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Delays, closures and chaos mount at Texas-Mexico border crossings from new state inspections

U.S. Customs and Border Protection called the state inspections ordered by Gov. Greg Abbott “unnecessary” and said commercial traffic at the Texas-Mexico border has dropped 60% since they began.

Commercial trucks are inspected by a Texas Department of Public Safety trooper at an inspection station in Brownsville on April 12, 2022.
Truck drivers wait in the shade by their vehicles at the Ysleta Port of Entry, Tuesday, April 12, 2022, in Juarez, Mexico. Hundred of semi trucks are seen at a standstill due to the drivers protesting Greg Abbott's decision to have state troopers inspect northbound commercial vehicles one at a time. At this port, trucks are not flowing into Mexico to pickup more products and also not flowing into the U.S. to deliver those products.  Photo by Ivan Pierre Aguirre for The Texas Tribune
Hundreds of semi trucks headed southbound into Mexico are seen at a standstill at the Ysleta Port of Entry, Tuesday, April 12, 2022, in Juarez, Mexico. Truck drivers are protesting Greg Abbott's decision to have state troopers inspect northbound commercial vehicles one at a time. At this port, trucks are not flowing into Mexico to pickup more products and also not flowing into the U.S. to deliver those products.  Photo by Ivan Pierre Aguirre for The Texas Tribune
Truck drivers Oscar Gutierrez, left, and Pedro Aubendaño wait by their vehicles at the Ysleta Port of Entry, Tuesday, April 12, 2022, in Juarez, Mexico. Hundred of semi trucks are seen at a standstill due to the drivers protesting Greg Abbott's decision to have state troopers inspect northbound commercial vehicles one at a time. At this port, trucks are not flowing into Mexico to pickup more products and also not flowing into the U.S. to deliver those products.  Photo by Ivan Pierre Aguirre for The Texas Tribune

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