Horse News

Congressional Committee Will Call for Moratorium on Gathers

by Laura Allen, Executive Director, Animal Law Coalition

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BLM contractor's chopper running Pryor Mountain horses into trap

Update Nov. 2, 2009: A Congressional staff member has confirmed to Animal Law Coalition that the House Natural Resources Committee is calling on BLM to stop all gathers or removals of wild horses and burros until Congress takes action on the controversial issues surrounding the wild horses and burros.

A Congressional staff member told Animal Law Coalition, “It is my understanding that BLM has 11 more roundups planned for 2009 and is expecting to remove more than 6,000 horses.  This is unacceptable especially in light of the fact that these roundups are not based on science.”

Support the House Natural Resources Committee’s call for a moratorium! Write or call your U.S. representative and senators and urge them to support a moratorium pending decisions by Congress on the role of the BLM and the course of the wild horses and burros program.  Copy the Committee on any fax or letter to your representative and senators so they can see your support for a moratorium!

For more information, read Animal Law Coalition’s call for a Congressional investigation and moratorium on gathers!

Original report: It’s time for a public Congressional hearing and investigation of BLM’s management of America’s wild horses and burros including the new plan recently announced by DOI and BLM.

In the meantime and pending decisions about the course of the wild horse and burro program, there should be a moratorium on gathers.

On October 7, 2009 Dept. of Interior Secretary Ken Salazar and Bureau of Land Management Director Bob Abbey announced a new 3 part plan for managing America’s wild horses and burros in the future. But, other than a press release and a letter to Sen. Harry Reid (D-NV), the specifics of the plan have not been made public. As Mr. Abbey said in the press conference held on Oct. 7, 2009, there are “thousands” of wild horse and burro enthusiasts who care about the fate of these animals. There are also innumerable experts and citizens concerned about BLM’s management of these American icons.

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Victims of recent Pryor Mountain "gather" - Free one moment, imprisoned the next

There should be a public hearing and investigation held by Congress regarding BLM’s management of America’s wild horses and burros particularly before yet another plan essentially approved only by BLM and DOI is put in place. There should be a moratorium on all gathers until Congress has completed public hearings and an investigation and reached a decision about the appropriate management of these animals consistent with the laws that protect them. These are after all America’s wild horses and burros.

The Wild Free Roaming Horses and Burros Act (WFRHBA) directs BLM to manage America’s wild horses and burros to “maintain free roaming behavior”. All management activities by law are to be at the “minimal feasible level“. Under WFRHBA America’s wild horses and burros are entitled to humane treatment and to remain free from “capture, …harassment, or death“.

But, instead, the BLM largely manages these animals by running them down with helicopters and gathering or removing them from public lands to holding facilities, separating families, injuring and even killing horses in the process. A terrifying ordeal that leaves wild horses and burros in holding pens where few are adopted, many are sold for slaughter and still more languish, their spirits and bodies broken. The operation of holding facilities will consume about 70% of the total 2009 budget for these animals.

Surely, that is contrary, to say the least, to the directive of the WFRHBA. Indeed, U.S. District Court Judge Rosemary Collyer found in her August 5, 2009 opinion: “It would be anomalous to infer that by authorizing the custodian of the wild-free roaming horses and burros to manage them, Congress intended to permit the animals’ custodian to subvert the primary policy of the statute by capturing and removing from the wild the very animals that congress sought to protect from being removed from the wild. Colorado Wild Horse and Burro Coalition, Inc. v. Salazar, No. 06-1609 (D.D.C 2009)

Mr. Salazar insists that “arid western lands and watersheds” can’t support the few wild horses that remain “without significant damage to the environment” and “degrading public lands”.  These are reasons typically stated by BLM in its environmental assessments and environmental impact statements to support removals of wild horses and burros from herd areas. And, just as typically, there are no specifics to support these claims. For more examples….

Indeed, Mr. Salazar and BLM do not mention the thousands of cattle grazing and drinking and fouling water on these lands, BLM’s land sales, development, increasing recreational use, and mining as well diversion of water from herd areas. Wildlife ecologists say if public lands are “degraded”, something that is disputed, these factors are far more to blame. In fact, citizens living in the areas where there are wild horses and burros, including small ranchers, contradict BLM’s assessments the range is “degraded” or lacks sufficient water for these few remaining animals.

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A BLM sign that the Public must obey, but the BLM ignors!

Note that in 1990 BLM claimed the range was the best it had been in the last century. Yet, since then, there has been an increase in the numbers of wild horses and burros removed from the range. There is also no question BLM has routinely renewed grazing permits, finding the range satisfactory for grazing cattle and at the same time, issue environmental assessments that claim the very same range cannot support the few wild horses and burros that remain. BLM has also relied on outdated or what can only be called completely false assessments in its apparent zeal to justify removal of wild horses and burros.

Shouldn’t Congress at least have a hearing or investigate whether BLM’s claims are true? Shouldn’t Congress consider whether BLM should even continue as the manager of the wild horses and burros program? An agency that has turned the WFRHBA on its head and instead of managing to maintain free roaming behavior, does so by removing and penning wild horses and burros.

It is also questionable whether BLM really has the authority, as it claims, to manage America’s wild horses and burros in all respects pursuant to a multiple use concept. Though WFRHBA mentions “multiple-use relationship” in connection with specified ranges, it is very clear that the directive is to manage these animals otherwise only to “maintain a thriving natural ecological balance on the public lands” and “protect the natural ecological balance of all wildlife species which inhabit such lands, particularly endangered wildlife species“.

In effect, WFRHBA authorizes only limited interference with wild horses and burros in herd areas where they were living in 1971. Nothing about removing wild horses and burros from herd areas where they lived in 1971 to allow multiple use such as cattle grazing, recreation for off road vehicles, mining or development. Also, protecting the ecological balance of all wildlife has never meant rounding up and removing whole species. Especially when there is a law that explicitly protects their right to exist in historic herd areas.

Even designated ranges managed under a multiple use concept are to be “devoted principally” to wild horses and burros. The wild horses and burros on these lands are not to be eliminated for cattle or mining or recreation or even secondary to these other uses.

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Carol Walker, Elyse Gardener and Ginger Kathrens observe "processing" from a distance

Despite the limited authority to interfere with wild horses and burros under WFRHBA, the BLM has decided, however, the multiple public use concept applies to all herd areas as well as ranges. BLM even issued a regulation that effectively rewrites WFRHBA to say the “objectives of these regulations are management of wild horses and burros as an integral part of the natural system of the public lands under the principle of multiple use“. 43 CFR § 4700.0-2 Yet, the WFRHBA says only that wild horses and burros “are to be considered in the area where presently found, as an integral part of the natural system of the public lands“. 16 U.S.C. §1331.

The BLM has also authorized itself to divide herd areas into “herd management areas“, something not authorized by WFRHBA. 43 CFR 4710.3-1. In this way, with no statutory authority at all, BLM has limited wild horses and burros’ access to thousands of acres that were historically their herd areas. This is done without thought about the horses’ seasonal migration patterns or available resources. The BLM then removes wild horses and burros from the artificially created “herd management areas” on the basis there is insufficient forage, water or habitat! BLM also targets them for removal if they cross the artificial boundaries into their original herd areas.

While BLM has authorized itself to create divide herd areas into Herd Management Areas, its own regulations provide that “management of wild horses and burros shall be undertaken with the objective of limiting the animals’ distribution to herd areas, 43 C.F.R. § 4710.4.”Herd area” is defined by regulation as “the geographic area identified as having been used by a herd as its habitat in 1971,” 43 C.F.R. §4710.4.

Another example of BLM’s erosion of the WFRHBA protections is the rewording of the WFRHBA mandate “[a]ll management activities shall be at the minimal feasible level“. BLM’s regulation says “[m]anagement shall be at the minimum level necessary to attain the objectives identified in approved land use plans and herd management area plans.” 43 CFR 4710.4, 16 U.S.C. §1333. Two very different laws. So if a land use plan authorizes a land giveaway or increased recreation or mining, “management…at a minimum level” can mean round up and removal, according to the BLM.

The Federal Land Policy Management Act requires management of public lands under concepts of multiple use and sustained yield. 43 U.S.C. §§ 1701, et seq.  But the multiple use concept does not trump the WFRHBA protections for wild horses.  In fact, the statute makes clear that the protections under WFRHBA take precedence. FLPMA, 43 U.S.C. § 1732 (a) Yet, despite this, BLM has issued a regulation that provides “[w]ild horses and burros shall be considered comparably with other resource values in the formulation of land use plans.” 43 C.F.R. §4700.0-6(b).

The BLM’s land use plans make clear that contrary to WFRHBA, it does not decide to remove wild horses and burros only to maintain a “thriving natural ecological balance to the range, and protect the range from the deterioration associated with overpopulation“. Nor are the protected wild horse ranges “devoted principally” to the use of wild horses and burros. Instead, the BLM clearly embraces the multiple use concept for all lands designated for wild horses and burros.  Indeed, the plan seems to be to eliminate or zero out the wild horses and burros in favor of increased development and recreational use, mining, and cattle.

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Cloud, captured during botched Labor Day Pryor Mountain gather

Surely, BLM’s fast and loose interpretation of the WFRHBA is more than sufficient for Congress to take a look, hold a public hearing and investigate before America’s icon is lost forever.

It should be noted that BLM has also virtually ignored the directive in the WFRHBA to “maintain a current inventory of wild free-roaming horses and burros on given areas of the public lands“. 16 U.S.C. §1333(b). According to WFRHBA, the inventory is critical in determining appropriate management levels or AML and whether there is indeed an overpopulation or excess horses and burros. Yet, BLM has gathered and removed thousands of horses without the important information necessary to determine if the removal is legal. It’s time to take a look, an independent census and standardize AML determinations.

It is important for Congress to open up for public review the work of an agency that has operated largely in secret, offering the public generally pre-determined courses of action, making a joke out of the public comment process. It is also time BLM or whatever agency that is put in charge of the wild horses and burros took seriously the WFRHBA mandate requiring consultation not with special interests but also a range of independent experts recommended by the National Academy of Sciences, the states and those with  “scientific expertise and special knowledge of wild horse and burro protection…[and] wildlife management“. 16 U.S.C. §1333(b).

Congress should hold public hearings and investigate Secretary Salazar’s plan in particular. There are innumerable experts outside of the BLM who should have an opportunity to weigh in on how BLM continues to manage America’s wild horses and burros.

Secretary Salazar delivered the following 3 part proposal to Sen. Reid: 1. BLM will work with non-profits and the “thousands” of wild horse enthusiasts to create sanctuaries and preserves in the Midwest or east. In fact, BLM appears to have already decided on sever preserves. It is not known who is involved in these transactions or how BLM decided on these preserves. Surely, the public is entitled to know how this happened. Mr. Salazar says tourism would be encouraged and could provide a source of revenue.  But the mandate of the WFRHBA is to avoid such zoo-like settings for these American icons. The idea, the law, in fact, is that these animals are to remain free to roam on the public lands where they were living in 1971 when the Act went into effect.

2.  Mr. Salazar will designate more ranges for wild horses. He cited the Pryor Mountain herd, recently rounded up and decimated, as an example of a range under BLM protection.

3.  This is one of the most troubling aspects of Mr. Salazar and Mr. Abbey’s plan. They say BLM will work to restore the “sustainability” of herds and public lands. BLM will continue to round up and remove horses but step up “fertility control”, monitor sex ratios, and introduce non-reproducing herds.  More like BLM will work toward the extinction of herds.  The obvious concern is how a herd that is non-reproducing or sterilized can remain self-sustaining, genetically viable, as mandated by law. There are serious questions here about BLM’s determination of sex ratios. These proposals will have a very negative effect on herds and herd behavior. This plan euphemistically referred to as “restoring sustainability” during the press conference, is, in fact, the opposite, a plan to exterminate the wild horses and burros and in doing so, create great chaos and suffering in the herds. In effect, this plan raises real concerns about compliance with WFRHBA’s mandate that BLM should manage these animals to maintain “free-roaming behavior” and a “thriving natural ecological balance” in herd areas.

There are also growing concerns about the effectiveness and use of the contraceptive, PZP, particularly in view of its effect on herd behavior and dangerous side effects such as out of season foals.

These plans likely stem from BLM’s secret discussions that began in July, 2008 about ways to eliminate wild horses through unlimited slaughter, killing, manipulation of sex ratios, sterilization of mares, creation of gelding herds and the like. It is telling that here there is no promise in this plan to stop the slaughter of these wild animals or killing of healthy animals. There is no promise to stop the round ups, the decimation of herds, the brutal treatment of America’s wild horses and burros in holding facilities.

During its discussions in the past year BLM considered ways to keep the public away from round ups and the killing of healthy horses and burros and planned to brand protests as “eco-terrorism”.  This was all to be done in secret. If Congress does not hold a hearing, investigate this plan and this agency, BLM will have succeeded.

WHAT YOU CAN DO

The wild horses and burros can be saved. There has to be a better way to manage these animals other than by hiring criminals to run them down with helicopters and penning some for life and sending others to slaughter. The WFRHBA requires them to be protected in their herd areas where they were living in 1971. And that is what the BLM should do.

Find and contact your U.S. senators here and urge them to hold a hearing or investigate BLM’s management of America’s wild horses and burros and tell the BLM to stop rounding up and killing or removing our wild horses and burros or selling them for slaughter and return them to the lands where they were living in 1971.

Go here to write your U.S. representative and urge him or her to do the same!

 

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13 replies »

  1. This Summary of the ROAM Act as interpreted by the National Cattlemens’s Beef Assoc. “The ROAM Act allows for limitless expansion of wild horse and burro range and the designation of exclusive use areas for the animals. The bill takes away the ability to sell or humanely euthanize excess animals and makes the adoption process very time consuming. Additionally, it makes any transportation for processing criminal. The current horse and burro program is underfunded and much of the range is overpopulated with little demand for adoption of excess animals. It is inhumane to allow overpopulation on designated range and this legislation is not the solution. The bill radically overturns longstanding management practices of public lands.” I can find nothing in the bill that calls for LIMITLESS EXPANSION or RADICALLY OVERTURNING MANAGEMENT practices of PUBLIC lands. I have written to the cattlemen & beef associations asking them to please correct their ‘Fact Sheet’. We’ll see where this goes. -Kathy

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    • When I saw the recent Cloud episode I cried when little Dusty was killed. But as sad as it was better to die FREE than in some prison for something he didn’t even do.

      My understanding of ROAM is that it will stop the transport of horses across the border for slaughter. Slaughter isn’t humane. Horses crammed in a trailer with no food or water for hours if not days isn’t humane. Being stabbed in the neck til the killer severs your spinal column isn’t humane. Being shot with a captive bolt designed for cattle isn’t humane.

      The reason the current horse and burro program is underfunded is because of mismanagement by Ken Salazar. “Gathering” horses in late Oct/Nov to not adopt them out until spring is mismanagement. We the taxpayers are having to foot the boarding bills in the meantime.

      If we leave mother nature alone–she will take care of everything naturally. It may not be pretty and can be pretty darn aweful (as in the case of little Dusty) but why are we messing with something so perfect?

      One thing I’d like to see is if the BLM won’t release the 33 thousand horses they currently have in custody–why won’t they dart and experiment on those horses? Why are they experimenting on wild horses with NO IDEA of the damage they are doing?

      Please read the current Cloud book–Ginger tells of an email she recieved that said that the PZP can be reversed! as per the BLM. This because a mare they had darted the year before somehow got into foal and delivered it.

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  2. All I know is that when I read that it was Troy Cattoor that hotshotted Floyd–I could only see red for a long time. In the first place Floyd should never have been hotshotted but to find out that it was a Cattoor to boot–WHY ARE THESE PEOPLE ON THE GOVERNMENT PAYROLL WHEN THEY OBVIOUSLY NOT ONLY LIE BUT ABUSE ANIMALS TOO!. Sorry for shouting–I meant too shout but it was also meant as emphasis. I apologize to my Cloud Family.

    I have to re-read this article and then try to email it on. One of my Senator’s claims to love horses but since she isn’t on the Energy Committee its kinda like passing gas in the wind. She won’t do a thing until it comes to a vote. But she says she is pro–horse, anti-slaughter etc.

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    • oh, margaret. we’ve been asking that question for a long time…why are cattoor’s on the govt payroll? why were we paying them double time holiday pay for abusing our horses? how does papa cattoor, with his conviction & guilty plea for hunting, illegally rounding up, & taking to slaughter truckloads of wild horses, get so many contracts with our us govt? how are helicopter roundups even ALLOWED in the first place (hasn’t the blm even read the wfrh&b act of 1971)? why? why?? why???
      who is your senator? keep pressing her. let her know that this is a big thing to YOU, one of her constituents….morgan has been pressing people to try to actually MEET with their senators whenever they can, as many of them return to their home states quite often. keep at it!
      btw, have you read the TCF blog entries from the pryor round up in sept? elyse gardner provides comments on the torture that floyd suffered for nearly 14 minutes in one post & she also has a video of him being hit with paddles & plastic bags while stuck in the chute. it’s a wonder the poor guy didn’t die of shock on the spot. we were seeing bloody CHINA when that was happening. errrgggggh.

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      • I saw that on the video. What is worse is the people laughed about it. Perhaps because Floyd turned right at the “wrong” moment–but I think it speaks for itself when you laugh and don’t even apologize for slapping the horse. Maybe that lady didn’t mean to–but I didn’t hear her say I’m sorry horsie.

        I did get a form letter back from Senator Feinstein and sent a scathing letter in response. Told her a form letter was great but the situation was far more serious than–“we see that you are concerned about this”.

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  3. Margaret :
    I did get a form letter back from Senator Feinstein and sent a scathing letter in response. Told her a form letter was great but the situation was far more serious than–”we see that you are concerned about this”.

    Good for you!!

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