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Sinkholes Threaten Mexican Capital
Austin-American Statesman ^ | July 28, 2007 | By Jeremy Schwartz

Posted on 07/29/2007 2:38:38 PM PDT by JACKRUSSELL

(MEXICO CITY) — As if life-shortening pollution, hours-long traffic jams and kidnappings weren't bad enough, Mexico City residents now have to worry about the earth opening up and swallowing them.

As the summer rainy season hits, concern is growing that hundreds of cracks, holes and fractures that line this city could open up with disastrous consequences in a metropolitan area of 20 million people.

The fear became reality this month in a Mexico City slum when heavy rainfall ruptured a fissure in the street, swallowing a car and an onlooker, who was killed when he tumbled into the muddy depths more than 60 feet below.

Mexico City's latest urban ill stems from its geography and history. Built on a drained lake bed after the Spanish destroyed the Venice-like city of Tenochtitlan, Mexico City has been sinking steadily for centuries, falling the equivalent of a three-story building since 1900.

At the same time, the sinking megalopolis has been slaking its thirst by draining the underground aquifer beneath the city. And if that wasn't enough, the city also sits over a maze of geological fault lines and abandoned mines.

The underground cracks and crevices are exacerbated by rain, which also threatens to overwhelm the city's faulty drainage system.

A massive pipe is meant to funnel waste out of the bowl-like valley over which Mexico City is sprawled. Experts say a heavy rain could trigger a flood of sewage.

"When the Aztecs moved here, they could have never imagined the problems (this location) would generate," said Martín Argueta of the Mexican Geological Service. "We aren't going to get rid of these cracks, but we need to learn how to manage the risk."

Much of the danger stems from the unregulated growth in Mexico City that saw makeshift neighborhoods extend into the most fragile areas of the valley.

Government officials often promoted the unregulated growth in return for captive votes. Engineers have been calling for more building restrictions, but with most of the metro area carpeted with homes and businesses, it could be too late.

Perhaps most at risk is the sprawling neighborhood of Iztapalapa. Bigger than the Mexican cities of Guadalajara, Jalisco, and Monterrey, Nuevo León, Iztapalapa is home to some of Mexico City's poorest — and unluckiest — residents.

More than 200 cracks threaten 10,000 homes in Iztapalapa, because of a combination of underground faults and the aquifer draining.

But despite all the water sucked from the ground beneath them, Iztapalapa residents suffer chronic shortages of drinking water, which often must be trucked in.

For nearly 30 years, David Pérez Figueroa has lived next to what became a deadly sinkhole. Throughout his neighborhood of unfinished concrete homes and narrow streets, buildings pitch forward at odd angles and cracks spread up walls.

Pérez said he and other neighbors worried constantly about what began as a crack in the street about eight years ago.

"We told the authorities, we sent letters, we met with officials, but they never paid attention to us," Pérez said. "They knew this problem existed, but they never fixed it."

Pérez was hosting a graduation party at the hall he rents for special events when the earth opened on July 7. One of his guest's cars slipped into the crevice. He said he yelled at 19-year-old Jorge Ramirez to move away from the widening hole, but Ramirez fell to his death while peering over the edge.

City workers will fill the opening with bentonite, a clay-based substance that expands when it comes in contact with water. Officials in Iztapalapa say they have only enough money to fill a small percentage of the neighborhood's 200 cracks.

The city's infrastructure woes have stoked a feud between the conservative federal government and the left-leaning city government.

It is more fallout from last year's bitterly contested presidential election, which pitted former Mexico City Mayor Andrés Manuel López Obrador against Felipe Calderón. Relations between Calderón, who eventually won the election, and new Mexico City Mayor Marcelo Ebrard, widely considered López Obrador's protégé, have been frosty ever since.

Calderón has used the situation to sharply criticize city leaders, who he says haven't invested enough in infrastructure improvements. City officials say they are frustrated that federal officials haven't released disaster relief funds to fill in the cracks and abandoned mines or allowed the city to restructure its debt, which would free up more money for improvements.

Ebrard defended the city's track record, saying it is fixing its drainage system, including building four pumping stations to aid the flow of waste out of the city.

But as the politicians bicker, Pérez says residents in Iztapalapa continue to hold their breath every time it rains.


TOPICS: Mexico; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: mexico
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To: JACKRUSSELL
Simpsons Movie semi-SPOILER to follow -





Maybe they saw the Simpsons movie and are hatching a plan to get around a border fence. ;)
21 posted on 07/29/2007 4:09:53 PM PDT by Scarchin (+)
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To: COBOL2Java

If a Republican is President the ‘slow response’ and high death toll will be his fault as well.


22 posted on 07/29/2007 4:09:54 PM PDT by kinoxi
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Sinkhole in the stinkhole.


23 posted on 07/29/2007 4:13:18 PM PDT by Captainpaintball
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To: JACKRUSSELL

So what does happen when a cesspool gets swallowed up in a sinkhole?


24 posted on 07/29/2007 4:32:38 PM PDT by Enchante (Reid and Pelosi Defeatocrats: Surrender Now - Peace for Our Time!!)
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To: reagan_fanatic
¡muy excelente!
25 posted on 07/29/2007 4:57:01 PM PDT by mikrofon (GMTA)
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To: Jeff Chandler

Maybe when ‘global warming’ melts enough ice, the lake will re-form. Then we can watch all the Mexicans try to figure out how to live under water.


26 posted on 07/29/2007 5:34:47 PM PDT by whipitgood (Let's burn some MEXICAN flags!)
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To: JACKRUSSELL

At some point nature will win — there willone day be a major earthquake during a period of heavy rain, and a good portion of Mexico City will probably liquify and sink.


27 posted on 07/29/2007 5:40:32 PM PDT by commish (Freedom tastes sweetest to those who have fought to protect it.)
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To: JACKRUSSELL

Maybe they could fill them in with all the disposable diapers their citizens have been dropping on American streets for the past 30+ years.


28 posted on 07/29/2007 5:43:07 PM PDT by ElkGroveDan (When toilet paper is a luxury, you have achieved communism.)
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To: JACKRUSSELL

****”When the Aztecs moved here, they could have never imagined the problems (this location) would generate,” ****

Mexico City is collapsing into the fabled underground city of the Aztecs!


29 posted on 07/29/2007 6:33:50 PM PDT by Ruy Dias de Bivar (When someone burns a cross on your lawn the best firehose is an AK-47.)
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To: reagan_fanatic

There you go!

I’m just getting around to reading this thread.

(God knows why.)

Sinkhole De Mayo was my first thought and I’m glad you posted it. So I didn’t have to.


30 posted on 07/30/2007 2:02:08 PM PDT by Responsibility2nd
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To: JACKRUSSELL

Great! Lets see how the democrates are going to help pay for this!


31 posted on 07/30/2007 2:03:32 PM PDT by ronnie raygun (I'd rather be hunting with dick than driving with ted)
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