He’s the Government Relations & Policy Director according to the staff directory.
He was with the Wild Horse Refuge but his bio at CAAWH is silent about that.
The Campaign Against America’s Wild Horses and its partner organizations lead the nation in mass sterilization, which they peddle as wild horse conservation.
Approaching the horses can cause dangerous habituation, according to a report by WCTI News, a condition that can ultimately lead to them being removed from the wild.
Apples and carrots are not part of their natural diet and can cause fatal choking or colic.
Not all of their advice is good.
Moving away if they approach you tells them they’re higher, a practice that may lead to more encounters and removal from the wild.
Who’s giving the orders and why are they being overly cautious about the herd?
The rangeland eugenicists, who routinely got as close as they could to the mares to pummel them with pesticide-laced darts.
It’s still not clear if the program was halted soon enough to allow the birth rate to rise above the death rate and stay there, avoiding slow but certain demise.
The Salt River advocates have thrown their support behind SB1199, a bill that would place a moratorium on wild horse removals while researchers conduct a genetic viability study to determine how many animals are needed for a healthy breeding population.
As if the herd was still viable.
To give your assent, you must disavow all knowledge of their actions, especially the fertility control program that has morphed into a mass sterilization program because it has outlived the window of reversibility.
There’s still time to act!
If the legislature formed a truth commission, here’s what they’d find:
The owners have been charged for allowing livestock to run at large and for failing to cooperate with recovery efforts according to an update from WSOC News.
The parcel doesn’t overlap any areas identified for wild horses but it’s close to the Hill Creek HA and the vacant allotments in Uintah County.
The BLM recently approved the installation of an underground water storage tank and associated trough according to yesterday’s news release.
The CX and DR were copied to the project folder in ePlanning.
The allotment master report puts it in the Improve category, suggesting that your stewards of the public lands are not taking their responsibilities seriously.
On the bright side, approximately 33% of the permitted use has been moved to the suspended column to help the land recover.
The allotment offers 2,003 active AUMs on 43,370 public acres, equivalent to 3.8 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.
Yet in Little Desert, the authorized stocking rate is almost four times higher, even after changes were made to reduce grazing pressure.
The double standard for rangeland health.
If all of the AUMs were in the active column, the equivalent stocking rate would be 5.7 wild horses per thousand acres.
A story by Phoenix New Times says a strike-everything amendment would place a three-year moratorium on wild horse removals from the Lower Salt River while researchers conduct a genetic viability study examining how many animals are needed to maintain a healthy breeding population.
The bill cleared the Arizona Senate in February and has been taken up by the House, where legislators have proposed several amendments.
The House engrossed version states that the population was 273 as of March 28, with a negative growth rate due to a successful fertility control program—which has evolved into a mass sterilization program because it has exceeded the window of reversibility.
Simone Netherlands, instigator of the program, thinks the state is pushing the herd toward long-term genetic collapse.
But it’s a fait accompli—she and her field workers have already done it.
You cannot maintain genetic diversity when the birth rate and breeding population are essentially zero and will stay at zero because the mares have been ruined by fertility control pesticides.
The article noted that the bill, if approved by the House, will have to go back to the Senate for ratification of amendments.
Steve Cohen, who represented Tennessee’s ninth congressional district for almost 20 years, will retire at the end of the term according to a report by The Hill.
Here he speaks about the PZP amendment, an attachment to a FY21 spending bill.
They won’t look at resource availability because those figures would show the darting programs aren’t necessary.
Remember, they’re pesticide salesman, not conservationists.
Not really.
These data, from the Jackson Mountains EA, tell you why the off-range corrals are flooded with wild horses, that many animals can go back on the range, and that the bureaucrats are lying about rangeland health and the carrying capacity of public lands.
Ask the advocates to explain it.
Here’s a hint from section 3.13 in the EA regarding the Jackson Mountain allotment:
If analysis of monitoring data were to show that the carrying capacity of the Allotment differs from the carrying capacity listed in the Decision, the available forage would be apportioned in the same proportions used in the decision (18% of available forage to wild horses, and 82% to livestock).
The new executive director, who replaced Roy last year on November 1, discusses her plans for salvaging the nonprofit (which is still held in high regard by most advocates).
At 10:40 she mentions a seven-page document with individuals whose material they would not post to socialist media.
At 20:35 she says “We need to be focused on who is the real problem” but omits the cattlemen and sheepherders from her list of culprits.
How are you supposed to win the battle when you won’t even acknowledge the enemy?
You must never confuse faith that you will prevail in the end—which you can never afford to lose—with the discipline to confront the most brutal facts of your current reality, whatever they might be.
A Draft Environmental Assessment has been copied to the project folder with comments due by June 15.
Alternative A, the Proposed Action, features removal of excess animals to low AML, application of fertility control pesticides, sex ratio skewing and selective return of sterilized animals.
Table 11 provides data for livestock grazing.
The new HMAP is discussed in Appendix XIII.
The news release said the HMAP will set objectives for managing wild horses to maintain a thriving ecological balance within the HMA.