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In 1971, more letters poured into Congress over the threat to our
nation’s wild horses than over any issue in U.S. history,
except for the Vietnam War. And so Congress unanimously passed the
Wild
Free-Roaming Horse and Burro Act, declaring that “wild
horses and burros are living symbols of the historic and pioneer
spirit of the West; that they contribute to the diversity of life
forms within the Nation and enrich the lives of the American people;
and that these horses and burros are fast disappearing from the
American scene.” The Bureau of Land Management (BLM) and the
U.S. Forest Service (USFS) were appointed to implement the Act.
Most herd areas are under BLM jurisdiction.
Fast-forward
thirty years: in 2001, after decades of failed herd management policies,
the BLM obtained a 50% increase in annual budget to $29 million
for implementation of an aggressive removal campaign; in 2004, the
1971 Act was surreptitiously amended,
without so much as a hearing or opportunity for public review, opening
the door to the sale of thousands of wild horses to slaughter for
human consumption abroad.
The
current situation is the result of a long history of failed policies,
land allocation issues, and an intricate money trail. The BLM and
the USFS, among others, are responsible for managing the nation’s
public lands and are foremost the managers of wild horses and burros.
Their responsibilities also include issuing public land grazing
permits to cattle ranchers. These grazing permits cover limited
areas of public land that are available for lease. So, for every
wild horse removed from a grazing permit allotment, a fee-paying
cow gets to take its place, and a public land rancher gets the benefit
of public land forage at bargain rates. This is the number one reason
wild horses are removed from public lands.
The
1971 Wild Free-Roaming Horse and Burro Act mandated that wild horses
be managed at their then-current population level, officially estimated
by the BLM at 17,000 (three years later, BLM’s first census
found over 42,000 horses).
To the horses' detriment, both sides agreed to allow the government
to manage wild horse populations at that “official”
1971 level. Eleven years later, a study by the National
Academy of Sciences found BLM’s 1971 estimate
to have been “undoubtedly low to an unknown, but perhaps substantial,
degree,” given subsequent census results and taking into account
the horses' growth rate and the number of horses since removed.
But the damage had already been done; management levels had been
etched in stone, and processes for removal of "excess"
horses were well in place.
The
fact is that the 1982 National Academy of Sciences report and two
General Accounting Office
reports have countered key points in BLM's premise
for its current herd reduction campaign. These government-sanctioned
documents concluded that: (i) horses reproduce at a much slower
rate than BLM asserts, (ii) wild horse forage use remains a small
fraction of cattle forage use on public ranges, (iii) “despite
congressional direction, BLM did not base its removal of wild horses
from federal rangeland on how many horses ranges could support,”
and (iv) “BLM was making its removal decisions on the basis
of an interest in reaching perceived historic population levels,
or the recommendations of advisor groups largely composed of livestock
permittees.”
From
over 2 million in the 1800s, America’s wild horse population
has dwindled to less than 25,000. There are now more wild horses
in government holding pens than remain in the wild, with many of
the remaining herds managed at population levels that do not guarantee
their long-term survival. Still, the round-ups continue.
Over
the past thirty years, federal law enacted by the people on behalf
of their wild horses has been ignored. No strategic plan to keep
viable herds of wild horses on public lands was ever developed.
Please take action
now.
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