A report by KTMF News says a packed public meeting on June 11 brought out strong opinions about what should happen next to the horses roaming in the area.
Many residents want to keep them on the landscape.
But County Commissioners have drafted a resolution to establish a process for private landowners to capture abandoned horses located on their property, request Department of Livestock inspection to confirm they’re not owned and guide the transfer of the animals through approved channels.
Section 6 covers disposition.
A keyword search of the proposal yielded these results:
The event runs from 10 AM to 1 PM on June 13 according to an announcement in the Cody Enterprise.
BLM expert Tricia Hatle will talk about wild horses and herd dynamics but will probably avoid the sterilization program (initially sold as a fertility control program) inflicted on the herd by your hosts.
The picnic will take place at the FOAL educational kiosk 28 miles east of Cody on US Hwy 14/16/20.
If the advocates were honest, they’d change their name to Friends of the Ranchers.
Protection, preservation and conservation are codewords for long-term use of fertility control pesticides, with the inevitable result of permanent infertility and herd collapse.
They will meet at Washoe Lake, across from the bird watch area, on June 13 according to an announcement in Carson Now.
Organizers are urging the Nevada Department of Agriculture and the Bureau of Land Management to pause the project and engage with the public to discuss humane, practical alternatives that protect both public safety and the long-term welfare of the horses—a likely reference to the mass sterilization program, which has already inflicted more harm than a fence ever could.
Are you surprised that the advocates would push for the greater of two evils?
They are phonies, leaders of the blind, and don’t deserve a penny of your support.
Search for “horse” (CTRL+F) in HR9171 to see the provisions and prohibitions related to wild horses and burros in the next fiscal year, which starts on October 1.
The accompanying report says that “up to $11,000,000 shall be used for the administration of humane population growth suppression strategies, including immunocontraceptive vaccines and permanent sterilization efforts, of which not less than $7,000,000 is for the implementation of existing immunocontraceptive vaccines.”
It also mentions the Wild Horse and Burro Task Force established in FY22, and the quarterly reports produced thereby, but Western Horse Watchers is not aware of a place where they can be accessed by the public.
They could get rid of more wild horses if they had more money.
Why aren’t the donations pouring in?
Their would-be suitors and chief beneficiaries, the hunters and ranchers, still think of them as disciples of Velma, a role they abandoned years ago.
What’s the best way to change perceptions without sacrificing their current supporters?
A morally depraved public supports the use of contraceptives, which are more harmful in the long run, but won’t tolerate the “cruel and costly” roundups.
The House engrossed version of SB1199 says in section 5 that the act is an emergency measure that is necessary to preserve the public peace, health or safety and is operative immediately as provided by law.
Motorized removal provides quick but temporary relief from the pests.
Nonmotorized removal provides lasting results but requires patience.
Shooting, practiced by rogue elements in the population while your faithful public servants look the other way, provides the best of both worlds.
Quick results, permanent relief.
Protection, conservation and preservation are codewords for long-term use of fertility control pesticides, with the inevitable result of permanent infertility and herd collapse.
If you’re a hunter or rancher, know that the advocates are on your side and are more than deserving of your financial support.
Highway 395 runs through the allotment and there are no fences at the northern end to keep livestock off the road, but the Lakeview Field Office has approved a project to resolve that according to a BLM news release.
The parcel offers 6,223 active AUMs on 87,570 public acres, equivalent to 518 wild horses or 5.9 wild horses per thousand public acres.
Your faithful public servants claim that public lands in the western U.S. can only support one wild horse per thousand acres, and that rangeland health will suffer if the stocking rate exceeds that value.
But in Alkali Winter, the stocking rate is almost six times higher and the land meets or exceeds those standards.
An impediment to setting up a refuge is the number of permits in the allotment—four to be exact—so you may need to purchase or lease several base properties to access all of the AUMs.
A coalition led by Rewilding America Now, the former CANA Foundation (known for its checkered past), sent a letter to the Pesticide Caucus asking for a formal audit by the Government Accountability Office of the BLM’s Wild Horse and Burro Sale Program, including the use of “Sale Authority” and “sales without limitation,” according to its news release.
The signatories are concerned that the program’s insufficient protections enable the secondary sale of federally protected wild horses and burros via auctions, which ultimately results in their slaughter, despite long-established congressional mandates intended to prevent such incidents.
If you’re a hunter or rancher, are you more inclined to give money to a nonprofit that produces videos and policy statements against free-roaming horses or an NGO that has volunteers in the field sterilizing the mares?
The facility currently houses over 1,200 horses according to a report by KIVI News, racking up a deficit of $2.6 million per year.
If the Trump administration is s serious about reducing government spending, why hasn’t it killed the grazing program or at least asked Congress to cancel it?