
California’s San Diego Regional Water Quality Control Board has set a noon (Pacific) deadline of 13 March 2026 for public comments on draft guidelines governing US$300 million in Proposition 4 funding earmarked for projects that improve water quality at the US–Mexico border. The notice appears in the Board’s Executive Officer’s Report dated 11 March and follows a 5 February roundtable that included U.S. EPA Administrator Lee Zeldin and other federal officials. Although primarily an environmental programme, the funding has direct mobility implications. Frequent sewage spills and trans-boundary pollution in the Tijuana River Valley have prompted frequent beach closures and temporary restrictions at San Ysidro and Otay Mesa ports of entry—two of the busiest land crossings for maquiladora executives, long-haul truck drivers and cross-border commuters. Improving wastewater infrastructure is expected to reduce unplanned closures that disrupt the daily movement of people and goods between Southern California and Baja California.
Under the draft guidelines, priority projects include replacement of ageing sewer lines, expansion of treatment capacity at the South Bay International Wastewater Treatment Plant, and real-time water-quality monitoring systems. Grants will require binational coordination with Mexico’s Comisión Nacional del Agua (CONAGUA) and local utilities in Tijuana and Ensenada.
Companies that routinely deploy personnel across the U.S.–Mexico border will also want to confirm that their underlying travel documents remain current. VisaHQ, an online visa and passport processing platform, simplifies the task with step-by-step application guidance, status tracking and dedicated support for U.S. and Mexican travel documents. More information is available at https://www.visahq.com/united-states/ where mobility managers can begin applications or arrange personalised consultations.
Mobility stakeholders—especially logistics providers and companies that rotate staff between San Diego and Tijuana—are urged to submit comments supporting projects that minimise future cross-border disruptions. The Board will use feedback to finalise criteria before opening the first call for proposals in May 2026. Successful projects must break ground by late 2027 to comply with bond-issuance timelines. Corporations with large cross-border workforces may wish to partner with municipal agencies to sponsor infrastructure that directly benefits commuter corridors. For global-mobility managers, sustained reliability at the border reduces overtime, hotel costs and lost productivity caused by sudden port closures. Investments in water-quality infrastructure thus dovetail with broader efforts—such as the planned Gordie Howe and Otay Mesa II crossings—to modernise North American trade routes.
Under the draft guidelines, priority projects include replacement of ageing sewer lines, expansion of treatment capacity at the South Bay International Wastewater Treatment Plant, and real-time water-quality monitoring systems. Grants will require binational coordination with Mexico’s Comisión Nacional del Agua (CONAGUA) and local utilities in Tijuana and Ensenada.
Companies that routinely deploy personnel across the U.S.–Mexico border will also want to confirm that their underlying travel documents remain current. VisaHQ, an online visa and passport processing platform, simplifies the task with step-by-step application guidance, status tracking and dedicated support for U.S. and Mexican travel documents. More information is available at https://www.visahq.com/united-states/ where mobility managers can begin applications or arrange personalised consultations.
Mobility stakeholders—especially logistics providers and companies that rotate staff between San Diego and Tijuana—are urged to submit comments supporting projects that minimise future cross-border disruptions. The Board will use feedback to finalise criteria before opening the first call for proposals in May 2026. Successful projects must break ground by late 2027 to comply with bond-issuance timelines. Corporations with large cross-border workforces may wish to partner with municipal agencies to sponsor infrastructure that directly benefits commuter corridors. For global-mobility managers, sustained reliability at the border reduces overtime, hotel costs and lost productivity caused by sudden port closures. Investments in water-quality infrastructure thus dovetail with broader efforts—such as the planned Gordie Howe and Otay Mesa II crossings—to modernise North American trade routes.