Thursday, January 24, 2008

Blog

 

Texas Hold 'em Poker Night to help the:

Equine Angels Youth Ranch and Mustang and Wild Horse Rescue and Training Center of Georgia, Inc.

 

Will be held at the

Dave and Busters in

Gwinnett

4000 Venture Dr.

Duluth

Buy In: $50

Contact person:

Pam 770-355-0713

Mustang Dave 404-667-7393

Date: 3/28/08

Time: 6pm-12:30am

Come be a part of America's Past: Mustangs and Poker!

All proceeds to benefit The Equine Angels Youth Ranch and

Mustang Rescue. For more information about these Non-Profit

Organizations please visit their websites:

www.theequineangelsyouthranch.com

www.mustangandwildhorserescue.com

Prizes for Top Finishers

Food and Drinks to Order

Tax Deductible

Monday, January 14, 2008

No Hay and No Water

No Water, No Hay. What This Means To The Mustangs, America's Living Legends

This past year we have experienced extreme draughts in the Southwest and here in the Southeast while parts of the Midwest saw flooding. This means that the first cut of hay was missed in the Midwest and in the Southeast many farmers only got a first cut, missing the second and third cuts due to lack of growth. Couple this with Agribusinesses buying up all the hay they can get and we have a problem.  We have seen our hay costs tripling in the past twelve months. So how does this affect the horse? There has been an overpopulation of horse's recently due in part to the number of baby boomers who have become horse owners and the breeding industry wanting to take advantage of the growing market. The Thoroughbred breeders have always kept their breeding mares pregnant in order to increase the number of foals they can sell for millions of dollars to syndicated buyers. If these horses don't produce income at the track, they are dumped on the market as well. Then you have ancillary breeders associated with the Thoroughbred breeders. These breeders provide nurse mares to nurse the Thoroughbred foals while the Thoroughbred breeders start the impregnation process of their mares all over again. This leaves the nurse mare foals that happen to be lucky enough not to be lined up in front of a hole and shot, or sent off to pharmaceutical labs to be used as test animals on products such as fly spray, looking for someone to adopt them.
Now horse rescues are being inundated with requests to take in starving and unwanted horses. The equine community, always a fractious community, is pointing fingers at each other with some saying the closing of the two slaughter houses in America exacerbated the problem while others blame greedy breeders. The fact remains we have a problem we have to fix.
So what does this mean to the Mustang? Well, beside the obvious that forage and water is a little more difficult to find in the habitat of these animals, the Bureau of Land Management (BLM) is having a difficult time in their attempts to find adopters. Why would someone adopt a wild horse for $125 when they can get a trained domestic horse for the same price? In general, people who end up adopting Mustangs don't have the disposable income to absorb the increased costs to feed these animals. Also, the reduction of water and forage on the Herd Management Areas (HMAs) will increase the pressure put on the BLM by livestock breeders to remove more Mustangs thus increasing the amount of water and forage for their income producing livestock and increasing the number of unwanted horses on the market. These HMAs, originally 303, were set aside specifically for the wild horses and burros by Congress in 1971 when they passed Public Law 92-195. When this law was passed, there were an estimated 50,000 wild horses and the BLM was put in charge of the welfare of these animals. And what has the BLM done in the ensuing 36 years? Well, they zeroed out 100 HMAs and reduced the number of wild horses to approximately 20,000. They have about that many in their holding corrals across the United States awaiting adoption costing American taxpayers in excess of $10 million a year. We don't need more unwanted horses on the market. We have to leave these horses in the wild.
One obvious step to alleviate the overpopulation of unwanted horses is for our Congress to hold the BLM accountable for their actions and make them leave the wild horses on our public lands as mandated by PL 92-195. The only way that will happen is for concerned citizens to contact their Congressmen and Senators and tell them to make the BLM stop circumventing the intent of the law and leave the horses on their rightful HMAs.

David Hesse,

 Director

Mustang and Wild Horse Rescue and Training Center of Georgia, Inc.

                                   



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Sunday, January 13, 2008

Mustang and Wild Horse Rescue of Georgia

One reason we should work to save the Mustang.
The Mustang and Wild Horse Rescue of Georgia would like you to know: 

When asked if he could name the most significant animal on the American continent, Frank Hopkins, arguably the greatest horseman and winner of over 400 endurance rides ranging from 50 miles to over 3,000 miles, all on mustangs, replied: "The Mustang is the most significant animal in America. " Many would have to agree.
The Mustang was responsible for settling the West. Small in stature, big in heart, this little horse carried explorers through unchartered territory most times carrying a quarter of their weight on their backs.
Frank Hopkins, who participated in more endurance races than any other man in history spending over 60 years in the saddle, said that the Mustang has the qualities to make the ideal saddle horse. What are these qualities?
Well, first he said endurance. The mustang can keep going day in and day out. Frank quoted General George Cook: " ... if troops can't overtake a band of Indians in two hours, its better to give up the chase because they'll never in this green world catch them. Those wiry ponies of theirs can go ninety miles without food or water. They wear out all the cavalry horses we have on the frontier.
The second quality he listed was intelligence. "You can't beat Mustang intelligence in the entire equine race." The Mustang has had to fend for itself for generations. No body was going to look after them so they had to figure out how to survive and that took superior intelligence. The ones who are here survived through the evolutionary process of the survival of the fittest.
The third quality he mentions is economy. The Mustang can live where a stall fed animal would starve. The Mustang has learned how to pick his own food from the country and can live where a cow would starve. A Mustang knows how to take such good care of himself that he is always ready to go.
When Frank was listing qualities that made the Mustang superior to other horses, he failed to mention their feet. It is well know that due to the years they spend traveling 10-25 miles a day in the high desert country and the mountainous terrain, they have developed very tough hoof walls and soles. Terrain that would cause a domestic horse to pull up lame, hardly is noticed by the Mustang.
So why are so many people intent on destroying this exceptional horse? It is a long and complicated story that we will touch on in our next posting.
Mustang Dave


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Sunday, December 30, 2007

Hidalgo



The Mustang and Wild Horse Rescue and Training Center of Georgia would like you to know where the name of the mustang Hidalgo, in the movie by the same name, came from:
A hidalgo or fidalgo was a member of the lower Spanish and Portuguese nobility. Hidalgos were exempt from paying taxes, but did not necessarily own real property .
Now you know.
Mustang Dave


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Monday, December 03, 2007

Wild Horses and Burros 101

I met with Amy Howton at Kennesaw State University this past week to discuss issues regarding the mustang rescue and the wild horses and she pointed out that our government has created a special class of citizen in the cattlemen by subsidizing their business like no other group in America. This has been going on for over 100 yrs. They had and have controlled the boards overseeing the grazing leases on public lands, appointed sheriffs, judges, as well as governors and representatives. Quite a cartel. Now we have proof that the very agency appointed to protect the wild horse and burro against the agenda held by the likes of the Cattlemen's Association, has been actively promoting and participating in the illegal slaughter of these animals and the US Justice Department says the corruption is so widespread that they can't prosecute?

Once you read this whole thing, you will then be educated and informed on the truth, supported by facts, about BLM's so-called 'management' and supposed 'protection' of America's wild horses. Do read it, you'll see how the foxes have been put in charge of the hen house since day one. The more people that know the truth, the harder the lies become to pass off onto the 'formerly uneducated' public -

http://www.americanherds.blogspot.com/

(pictures on site)

Thursday, November 29, 2007

Stalled

It was New Mexico law enforcement agents that began investigating the selling of wild horses to slaughter in 1992. This investigation centered around the direct participation of BLM employees and contractors selling wild horses for slaughter with both the knowledge and approval of BLM managers. Their scheme involved the use of satellite ranches and horse sanctuaries to hide the horses for profit operation. (1)

The Grand Jury investigation into illegal wild horse slaughter began with two BLM employees: Mr. Galloway and Mr. Sharp, both working under the direction of Steve Henke, currently still employed by BLM as a District Manager in Farmington, New Mexico.

In 1995, the Grand Jury issued subpoenas intending to inventory more than 1,200 horses at a BLM sanctuary in Bartlesville, OK but a Department of the Interior lawyer in New Mexico, Grant Vaughn, wrote a letter telling the prosecutor that his agency could not comply with the subpoenas and efforts to access any information about these facilities was successfully thwarted. (2)

Over ten years later, a different investigative report has just been released by Valerie James Patton, which includes some serious questions surrounding BLM sanctuaries in Bartlesville, OK and the more than 8,000 geldings these sanctuaries now hold.

Ms. Pattons Investigative Report centers around an anomaly of exclusive gelding exports from the Santa Teresa Livestock Port of Entry between New Mexico to Mexico, where USDA export records indicate record breaking levels of geldings have been, and are still being sent to Mexico under a non-slaughter status. The current total of these non-slaughter geldings shipped into Mexico has now reached over 3,000 for this year alone.

Her report on the possible illegal shipment of these horses compares the Texas export numbers of non-slaughter geldings with the Santa Teresa Ports export numbers, notes that Santa Teresa does not send any other kind of horse through their port under a non-slaughter status and asks hard questions about what Mexico is doing with these geldings that are now numbering into the thousands, as they are obviously not for breeding purposes.

Furthermore, her report states that the only currently known source for such a continuous supply of geldings is BLM sanctuaries. The report gives significant treatment to statistics, numbers, locations, interviews, newspaper articles, government connections between U.S. and Mexican officials, and as the evidence mounts, a powerful case is presented which demands an official investigation into the both the source and the destination of these non-slaughter geldings.

Except it looks like that is going to be very difficult..

Her report also includes the results of a recent on-site investigation by Animals Angels investigators who were denied access to Santa Teresas facilities and what little information New Mexico officials offered turned out to be false - these officials included USDA employees. Yes, this is the same USDA that flipped Congress the finger when they voted to withdraw funding for horsemeat inspections in efforts to shut down the American horse slaughter trade in 2006.

In another AP news article by Martha Mendoza published in 1997, Trails End for Horses: Slaughter, over 200 BLM employees were cited as adopting wild horses and burros with most unaccounted for and some employees acknowledging they were sent to slaughter while Pascal Derde, the proprietor of Cavel West Slaughterhouse in Redmond, OR, reportedly 'displayed a sheaf of BLM certificates for horses he recently butchered'.

Gabriel Paone, a Department of the Interior ethics official was quoted as saying there was nothing wrong with BLM employees adopting wild horses and then selling them for profit. 'Theyre not doing this as public officials.' Paone said. 'Theyre doing this as private citizens.'

In an article by American Wild Horse Preservation Campaign, The Story Behind The Burns Amendment, a plan is outlined showing which way American wild horses were headed. A few years ago, a Montana rancher proposed to send 10,000 wild horses to Mexico, the second largest horse meat supplier in the world, for his private enterprise craftily dubbed the 'Sonora Wild Horse Repatriation Project.'

Apparently, the boldness of this proposal created so much opposition it was ultimately defeated - perhaps an even craftier enterprise was needed to move our horses into Mexico.

The political consequences of openly killing wild horses and burros was foreseen during the July 1998 Field Hearing held in Reno, NV (see Year of the Horse II) as John Balliette, Contractual Natural Resource Manager, Eureka County, NV stated, I also urge you to be cautious with euthanasia, especially for large reductions. Personally, I would view putting thousands of horses down as a terrible waste of a resource. I also believe the first time several hundred horses are euthanized in one spot, a political firestorm will follow.

Needless to say, Mr. Balliette was correct but it didnt take several hundred to do it.

In November 2004, the Burns Amendment was slipped in and became a reality for our wild horses and burros in 2005. Forty-one wild horses were slaughtered in an Illinois slaughter plant, some of the first sold under this new For Sale Authority and public outrage caused BLM to temporarily suspend sales between April 25 thru May 19, 2005.

BLM also rewrote and strengthened the adoption contracts before resuming sales but considering past historical violations, even by the agency itself, as well as no true legal consequences to those who violate these contracts due to Congress continuing to give BLM the authority to sell them unconditionally, there is little hope that violators will actually be prosecuted if our horses and burros end up hanging from a hook.

According to Ms. Pattons investigative report, the shipment of unusually high numbers of non-slaughter geldings sent through Santa Teresa, New Mexico to Mexico began on August 16th, 2005 just three months after BLM resumed selling our wild heritage to sealed bidders.

Advocate and watch dog groups have been requesting details about the For Sale Program but meaningful answers have not been forthcoming and the BLM only publicly provides a running total of the wild horses and burros that they sell.

So here we sit..

Unprecedented numbers of wild horses and burros have been swept off public lands authorized by completely absurd assessments, BLM cut adoption events over the last few years during a time when they needed this outlet most, the cost of capturing and holding our wild horses and burros in these mysterious sanctuaries continues to skyrocket and suddenly we find New Mexico in the news - again!

Yet Congress sits stalled refusing to investigate the Wild Horse & Burro Program or demand accountability, refusing to repeal the Burns Amendment, and refusing to open an investigation into these non-slaughter geldings being exported from New Mexico at record levels.

Some speculate these geldings are being shipped to Mexico as unwilling participants in a popular form of Mexican entertainment called Horse Tripping, as illustrated in the header photo. Even so, most horses used for these events end up in Mexican slaughterhouses once the ropes have cut their flesh too deeply or their legs finally brutally break.

The Humane Society of the United States has recently released a video on the reality of Mexican Horse Slaughter, often performed by repeatedly stabbing a knife into the horses spinal cord until it is paralyzed, though not unconscious for its slaughter. There is little question the final destination of the majority of these non-slaughter geldings will share the same fate of those so graphically depicted in this video.

In 1998, Mr. Balliette also recommended a sale authority that would be sunsetted once the numbers on the range and in the adoption pipeline were brought down to manageable numbers before more politically correct population control methods were again employed.

Maybe Congress is waiting, as Mr. Balliette suggested, until a sufficient amount of Americas wild horses and burros have been disposed of before bringing the vote to the floor. or maybe they will never repeal it - after all, its only the majority of the American people who so passionately love wild horses and burros and have showed their overwhelming support time and time again for mandating their protection but does anyone in Washington care?

Tell Congress to stop stalling and protect

OUR WILD HORSES AND BURROS

!NOW!

Non-Slaughter Geldings To Mexico

In efforts to bring awareness to the weekly shipments of these Non-Slaughter Geldings being sent to Mexico from New Mexico for over two years now, the American Herds Hot News Section will now display their weekly exported totals until -we pray -these shipments are investigated and finally brought to a halt.

(1) Horses to Slaughter - Anatomy of a Cover Up with the BLM (1997-04-01)
http://www.peer.org/pubs/whitepapers_id.php?row_id=14

(2) Mendoza, Wild Horses Criminal Case Shut Down, http://igha.org/BLM12.html

Posted by Preserve the Herds at 12:00 PM 0 comments

Tuesday, November 27, 2007

Closing The Deal

The governments continued lackadaisical attitude toward the mustangs makes it necessary for private conservation groups to constantly remain alert and follow the administration and enforcement of the law. Otherwise, the horses traditional enemies will succeed in slowly but surely eliminating them. -The Politics of Extinction by Lewis Regenstein, 1975.

So how long have a handful of individuals been trying to eliminate wild horses and burros from the American scene? As far back as their American history goes

In fact, there is so much available evidence clearly showing inappropriate and often illegal activities against wild horses and burros, only the illiterate could be convinced otherwise.

In his book, Wild Horses: Living Symbols of Freedom, wildlife ecologist and author, Craig C. Downer states how it began, It was the White life style which caused the mustangs demise, along with that of the buffalo.The horse allowed the Indian to withstand the White settlers and, so, the horse came to be regarded as part of the whole Indian problem. A prejudice against wild horses has remained as a part of the tradition to this very day among ranchers and farmers as well as others in the West.

Mr. Downer asserts the 18th century saw the pinnacle of wild horse populations, estimated then at nearly 10 million strong but by the turn of the 19th century, their numbers had been reduced to 2 million and in the late 1950s, when Wild Horse Annie began creating public awareness for the plight of the wild horse, it was estimated their numbers had been gutted to a paltry 25,000 throughout the West. (1)

When public love and outcry sparked Congress to pass the Wild Free-Roaming Horse and Burro Act in 1971, those still prejudice against the wild ones have been seeking to overturn their federally protected status ever since.

In 1973, legal proceedings were initiated by a New Mexico cattleman who unsuccessfully tried to overturn their federal protection in Kleppe vs New Mexico (June 17, 1976).

Betsy A. Cody, Specialist in Natural Resources produced a report for the Congressional Research Service on Wild Horse and Burro Management, which stated, In 1984, BLM started to allow individuals to adopt large numbers of animals for free. Approximately 20,000 horses were adopted while this fee-waiver program was in effect and several thousand of these animals reportedly ended up in glue or pet-food factories.(2) The program was stopped in 1988 due to public outcry.

Karen Sussman, President of the International Society for the Preservation of Mustangs and Burros (ISPMB) submitted a Report to the Subcommittee on National Parks and Public Lands June 5, 1998, that stated, Regulation changes proposed in 1984 allowed BLM to gather an unprecedented number of wild horses during the two year period that the rule changes were pending.

Another 1984 regulation was implemented known as fee-waivers/mass adoptions which allowed 100 or plus horses to be given to adopters. Ranchers adopted them and turned around and sold many to slaughter after title passed.

During these years, with BLMs approval, several attempts were made to allow BLM to sell unadoptable horses for slaughter by initiating language, which never got out of committee in Congress. The Range Omnibus bill which included the slaughter provision made it to the floor of Congress but was defeated.

The Government Accounting Office (GAO) released their audit and report in August 1990 of the BLMs Wild Horse and Burro Program titled, Rangeland Management, Improvements Needed in the Federal Wild Horse Program, which included scathing indictments of wild horses being regularly sent to slaughter and unfair treatment by BLM.

American Wild Horse Preservation Campaign provides a Link to a 1997 report released by the Public Employees for Environmental Responsibility (PEER), Horse Slaughter -Anatomy of a Cover-Up, which explicitly details BLM abuses, wild horses and burros going to slaughter and a complete lack of accountability in the wild horse and burro program that many believe still continues today.

The PEER Horse Slaughter Report states: BLM has tolerated and in some instances facilitated the routine and illegal trafficking of wild horses to slaughter. The agency has obstructed efforts by its own law enforcement officers to expose commercial theft of wild horses, fraudulent adoption schemes and fictitious 'sanctuary' herds not only to avoid embarrassment but also to maintain the flow of horses off the range.

The BLM began a crackdown on wild horse-to-slaughter operations in 1993 under former Director Jim Baca. BLM investigators began compiling evidence documenting:

*

theft of wild horses during BLM sponsored 'gathers' or captures;

*

'black booking' or phony double branding of horses so that duplicate branded horses could disappear without a paper trail;

*

manipulation of wild horse adoptions where one person holds the proxies for a group of supposedly separate adopters and the horses all end up at slaughter;

*

use of satellite ranches to hold horses for days or weeks as stopping points on the way to slaughter;

*

fraudulent use of wild horse sanctuaries--ranches subsidized by the federal government to care for unadoptable wild horses deemed excess and removed from the range--as fronts for commercial exploitation.

Lawyers from the Department of Justice also urged that the case be dropped because the tolerance within BLM for the horse to slaughter trade was so widespread that it would be unfair to single out any one person for prosecution.

Associated Press reporter, Martha Mendoza also did a series of articles on the travesty occurring, such as Wild Horse Criminal Case Shut Down, which involved additional investigative reporting that found a long-standing history of cover ups, abuses and wild horses and burros being sold for slaughter.

Bill Sharp, who worked for the BLM before retiring in 1994 was quoted as saying, 'If I really was worried about intent then I probably wouldn't have adopted out any horses, because I believe 90 percent of these horses go to slaughter.'

While evidence piled up that indeed, Americas wild horses and burros were routinely being sent to slaughter with many BLM employees actively participating, looking the other way or being too afraid to speak out, the Grand Jury Investigation was successfully slammed shut in 1996 without any of the hard won evidence ever being heard.

Congress responded by turning a blind eye to this day, they have failed to demand any investigation or accountability of these allegations and have failed to require BLM to submit biannual reports on the Wild Horse and Burro Program, as required by law, since 1997.

In July 1998 Congressional Subcommittee Hearing in Reno, Nevada (see last post, Year of the Horse II), the Honorable Delegate from the Territory of American Samoa, Eni Faleomavaega, continued to press for answers; there are allegations that thousands of horses are being slaughtered and there are further allegations that BLM could not even account for some 32,000 adopted animals, and that even BLM employees may have been participants and may even have profited in the slaughter of thousands of wild horses.

His questions, and ours, have never significantly been addressed.

The prosecuting attorney for the derailed Grand Jury investigation, Alia Ludlum, stated, 'I believe that my investigation was obstructed all along by persons within the BLM..I think there is a terrible problem with the program and with government agents placing themselves above the law.'

And so, with improprieties, abuses, and illegal activities against wild horses and burros being sanctioned and covered up at the highest levels, Larry Johnson, Director of Nevada Bighorns Unlimited and currently serving on the 2007 Wild Horse and Burro Advisory Board, stepped up to the plate.

In March 2000, Mr. Johnson submitted statements in concert with BLM under a Wild Horse Attachment to a Senate Subcommittee on Energy and Natural Resources to urge their support for The Restoration of Threatened Watersheds, citing wild horses and burros, not livestock, were one of the major threats to both watershed health and wildlife and as such, funding was needed to drastically reduce their populations across the West.

The Nevada Commission for the Preservation of Wild Horses was also cited by jubilant anti-wild horse supporters as being the key factor in convincing Congress that their removals were truly a necessity in Nevadas 2000 Public Land Policy Update (pg.17).

In October 2001, armed with Congressional approval and funding, BLM proceeded to launch the most aggressive removal campaign ever implemented, rounding up over 70,000 of our wild horses and burros over the last six years.

With the Sales Authority waiting in the wings, BLM officials successfully escaping federal indictments, prosecution or any accountability at all, years of frustrated efforts to strip federal protection of Americas wild horses and burros was finally rewarded - our Land Lords just sat back to wait..

Photo taken from BLM Internet Adoption Website
http://www.blm.gov/

#9259 Two Year Old Mare - Captured 1/17/06 Sand Springs East HMA, NV

(1) Report prepared by the ISPMB, Subcommittee on National Parks and Public Lands, June 5, 1998.

(2) GAO RCED-90-110 Rangeland Management, Improvements Needed In Federal Wild Horse Program, pg. 31

http://archive.gao.gov/d23t8/142041.pdf

Posted by Preserve the Herds at 12:22 PM 0 comments

Sunday, November 25, 2007

Year Of The Horse II

The second big event that happened in 1998 was a Congressional Subcommittee Hearing of National Parks and Public Lands held in Reno, Nevada on July 13th titled, Field Hearing on Range Issues and Problems with the Wild Horse and Burro Act and Its Implementation.

It was here that a handful of men began laying the groundwork to amend the Wild Free-Roaming Horse & Burro Act to include a Sales Authority clause to allow them to be slaughtered as well as exploring all possibilities for disposing of America's excess wild horses and burros.

The need to grant BLM the authority to slaughter Americas wild horses and burros was openly discussed by many with testimony citing them as merely feral like alley cats and that BLM needs to be able to manage them as livestock, a position supported by then BLM Director, Pat Shea.

Nevada rancher, Demar Dahl, offered this practical insight by stating, We eat them. The horse is a resource.I love good horses, but there are a lot of horses that are just to be eaten and that is their best use..And I can tell you right now, there are a lot of wild horses, BLMhorses with a BLM freeze iron under the brand, that go through the sales to the killer plants today. And any horse sales that you want to go to where they put killer horses through, you will find a number of wild horses.So it is happening already, we just need to recognize it.

John Balliette, Contractual Natural Resource Manager from Eureka County, Nevada stated,Some real double standards exist when it comes to sale authority. Each year our country sells thousands of privately owned horses for slaughter. But the mere mention of sale authority of ''wild'' horses with the possibility of slaughter is offensive to some. Horses are the only large ungulate on Federal lands that are not harvested for consumptive purposes. If harvesting one large ungulate is acceptable, why is harvesting horses unacceptable? Horses must be viewed as are other large ungulates on Federal lands, a renewable resource that can be effectively managed by harvesting excess numbers.

Senator Dean Rhoads, Chairman of the Senate Natural Resources Committee for the Nevada Legislature and a rancher himself led the charge to implement a Sales Authority with such statements as, I usually do not go to the sales yard so I have no idea who buys them, but I assume that some of them are bought by people that take them home and break them. Others are probably bought that ends up in the slaughterhouse. But that is just the thing that we have been doing for centuries.

Nevada Lincoln County Commissioner Rey Flake reminded everyone that Ranching on public lands is also a legacy of the west and presented this vision to Congressional representatives for his model of what the Wild Horse & Burro Program should look like, We need to consider the idea of having one or two herds of horses in each state.

Senator Rhoads supported Commissioner Flakes statement by affirming the idea for a few public-viewing centers citing we would probably put up some vistas and interpretive centers and so forth then also added, Then you could remove all the other horses from the west on much of our grazing lands.

The following individuals all testified and supported a need to introduce legislation to allow BLM to sell excess and unadoptable wild horses and burros or explore all means to dispose of or destroy them:

Utah Congressional Representative James Hansen, Nevada Congressional Representative Jim Gibbons (now Nevada Governor), NV Legislative Senator Dean Rhoads, NV Assemblyman John Carpenter, NV Elko County Commissioner Anthony Lesperance, Ph.D, NV Lincoln County Commissioner Rey Flake, NV Eureka County Natural Resources Manager John Balliette, National Wild Horse Association Field Director David C.J. Tattam, Arizona Game & Fish Department Director Duane L. Shroufe, and NV Rancher Demar Dahl.

Current Nevada Senator John Ensign, who introduced S. 1915, a bill to amend the Horse Protection Act to prohibit shipping, transporting, moving, delivering, receiving, possessing, purchasing, selling, or donation of horses and other equines to be slaughtered for human consumption, and for other purposes, was also present as a Congressional Representative at this 1998 Field Hearing.

Representative Ensign made no comment throughout the proceedings regarding the selling of Americas wild horses and burros for slaughter. His statements were limited to,How much of the policy is actually being directed based on pure emotionalism? How much of the policy is being directed on what is truly best for the environment, best for the animals in the long-run for the overall part of the population, and truly how are we getting to where we are going.?

As politicians and cattleman lined up to testify against the wild horses with arguments that ranged from how their excessive numbers destroy the range and riparian areas, strip the forage for their livestock, and threaten true wildlife species such as bighorn sheep, they never failed to grind the ever popular axe of wild horse and burro management costing the taxpayer a fortune by being nothing more than a Federal welfare case - (Representative Jim Gibbons).

Utah Representative James Hansen stated, If any public land program could be called a subsidy, this would be it.

While these cattleman were arguing against the costs of the Wild Horse & Burro program and how public land is really their land, USDA Records shows in 1998, almost $2.7 million dollars was handed out in federal subsidies in Nevada and exceeded $62 million dollars between 1995 and 2005 for Nevada ranchers and farmers alone. This does not take into account that a rancher is currently paying less than $1.35 per month per cow to graze them on public lands -1/10th the cost of private grazing fees.

USDA federal subsidies records also shows NV Senator Dean Rhoads of Rhoads Trust Dean & Sharon have personally received $500,875 dollars between 1995 and 2005.

This Field Hearing was conducted one month before the Nevada Draft Management Plan for Wild Horses was introduced (see last post, Year of the Horse I).

During this field hearing, Cathy Barcomb, Administrator for the Nevada Commission for the Preservation of Wild Horses reported to these Congressional Committee members that the Draft Management Plan for Wild Horses for Nevada was due out in August adding, ..a lot of people that are in this room helped us write the plan and I think it is a good compilation from Nevada.

Posted by Preserve the Herds at 5:53 PM 0 comments

Wednesday, November 21, 2007

Year Of The Horse - Part I

The year 1998 was a big one for our wild horses and burros -two major events happened that laid the groundwork for the most stunning change in wild horse and burro policy since the passage of the Wild Free-Roaming Horse and Burro Act.

Of course, this change would be the Unconditional Sale of our herds commonly known as the Burns Amendment and now carried out by BLM under the term Sale Authority.

However, as is commonly believed, there was nothing stealth about it selling our wild heritage was well planned and coordinated long before it was slipped in the day before the Thanksgiving break.

In August of 1998, Nevada Ecological Consulting, Inc. presented the Draft Nevada Wild Horse Management Plan for Federal Lands to the Nevada Department of Conservation and Natural Resources/Commission for the Preservation of Wild Horses in response to Bill 211, enacted by the Nevada Legislature in 1997 requiring the Commission to develop a plan for managing wild horses in Nevada.

There were sixty-five participants that provided input for this plan as well as nine public meetings held throughout the state.

The Plan discussed a large array of issues on wild horse and burro management but almost none of the solutions presented to maintain wild horses and burros as integral components of public lands have gone any further than the drawing board. The emphasis seemed to be on what to do with the wild horses and burros once they had been removed from the range, not providing the critical habitat requirements necessary to keep them from being removed.

Here are exact quotes from this Draft Management Plan:

Section 5.82 - Strategy:

#

By the year 2005, reach AML on all delineated HMAs by removal of unadoptable wild horses (as a last resort), either by euthanasia methods preferably on home range, or by sales authority granted to BLM with all sale receipts earmarked to defray program costs.

Section 5.83 - Actions:

#

BLM and Congress should abide by the provisions of the ACT allowing euthanasia as a humane method of removal of excess numbers of unadoptable wild horses, and that the euthanasia prohibition in the annual Congressional Appropriations Act for funding of the wild horse program be rescinded.

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Congress should consider amending the ACT to allow sales authority to BLM for placement of unadoptable wild horses where a reasonable number of adoption attempts have failed to place the animals. All sale receipts from such placement to be earmarked to the state of origin to defray costs of program.

#

BLM should consider initiating studies on time delay Sunset* euthanasia drugs which would allow humane death of known unadoptable wild horses on home range to spare the animals the stress of shipping and corral storage and to eliminate these program handling costs. (*A Sunset Drug is a drug that would be administered allowing the wild horses and burros to be killed slowly.)

Appendix B, Page 9

#

1) Amendment to the Wild Horse & Burro Act of 1971 is needed to include a sales authority clause to remove excessive numbers of unadoptable animals with sale proceeds earmarked to defray program costs.

Appendix C, Synopsis of Public Forum, Page 5

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3 strikes and you're out by either sale or euthanasia.

Here is the law that was enacted six years later, initially reported as having been co-sponsored by Nevada Senator Harry Reid, which our Congress has still failed to repeal-

Fiscal Year 2005 Omnibus Appropriations Act

Public Law 108-447, Division E, Section 142

SEC. 142. SALE OF WILD FREE-ROAMING HORSES AND BURROS. (a) IN GENERAL- Section 3 of Public Law 92-195 (16 U.S.C. 1333) is amended--

(1) in subsection (d)(5), by striking `this section' and all that follows through the period at the end and inserting `this section.'; and

(2) by adding at the end the following:

`(e) SALE OF EXCESS ANIMALS-

`(1) IN GENERAL- Any excess animal or the remains of an excess animal shall be sold if--

`(A) the excess animal is more than 10 years of age; or

`(B) the excess animal has been offered unsuccessfully for adoption at least 3 times.

`(2) METHOD OF SALE- An excess animal that meets either of the criteria in paragraph (1) shall be made available for sale without limitation, including through auction to the highest bidder, at local sale yards or other convenient livestock selling facilities, until such time as--

`(A) all excess animals offered for sale are sold; or

`(B) the appropriate management level, as determined by the Secretary, is attained in all areas occupied by wild free-roaming horses and burros.

`(3) DISPOSITION OF FUNDS- Funds generated from the sale of excess animals under this subsection shall be--

`(A) credited as an offsetting collection to the Management of Lands and Resources appropriation for the Bureau of Land Management; and

`(B) used for the costs relating to the adoption of wild free-roaming horses and burros, including the costs of marketing such adoption.

`(4) EFFECT OF SALE- Any excess animal sold under this provision shall no longer be considered to be a wild free-roaming horse or burro for purposes of this Act.'.

Photo of wild horse being roped downloaded from BLM State Field Office Website
http://www.blm.gov/

Posted by Preserve the Herds at 1:42 PM 0 comments

Monday, November 19, 2007

A Good Plan

The Commissioners statements in the NVCPWH April 2005 Meeting Minutes* can only leave us wondering.

Why would BLM cut adoption events or refuse to supply wild horses and burros to events where all they had to do was collect the money when holding pens were bursting at the seams?

In 2001, when BLM launched the most aggressive wild horse and burro removal campaign they had ever undertaken, didnt they know what would happen?

Did they have a plan on how to deal with tens of thousands of wild horses and burros now crammed in government pens at taxpayers expense?

The Plan

The plan developed by BLM was to escalate removals to balance public lands and achieve AML (Allowable Management Level). At the same time the Fleishman-Hillard study had introduced some very innovative changes to the adoption program.

The whole concept was introduced to Congress to bring public lands down to AML. BLM asked Congress for an additional 36 million dollars over 4 years to implement their new plan because they knew they would be taking approximately 12 thousand wild horses off of public lands per year, BLM knew they could average 7,000 horses per year in the adoption program, they knew there would be approximately 5,000 horses in excess each year.

They knew it and planned for it. They knew that by the fourth and fifth years that they would have 20,000 horses in holding, thats what the extra funds were for. The concept was that after BLM got to AML that only 3,500 to 4,000 horses per year would be removed from public lands and with a demand of over 7,000, the BLM would then start removing them from the sanctuaries and place them in the adoption program.

The whole plan was to balance itself and greatly reduced the costs because you would then be lowering the costs of holding horses in sanctuaries, you would only be removing 1/3 the number of horses on public lands and reducing that cost drastically, and you wouldnt be holding or processing as many horses because they would be adopted. The whole plan was a good one, Congress endorsed it, and now, we are there, we are within one year, they got all the horses in the sanctuaries, as planned, and then voted into slaughter all of them.

I feel it was somewhat of a setup, we were betrayed. We all bought into the plan and supported it, only to be turned on once the horses came off the lands.

Cathy Barcomb, Administrator

Nevada Commission for the Preservation of Wild Horses

April 7, 2005

So what happened?

*See last post, 'Doing Everything We Can'

Photo taken from BLM Internet Adoption Site
http://www.blm.gov/

Captured Wild Burro from California Slate Range 2007

Posted by Preserve the Herds at 9:16 PM 0 comments

Saturday, November 17, 2007

'Doing Everything We Can'

As Chief Investigative Reporter, George Knapp and the I-Team of KLAS 8 in Las Vegas, Nevada ask hard questions about what BLM is doing to help our now captured wild horses and burros find good homes through adoptions, Mr. Knapp's Interview with Nevada Wild Horse and Burro Lead Susie Stokke shows her confidently assuring us that, If you look at what Nevada is accomplishing compared to other states, we are doing everything we can.

So is this true? Not according to the Nevada Commission for the Preservation of Wild Horses. Here is what they had to say in the Commissions April 7, 2005 Meeting Minutes.

In discussing the Prison Wild Horse Training/Adoption Program, Ms. Cathy Barcomb, long-time administrator for the Commission reported that, The last prison adoption had been extremely successful with all horses adopted averaging $1,500. She reported that the new indoor arena had been dedicated for opening and that almost all of the Commissioners had been present for the ceremony. Ms. Barcomb noted that the Bureau of Land Management had recently met with prison officials and stated that they could no longer afford the prison program or adoptions in Nevada as their focus was primarily to place all funding towards removals of wild horses from public lands in an attempt to reach AML.

She also added, BLM was reducing the number of BLM supported adoptions to 3 per year instead of 4. She added that she felt BLM has not generally been very cost effective in their approaches to wild horse adoptions. She stated that there were usually 5-6 BLM personnel at each prison adoption, being paid overtime, and that it was unnecessary to have so many people there, which drives up the costs.

Commissioner Gleason stated that she felt BLM was spending more with no accountability.

Ms. Barcomb reported that, In 2004, that the Expo and Department of Agriculture transported all the prison horses to the Expo adoption, not BLM, the volunteers and Dept. of Agriculture had also transported and set up all the panels for holding the horses, not the BLM. She stated in general, that BLM really didnt have to put any effort into the marketing, transport, promotions, care, feeding, or adoption of the prison trained horses that they just had to show up and collect the funds. But for 2005, the BLM has declined to allow any BLM horses, prison trained or not, to be adopted at the Expo.

Ms. Barcomb also stated, The BLM Nevada would not be actively participating in the Western States Wild Horse and Burro Expo either. They would not have prison-trained horses on site, nor would they be doing an open house at the Palomino Valley Corrals.

Commissioner Evans stated that, He was disheartened by the fact that BLM has approximately 28,000 horses in holding facilities, that its costing taxpayers a fortune, that the solution to the problem IS adoption, and cutting back on the adoption program shows a serious lack of judgment as to what is needed for a comprehensive working program.

Commissioner Brehm stated, Adoptions hosted around the National Final Rodeo in Las Vegas were a good event and that almost all the horses were adopted in the previous years when BLM hosted adoptions there, but that it has been over 10 years since they did the NFR adoptions.'

During the public comment period, Frank Cassas, Chairman of the National Wild Horse and Burro Foundation stated,

The National Marketing Plan for the Bureau of Land Managements Wild Horse and Burro Program submitted by Fleishman-Hillard, Inc. on January 12, 2001.includes numerous constructive recommendations for invigorating and centralizing the BLMs Wild Horse and Burro Programs marketing and adoption activities.'

Mr. Cassas expressed his frustration in that nothing has been done since the report and recommendations have come out.

Commissioner Evans stated, Weve been talking about this with BLM for over 5 years..now its 5 years later and nothing. You can spend millions of dollars on study after study, and nothing ever happens.

Meanwhile, when George asks Ms. Stokke, You would say the BLM has done its best to market to Nevadans in adopting wild horses?

Stokke replies, I think that we are continuing to explore new opportunities and new avenues...'

Photo taken from BLMs Internet Adoption Site, Nebraska wild horse and burro holding pens.

Nevada Commission for the Preservation of Wild Horses, Meeting Minutes, April 7, 2005
http://www.wildhorse.nv.gov/main/april05.pd

Posted by Preserve the Herds at 6:01 PM 0 comments

Thursday, November 15, 2007

Hero Of The Herds II

Part II

As promised, Chief Investigative Reporter, George Knapp and the I-Team of KLAS 8 in Las Vegas, NV have followed up their first investigative story, No Straight Answers on Wild Horse Budget (Part I), with an in depth look at questions on how BLM determines our wild horses and burros need to be removed.

Today, with more wild horses in government pens than now roam free, millions of dollars being spent the last few years for their removals and millions more now spent to feed them, Mr. Knapp asks whether BLM has any justification for corralling them in the first place.

So how does BLM justify the round ups? Usually by claiming the horses are a threat to the health of the range. The question is can they prove it?

So the Knappster begins his quest for answers as he and the I-Team examine the 40 million acres under BLM control in Nevada, the recent Jackson Mountain HMA round up that led to over 150 deaths in BLM's Palomino Valley holding facility, the 8,000 livestock that have been approved to graze the Jackson Mountain home range area, and allegations by national BLM scientists who have accused BLM of politicizing range science to benefit ranchers, miners, and oil companies on public lands.

In an interview with Craig Downer, once employed by BLM as a range scientist but claims he quit in disgust, Mr. Downer grew up watching wild horses near his Northern Nevada home and stated, Its very skewed data, very arbitrary statements. Theyll just come out and say that wild horses are a detriment to the ecosystem without any proofs.'

He further added,How can you say the several thousand horses that remain in all the west compare with several million livestock? Its just ludicrous.

Mr. Downer feels that most of the information used to justify many of the round ups is bogus.

In another interview with long time wild horse advocate Jerry Reynoldson of Wild Horses 4 Ever, the Knappster found continuing support for the position that BLM uses bogus information to justify the round ups.

What I really think is there is no science Reynoldson said. It has little to do with range conditions and a lot to do with we just want to get them out of here.Nevada BLM basically makes it up as it goes along.

While questions continue as to how BLM has justified the removals of thousands of wild horses and burros from public lands, the millions of dollars being paid to those who remove and feed them, and little being budgeted towards their adoptions, is it any wonder the I-Teams choose Nevadas Wild Horses Face Desperate Future for part two of their look at Americas remaining herds.

Kudos to Mr. Knapp and the I-Team for working to expose the truth behind this American tragedy as these living symbols of freedom are once again fast-disappearing - this time funded out of the government trough.

Comments to Chief Investigative Reporter, George Knapp can be emailed to
gknapp@klastv.com

The photo used was taken from the Palomino Valley Internet Adoption site five days after BLM began conducting the Spring Mountain round ups based on 'BLM formulas' that determined they 'might starve or become thirsty in the future'. This horse was one of the 864 wild horses and burros BLM removed from the area in January 2007.

www.lasvegasnow.com

http://horses.generitek.com


A man of kindness, to his beast is kind.

But, brutal actions, show a brutal mind:

Remember, He who made thee, made the brute,

Who gave thee speach and reason, formed him mute;

He can't complain, but God's omnicient eye

Beholds thy cruelty - He hears his cry!

He was designed thy servant; not thy drudge,

But know - That his Creator is thy judge.

Unknown author from The Ladies' Equestrian Guide, 1857.

'They too, are created by the same loving hand of God which

Created us...It is our duty to Protect Them and to promote their

well-being. '

--Mother Teresa.

'Until he extends his circle of compassion to all living things, man himself will not find peace. ' - Albert Schweitzer 1875 - 1965




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Wednesday, November 28, 2007

10,000 Wild Horses In Australia Slaughtered

If you're having trouble viewing this article, click here to view it in your browser.

NEWS.com.au

David Hesse, Mustang Dave (mustangdave1@gmail.com) thought you might find this article from NEWS.com.au interesting:

Over 10,000 horses slaughtered

From: The Courier-Mail
November 10, 2007
  • Queensland Govt tries to hide massive cull
  • Most left to rot, shooters told to hide bodies
  • Brumbies can be tamed, says campaigner

MORE than 10,000 brumbies will be slaughtered in Queensland in a massive cull the State Government has tried to hide.
Documents obtained by The Courier-Mail show fears of a public outcry led to high-level talks on how to conceal one of the world's largest animal culls.

Click here to read the full article on the website
Alternatively, you can copy and paste this link into your browser:
http://www.news.com.au/story/0,23599,22733074-421,00.html




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Sunday, August 26, 2007

Check out our slideshow from our 2007 Activity Day!