congress of a
bill titled Borderlands Wildlife and Wildlife
Habitat Conservation to fund binational recovery
projects of wildlife species in the shared
ecosystems of the border, and also begin the
coordination activities outlined in the bill.
HEALTH
- Request the U.S. federal
government to: (1) provide continued dedicated
funding to the U.S.-Mexico border region for
public health emergency preparedness and response;
(2) provide flexibility in the utilization of this
funding according to identified risk-based needs,
and the ability to use funds over multiple years;
and (3) require binational, state-to-state
collaboration in developing and implementing joint
annual work plans for public health emergency
preparedness and response.
- Request the Congress of the
United States to enact legislation to allow for
cross-border deployment of the U.S. Strategic
National Stockpile (SNS) to enhance and complement
the Mexico SNS.
BORDER SECURITY
- Offer reciprocal support for
training border state police agencies and work to
establish common standards for civil emergency
reaction plans.
- Compile a proceedings manual to
improve existing communication mechanisms among
the work table members.
- Promote before the authorities of
both countries the border region as a strategic
zone of attention on matters related to security
and, consequently request specific budget
contributions to deal with this problem.
TOURISM
- Promote the integration of
binational commissions for establishing tourism
circuits that can operate among border states .
- Promote, in coordination with the
border crossings work table, the reduction of
border crossings time consumption.
- Encourage an improvement in
tourist orientation through adequate tourist
signage.
- Favor de expeditious process to
obtain permits to promote and allow for better use
of hunting tourism.
- Promote a respectful, just and
cordial treatment of tourism providing better
information in its transit and stay through our
states.
Addendum No.
1
BECC and NADBANK
Respectfully request the federal
government of the United States to conclude the
appointing process of the members of BECC and NADBAK
Board of Directors. Exhort both governments to start
operations of the Board as soon as possible.
Continue to insist on the annual
assignation of non refundable resources by EPA to the
BEIF program. Make flexible bank credit regulations
and continue on with pending capital contributions.
Extend the eligible programs to the new jurisdiction
of 300 kilometers from the border, the whole new
programs with resources from the Bank.
Insist on the communiqué of the
Conference of 2004 to plan Bank’s funding projects
to cover broader issued besides environment.
Recognize the director of NADBANK,
Mr. Raul Rodriguez Barocio.
Addendum No.
2
Participation of
Federal Representatives
The Border Governors agreed on r
equest the federal governments of both countries to
select a liaison for each work table of this
Conference in order to participate as legitimate
members, exempting the right to vote.
Addendum No.
3
Technical Secretariat
Provisionally, the
creation of the Technical Secretariat is approved as a
test pilot, expected to be evaluated in its functions
and the actual work that Governors’ agencies of each
State have related to this matter.
Addendum No.
4
Mexican
vice-president
The next Mexican
vice-president is the Governor of Sonora, Eduardo
Bours Castelo.
Addendum No.
5
Forum of Universal
Cultures
The Border Governors
Conference Mexico-United Status declares its support
to the second edition of the Forum of Universal
Cultures which will take place in Monterrey , Nuevo
Leon on 2007. With no doubt, this important
international event will be an open space for world
society diversity to express and share freely its
values and cultural and artistic patrimony, and in a
very special way it will enrich the encounter among
Latin culture with indigenous roots and Anglo culture,
and its implications on issues related to migration,
socioeconomics, culture and politics.
Addendum No.
6
Joint Statement of
Principles on Immigration and Border Security
We, the governors of the states that
comprise the border between the United States of
America and the United States of Mexico, jointly
declare our commitment to work together to promote
legal immigration. We support programs that facilitate
the swift and lawful movement of people and goods. And
we agree to evaluate legislative proposals, such as
guest worker programs, that facilitate legal
immigration in a way that mutually benefit both Mexico
and the United States .
At the same time, violations of the
laws of either country must not be tolerated. While
border security is primarily the responsibility of the
federal governments of Mexico and the United States ,
we, the border governors, recognize the importance of
border security and the elimination of trafficking in
persons.
We also recognize that provisions
must be made to ensure respect for the human rights
and safety of all immigrants, documented or
undocumented. United States and Mexican border law
enforcement agencies, both federal and state, must
treat all immigrants with the respect and consistency
to which they are entitled.
We look forward to the leadership of
incoming Chair Governor Rick Perry of Texas and the
Vice-chair Governor Eduardo Bours Castelo of Sonora ,
in addressing the critical issues of immigration and
border security in the coming year.
