Wild Horses SAVED: Congress Votes To Protect Mustangs And Burros From Government-Sponsored Slaughter

KEVIN FREKING | 07/17/09 09:07 PM | AP

I Like ItI Don’t Like It

WASHINGTON — Galloping to the aid of the nation's wild horses and burros, the House voted Friday to rescue them from the possibility of a government-sponsored slaughter and give them millions more acres to roam.

But the effort may get penned up in the Senate.

The bill passed the House, 239-185, with Republican opponents arguing that it underscored wrongheaded Democratic priorities by focusing on animals instead of people at a time when the nation's unemployment rate is approaching double digits.

An estimated 36,000 wild horses and burros live in 10 Western states. Federal officials estimate that's about 9,400 more than can exist in balance with other rangeland resources. Off the range, more than 31,000 other wild horse and burros are cared for in corrals and pastures.

The plan aims to reduce the number of animals kept in holding pens awaiting adoption and to reduce the stress on land currently set aside for them.

Supporters mobilized after the Interior Department announced last year that it might have to kill thousands of healthy wild horses and burros to deal with the growing population on the range and in holding facilities.

Republicans dismissed the measure as welfare for horses, but Rep. Nick Rahall, D-W.Va., said a majority of Americans would not support slaughtering healthy animals or keeping them in holding pens for years at a time.

"The status quo is a national disgrace," said Rahall, chairman of the Committee on Natural Resources. "It is a disgrace to our heritage."

Story continues below
advertisement

However, no comparable bill has been sponsored in the Senate, which doesn't bode well for final passage of the measure. Both houses would have to approve the legislation before it could be sent to the White House for President Barack Obama's consideration.

Some lawmakers from Western states said Congress is mismanaging the nation's wild horse population by preventing the Bureau of Land Management from keeping populations at a level that's appropriate for the environment. They said more horses will just make the problem worse.

"This bill is based on emotion and not science," declared Rep. Cynthia Lummis, R-Wyo., saying the bill would elevate wild horses above threatened and endangered species in her state.

The Congressional Budget Office estimated that enacting the Restore our American Mustangs Act would cost about $200 million over the next five years. Currently, the wild herds roam over about 33 million acres of Western land.

To comply with the bill, the Bureau of Land Management would need to find an additional 20 million acres, primarily after 2013, at a cost of up to $500 million, according the CBO. But Rahall said those estimates don't reflect new language in the bill that makes adding millions of acres of rangeland a goal rather than a legal requirement.

Rahall said the bill would actually save the government money by reducing the amounts now devoted to caring for the animals in corrals and on pastures. He said slaughtering healthy animals to control their population should not be an option.

"How in the world can a federal agency be considering the massive slaughter of animals the law says they are supposed to be protecting?" he said.

While Rahall said the cost estimates were overblown, Republicans weren't buying it. House Republican leader John Boehner of Ohio said even debating the bill was an insult to people looking for work and small businesses trying to keep their doors open.

"It doesn't make any sense that we're debating a welfare program about wild horses when the American people really want to know, 'where are the jobs?'" Boehner said.

The bill would give the government authority to enter into cooperative agreements to establish wild horse sanctuaries on nonfederal lands. It also would attempt to bolster an adoption program and sterilize more animals. It would prohibit the killing of healthy wild horses and burros and restrict time spent in holding pens to six months.

The Humane Society of the United States supports the legislation, saying the current program of rounding up wild horses and keeping them in holding pens is a "fiscal and animal care disaster."

"We have got to get off the current treadmill of spending millions of tax dollars rounding up wild horses and caring for them in captivity, and instead make wider use of fertility control as a humane population management tool," said Wayne Pacelle, the organization's president and CEO.

In Friday's vote, 206 Democrats supported the measure and 47 opposed it. Among Republicans, 33 voted for it and 138 against.

WASHINGTON — Galloping to the aid of the nation's wild horses and burros, the House voted Friday to rescue them from the possibility of a government-sponsored slaughter and give them millions mo...
WASHINGTON — Galloping to the aid of the nation's wild horses and burros, the House voted Friday to rescue them from the possibility of a government-sponsored slaughter and give them millions mo...
Report Corrections
 
Comments
113
Pending Comments
0
iPhone App Promo

Want to reply to a comment? Hint: Click "Reply" at the bottom of the comment; after being approved your comment will appear directly underneath the comment you replied to

View Comments:
Page: « First ‹ Previous 1 2 3 (3 pages total)
- susangg I'm a Fan of susangg 2 fans permalink

why not fund some ranches where troubled teens and young adult offenders can be sent for rehabilitation? They can learn empathy by working with horses and farm animals and learn how good a hard day's work can make you feel, eat healthy food, and be away from inner city drugs and gangs. Take the money out of the bloated prison budget.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:55 PM on 07/17/2009

Uh, there are plenty of equine therapy camps already.
And most captured "mustangs" are anything but docile.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:50 PM on 07/17/2009

Better yet, put some low-risk prisoners on a carefully run ranch and let them train the mustangs until they're gentle enough for younger or less able riders, or to parks, zoos, wherever they will be most enjoyed. Programs using prisoners to train service dogs have proven that both the animal and the human benefit greatly. Any program that reduces recidivism and improves the emotional stability of convicts before their sentence ends is money well spent. And speaking as a person who's spent a lifetime around horses, butchering healthy, trainable animals is a wasteful and asinine way to control a population.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:56 PM on 07/17/2009
- mollymac I'm a Fan of mollymac 15 fans permalink

They are already doing that in some areas. Similar to pups in prison. Wonderful programs.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:26 PM on 07/18/2009
- PWM I'm a Fan of PWM 258 fans permalink
photo

Do these horses have predators?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:53 PM on 07/17/2009
- ranchero42 I'm a Fan of ranchero42 25 fans permalink
photo

Well...kin­da. The short answer is they're endangered. The long answer is modern horses aren't native to this hemisphere. These herds get thinned one way or the other.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:59 PM on 07/17/2009

Endangered? Not really - hence the overpopulation problem that the Govt and BLM is trying to resolve.

"Aren't native to this hemisphere"? Which hemisphere is that?

The mustang herds do not get "thinned" except by BLM roundup programs. The fact is that the horse is very successful in the wild, and while they do have predators, the herd structure protects the young and the sick as much as possible. The size of a Mustang herd in the wild doubles every six to nine years (according to the BLM).

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:25 PM on 07/17/2009
- TFlint I'm a Fan of TFlint 40 fans permalink
photo

Depends. Did we kill all the wolves?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:22 PM on 07/17/2009

you bet on the wolf ..I'll bet on the horses

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:18 PM on 07/17/2009
- mollymac I'm a Fan of mollymac 15 fans permalink

Ask sarah Palin.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:26 PM on 07/18/2009
- temenos I'm a Fan of temenos 23 fans permalink
photo

Like most other unfortunate creatures, their main predator is man.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:16 PM on 07/17/2009
- ecotopian I'm a Fan of ecotopian 13 fans permalink
photo

"Federal officials estimate that's about 9,400 more than can exist in balance with other rangeland resources.­"

Those other rangeland resource users are millions of head of cattle. People in the know will tell you, it isn't the horses that are the problem. It's the cattle. Mustangs don't give as much to congresspeople are ranchers do. So they will continued to rounded up. Before someone says horses aren't native, they used to be. They were wiped out over 8000 years ago. Horses first evolved on the North American continent.

Besides, isn't a burro just another type of donkey? Is it any wonder we Democrats would want them protected?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:49 PM on 07/17/2009
- Skepticat I'm a Fan of Skepticat 61 fans permalink
photo

It's rather telling of what's happened to the country when you consider Nixon perhaps not the most empathetic of presidents signed a bill to protect the mustang back in the early '70s.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:39 PM on 07/17/2009

Unbelievably, I'm with the Republicans on this one. It IS welfare for horses that no one wants, especially during the Bush Depression, some of which are simply unsuitable for adoption, too. We should have horse meat plants scattered across the country so that a short ride and a quick death can cut our lo$$es on the unwanted horse problem and at least some good come of a sad situation.

And no, I don't hate horses; I have 5 here at home, all pampered family members.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:37 PM on 07/17/2009

Why should a beings right to life be based on being "wanted" by humans? There seems to me something wrong with that...

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:30 PM on 07/17/2009
- Vickster I'm a Fan of Vickster 15 fans permalink
photo

Too many feral horses will destroy habitat that native species rely on. In other words, the native species may lose their "right to life" because they aren't romanticized by humans.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:05 PM on 07/17/2009
- julianne I'm a Fan of julianne 57 fans permalink

With respect, what about all the human beings around here nobody wants or cares for? What about a country that has 330 million people with about 30 million perennially pregnant who can't afford to take care of the children they've already brought into the world? We're not talking about 2-3 million horses. These are small numbers compared to what were running free in the past. Hell, there are more people living on the street in each of our larger cities than this. If we can't care about each other, maybe it's because we no longer care about such things as our wild horses.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:38 PM on 07/17/2009
- OKSunny I'm a Fan of OKSunny 12 fans permalink

amen
I find it very disturbing when people make comments like "it's just a dog, horse, cat etc"

How far is it until "it's just a [enter race, ethnicity] kid"

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:12 PM on 07/17/2009

WWWWILBERR­RR...the steaks are on the Barby.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:22 PM on 07/17/2009
photo

Dems can count on the horse vote . . .
~

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:34 PM on 07/17/2009

And Rethugs can count on the "I hate animals" vote.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:38 PM on 07/17/2009
- audadvnc I'm a Fan of audadvnc 20 fans permalink
photo

They saved the Mustang - great! Lemme knew when they'll save the Stingray, Barracuda and Charger!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:32 PM on 07/17/2009

wasn't all that covered in the Detroit bailout?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:23 PM on 07/17/2009
Page: « First ‹ Previous 1 2 3 (3 pages total)
Comments are closed for this entry

 You must be logged in to comment. Log in  or connect with 

Connect