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FILE: Feb. 15, 2012: A border patrol vehicle observes border fencing in Douglas, Ariz.Reuters
The U.S. Customs and Border Protection agency said Monday it will delay furloughs and the elimination of planned overtime, after announcing last week it would implement such cuts to deal with sequester -- the roughly $85.4 billion in mandatory federal budget reductions this year across all government agencies.
The border agency said the cuts will be delayed "pending re-examination," following concerns from Congress and at least one border agent union about potential safety and security lapses.
Deputy Commissioner Thomas S. Winkowski told employees in a letter Monday that the temporary spending bill President Obama signed last week that funds the federal government over the next six months allows the agency to "mitigate to some degree" the sequester's impact.
However, sources told Fox News a recent surge in illegal border crossings contributed to the re-examination, as the Senate nears a final proposal on immigration reform that hinges on secure borders.
Still, the agency must find ways to cover a $250 million shortfall this year as a result of the sequester.
Congress agreed in 2011 on the mandatory, across-the-board cuts this year as leverage to get the two sides to agree on a less drastic approach to reducing the federal budget. But the two sides failed to reach a follow-up agreement before the March 1 deadline. The cuts equal roughly $1.2 trillion over the next 10 years should Congress allow them to continue.
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