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Gov. Greg Abbott spends an additional $30 million on Operation Lone Star to aid local governments

Gov. Greg Abbott spoke at a press conference in Mission with nine other governors on Oct. 6.
Eddie Gaspar
/
The Texas Tribune
Gov. Greg Abbott spoke at a press conference in Mission with nine other governors on Oct. 6.

Abbott announced that his already $4 billion border mission would provide grant funding for cities and counties, following a press conference by some local officials calling on the governor to take more drastic action to secure the border.

Gov. announced Thursday that the state will spend an additional $30 million on his border mission, Operation Lone Star, to provide grants to cities and counties seeking financial assistance to combat criminal activity related to border crossings.

The announcement comes after frustrated local officials, including those in border counties, called on Abbott on Tuesday to take drastic action. The county officials under the Texas and United States constitutions and to deploy state resources to remove migrants from the country. Immigration law enforcement and deportations are the responsibility of the federal government.

鈥淲hile the Biden Administration has abandoned border communities, the State of Texas will support them and help them respond to the disaster that President Biden has caused on the border,鈥 Abbott said in a statement Thursday.

His press release said the funding would come from the governor鈥檚 Public Safety Office, which administers federal and state grants focusing on terrorism, victims services, justice programs, Crime Stoppers and border security, among other programs.

The Operation Lone Star grant program launched in September of last year with an initial $100 million in funding available for local governments. To date, $58 million has been distributed, while $42 million has yet to be used, according to a press release.

Abbott didn鈥檛 immediately respond to request for comment.

The to deter human smuggling, drug trafficking and gang activity at the border. Those applying to the funding can use it to increase law enforcement operations, expand detention facility operations, support medical examiners who identify the remains of migrants, increase the capacity and expediency of courts processing criminal trials related to Operation Lone Star, and provide legal representation to those being tried.

Of the new dollars, $14 million will be available specifically to border-adjacent counties, while $16 million will be made available to any county or city that applies for it.

The announcement also comes as Operation Lone Star and border security efforts more broadly are being scrutinized in Texas after more than 50 migrants died in a truck in San Antonio, in what is deemed the in U.S. history.

Meanwhile, The Texas Tribune and ProPublica reported that the Justice Department is Operation Lone Star 鈥 an effort with a price tag of roughly $4 billion 鈥 for alleged civil rights violations.