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Northern Border Security: CBP Identified Resource Challenges but Needs Performance Measures to Assess Security Between Ports of Entry

GAO-19-470 Published: Jun 26, 2019. Publicly Released: Jun 26, 2019.
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Fast Facts

U.S. Customs and Border Protection provides security between ports of entry along the 4,000-mile-long border between the United States and Canada.

However, CBP told us that staffing and resource challenges limit its enforcement activities along the U.S.-Canada border. For example, there are an insufficient number of agents for patrol missions. CBP has trouble addressing these challenges because of competing priorities along the U.S.-Mexico border.

CBP also does not have specific performance measures to assess how effectively it is securing the northern border between ports of entry. We recommended that CBP develop and implement such measures.

Aerial view of the Blue Water Bridge, an international crossing over the St. Clair River between Michigan and Ontario

Aerial view of the Blue Water Bridge between Michigan and Ontario

Aerial view of the Blue Water Bridge between Michigan and Ontario

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Highlights

What GAO Found

U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP) identified staffing and resource challenges affecting its enforcement activities along the U.S.-Canada (northern) border and actions to address them, but faces competing priorities. The U.S. Border Patrol (Border Patrol) and Air and Marine Operations (AMO) are the components within CBP responsible for securing U.S. borders between ports of entry in the land, air, and maritime environments. Border Patrol identified an insufficient number of agents that limited patrol missions along the northern border. AMO identified an insufficient number of agents along the northern border, which limited the number and frequency of air and maritime missions. Border Patrol and AMO also identified a variety of resource challenges along the northern border, such as limited radar and surveillance technology coverage and inadequate facilities to process and temporarily hold apprehended individuals. While the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) and CBP identified actions to address staffing and resource challenges, it is unknown whether these challenges will be addressed. This is primarily because CBP's priority is to secure the U.S.-Mexico (southwest) border. Issued in January 2017, Executive Order 13767 directed DHS to take actions to secure the southwest border by, among other things, constructing physical barriers and hiring thousands of agents.

Examples of U.S. Border Patrol's Northern Border Areas of Responsibility

HL_5 - 103332

While CBP has performance measures that assess selected border security operations or programs, some of which include data from the northern border, it does not have specific measures to assess its effectiveness at securing the northern border between ports of entry. For example, Border Patrol has performance measures that assess security in remote areas on the northern border, but the measures do not include data from maritime border areas. Developing and implementing such measures could help Border Patrol and AMO better assess the effectiveness of their northern border operations between ports of entry, including addressing challenges due to limited staffing and resources.

Why GAO Did This Study

The United States and Canada share the longest common non-militarized border between two countries, spanning nearly 4,000 miles of land and maritime borders from the states of Washington to Maine. CBP, within DHS, has primary responsibility for securing U.S. borders at and between ports of entry.

GAO was asked to review CBP's efforts to secure the northern border between ports of entry. This report examines, among other things, (1) the staffing and resource challenges that CBP identified and actions it has taken to address those challenges and (2) the extent to which CBP has developed and implemented performance measures to assess its effectiveness at securing the northern border between ports of entry. GAO reviewed agency documentation and met with DHS and CBP officials in headquarters and field locations. This is a public version of a sensitive report that GAO issued in March 2019. Information that DHS deemed sensitive has been omitted.

Recommendations

GAO is making two recommendations, that Border Patrol and AMO each develop and implement performance measures to assess their effectiveness at securing the northern border between ports of entry. DHS concurred with both recommendations.

Recommendations for Executive Action

Agency Affected Recommendation Status
U.S. Border Patrol The Chief of Border Patrol should develop and implement performance measures to assess its effectiveness at securing the northern border between ports of entry (Recommendation 1).
Open
Border Patrol concurred with this recommendation and in an April 2020 update stated that it is developing new northern border security metrics. Border Patrol is in the process of evaluating them and coordinating with subject matter experts to ensure they are valid. In a September 2021 update, Border Patrol stated that it is coordinating with northern border sectors and stations, as well as subject matter experts, to collect data that are relevant to the northern border operational environment in order to better measure performance. In a July 2023 update, Border Patrol stated that it developed a catalog of metrics that are relevant to the northern border operational environment to better measure performance. Border Patrol is in the process of testing the catalog and estimated it will be fully functional in late 2023. We will continue to monitor Border Patrol's ongoing efforts.
Air and Marine Operations The Executive Assistant Commissioner of AMO should develop and implement performance measures to assess its effectiveness at securing the northern border between ports of entry in the air and maritime environments (Recommendation 2).
Open
AMO concurred with this recommendation and in a July 2022 update, stated that it has developed preliminary performance measures and established a data collection mechanism. In a May 2023 update, AMO stated that in order to ensure the data collection mechanism is reliable, AMO is collecting a full fiscal year's worth of data from 2023. AMO estimated that the performance measures will be implemented by early December 2023. We will continue to monitor AMO's ongoing efforts.

Full Report

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Topics

Border patrolBorder patrol officersBorder securityHomeland securityHuman capital managementPerformance measuresPorts of entryStaffing levelsBorder controlPerformance measurement