Feds consider euthanizing wild horses in West

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RENO, Nev. - Federal officials are considering euthanizing wild horses to deal with the growing population on the range and in holding facilities, authorities said Monday.

Wild horses have overpopulated public lands and the U.S. Bureau of Land Management can't afford to care for the number of mustangs that have been rounded up, said Henri Bisson, the agency's deputy director. Also, fewer people are adopting the horses, he said.

Monday's announcement marks the first time the agency publicly has discussed the possibility of putting surplus animals to death.

The agency is also considering whether to stop roundups of wild horses to save money, a move that would be criticized by and from sheep and cattle ranchers who see the mustangs as competition for feed on the open range.

"Our goal is supposed to be about healthy horses on healthy ranges. But we are at the point we need to have a conversation with people about pragmatically what can we do given the financial constraints of our program to meet the goals we have," Bisson said.

There are an estimated 33,000 wild horses on the range in 10 Western states, Bisson told the organization's National Wild Horse and Burro Advisory Board. About half of those are in Nevada.

The agency has set a target "appropriate management level" of horses at 27,000.

Thousands penned in
About another 30,000 horses are in holding facilities, where most are made available for adoption. But those deemed too old or otherwise unadoptable are sent to long-term holding facilities to live out their lives — some for 15 to 20 years.

The board will consider the alternatives at its next meeting in September.

Last year about $22 million of the entire horse program's $39 million budget was spent on holding horses in agency pens. Next year the costs are projected to grow to $26 million with an overall budget that is being trimmed to $37 million, Bisson said.

"We have a responsibility to balance the budget, so we are going to have to make some tough choices," Bisson said.

Bonnie Matton, president of the Wild Horse Preservation League, said she wasn't surprised by the agency's predicament.

"They really do have a can of worms," she said.


Source: Feds may euthanize wild horses - Environment - MSNBC.com

This is pretty disturbing and sad that Feds are doing this :(
 
Oh No!!! I wish take some of them .. but crazy cost trasport * hire load horse in trailer to bring here and may cost 1000 less per horse!.. :(:(
 
Yes I saw on news and I am so upset about it. ranchers :rl:
 
It's very sad to read this article... Yes, it's very disgusitly... *shake my head angrily*
 
No!!!!! They should move them to someplace where it's remote, not kill them! I don't like what they're doing. 33,000 wild horses is NOT many compared to over 60+ million people in the West US.
 
No!!!!! They should move them to someplace where it's remote, not kill them! I don't like what they're doing. 33,000 wild horses is NOT many compared to over 60+ million people in the West US.

Yeah unfortunately human population has affected the wild animal's land. The urban development has taken away their lands and there's not going to be much room for them to roam freely in the west. There were millions of horses in west in the 1800's and before gasoline engines were invented, the horses were the primary mode of transportation for those people. In the 19th century, the more cars people buy, people leave horses behind or abandon them to the wild. It's pretty disturbing and sickening for government to not doing any effort to at least move horses to another location. :(
 
That's sad, they should move the wild horses to another better location than euthanizing wild horses.
 
DOUGLAS, Wyo. - As a Johnny Cash tune played over the loudspeakers, horse trainer Gary Main Jr. coaxed Victory through a display of discipline and skill inside the Wyoming State Fair arena.

Hundreds of potential horse buyers looked on as Victory stopped on a dime, backed up on command and trotted along the perimeter. On this day, the horses were not from breeders but rather the Western range — separated from their wild origins by only a few months of training.

Faced with a surplus of wild horses, the U.S. Bureau of Land Management and its nonprofit partner, the Mustang Heritage Foundation, have been holding a series of training contests and subsequent adoptions like the Mustang Challenge held in Wyoming this summer.

Adoption is likely the best outcome for the horses. The BLM, citing budget constraints and the ever-multiplying herds of mustangs that roam free on federal land in the West, said this summer it was studying ways to get rid of excess horses, including euthanasia.

Effort to boost adoptions
To try to boost the number of adoptions, Patti Colbert, executive director of the mustang foundation, came up with the idea of the horse-training competitions while watching reality TV shows.

"I figured if you could make over a house or a person or a truck, then we could take these mustangs and in a short amount of time show their value because of their trainability," Colbert said.

About 29,500 horses and 3,500 burros roam federal land in 10 states, according to the BLM. That's too many for the agency's rangeland management plans, which also account for other uses like wildlife habitat and livestock grazing.

"The wild horse population doubles about every four years, and the effects of that are they will overgraze the land," said Sally Spencer of the BLM's National Wild Horse and Burro Program. "If left unchecked, they would eat themselves out of house and home."

As potential owners wrestle with increased costs for animal feed and transportation, the government's longstanding adoption program has seen declining numbers, from about 5,700 in 2005 to less than 4,800 in 2007, according to the BLM. The Texas-based Mustang Heritage Foundation is working to change that.

It began holding mustang-training competitions last year, awarding thousands of dollars in prize money and culminating in adoptions at six events.

The group boasts a 100 percent adoption rate for participating horses, amounting to a total of about 850 horses adopted in the last year, in Texas, California, Nevada, Wisconsin and Wyoming.

The horses on display in the Mustang Challenge were rounded up from BLM land in Wyoming, where about 3,600 wild horses live. The 26 participating trainers picked up the horses from a holding facility 90 days before the competition.

Graded on the level of trust
Quinn Martin, a judge at the Wyoming competition, said he graded the contestants on the level of trust between trainer and horse.

"You can tell that horse is with him by the look in the horse's eye and how hard he's trying," Martin said.

Supporters of the training competitions say the contests help those efforts by disproving the notion that mustangs can't be trained.

Competitor Bryan Mantle, who has trained wild mustangs for 10 years on his family's Wheatland ranch, said the initial training is key to successful adoptions.

"People seem to be able to get along with them easier, and the horses end up having a home and not just coming back like a troubled pet," he said.

Boosting adoptions would help ease the strain the horses are placing on the BLM's holding facilities and budget.

The BLM culled more than 7,500 horses from the range last year, adding to the roughly 30,000 wild horses and burros that are cared for in short-term corrals and long-term pastures. This year, the agency is spending about 70 percent of its $37 million wild horse budget on holding costs, said BLM spokesman Tom Gorey.

Because of the overcrowding, the BLM announced in June that it was studying the possibility of euthanizing older horses or allowing their unrestricted sale. Critics say that would result in the horses being exported to Mexico or Canada for slaughter.

All horses adopted at auction
At the end of the Wyoming competition, all 26 horses were adopted at auction for a total of $47,500. Excluding BLM adoption fees, trainers received 20 percent of their mustang's price and the rest went to the Mustang Heritage Foundation.

Rhonda Sedgwick Stearns, a Newcastle rancher, paid $4,300 to take home Pistol, a 3-year-old gelding that placed sixth. The price was a good deal, she said, considering the time and cost associated with the training a horse.

Stearns said she intends to use Pistol as a ranch horse, which means long days of riding upward of 30 miles, possibly in muddy and icy terrain. That's one of the reasons she wanted a mustang.

"If you're riding one of these horses, they ran along their mothers when they were babies and so they learn to watch where they're going and know where their feet are," Stearns said.

For his part, Main ended up adopting Victory, who finished seventh, for $1,050. The two went back home to Laramie.

"His heart and his try are worth a thousands bucks," Main said. "So I'm not going to let somebody else walk away with him for that. He's going to make too nice of a horse."

Contest pairs horse trainers with wild mustangs MSNBC.com
 
Wild horse advocates decry euthanasia option

Government proposal will allow kill or unrestricted sale of captured animals

RENO, Nev. - A stampede of opposition is growing over a proposal by the U.S. Bureau of Land Management to kill or allow unrestricted sale of wild horses captured from western public land because of budget constraints.

Tens of thousands of horse advocates have voiced outrage at the idea of slaughtering what many revere as romantic symbols of the American West.

"Most Americans view these horses as the greatest symbols of our American freedom," said Ross Potter of Phoenix.

"If we kill them now without exhausting all other possibilities, we are telling the world that we have no respect for our own heritage," he said in a recent letter to the BLM. "I don't think that is an image we can afford to project."

The BLM's nine-member National Wild Horse and Burro Advisory Board is scheduled to consider the proposal at a meeting Monday in Reno.

About 33,000 wild horses roam the open range in 10 Western states. The BLM has set a target "appropriate management level" of horses at 27,000.

Many critics say inept bureau management created the problem that has led to nearly as many horses being kept in long-term corrals as remain on the range.

Protecting animals
Karen Sussman, president of the International Society for the Protection of Mustangs and Burros, said the BLM has never considered the health of herds when conducting roundups.

She and others say large-scale roundups upset a herd's social hierarchy, leading to unchecked breeding that threatens their gene pool and accelerates population growth.

"They are mandated by law to protect these horses for American citizens. They have not done that," she said.

"And now, on the backs of these horses that should never have been removed, they want to kill them."

Critics also argue that, when it comes to public land, wild horses get short shrift to the benefit of livestock and wildlife. They claim that since 1971 about 20 million acres originally designated as herd areas have been withdrawn from that use. They say reopening those areas to horses would alleviate the need for boarding.

"While forage and water are rarely an issue for the established livestock and big game interests, these same resources are almost always portrayed as being too little for the relatively tiny members of our nation's remaining wild horses and burros — who are too often scapegoated for ecological destruction caused ultimately by man," wrote Craig Downer, a wild horse ecologist.

A report issued last week by the Government Accountability Office, the investigative arm of Congress, said the BLM needs to consider euthanizing horses or selling them to reduce spiraling costs of keeping them in long-term holding pens.

Declining demand
Wild horses and burros are protected under federal law. Most captured horses are placed for adoption, but those deemed too old or otherwise unadoptable are sent to long-term holding facilities — some for 15 to 20 years.

The BLM says demand for horses has declined, and the cost of caring for geriatric equines is devouring its budget.

The GAO report said costs of caring for wild horses likely will account for 74 percent of the program's overall budget this year, or more than $27 million. That percentage will climb, it said, unless alternatives are found.

Continuing current practices would require a budget of $58 million next year, escalating to $77 million in 2012, the BLM estimated.

The BLM already has authority to use euthanasia for horse management but has been reluctant to do for fear of public backlash.

"We have a responsibility to balance the budget, so we are going to have to make some tough choices," BLM Deputy Director Henri Bisson said when the proposal was first aired in June.

"We don't want to do this at the last minute. So we need to have a conversation with horse advocates and try to share the pain a little bit so people understand that if we have to make those tough changes it's not because we want to," he said.

Horse advocates decry euthanasia option
 
can't people just simply do birth control to help reduce the population?
 
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