With US border work on track, rural towns fear virus spread
By MATTHEW BROWN, STEPHEN GROVES and CEDAR ATTANASIO
an hour ago
BILLINGS, Mont. (AP) Major construction projects moving forward along the U.S. borders with Canada and Mexico are raising fears the coronavirus could race through temporary work camps and spread to rural communities unable to handle an outbreak.
Despite a clampdown on peoples movements in much of the country, groups of workers travel every day from camps in New Mexico to build President Donald Trumps border wall.
Along the northern border, a Canadian company says it will start work this month on the disputed Keystone XL oil pipeline, another Trump-supported project that could bring thousands of workers to rural communities in Montana, South Dakota and Nebraska.
Residents, tribal leaders and state officials have warned that the influx of outsiders could make problems worse in rural areas with little or no medical infrastructure capable of dealing with a surge of infections. The border wall and pipeline are exempt from stay-at-home restrictions intended to reduce the viruss spread.
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